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+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #61436 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/61436)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Ancient legends, Mystic Charms &
-Superstitions of Ireland, by Jane Francesca Agnes Wilde
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Ancient legends, Mystic Charms & Superstitions of Ireland
- With sketches of the Irish past
-
-Author: Jane Francesca Agnes Wilde
-
-Release Date: February 18, 2020 [EBook #61436]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ANCIENT LEGENDS, CHARMS, OF IRELAND ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by MWS, Les Galloway and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This book was
-produced from images made available by the HathiTrust
-Digital Library.)
-
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Notes
-
-Obvious typographical errors have been silently corrected. Variations
-in hyphenation and accents have been standardised but all other
-spelling and punctuation remains unchanged.
-
-Italics are represented thus _italic_.
-
-
-
-
- ANCIENT LEGENDS OF IRELAND
-
-
-
-
- Ancient Legends
- Mystic Charms & Superstitions
- of Ireland
-
- WITH SKETCHES OF THE IRISH PAST
-
-
- BY
-
- LADY WILDE
-
-
- A NEW EDITION
-
-
- LONDON
- CHATTO & WINDUS
- 1919
-
-
-
-
- OPINIONS OF THE PRESS
- ON
- ANCIENT LEGENDS OF IRELAND.
-
-
-‘A work to be welcomed as a valuable addition to the literature of
-folk-lore and mythology; taken down, for the most part, from oral
-communications with the peasantry.’—SCOTSMAN.
-
-‘Few nations have a folk-lore so rich and imaginative as that of the
-Irish. Lady Wilde has studied it conscientiously, and is so well
-acquainted with the origins of her subject, that the perusal of her
-book is no less instructive than pleasing.’—MORNING POST.
-
-‘An important contribution to the literature of Ireland and the world’s
-stock of folk-lore.’—EVENING MAIL.
-
-‘Lady Wilde’s book will be welcome either to the professed student of
-Irish antiquity or to the more general reader who finds delight in
-fascinating folk-tales delightfully recorded.’—WESTMINSTER REVIEW.
-
-‘Told with power as well as with simplicity ... a very interesting and
-readable collection of folk-lore.’—GRAPHIC.
-
-‘Lady Wilde’s book is delightful.... Amongst those best acquainted with
-Irish folk-lore, legends, and mysteries, we believe few will be found
-capable of adding many words to pages which could only have been filled
-by an Irish woman lovingly treating such a subject.’—VANITY FAIR.
-
-‘Those who care for legendary reading will find in this volume a source
-of much enjoyment.’—NORTHERN WHIG.
-
-‘The myths and legends are all of deep interest and value.’—KNOWLEDGE.
-
-
- COMPANION TO THE PRESENT VOLUME.
-
-
- POPULAR ROMANCES OF THE WEST OF ENGLAND:
-
- or, The Drolls, Traditions, and Superstitions of Old Cornwall.
-
- Collected and Edited by ROBERT HUNT, F.R.S.
-
- With Illustrations by GEORGE CRUIKSHANK.
-
-
- London: CHATTO & WINDUS, 97 & 99 St. Martin’s Lane, W.C.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS.
-
-
- PAGE
- INTRODUCTION 1
- THE HORNED WOMEN 10
- THE LEGEND OF BALLYTOWTAS CASTLE 12
- A WOLF STORY 17
- THE EVIL EYE 20
- THE STOLEN BRIDE 27
- FAIRY MUSIC 29
- THE FAIRY DANCE 30
- FAIRY JUSTICE 32
- THE PRIEST’S SOUL 33
- THE FAIRY RACE 37
- THE TRIAL BY FIRE 39
- THE LADY WITCH 41
- ETHNA THE BRIDE 42
- THE FAIRIES’ REVENGE 46
- FAIRY HELP—THE PHOUKA 48
- THE FARMER PUNISHED 49
- THE FARMER’S WIFE 52
- THE MIDNIGHT RIDE 53
- THE LEPREHAUN 56
- THE LEGENDS OF THE WESTERN ISLANDS 59
- THE BRIDE’S DEATH-SONG 60
- THE CHILD’S DREAM 62
- THE FAIRY CHILD 64
- THE DOOM 67
- THE CLEARING FROM GUILT 69
- THE HOLY WELL AND THE MURDERER 70
- LEGENDS OF INNIS-SARK—A WOMAN’S CURSE 71
- LEGENDS OF THE DEAD IN THE WESTERN ISLANDS 75
- The Death Sign 75
- Kathleen 76
- November Eve 78
- The Dance of the Dead 80
- SUPERSTITIONS CONCERNING THE DEAD 81
- THE FATAL LOVE-CHARM 83
- THE FENIAN KNIGHTS 84
- RATHLIN ISLAND 86
- THE STRANGE GUESTS 86
- THE DEAD SOLDIER 87
- THE THREE GIFTS 88
- THE FAIRIES AS FALLEN ANGELS 89
- THE FAIRY CHANGELING 89
- FAIRY WILES 91
- SHAUN-MOR 91
-
- THE CAVE FAIRIES—
- The Tuatha-de-Danann 93
- Edain the Queen 94
- The Royal Steed 96
-
- EVIL SPELLS—
- Cathal the King 97
- The Poet’s Malediction 99
- Drimial Agus Thorial 100
- AN IRISH ADEPT OF THE ISLANDS 100
- THE MAY FESTIVAL 101
- MAY-DAY SUPERSTITIONS 106
-
- FESTIVALS—
- Candlemas 107
- Whitsuntide 108
- Whitsuntide Legend of the Fairy Horses 108
- NOVEMBER SPELLS 109
- NOVEMBER EVE 110
- A TERRIBLE REVENGE 112
-
- MIDSUMMER—
- The Baal Fires and Dances 113
- The Fairy Doctress 114
- MARRIAGE RITES 115
- THE DEAD 117
- THE WAKE ORGIES 119
- THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES 123
- THE POWER OF THE WORD 129
- THE POET AND THE KING 130
- THE SIDHE RACE 132
- MUSIC 133
- POET INSPIRATION—EODAIN THE POETESS 134
- THE BANSHEE 135
- QUEEN MAEVE 137
- DEATH SIGNS 138
- The Hartpole Doom 139
- SUPERSTITIONS 140
- THE FAIRY RATH 142
- FAIRY NATURE 142
- IRISH NATURE 144
-
- LEGENDS OF ANIMALS.
-
- CONCERNING DOGS 146
- CONCERNING CATS 151
- The King of the Cats 153
- The Demon Cat 154
- Cat Nature 156
- SEANCHAN THE BARD AND THE KING OF THE CATS 159
- THE BARDS 163
- KING ARTHUR AND THE CAT 166
- CONCERNING COWS 168
- Fairy Wiles 170
- THE DEAD HAND 172
- THE WICKED WIDOW 173
- THE BUTTER MYSTERY 175
-
- CONCERNING BIRDS—
- The Magpie 177
- The Wren 177
- The Raven and Water Wagtail 177
- The Cuckoo and Robin Redbreast 177
-
- CONCERNING LIVING CREATURES—
- The Cricket 178
- The Beetle 178
- The Hare 179
- The Weasel 179
-
-
- THE PROPERTIES OF HERBS AND THEIR USE IN MEDICINE 181
- A Love Potion 185
- Love Dreams 185
- To Cause Love 185
-
- MEDICAL SUPERSTITIONS AND ANCIENT CHARMS 186
- Against Sorrow 188
- To Win Love 189
- For the Night Fire (the Fever) 189
- For a Pain in the Side 189
- For the Measles 190
- For the Mad Fever 190
- Against Enemies 190
- To Extract a Thorn 190
- To Cause Hatred between Lovers 191
- For Love 191
- How to have Money Always 191
- For the Great Worm 191
- For Sore Eyes 191
- For Pains in the Body 192
- Against Drowning 192
- In Time of Battle 192
- For the Red Rash 193
- To Tame a Horse 193
- A very Ancient Charm against Wounds or Poisons 193
- For a Sore Breast 193
- For a Wound 194
- For the Evil Eye 194
- For St. Anthony’s Fire 194
- How to go Invisible 194
- For Pains 194
- For a Sprain 195
- To Cause Love 195
- For the Bite of a Mad Dog 195
- For Toothache 196
- For Freckles 196
- For a Burn 197
- For the Memory 197
- For the Falling Sickness 197
- For Chin-Cough 197
- For Rheumatism 198
- For a Stye on the Eyelid 198
- To Cure Warts 198
- For a Stitch in the Side 198
- For Weak Eyes 198
- For Water on the Brain 199
- For Hip Disease 199
- For the Mumps 199
- For Epilepsy 199
- For Depression of Heart 200
- For the Fairy Dart 200
-
- VARIOUS SUPERSTITIONS AND CURES 200
- To find Stolen Goods 207
- A Prayer against the Plague 207
- A Blessing 207
- A Cure for Cattle 207
- A Charm for Safety 208
- An Elixir of Potency 208
- For the Bite of a Mad Dog 208
- Dreams 208
- Fairy Doctors 209
- Charms by Crystals 209
- Alectromantia 210
- Fairy Power 210
-
- OMENS AND SUPERSTITIONS 211
- That Forbode Evil 211
- To Attract Bees 213
-
- SUPERSTITIONS OF THE ISLANDS—
- Concerning the Dead 213
- The Coastguard’s Fate 214
- Relics 214
-
- LEGENDS OF THE SAINTS.
-
- ST. PATRICK 215
- The Well of the Book 216
- St. Patrick and the Serpent 216
- St. Patrick and the Princesses 217
- The Poison Cup 217
- Divination 217
- The Blind Poet 218
- The Story of Breccan 218
- Bardic Privileges 219
- ST. CIARON 220
- ST. MARTIN 220
- ST. BRIDGET 222
- ST. KIERAN 223
- ST. KEVIN 223
- CHRISTIAN LEGENDS 224
-
- SWEARING STONES AND RELICS—
- The Cremave 225
- Relics for clearing from Guilt 226
- Innis-Murry 227
-
- MYSTERIES OF FAIRY POWER.
-
- THE EVIL STROKE 228
- THE CHANGELING 229
- THE FAIRY DOCTOR 231
- THE POET’S SPELL 233
- CHARM FOR THE FAIRY STROKE 233
- THE FARMER’S FATE 234
- THE FAIRY RATH 235
-
- THE HOLY WELLS.
-
- THE HOLY WELLS 236
- The White Stones 237
- The Sacred Trout 237
- ST. AUGUSTINE’S WELL 238
- THE GRILLED TROUT 238
- LEGEND OF NEAL-MOR 239
- ST. JOHN’S WELL 240
- THE WELL OF FIONN MA-COUL 240
- ST. SEENAN’S WELL 241
- KID-NA-GREINA 241
- THE WELL OF WORSHIP 243
- THE BRIDE’S WELL 243
- THE IRISH FAKIR 244
- SACRED TREES 246
- TOBER-NA-DARA 247
- LOUGH NEAGH 247
- THE DOCTOR AND THE FAIRY PRINCESS 248
- A HOLY WELL 250
- A SACRED ISLAND 251
- THE LAKE OF REVENGE 251
- SCENES AT A HOLY WELL 252
- LOUGH FOYLE 252
- THE HEN’S CASTLE 253
- SLIABH-MISH, COUNTY KERRY 254
- THE SKELLIGS OF KERRY 254
-
- POPULAR NOTIONS CONCERNING THE SIDHE RACE.
-
- THE SIDHE RACE 256
- THE HURLING MATCH 259
- THE RIDE WITH THE FAIRIES 260
- THE FAIRY SPY 263
- THE DARK HORSEMAN 264
- SHEELA-NA-SKEAN 267
- CAPTAIN WEBB, THE ROBBER CHIEF 270
- THE MAYO CAPTAIN AND FEENISH THE MARE 271
-
- SKETCHES OF THE IRISH PAST.
-
- THE BARDIC RACE 274
- THE ANCIENT RACE 276
- THE ANTIQUITIES OF IRELAND 278
- EARLY IRISH ART 287
- OUR ANCIENT CAPITAL 295
-
- SIR WILLIAM WILDE ON “THE ANCIENT RACES OF IRELAND” 329
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-The three great sources of knowledge respecting the shrouded part of
-humanity are the language, the mythology, and the ancient monuments of
-a country.
-
-From the language one learns the mental and social height to which
-a nation had reached at any given period in arts, habits, and
-civilization, with the relation of man to man, and to the material and
-visible world.
-
-The mythology of a people reveals their relation to a spiritual and
-invisible world; while the early monuments are solemn and eternal
-symbols of religious faith—rituals of stone in cromlech, pillar, shrine
-and tower, temples and tombs.
-
-The written word, or literature, comes last, the fullest and highest
-expression of the intellect and culture, and scientific progress of a
-nation.
-
-The Irish race were never much indebted to the written word. The
-learned class, the ollamhs, dwelt apart and kept their knowledge
-sacred. The people therefore lived entirely upon the traditions
-of their forefathers, blended with the new doctrines taught by
-Christianity; so that the popular belief became, in time, an amalgam of
-the pagan myths and the Christian legend, and these two elements remain
-indissolubly united to this day. The world, in fact, is a volume, a
-serial rather, going on for six thousand years, but of which the Irish
-peasant has scarcely yet turned the first page.
-
-The present work deals only with the mythology, or the fantastic creed
-of the Irish respecting the invisible world—strange and mystical
-superstitions, brought thousands of years ago from their Aryan home,
-but which still, even in the present time, affect all the modes of
-thinking and acting in the daily life of the people.
-
-Amongst the educated classes in all nations, the belief in the
-supernatural, acting directly on life and constantly interfering with
-the natural course of human action, is soon dissipated and gradually
-disappears, for the knowledge of natural laws solves many mysteries
-that were once inexplicable; yet much remains unsolved, even to the
-philosopher, of the mystic relation between the material and the
-spiritual world. Whilst to the masses—the uneducated—who know nothing
-of the fixed eternal laws of nature, every phenomenon seems to result
-from the direct action of some nonhuman power, invisible though ever
-present; able to confer all benefits, yet implacable if offended, and
-therefore to be propitiated.
-
-The superstition, then, of the Irish peasant is the instinctive belief
-in the existence of certain unseen agencies that influence all human
-life; and with the highly sensitive organization of their race, it is
-not wonderful that the people live habitually under the shadow and
-dread of invisible powers which, whether working for good or evil, are
-awful and mysterious to the uncultured mind that sees only the strange
-results produced by certain forces, but knows nothing of approximate
-causes.
-
-Many of the Irish legends, superstitions, and ancient charms now
-collected were obtained chiefly from oral communications made by the
-peasantry themselves, either in Irish or in the Irish-English which
-preserves so much of the expressive idiom of the antique tongue.
-
-These narrations were taken down by competent persons skilled in both
-languages, and as far as possible in the very words of the narrator; so
-that much of the primitive simplicity of the style has been retained,
-while the legends have a peculiar and special value as coming direct
-from the national heart.
-
-In a few years such a collection would be impossible, for the old race
-is rapidly passing away to other lands, and in the vast working-world
-of America, with all the new influences of light and progress, the
-young generation, though still loving the land of their fathers, will
-scarcely find leisure to dream over the fairy-haunted hills and lakes
-and raths of ancient Ireland.
-
-I must disclaim, however, all desire to be considered a melancholy
-_Laudatrix temporis acti_. These studies of the Irish past are simply
-the expression of my love for the beautiful island that gave me my
-first inspiration, my quickest intellectual impulses, and the strongest
-and best sympathies with genius and country possible to a woman’s
-nature.
-
- FRANCESCA SPERANZA WILDE.
-
-
-
-
- ANCIENT LEGENDS.
-
-
-INTRODUCTION.
-
-
-The ancient legends of all nations of the world, on which from age
-to age the generations of man have been nurtured, bear so striking a
-resemblance to each other that we are led to believe there was once a
-period when the whole human family was of one creed and one language.
-But with increasing numbers came the necessity of dispersion; and that
-ceaseless migration was commenced of the tribes of the earth from the
-Eastern cradle of their race which has now continued for thousands of
-years with undiminished activity.
-
-From the beautiful Eden-land at the head of the Persian Gulf, where
-creeds and culture rose to life, the first migrations emanated, and
-were naturally directed along the line of the great rivers, by the
-Euphrates and the Tigris and southward by the Nile; and there the first
-mighty cities of the world were built, and the first mighty kingdoms of
-the East began to send out colonies to take possession of the unknown
-silent world around them. From Persia, Assyria, and Egypt, to Greece
-and the Isles of the Sea, went forth the wandering tribes, carrying
-with them, as signs of their origin, broken fragments of the primal
-creed, and broken idioms of the primal tongue—those early pages in the
-history of the human race, eternal and indestructible, which hundreds
-of centuries have not been able to obliterate from the mind of man.
-
-But as the early tribes diverged from the central parent stock,
-the creed and the language began to assume new forms, according as
-new habits of life and modes of thought were developed amongst the
-wandering people, by the influence of climate and the contemplation
-of new and striking natural phenomena in the lands where they found a
-resting-place or a home. Still, amongst all nations a basis remained
-of the primal creed and language, easily to be traced through all the
-mutations caused by circumstances in human thought, either by higher
-culture or by the debasement to which both language and symbols are
-subjected amongst rude and illiterate tribes.
-
-To reconstruct the primal creed and language of humanity from these
-scattered and broken fragments, is the task which is now exciting so
-keenly the energies of the ardent and learned ethnographers of Europe;
-as yet, indeed, with but small success as regards language, for not
-more, perhaps, than twenty words which the philologists consider may
-have belonged to the original tongue have been discovered; that is,
-certain objects or ideas are found represented in all languages by the
-same words, and therefore the philologist concludes that these words
-must have been associated with the ideas from the earliest dawn of
-language; and as the words express chiefly the relations of the human
-family to each other, they remained fixed in the minds of the wandering
-tribes, untouched and unchanged by all the diversities of their
-subsequent experience of life.
-
-Meanwhile, in Europe there is diligent study of the ancient myths,
-legends, and traditions of the world, in order to extract from them
-that information respecting the early modes of thought prevalent
-amongst the primitive race, and also the lines of the first migrations,
-which no other monuments of antiquity are so well able to give.
-Traditions, like rays of light, take their colour from the medium
-through which they pass; but the scientific mythographic student
-knows how to eliminate the accidental addition from the true primal
-basis, which remains fixed and unchangeable; and from the numerous
-myths and legends of the nations of the earth, which bear so striking
-a conformity to each other that they point to a common origin, he
-will be able to reconstruct the first articles of belief in the creed
-of humanity, and to pronounce almost with certainty upon the primal
-source of the lines of human life that now traverse the globe in all
-directions. This source of all life, creed, and culture now on earth,
-there is no reason to doubt, will be found in _Iran_, or Persia as we
-call it, and in the ancient legends and language of the great Iranian
-people, the head and noblest type of the Aryan races. Endowed with
-splendid physical beauty, noble intellect, and a rich musical language,
-the Iranians had also a lofty sense of the relation between man and
-the spiritual world. They admitted no idols into their temples; their
-God was the One Supreme Creator and Upholder of all things, whose
-symbol was the sun and the pure, elemental fire. But as the world grew
-older and more wicked the pure primal doctrines were obscured by human
-fancies, the symbol came to be worshipped in place of the God, and the
-debased idolatries of Babylon, Assyria, and the Canaanite nations were
-the result. Egypt—grave, wise, learned, mournful Egypt—retained most
-of the primal truth; but truth was held by the priests as too precious
-for the crowd, and so they preserved it carefully for themselves and
-their own caste. They alone knew the ancient and cryptic meaning of the
-symbols; the people were allowed only to see the outward and visible
-sign.
-
-From Egypt, philosophy, culture, art, and religion came to Greece, but
-the Greeks moulded these splendid elements after their own fashion, and
-poured the radiance of beauty over the grave and gloomy mysticism of
-Egypt. Everything hideous, terrible, and revolting was banished from
-the Greek Mythology. The Greeks constructed no theory of a devil, and
-believed in no hell, as a distinct and eternal abode for the lost souls
-of men. The Greek gods were divinely beautiful, and each divinity in
-turn was ready to help the mortal that invoked him. The dead in Hades
-mourned their fate because they could no longer enjoy the glorious
-beauty of life, but no hard and chilling dogmas doomed them there to
-the tortures of eternal punishment. Earth, air, the heavens and the
-sea, the storms and sunshine, the forests and flowers and the purple
-grapes with which they crowned a god, were all to the Greek poet-mind
-the manifestations of an all-pervading spiritual power and life. A
-sublime Pantheism was their creed, that sees gods in everything, yet
-with one Supreme God over all. Freedom, beauty, art, light, and joy,
-were the elements of the Greek religion, while the Eternal Wisdom, the
-Great Athené of the Parthenon, was the peculiar and selected divinity
-of their own half divine race.
-
-Meanwhile other branches of the primal Iranian stock were spreading
-over the savage central forests of Europe, where they laid the
-foundation of the great Teuton and Gothic races, the destined
-world-rulers; but Nature to them was a gloomy and awful mother,
-and life seemed an endless warfare against the fierce and powerful
-elemental demons of frost and snow and darkness, by whom the beautiful
-Sun-god was slain, and who reigned triumphant in that fearful season
-when the earth was iron and the air was ice, and no beneficent God
-seemed near to help. Hideous idols imaged these unseen powers, who were
-propitiated by sanguinary rites; and the men and the god they fashioned
-were alike as fierce and cruel as the wild beasts of the forest, and
-the aspects of the savage nature around them.
-
-Still the waves of human life kept rolling westward until they surged
-over all the lands and islands of the Great Sea, and the wandering
-mariners, seeking new homes, passed through the Pillars of Hercules out
-into the Western Ocean, and coasting along by the shores of Spain and
-France, founded nations that still bear the impress of their Eastern
-origin, and are known in history as the Celtic race; while the customs,
-usages, and traditions which their forefathers had learnt in Egypt or
-Greece were carefully preserved by them, and transmitted as heirlooms
-to the colonies they founded. From Spain the early mariners easily
-reached the verdant island of the West in which we Irish are more
-particularly interested. And here in our beautiful Ireland the last
-wave of the great Iranian migration finally settled. Further progress
-was impossible—the unknown ocean seemed to them the limits of the
-world. And thus the wanderers of the primal race, with their fragments
-of the ancient creed and mythic poet-lore, and their peculiar dialect
-of the ancient tongue, formed, as it were, a sediment here which still
-retains its peculiar affinity with the parent land—though the changes
-and chances of three thousand years have swept over the people, the
-legends, and the language. It is, therefore, in Ireland, above all,
-that the nature and origin of the primitive races of Europe should be
-studied. Even the form of the Celtic head shows a decided conformity to
-that of the Greek races, while it differs essentially from the Saxon
-and Gothic types. This is one of the many proofs in support of the
-theory that the Celtic people in their westward course to the Atlantic
-travelled by the coasts of the Mediterranean, as all along that line
-the same cranial formation is found. Philologists also affirm that the
-Irish language is nearer to Sanskrit than any other of the living and
-spoken languages of Europe; while the legends and myths of Ireland can
-be readily traced to the far East, but have nothing in common with the
-fierce and weird superstitions of Northern mythology.
-
-This study of legendary lore, as a foundation for the history of
-humanity, is now recognized as such an important branch of ethnology
-that a journal entirely devoted to comparative mythology has been
-recently started in Paris, to which all nations are invited to
-contribute—Sclaves, Teutons, and Celts, Irish legends being considered
-specially important, as containing more of the primitive elements
-than those of other Western nations. All other countries have been
-repeatedly overwhelmed by alien tribes and peoples and races, but
-the Irish have remained unchanged, and in place of adopting readily
-the usages of invaders they have shown such remarkable powers of
-fascination that the invaders themselves became _Hibernicis ipsis
-Hiberniores_. The Danes held the east coast of Ireland for three
-hundred years, yet there is no trace of Thor or Odin or the Frost
-Giants, or of the Great World-serpent in Irish legend; but if we go
-back in the history of the world to the beginning of things, when
-the Iranian people were the only teachers of humanity, we come upon
-the true ancient source of Irish legend, and find that the original
-materials have been but very slightly altered, while amongst other
-nations the ground-work has been overlaid with a dense palimpsest of
-their own devising, suggested by their peculiar local surroundings.
-
-Amongst the earliest religious symbols of the world are the Tree,
-the Woman, and the Serpent—memories, no doubt, of the legend of
-Paradise; and the reverence for certain sacred trees has prevailed in
-Persia from the most ancient times, and become diffused among all the
-Iranian nations. It was the custom in Iran to hang costly garments
-on the branches as votive offerings; and it is recorded that Xerxes
-before going to battle invoked victory by the Sacred Tree, and hung
-jewels and rich robes on the boughs. And the poet Saadi narrates an
-anecdote concerning trees which has the true Oriental touch of mournful
-suggestion:—He was once, he says, the guest of a very rich old man who
-had a son remarkable for his beauty. One night the old man said to
-him, “During my whole life I never had but this son. Near this place
-is a Sacred Tree to which men resort to offer up their petitions. Many
-nights at the foot of this tree I besought God until He bestowed on me
-this son.” Not long after Saadi overheard this young man say in a low
-voice to his friend, “How happy should I be to know where that Sacred
-Tree grows, in order that I might implore God for the death of my
-father.”
-
-The poorer class in Persia, not being able to make offerings of costly
-garments, are in the habit of tying bits of coloured stuffs on the
-boughs, and these rags are considered to have a special virtue in
-curing diseases. The trees are often near a well or by a saint’s grave,
-and are then looked upon as peculiarly sacred.
-
-This account might have been written for Ireland, for the belief and
-the ceremonial are precisely similar, and are still found existing to
-this day both in _Iran_ and in _Erin_. But all trees were not held
-sacred—only those that bore no eatable fruit that could nourish men;
-a lingering memory of the tree of evil fruit may have caused this
-prejudice, while the Tree of Life was eagerly sought for, with its
-promised gift of immortality. In Persia the plane-tree was specially
-reverenced; in Egypt, the palm; in Greece, the wild olive; and the oak
-amongst the Celtic nations. Sometimes small tapers were lit amongst the
-branches, to simulate by fire the presence of divinity. It is worthy of
-note, while on the subject of Irish and Iranian affinities, that the
-old Persian word for tree is _dar_, and the Irish call their sacred
-tree, the oak, _darragh_.[1]
-
- [1] The terms Dryad and Druid may be compared as containing the same
- root and reference.
-
-The belief in a race of supernatural beings, midway between man and the
-Supreme God, beautiful and beneficent, a race that had never known the
-weight of human life, was also part of the creed of the Iranian people.
-They called them _Peris_, or _Feroüers_ (fairies); and they have some
-pretty legends concerning the beautiful _Dukhtari Shah Periân_, the
-“Daughter of the King of the Fairies,” for a sight of whose beauty
-men pine away in vain desire, but if it is granted to them once to
-behold her, they die. Every nation believes in the existence of these
-mysterious spirits, with mystic and powerful influence over human life
-and actions, but each nation represents them differently, according to
-national habits and national surroundings. Thus, the Russians believe
-in the phantom of the Ukraine, a beautiful young girl robed in white,
-who meets the wanderer on the lonely snow steppes, and lulls him by
-her kisses into that fatal sleep from which he never more awakens. The
-legends of the Scandinavians, also, are all set in the framework of
-their own experiences; the rending and crash of the ice is the stroke
-of the god Thor’s hammer; the rime is the beard of the Frost Giant;
-and when Balder, their Sun-god, is beginning to die at Midsummer, they
-kindle pine-branches to light him on his downward path to hell; and
-when he is returning to the upper world, after the winter solstice,
-they burn the Yule-log, and hang lights on the fir-trees to illuminate
-his upward path. These traditions are a remnant of the ancient sun
-worship, but the peasants who kindle the Baal fires at Midsummer, and
-the upper classes who light up the brilliant Christmas-tree, have
-forgotten the origin of the custom, though the world-old symbol and
-usage is preserved.
-
-The _Sidhe_, or Fairies, of Ireland, still preserve all the gentle
-attributes of their ancient Persian race, for in the soft and equable
-climate of Erin there were no terrible manifestations of nature to be
-symbolized by new images; and the genial, laughter-loving elves were in
-themselves the best and truest expression of Irish nature that could
-have been invented. The fairies loved music and dancing and frolic;
-and, above all things, to be let alone, and not to be interfered with
-as regarded their peculiar fairy habits, customs, and pastimes. They
-had also, like the Irish, a fine sense of the right and just, and a
-warm love for the liberal hand and kindly word. All the solitudes of
-the island were peopled by these bright, happy, beautiful beings,
-and to the Irish nature, with its need of the spiritual, its love
-of the vague, mystic, dreamy, and supernatural, there was something
-irresistibly fascinating in the belief that gentle spirits were around,
-filled with sympathy for the mortal who suffered wrong or needed help.
-But the fairies were sometimes wilful and capricious as children, and
-took dire revenge if any one built over their fairy circles, or looked
-at them when combing their long yellow hair in the sunshine, or dancing
-in the woods, or floating on the lakes. Death was the penalty to all
-who approached too near, or pried too curiously into the mysteries of
-nature.
-
-To the Irish peasant earth and air were filled with these mysterious
-beings, half-loved, half-feared by them; and therefore they were
-propitiated by flattery, and called “the good people,” as the Greeks
-call the dread goddesses “the Eumenides.” Their voices were heard
-in the mountain echo, and their forms seen in the purple and golden
-mountain mist; they whispered amidst the perfumed hawthorn branches;
-the rush of the autumn leaves was the scamper of little elves—red,
-yellow, and brown—wind-delven, and dancing in their glee; and the
-bending of the waving barley was caused by the flight of the Elf King
-and his Court across the fields. They danced with soundless feet,
-and their step was so light that the drops of dew they danced on
-only trembled, but did not break. The fairy music was low and sweet,
-“blinding sweet,” like that of the great god Pan by the river; they
-lived only on the nectar in the cups of the flowers, though in their
-fairy palaces sumptuous banquets were offered to the mortals they
-carried off—but woe to the mortal who tasted of fairy food; to eat was
-fatal. All the evil in the world has come by eating; if Eve had only
-resisted that apple our race might still be in Paradise. The Sidhe look
-with envy on the beautiful young human children, and steal them when
-they can; and the children of a Sidhe and a mortal mother are reputed
-to grow up strong and powerful, but with evil and dangerous natures.
-There is also a belief that every seven years the fairies are obliged
-to deliver up a victim to the Evil One, and to save their own people
-they try to abduct some beautiful young mortal girl, and her they hand
-over to the Prince of Darkness.
-
-Dogmatic religion and science have long since killed the mythopoetic
-faculty in cultured Europe. It only exists now, naturally and
-instinctively, in children, poets, and the childlike races, like the
-Irish—simple, joyous, reverent, and unlettered, and who have remained
-unchanged for centuries, walled round by their language from the rest
-of Europe, through which separating veil science, culture, and the cold
-mockery of the sceptic have never yet penetrated.
-
-Christianity was readily accepted by the Irish. The pathetic tale
-of the beautiful young Virgin-Mother and the Child-God, for central
-objects, touched all the deepest chords of feeling in the tender,
-loving, and sympathetic Irish heart. The legends of ancient times were
-not overthrown by it, however, but taken up and incorporated with the
-new Christian faith. The holy wells and the sacred trees remained,
-and were even made holier by association with a saint’s name. And to
-this day the old mythology holds its ground with a force and vitality
-untouched by any symptoms of weakness or decay. The Greeks, who are
-of the same original race as our people, rose through the influence
-of the highest culture to the fulness and perfectness of eternal
-youth; but the Irish, without culture, are eternal children, with all
-the childlike instincts of superstition still strong in them, and
-capable of believing all things, because to doubt requires knowledge.
-They never, like the Greeks, attained to the conception of a race
-of beings nobler than themselves—men stronger and more gifted, with
-the immortal fire of a god in their veins; women divinely beautiful,
-or divinely inspired; but, also, the Irish never defaced the image
-of God in their hearts by infidelity or irreligion. One of the most
-beautiful and sublimely touching records in all human history is that
-of the unswerving devotion of the Irish people to their ancient faith,
-through persecutions and penal enactments more insulting and degrading
-than were ever inflicted in any other land by one Christian sect upon
-another.
-
-With this peculiarly reverential nature it would be impossible to
-make the Irish a nation of sceptics, even if a whole legion of German
-Rationalists came amongst them to preach a crusade against all belief
-in the spiritual and the unseen. And the old traditions of their race
-have likewise taken firm hold in their hearts, because they are an
-artistic people, and require objects for their adoration and love, not
-mere abstractions to be accepted by their reason. And they are also a
-nation of poets; the presence of God is ever near them, and the saints
-and angels, and the shadowy beings of earth and air are perpetually
-drawing their minds, through mingled love and fear, to the infinite
-and invisible world. Probably not one tradition or custom that had
-its origin in a religious belief has been lost in Ireland during the
-long course of ages since the first people from Eastern lands arrived
-and settled on our shores. The Baal fires are still lit at Midsummer,
-though no longer in honour of the sun, but of St. John; and the
-peasants still make their cattle pass between two fires—not, indeed,
-as of old, in the name of Moloch, but of some patron saint. That all
-Irish legends point to the East for their origin, not to the North,
-is certain; to a warm land, not one of icebergs, and thunder crashes
-of the rending of ice-bound rivers, but to a region where the shadow
-of trees, and a cool draught from the sparkling well were life-giving
-blessings. Well-worship could not have originated in a humid country
-like Ireland, where wells can be found at every step, and sky and land
-are ever heavy and saturated with moisture. It must have come from
-an Eastern people, wanderers in a dry and thirsty land, where the
-discovery of a well seemed like the interposition of an angel in man’s
-behalf.
-
-We are told also by the ancient chroniclers that serpent-worship once
-prevailed in Ireland, and that St. Patrick hewed down the serpent idol
-_Crom-Cruadh_ (the great worm) and cast it into the Boyne (from whence
-arose the legend that St. Patrick banished all venomous things from
-the island). Now as the Irish never could have seen a serpent, none
-existing in Ireland, this worship must have come from the far East,
-where this beautiful and deadly creature is looked upon as the symbol
-of the Evil One, and worshipped and propitiated by votive offerings,
-as all evil things were in the early world, in the hope of turning
-away their evil hatred from man, and to induce them to show mercy and
-pity; just as the Egyptians propitiated the sacred crocodile by subtle
-flatteries and hung costly jewels in its ears. The Irish, indeed, do
-not seem to have originated any peculiar or national cultus. Their
-funeral ceremonies recall those of Egypt and Greece and other ancient
-Eastern climes, from whence they brought their customs of the Wake,
-the death chant, the mourning women, and the funeral games. In Sparta,
-on the death of a king or great chief, they had a wake and “keen” not
-common to the rest of Greece, but which they said they learned from the
-Phœnicians; and this peculiar usage bears a striking resemblance to
-the Irish practice. All the virtues of the dead were recited, and the
-Greek “Eleleu,” the same cry as the “Ul-lu-lu” of the Irish, was keened
-over the corpse by the chorus of hired mourning women. The custom of
-selecting women in place of men for the chorus of lamentation prevailed
-throughout all the ancient world, as if an open display of grief was
-thought beneath the dignity of man. It was Cassandra gave the keynote
-for the wail over Hector, and Helen took the lead in reciting praises
-to his honour. The death chants in Egypt, Arabia, and Abyssinia all
-bear a marked resemblance to the Irish; indeed the mourning cry is the
-same in all, and the Egyptian lamentation “Hi-loo-loo! Hi-loo-loo!”
-cried over the dead, was probably the original form of the Irish wail.
-
-The Greeks always endeavoured to lessen the terrors of death, and for
-this reason they established funeral games, and the funeral ceremonies
-took the form of a festival, where they ate and drank and poured
-libations of wine in honour of the dead. The Irish had also their
-funeral games and peculiar dances, when they threw off their upper
-garments, and holding hands in a circle, moved in a slow measure round
-a woman crouched in the centre, with her hands covering her face.
-Another singular part of the ceremony was the entrance of a woman
-wearing a cow’s head and horns, as Io appears upon the scene in the
-Prometheus of Æschylus. This woman was probably meant to represent the
-horned or crescented moon, the antique Diana, the Goddess of Death.
-The custom of throwing off the garments no doubt originally signified
-the casting off the garment of the flesh. We brought nothing into this
-world, and it is certain we carry nothing out. The soul must stand
-unveiled before God.
-
-In the islands off the West Coast of Ireland, where the most ancient
-superstitions still exist, they have a strange custom. No funeral
-wail is allowed to be raised until three hours have elapsed from the
-moment of death, because, they say, the sound of the cries would
-hinder the soul from speaking to God when it stands before Him, and
-waken up the two great dogs that are watching for the souls of the
-dead in order that they may devour them—and the Lord of Heaven Himself
-cannot hinder them if once they waken. This tradition of watching by
-the dead in silence, while the soul stands before God, is a fine and
-solemn superstition, which must have had its origin amongst a people
-of intense faith in the invisible world, and is probably of great
-antiquity.
-
-The sound of the Irish keen is wonderfully pathetic. No one could
-listen to the long-sustained minor wail of the “Ul-lu-lu” without
-strong emotion and even tears; and once heard it can never be
-forgotten. Nor is there anything derogatory to grief in the idea
-of hired mourners; on the contrary, it is a splendid tribute to
-the dead to order their praises to be recited publicly before the
-assembled friends; while there is something indescribably impressive
-in the aspect of the mourning women crouched around the bier with
-shrouded heads, as they rock themselves to and fro and intone the
-solemn, ancient death-song with a measured cadence, sometimes rising
-to a piercing wail. They seem like weird and shadowy outlines of an
-old-world vision, and at once the imagination is carried back to the
-far-distant East, and the time when all these funeral symbols had a
-mysterious and awful meaning. Sometimes a wail of genuine and bitter
-grief interrupts the chant of the hired mourners. An Irish keen which
-was taken down from the lips of a bereaved mother some years ago, runs
-thus in the literal English version—
-
-“O women, look on me! Look on me, women! Have you ever seen any sorrow
-like mine? Have you ever seen the like of me in my sorrow? Arrah, then,
-my darling, my darling, ’tis your mother that calls you. How long you
-are sleeping. Do you see all the people round you, my darling, and I
-sorely weeping? Arrah, what is this paleness on your face? Sure there
-was no equal to it in Erin for beauty and fairness, and your hair was
-heavy as the wing of a raven, and your skin was whiter than the hand of
-a lady. Is it the stranger must carry me to my grave, and my son lying
-here?”
-
-This touching lament is so thoroughly Greek in form and sentiment that
-it might be taken for part of a chorus from the Hecuba of Euripides.
-Even the “Arrah” reminds one of a Greek word used frequently by the
-Greeks when commencing a sentence or asking a question, although the
-resemblance may be only superficial.
-
-The tales and legends told by the peasants in the Irish vernacular
-are much more weird and strange, and have much more of the old-world
-colouring than the ordinary fairy tales narrated in English by the
-people, as may be seen by the following mythical story, translated from
-the Irish, and which is said to be a thousand years old:—
-
-
-THE HORNED WOMEN.
-
-
-A rich woman sat up late one night carding and preparing wool, while
-all the family and servants were asleep. Suddenly a knock was given at
-the door, and a voice called—“Open! open!”
-
-“Who is there?” said the woman of the house.
-
-“I am the Witch of the One Horn,” was answered.
-
-The mistress, supposing that one of her neighbours had called and
-required assistance, opened the door, and a woman entered, having in
-her hand a pair of wool carders, and bearing a horn on her forehead,
-as if growing there. She sat down by the fire in silence, and began to
-card the wool with violent haste. Suddenly she paused and said aloud:
-“Where are the women? They delay too long.”
-
-Then a second knock came to the door, and a voice called as
-before—“Open! open!”
-
-The mistress felt herself constrained to rise and open to the call, and
-immediately a second witch entered, having two horns on her forehead,
-and in her hand a wheel for spinning the wool.
-
-“Give me place,” she said; “I am the Witch of the Two Horns,” and she
-began to spin as quick as lightning.
-
-And so the knocks went on, and the call was heard, and the witches
-entered, until at last twelve women sat round the fire—the first with
-one horn, the last with twelve horns. And they carded the thread, and
-turned their spinning wheels, and wound and wove, all singing together
-an ancient rhyme, but no word did they speak to the mistress of the
-house. Strange to hear, and frightful to look upon were these twelve
-women, with their horns and their wheels; and the mistress felt near
-to death, and she tried to rise that she might call for help, but she
-could not move, nor could she utter a word or a cry, for the spell of
-the witches was upon her.
-
-Then one of them called to her in Irish and said—
-
-“Rise, woman, and make us a cake.”
-
-Then the mistress searched for a vessel to bring water from the well
-that she might mix the meal and make the cake, but she could find none.
-And they said to her—
-
-“Take a sieve and bring water in it.”
-
-And she took the sieve and went to the well; but the water poured from
-it, and she could fetch none for the cake, and she sat down by the well
-and wept. Then a voice came by her and said—
-
-“Take yellow clay and moss and bind them together and plaster the sieve
-so that it will hold.”
-
-This she did, and the sieve held the water for the cake. And the voice
-said again—
-
-“Return, and when thou comest to the north angle of the house, cry
-aloud three times and say, ‘The mountain of the Fenian women and the
-sky over it is all on fire.’”
-
-And she did so.
-
-When the witches inside heard the call, a great and terrible cry broke
-from their lips and they rushed forth with wild lamentations and
-shrieks, and fled away to Slieve-namon, where was their chief abode.
-But the Spirit of the Well bade the mistress of the house to enter
-and prepare her home against the enchantments of the witches if they
-returned again.
-
-And first, to break their spells, she sprinkled the water in which
-she had washed her child’s feet (the feet-water) outside the door on
-the threshold; secondly, she took the cake which the witches had made
-in her absence, of meal mixed with the blood drawn from the sleeping
-family. And she broke the cake in bits, and placed a bit in the mouth
-of each sleeper, and they were restored; and she took the cloth they
-had woven and placed it half in and half out of the chest with the
-padlock; and lastly, she secured the door with a great cross-beam
-fastened in the jambs, so that they could not enter. And having done
-these things she waited.
-
-Not long were the witches in coming back, and they raged and called for
-vengeance.
-
-“Open! Open!” they screamed. “Open, feet-water!”
-
-“I cannot,” said the feet-water, “I am scattered on the ground and my
-path is down to the Lough.”
-
-“Open, open, wood and tree and beam!” they cried to the door.
-
-“I cannot,” said the door; “for the beam is fixed in the jambs and I
-have no power to move.”
-
-“Open, open, cake that we have made and mingled with blood,” they cried
-again.
-
-“I cannot,” said the cake, “for I am broken and bruised, and my blood
-is on the lips of the sleeping children.”
-
-Then the witches rushed through the air with great cries, and fled back
-to Slieve-namon, uttering strange curses on the Spirit of the Well,
-who had wished their ruin; but the woman and the house were left in
-peace, and a mantle dropped by one of the witches in her flight was
-kept hung up by the mistress as a sign of the night’s awful contest;
-and this mantle was in possession of the same family from generation to
-generation for five hundred years after.
-
-
-THE LEGEND OF BALLYTOWTAS CASTLE.
-
-
-The next tale I shall select is composed in a lighter and more modern
-spirit. All the usual elements of a fairy tale are to be found in it,
-but the story is new to the nursery folk, and, if well illustrated,
-would make a pleasant and novel addition to the rather worn-out legends
-on which the children of many generations have been hitherto subsisting.
-
-In old times there lived where Ballytowtas Castle now stands a poor
-man named Towtas. It was in the time when manna fell to the earth with
-the dew of evening, and Towtas lived by gathering the manna, and thus
-supported himself, for he was a poor man, and had nothing else.
-
-One day a pedlar came by that way with a fair young daughter.
-
-“Give us a night’s lodging,” he said to Towtas, “for we are weary.”
-
-And Towtas did so.
-
-Next morning, when they were going away, his heart longed for the young
-girl, and he said to the pedlar, “Give me your daughter for my wife.”
-
-“How will you support her?” asked the pedlar.
-
-“Better than you can,” answered Towtas, “for she can never want.”
-
-Then he told him all about the manna; how he went out every morning
-when it was lying on the ground with the dew, and gathered it, as his
-father and forefathers had done before him, and lived on it all their
-lives, so that he had never known want nor any of his people.
-
-Then the girl showed she would like to stay with the young man, and
-the pedlar consented, and they were married, Towtas and the fair young
-maiden; and the pedlar left them and went his way. So years went on,
-and they were very happy and never wanted; and they had one son, a
-bright, handsome youth, and as clever as he was comely.
-
-But in due time old Towtas died, and after her husband was buried, the
-woman went out to gather the manna as she had seen him do, when the dew
-lay on the ground; but she soon grew tired and said to herself, “Why
-should I do this thing every day? I’ll just gather now enough to do the
-week and then I can have rest.”
-
-So she gathered up great heaps of it greedily, and went her way into
-the house. But the sin of greediness lay on her evermore; and not a bit
-of manna fell with the dew that evening, nor ever again. And she was
-poor, and faint with hunger, and had to go out and work in the fields
-to earn the morsel that kept her and her son alive; and she begged
-pence from the people as they went into chapel, and this paid for her
-son’s schooling; so he went on with his learning, and no one in the
-county was like him for beauty and knowledge.
-
-One day he heard the people talking of a great lord that lived up in
-Dublin, who had a daughter so handsome that her like was never seen;
-and all the fine young gentlemen were dying about her, but she would
-take none of them. And he came home to his mother and said, “I shall go
-see this great lord’s daughter. Maybe the luck will be mine above all
-the fine young gentlemen that love her.”
-
-“Go along, poor fool,” said the mother, “how can the poor stand before
-the rich?”
-
-But he persisted. “If I die on the road,” he said, “I’ll try it.”
-
-“Wait, then,” she answered, “till Sunday, and whatever I get I’ll give
-you half of it.” So she gave him half of the pence she gathered at the
-chapel door, and bid him go in the name of God.
-
-He hadn’t gone far when he met a poor man who asked him for a trifle
-for God’s sake. So he gave him something out of his mother’s money and
-went on. Again, another met him, and begged for a trifle to buy food,
-for the sake of God, and he gave him something also, and then went on.
-
-“Give me a trifle for God’s sake,” cried a voice, and he saw a third
-poor man before him.
-
-“I have nothing left,” said Towtas, “but a few pence; if I give them, I
-shall have nothing for food and must die of hunger. But come with me,
-and whatever I can buy for this I shall share with you.” And as they
-were going on to the inn he told all his story to the beggar man, and
-how he wanted to go to Dublin, but had now no money. So they came to
-the inn, and he called for a loaf and a drink of milk. “Cut the loaf,”
-he said to the beggar. “You are the oldest.”
-
-“I won’t,” said the other, for he was ashamed, but Towtas made him.
-
-And so the beggar cut the loaf, but though they ate, it never grew
-smaller, and though they drank as they liked of the milk, it never
-grew less. Then Towtas rose up to pay, but when the landlady came and
-looked, “How is this?” she said. “You have eaten nothing. I’ll not take
-your money, poor boy,” but he made her take some; and they left the
-place, and went on their way together.
-
-“Now,” said the beggar man, “you have been three times good to me
-to-day, for thrice I have met you, and you gave me help for the sake of
-God each time. See, now, I can help also,” and he reached a gold ring
-to the handsome youth. “Wherever you place that ring, and wish for it,
-gold will come—bright gold, so that you can never want while you have
-it.”
-
-Then Towtas put the ring first in one pocket and then in another, until
-all his pockets were so heavy with gold that he could scarcely walk;
-but when he turned to thank the friendly beggar man, he had disappeared.
-
-So, wondering to himself at all his adventures, he went on, until he
-came at last in sight of the lord’s palace, which was beautiful to see;
-but he would not enter in until he went and bought fine clothes, and
-made himself as grand as any prince; and then he went boldly up, and
-they invited him in, for they said, “Surely he is a king’s son.” And
-when dinner-hour came the lord’s daughter linked her arm with Towtas,
-and smiled on him. And he drank of the rich wine, and was mad with
-love; but at last the wine overcame him, and the servants had to carry
-him to his bed; and in going into his room he dropped the ring from his
-finger, but knew it not.
-
-Now, in the morning, the lord’s daughter came by, and cast her eyes
-upon the door of his chamber, and there close by it was the ring she
-had seen him wear.
-
-“Ah,” she said, “I’ll tease him now about his ring.” And she put it
-in her box, and wished that she were as rich as a king’s daughter,
-that so the king’s son might marry her; and, behold, the box filled up
-with gold, so that she could not shut it; and she put it from her into
-another box, and that filled also; and then she was frightened at the
-ring, and put it at last in her pocket as the safest place.
-
-But when Towtas awoke and missed the ring, his heart was grieved.
-
-“Now, indeed,” he said, “my luck is gone.”
-
-And he inquired of all the servants, and then of the lord’s daughter,
-and she laughed, by which he knew she had it; but no coaxing would get
-it from her, so when all was useless he went away, and set out again to
-reach his old home.
-
-And he was very mournful and threw himself down on the ferns near an
-old fort, waiting till night came on, for he feared to go home in the
-daylight lest the people should laugh at him for his folly. And about
-dusk three cats came out of the fort talking to each other.
-
-“How long our cook is away,” said one.
-
-“What can have happened to him?” said another.
-
-And as they were grumbling a fourth cat came up.
-
-“What delayed you?” they all asked angrily.
-
-Then he told his story—how he had met Towtas and given him the ring.
-“And I just went,” he said, “to the lord’s palace to see how the young
-man behaved; and I was leaping over the dinner-table when the lord’s
-knife struck my tail and three drops of blood fell upon his plate, but
-he never saw it and swallowed them with his meat. So now he has three
-kittens inside him and is dying of agony, and can never be cured until
-he drinks three draughts of the water of the well of Ballytowtas.”
-
-So when young Towtas heard the cats talk he sprang up and went and told
-his mother to give him three bottles full of the water of the Towtas
-well, and he would go to the lord disguised as a doctor and cure him.
-
-So off he went to Dublin. And all the doctors in Ireland were round
-the lord, but none of them could tell what ailed him, or how to cure
-him. Then Towtas came in and said, “I will cure him.” So they gave him
-entertainment and lodging, and when he was refreshed he gave of the
-well water three draughts to his lordship, when out jumped the three
-kittens. And there was great rejoicing, and they treated Towtas like
-a prince. But all the same he could not get the ring from the lord’s
-daughter, so he set off home again quite disheartened, and thought to
-himself, “If I could only meet the man again that gave me the ring who
-knows what luck I might have?” And he sat down to rest in a wood, and
-saw there not far off three boys fighting under an oak-tree.
-
-“Shame on ye to fight so,” he said to them. “What is the fight about?”
-
-Then they told him. “Our father,” they said, “before he died, buried
-under this oak-tree a ring by which you can be in any place in two
-minutes if you only wish it; a goblet that is always full when
-standing, and empty only when on its side; and a harp that plays any
-tune of itself that you name or wish for.”
-
-“I want to divide the things,” said the youngest boy, “and let us all
-go and seek our fortunes as we can.”
-
-“But I have a right to the whole,” said the eldest.
-
-And they went on fighting, till at length Towtas said—
-
-“I’ll tell you how to settle the matter. All of you be here to-morrow,
-and I’ll think over the matter to-night, and I engage you will have
-nothing more to quarrel about when you come in the morning.”
-
-So the boys promised to keep good friends till they met in the morning,
-and went away.
-
-When Towtas saw them clear off, he dug up the ring, the goblet, and the
-harp, and now said he, “I’m all right, and they won’t have anything to
-fight about in the morning.”
-
-Off he set back again to the lord’s castle with the ring, the goblet,
-and the harp; but he soon bethought himself of the powers of the
-ring, and in two minutes he was in the great hall where all the lords
-and ladies were just sitting down to dinner; and the harp played the
-sweetest music, and they all listened in delight; and he drank out of
-the goblet which was never empty, and then, when his head began to grow
-a little light, “It is enough,” he said; and putting his arm round the
-waist of the lord’s daughter, he took his harp and goblet in the other
-hand, and murmuring—“I wish we were at the old fort by the side of the
-wood”—in two minutes they were both at the desired spot. But his head
-was heavy with the wine, and he laid down the harp beside him and fell
-asleep. And when she saw him asleep she took the ring off his finger,
-and the harp and the goblet from the ground and was back home in her
-father’s castle before two minutes had passed by.
-
-When Towtas awoke and found his prize gone, and all his treasures
-beside, he was like one mad; and roamed about the country till he came
-by an orchard, where he saw a tree covered with bright, rosy apples.
-Being hungry and thirsty, he plucked one and ate it, but no sooner
-had he done so than horns began to sprout from his forehead, and grew
-larger and longer till he knew he looked like a goat, and all he could
-do, they would not come off. Now, indeed, he was driven out of his
-mind, and thought how all the neighbours would laugh at him; and as he
-raged and roared with shame, he spied another tree with apples, still
-brighter, of ruddy gold.
-
-“If I were to have fifty pairs of horns I must have one of those,” he
-said; and seizing one, he had no sooner tasted it than the horns fell
-off, and he felt that he was looking stronger and handsomer than ever.
-
-“Now, I have her at last,” he exclaimed. “I’ll put horns on them all,
-and will never take them off until they give her to me as my bride
-before the whole Court.”
-
-Without further delay he set off to the lord’s palace, carrying with
-him as many of the apples as he could bring off the two trees. And when
-they saw the beauty of the fruit they longed for it; and he gave to
-them all, so that at last there was not a head to be seen without horns
-in the whole dining-hall. Then they cried out and prayed to have the
-horns taken off, but Towtas said—
-
-“No; there they shall be till I have the lord’s daughter given to me
-for my bride, and my two rings, my goblet, and my harp all restored to
-me.”
-
-And this was done before the face of all the lords and ladies; and his
-treasures were restored to him; and the lord placed his daughter’s hand
-in the hand of Towtas, saying—
-
-“Take her; she is your wife; only free me from the horns.”
-
-Then Towtas brought forth the golden apples; and they all ate, and the
-horns fell off; and he took his bride and his treasures, and carried
-them off home, where he built the Castle of Ballytowtas, in the place
-where stood his father’s hut, and enclosed the well within the walls.
-And when he had filled his treasure-room with gold, so that no man
-could count his riches, he buried his fairy treasures deep in the
-ground, where no man knew, and no man has ever yet been able to find
-them until this day.
-
-
-A WOLF STORY.
-
-
-Transformation into wolves is a favourite subject of Irish legend, and
-many a wild tale is told by the peasants round the turf fire in the
-winter nights of strange adventures with wolves. Stories that had come
-down to them from their forefathers in the old times long ago; for
-there are no wolves existing now in Ireland.
-
-A young farmer, named Connor, once missed two fine cows from his
-herd, and no tale or tidings could be heard of them anywhere. So he
-thought he would set out on a search throughout the country; and he
-took a stout blackthorn stick in his hand, and went his way. All day
-he travelled miles and miles, but never a sign of the cattle. And the
-evening began to grow very dark, and he was wearied and hungry, and no
-place near to rest in; for he was in the midst of a bleak, desolate
-heath, with never a habitation at all in sight, except a long, low,
-rude shieling, like the den of a robber or a wild beast. But a gleam of
-light came from a chink between the boards, and Connor took heart and
-went up and knocked at the door. It was opened at once by a tall, thin,
-grey-haired old man, with keen, dark eyes.
-
-“Come in,” he said, “you are welcome. We have been waiting for you.
-This is my wife,” and he brought him over to the hearth, where was
-seated an old, thin, grey woman, with long, sharp teeth and terrible
-glittering eyes.
-
-“You are welcome,” she said. “We have been waiting for you—it is time
-for supper. Sit down and eat with us.”
-
-Now Connor was a brave fellow, but he was a little dazed at first at
-the sight of this strange creature. However, as he had his stout stick
-with him, he thought he could make a fight for his life any way, and,
-meantime, he would rest and eat, for he was both hungry and weary, and
-it was now black night, and he would never find his way home even if he
-tried. So he sat down by the hearth, while the old grey woman stirred
-the pot on the fire. But Connor felt that she was watching him all the
-time with her keen, sharp eyes.
-
-Then a knock came to the door. And the old man rose up and opened
-it. When in walked a slender, young black wolf, who immediately went
-straight across the floor to an inner room, from which in a few moments
-came forth a dark, slender, handsome youth, who took his place at the
-table and looked hard at Connor with his glittering eyes.
-
-“You are welcome,” he said, “we have waited for you.”
-
-Before Connor could answer another knock was heard, and in came a
-second wolf, who passed on to the inner room like the first, and soon
-after, another dark, handsome youth came out and sat down to supper
-with them, glaring at Connor with his keen eyes, but said no word.
-
-“These are our sons,” said the old man, “tell them what you want, and
-what brought you here amongst us, for we live alone and don’t care to
-have spies and strangers coming to our place.”
-
-Then Connor told his story, how he had lost his two fine cows, and had
-searched all day and found no trace of them; and he knew nothing of the
-place he was in, nor of the kindly gentleman who asked him to supper;
-but if they just told him where to find his cows he would thank them,
-and make the best of his way home at once.
-
-Then they all laughed and looked at each other, and the old hag looked
-more frightful than ever when she showed her long, sharp teeth.
-
-On this, Connor grew angry, for he was hot tempered; and he grasped his
-blackthorn stick firmly in his hand and stood up, and bade them open
-the door for him; for he would go his way, since they would give no
-heed and only mocked him.
-
-Then the eldest of the young men stood up. “Wait,” he said, “we are
-fierce and evil, but we never forget a kindness. Do you remember, one
-day down in the glen you found a poor little wolf in great agony and
-like to die, because a sharp thorn had pierced his side? And you gently
-extracted the thorn and gave him a drink, and went your way leaving him
-in peace and rest?”
-
-“Aye, well do I remember it,” said Connor, “and how the poor little
-beast licked my hand in gratitude.”
-
-“Well,” said the young man, “I am that wolf, and I shall help you if I
-can, but stay with us to-night and have no fear.”
-
-So they sat down again to supper and feasted merrily, and then all fell
-fast asleep, and Connor knew nothing more till he awoke in the morning
-and found himself by a large hay-rick in his own field.
-
-“Now surely,” thought he, “the adventure of last night was not all a
-dream, and I shall certainly find my cows when I go home; for that
-excellent, good young wolf promised his help, and I feel certain he
-would not deceive me.”
-
-But when he arrived home and looked over the yard and the stable and
-the field, there was no sign nor sight of the cows. So he grew very sad
-and dispirited. But just then he espied in the field close by three of
-the most beautiful strange cows he had ever set eyes on. “These must
-have strayed in,” he said, “from some neighbour’s ground;” and he took
-his big stick to drive them out of the gate off the field. But when he
-reached the gate, there stood a young black wolf watching; and when the
-cows tried to pass out at the gate he bit at them, and drove them back.
-Then Connor knew that his friend the wolf had kept his word. So he let
-the cows go quietly back to the field; and there they remained, and
-grew to be the finest in the whole country, and their descendants are
-flourishing to this day, and Connor grew rich and prospered; for a kind
-deed is never lost, but brings good luck to the doer for evermore, as
-the old proverb says:
-
- “Blessings are won,
- By a good deed done.”
-
-But never again did Connor find that desolate heath or that lone
-shieling, though he sought far and wide, to return his thanks, as was
-due to the friendly wolves; nor did he ever again meet any of the
-family, though he mourned much whenever a slaughtered wolf was brought
-into the town for the sake of the reward, fearing his excellent friend
-might be the victim. At that time the wolves in Ireland had increased
-to such an extent, owing to the desolation of the country by constant
-wars, that a reward was offered and a high price paid for every wolf’s
-skin brought into the court of the justiciary; and this was in the time
-of Queen Elizabeth, when the English troops made ceaseless war against
-the Irish people, and there were more wolves in Ireland than men; and
-the dead lay unburied in hundreds on the highways, for there were no
-hands left to dig them graves.
-
-
-THE EVIL EYE.
-
-
-There is nothing more dreaded by the people, nor considered more deadly
-in its effects, than the Evil Eye.
-
-It may strike at any moment unless the greatest precautions are taken,
-and even then there is no true help possible unless the fairy doctor is
-at once summoned to pronounce the mystic charm that can alone destroy
-the evil and fatal influence.
-
-There are several modes in which the Evil Eye can act, some much more
-deadly than others. If certain persons are met the first thing in the
-morning, you will be unlucky for the whole of that day in all you do.
-If the evil-eyed comes in to rest, and looks fixedly on anything,
-on cattle or on a child, there is doom in the glance; a fatality
-which cannot be evaded except by a powerful counter-charm. But if
-the evil-eyed mutters a verse over a sleeping child, that child will
-assuredly die, for the incantation is of the devil, and no charm has
-power to resist it or turn away the evil. Sometimes the process of
-bewitching is effected by looking fixedly at the object, through nine
-fingers; especially is the magic fatal if the victim is seated by the
-fire in the evening when the moon is full. Therefore, to avoid being
-suspected of having the Evil Eye, it is necessary at once, when looking
-at a child, to say “God bless it.” And when passing a farmyard where
-the cows are collected for milking, to say, “The blessing of God be
-on you and on all your labours.” If this form is omitted, the worst
-results may be apprehended, and the people would be filled with terror
-and alarm, unless a counter-charm were not instantly employed.
-
-The singular malific influence of a glance has been felt by most
-persons in life; an influence that seems to paralyze intellect and
-speech, simply by the mere presence in the room of some one who
-is mystically antipathetic to our nature. For the soul is like a
-fine-toned harp that vibrates to the slightest external force or
-movement, and the presence and glance of some persons can radiate
-around us a divine joy, while others may kill the soul with a sneer or
-a frown. We call these subtle influences mysteries, but the early races
-believed them to be produced by spirits, good or evil, as they acted on
-the nerves or the intellect.
-
-Some years ago an old woman was living in Kerry, and it was thought
-so unlucky to meet her in the morning, that all the girls used to go
-out after sunset to bring in water for the following day, that so they
-might avoid her evil glance; for whatever she looked on came to loss
-and grief.
-
-There was a man, also, equally dreaded on account of the strange, fatal
-power of his glance; and so many accidents and misfortunes were traced
-to his presence that finally the neighbours insisted that he should
-wear a black patch over the Evil Eye, not to be removed unless by
-request; for learned gentlemen, curious in such things, sometimes came
-to him to ask for a proof of his power, and he would try it for a wager
-while drinking with his friends.
-
-One day, near an old ruin of a castle, he met a boy weeping in great
-grief for his pet pigeon, which had got up to the very top of the ruin,
-and could not be coaxed down.
-
-“What will you give me,” asked the man, “if I bring it down for you?”
-
-“I have nothing to give,” said the boy, “but I will pray to God for
-you. Only get me back my pigeon, and I shall be happy.”
-
-Then the man took off the black patch and looked up steadfastly at the
-bird; when all of a sudden it fell to the ground and lay motionless, as
-if stunned; but there was no harm done to it, and the boy took it up
-and went his way, rejoicing.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A woman in the County Galway had a beautiful child, so handsome, that
-all the neighbours were very careful to say “God bless it” when they
-saw him, for they knew the fairies would desire to steal the child, and
-carry it off to the hills.
-
-But one day it chanced that an old woman, a stranger, came in. “Let me
-rest,” she said, “for I am weary.” And she sat down and looked at the
-child, but never said “God bless it.” And when she had rested, she rose
-up, looked again at the child fixedly, in silence, and then went her
-way.
-
-All that night the child cried and would not sleep. And all next day
-it moaned as if in pain. So the mother told the priest, but he would
-do nothing for fear of the fairies. And just as the poor mother was in
-despair, she saw a strange woman going by the door. “Who knows,” she
-said to her husband, “but this woman would help us.” So they asked her
-to come in and rest. And when she looked at the child she said “God
-bless it,” instantly, and spat three times at it, and then sat down.
-
-“Now, what will you give me,” she said, “if I tell you what ails the
-child?”
-
-“I will cross your hand with silver,” said the mother, “as much as you
-want, only speak,” and she laid the money on the woman’s hand. “Now
-tell me the truth, for the sake and in the name of Mary, and the good
-Angels.”
-
-“Well,” said the stranger, “the fairies have had your child these two
-days in the hills, and this is a changeling they have left in its
-place. But so many blessings were said on your child that the fairies
-can do it no harm. For there was only one blessing wanting, and only
-one person gave the Evil Eye. Now, you must watch for this woman, carry
-her into the house and secretly cut off a piece of her cloak. Then burn
-the piece close to the child, till the smoke as it rises makes him
-sneeze; and when this happens the spell is broken, and your own child
-will come back to you safe and sound, in place of the changeling.”
-
-Then the stranger rose up and went her way.
-
-All that evening the mother watched for the old woman, and at last she
-spied her on the road.
-
-“Come in,” she cried, “come in, good woman, and rest, for the cakes are
-hot on the griddle, and supper is ready.”
-
-So the woman came in, but never said “God bless you kindly,” to man or
-mortal, only scowled at the child, who cried worse than ever.
-
-Now the mother had told her eldest girl to cut off a piece of the old
-woman’s cloak, secretly, when she sat down to eat. And the girl did as
-she was desired, and handed the piece to her mother, unknown to any
-one. But, to their surprise, this was no sooner done than the woman
-rose up and went out without uttering a word; and they saw her no more.
-
-Then the father carried the child outside, and burned the piece of
-cloth before the door, and held the boy over the smoke till he sneezed
-three times violently: after which he gave the child back to the
-mother, who laid him in his bed, where he slept peacefully, with a
-smile on his face, and cried no more with the cry of pain. And when he
-woke up the mother knew that she had got her own darling child back
-from the fairies, and no evil thing happened to him any more.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The influence of the mysterious and malign power of the Evil Eye has at
-all times been as much dreaded in Ireland as it is in Egypt, Greece,
-or Italy at the present day. Everything young, beautiful, or perfect
-after its kind, and which naturally attracts attention and admiration,
-is peculiarly liable to the fatal blight that follows the glance of the
-Evil Eye. It is therefore an invariable habit amongst the peasantry
-never to praise anything without instantly adding, “God bless it;” for
-were this formula omitted, the worst consequences would befall the
-object praised.
-
-The superstition must be of great antiquity in Ireland, for Balor, the
-Fomorian giant and hero, is spoken of in an ancient manuscript as able
-to petrify his enemies by a glance; and how he became possessed of the
-power is thus narrated:—
-
-One day as the Druids were busy at their incantations, while boiling a
-magical spell or charm, young Balor passed by, and curious to see their
-work, looked in at an open window. At that moment the Druids happened
-to raise the lid of the caldron, and the vapour, escaping, passed under
-one of Balor’s eyes, carrying with it all the venom of the incantation.
-This caused his brow to grow to such a size that it required four men
-to raise it whenever he wanted to exert the power of his venomed glance
-over his enemies. He was slain at last in single combat, according to
-the ancient legend, at the great battle of Magh-Tura[2] (the plain of
-the towers), fought between the Firbolgs and the Tuatha-de-Dananns for
-the possession of Ireland several centuries before the Christian era;
-for before Balor’s brow could be lifted so that he could transfix his
-enemy and strike him dead with the terrible power of his glance, his
-adversary flung a stone with such violence that it went right through
-the Evil Eye, and pierced the skull, and the mighty magician fell to
-rise no more.
-
- [2] Now called Moytura.
-
-An interesting account of this battle, with a remarkable confirmation
-of the legends respecting it still current in the district, is given
-by Sir William Wilde, in his work, “Lough Corrib; its Shores and
-Islands.” In the ancient manuscript, it is recorded that a young hero
-having been slain while bravely defending his king, the Firbolg army
-erected a mound over him, each man carrying a stone, and the monument
-was henceforth known as the _Carn-in-en-Fhir_ (the cairn of the one
-man). Having examined the locality with a transcript of this manuscript
-in his hand, Sir William fixed on the particular mound, amongst the
-many stone tumuli scattered over the plain, which seemed to agree
-best with the description, and had it opened carefully under his own
-superintendence.
-
-A large flag-stone was first discovered, laid horizontally; then
-another beneath it, covering a small square chamber formed of stones,
-within which was _a single urn_ of baked clay, graceful and delicate
-in form and ornamentation, containing incinerated human bones, the
-remains, there can be no reason to doubt, of the Firbolg youth
-who was honoured for his loyalty by the erection over him of the
-_Carn-in-en-Fhir_ on the historic plains of Mayo.
-
-After Balor, the only other ancient instance of the fatal effects of
-the malific Eye is narrated of St. Silan, who had a poisonous hair in
-his eyebrow that killed whoever looked first on him in the morning. All
-persons, therefore, who from long sickness, or sorrow, or the weariness
-that comes with years, were tired of life, used to try and come in the
-saint’s way, that so their sufferings might be ended by a quick and
-easy death. But another saint, the holy Molaise, hearing that St. Silan
-was coming to visit his church, resolved that no more deaths should
-happen by means of the poisoned hair. So he arose early in the morning,
-before any one was up, and went forth alone to meet St. Silan, and when
-he saw him coming along the path, he went boldly up and plucked out the
-fatal hair from his eyebrow, but in doing so he himself was struck by
-the venom, and immediately after fell down dead.
-
-The power of the Evil Eye was recognized by the Brehon laws, and severe
-measures were ordained against the users of the malign influence. “If a
-person is in the habit of injuring things through neglect, or of will,
-whether he has blessed, or whether he has not blessed, full penalty be
-upon him, or restitution in kind.” So ran the ancient law.
-
-The gift comes by nature and is born with one, though it may not be
-called into exercise unless circumstances arise to excite the power.
-Then it seems to act like a spirit of bitter and malicious envy that
-radiates a poisonous atmosphere which chills and blights everything
-within its reach. Without being superstitious every one has felt that
-there is such a power and succumbed to its influence in a helpless,
-passive way, as if all self-trust and self-reliant energy were utterly
-paralyzed by its influence.
-
-Suspected persons are held in great dread by the peasantry, and they
-recognize them at once by certain signs. Men and women with dark
-lowering eyebrows are especially feared, and the handsome children are
-kept out of their path lest they might be overlooked by them.
-
-Red hair is supposed to have a most malign influence, and it has even
-passed into a proverb: “Let not the eye of a red-haired woman rest on
-you.”
-
-Many persons are quite unconscious that their glance or frown has
-this evil power until some calamity results, and then they strive not
-to look at any one full in the face, but to avert their eyes when
-speaking, lest misfortune might fall upon the person addressed.[3]
-
- [3] There is a strange idea current in Europe at the present time that
- one of the most remarkable potentates now living has this fatal gift
- and power of the Evil Eye.
-
-The saving invocation, “God bless it!” is universally used when praise
-is bestowed, to prevent danger, and should a child fall sick some one
-is immediately suspected of having omitted the usual phrase out of
-malice and ill-will. Nothing is more dreaded by the peasantry than
-the full, fixed, direct glance of one suspected of the Evil Eye, and
-should it fall upon them, or on any of their household, a terrible fear
-and trembling of heart takes possession of them, which often ends in
-sickness or sometimes even in death.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Some years ago a woman living in Kerry declared that she was
-“overlooked” by the Evil Eye. She had no pleasure in her life and no
-comfort, and she wasted away because of the fear that was on her,
-caused by the following singular circumstance:—
-
-Every time that she happened to leave home alone, and that no one was
-within call, she was met by a woman totally unknown to her, who, fixing
-her eyes on her in silence, with a terrible expression, cast her to
-the ground and proceeded to beat and pinch her till she was nearly
-senseless; after which her tormentor disappeared.
-
-Having experienced this treatment several times, the poor woman finally
-abstained altogether from leaving the house, unless protected by a
-servant or companion; and this precaution she observed for several
-years, during which time she never was molested. So at last she began
-to believe that the spell was broken, and that her strange enemy had
-departed for ever.
-
-In consequence she grew less careful about the usual precaution, and
-one day stepped down alone to a little stream that ran by the house to
-wash some clothes.
-
-Stooping down over her work, she never thought of any danger, and began
-to sing as she used to do in the light-hearted days before the spell
-was on her, when suddenly a dark shadow fell across the water, and
-looking up, she beheld to her horror the strange woman on the opposite
-side of the little stream, with her terrible eyes intently fixed on
-her, as hard and still as if she were of stone.
-
-Springing up with a scream of terror, she flung down her work, and
-ran towards the house; but soon she heard footsteps behind her, and
-in an instant she was seized, thrown down to the ground, and her
-tormentor began to beat her even worse than before, till she lost all
-consciousness; and in this state she was found by her husband, lying
-on her face and speechless. She was at once carried to the house, and
-all the care that affection and rural skill could bestow were lavished
-on her, but in vain. She, however, regained sufficient consciousness
-to tell them of the terrible encounter she had gone through, but died
-before the night had passed away.
-
-It was believed that the power of fascination by the glance, which
-is not necessarily an evil power like the Evil Eye, was possessed in
-a remarkable degree by learned and wise people, especially poets, so
-that they could make themselves loved and followed by any girl they
-liked, simply by the influence of the glance. About the year 1790,
-a young man resided in the County Limerick, who had this power in a
-singular and unusual degree. He was a clever, witty rhymer in the Irish
-language; and, probably, had the deep poet eyes that characterize warm
-and passionate poet-natures—eyes that even without necromancy have been
-known to exercise a powerful magnetic influence over female minds.
-
-One day, while travelling far from home, he came upon a bright,
-pleasant-looking farmhouse, and feeling weary, he stopped and requested
-a drink of milk and leave to rest. The farmer’s daughter, a young,
-handsome girl, not liking to admit a stranger, as all the maids were
-churning, and she was alone in the house, refused him admittance.
-
-The young poet fixed his eyes earnestly on her face for some time in
-silence, then slowly turning round left the house, and walked towards
-a small grove of trees just opposite. There he stood for a few moments
-resting against a tree, and facing the house as if to take one last
-vengeful or admiring glance, then went his way without once turning
-round.
-
-The young girl had been watching him from the windows, and the moment
-he moved she passed out of the door like one in a dream, and followed
-him slowly, step by step, down the avenue. The maids grew alarmed, and
-called to her father, who ran out and shouted loudly for her to stop,
-but she never turned or seemed to heed. The young man, however, looked
-round, and seeing the whole family in pursuit, quickened his pace,
-first glancing fixedly at the girl for a moment. Immediately she sprang
-towards him, and they were both almost out of sight, when one of the
-maids espied a piece of paper tied to a branch of the tree where the
-poet had rested. From curiosity she took it down, and the moment the
-knot was untied, the farmer’s daughter suddenly stopped, became quite
-still, and when her father came up she allowed him to lead her back to
-the house without resistance.
-
-When questioned, she said that she felt herself drawn by an invisible
-force to follow the young stranger wherever he might lead, and that
-she would have followed him through the world, for her life seemed to
-be bound up in his; she had no will to resist, and was conscious of
-nothing else but his presence. Suddenly, however, the spell was broken,
-and then she heard her father’s voice, and knew how strangely she had
-acted. At the same time the power of the young man over her vanished,
-and the impulse to follow him was no longer in her heart.
-
-The paper, on being opened, was found to contain five mysterious words
-written in blood, and in this order—
-
- Sator.
- Arepo.
- Tenet.
- Opera.
- Rotas.
-
-These letters are so arranged that read in any way, right to left, left
-to right, up or down, the same words are produced; and when written in
-blood with a pen made of an eagle’s feather, they form a charm which no
-woman (it is said) can resist; but the incredulous reader can easily
-test the truth of this assertion for himself.
-
- * * * * *
-
-These popular stories are provokingly incomplete, and one cannot help
-regretting that the romance of “The Poet and the Farmer’s Daughter” was
-not brought to a happy termination; but the Irish tales are in general
-rather incoherent, more like remembered fragments of ancient stories
-than a complete, well-organized dramatic composition, with lights well
-placed, and a striking catastrophe. The opening is usually attractive,
-with the exciting formula, “Once upon a time,” from which one always
-expects so much; and there is sure to be an old woman, weird and
-witch-like, capable of the most demoniacal actions, and a mysterious
-man who promises to be the unredeemed evil spirit of the tale; but in
-the end they both turn out childishly harmless, and their evil actions
-seldom go beyond stealing their neighbours’ butter, or abducting a
-pretty girl, which sins mere mortals would be quite equal to, even
-without the aid of “the gods of the earth” and their renowned leader,
-Finvarra, the King of the Fairies. The following tale, however, of a
-case of abduction by fairy power, is well constructed. The hero of the
-narrative has our sympathy and interest, and it ends happily, which is
-considered a great merit by the Irish, as they dislike a tale to which
-they cannot append, as an epilogue, the hearty and outspoken “Thank
-God.”
-
-
-THE STOLEN BRIDE.
-
-
-About the year 1670 there was a fine young fellow living at a place
-called Querin, in the County Clare. He was brave and strong and rich,
-for he had his own land and his own house, and not one to lord it over
-him. He was called the Kern of Querin. And many a time he would go
-out alone to shoot the wild fowl at night along the lonely strand and
-sometimes cross over northward to the broad east strand, about two
-miles away, to find the wild geese.
-
-One cold frosty November Eve he was watching for them, crouched down
-behind the ruins of an old hut, when a loud splashing noise attracted
-his attention. “It is the wild geese,” he thought, and raising his gun,
-waited in death-like silence the approach of his victim.
-
-But presently he saw a dark mass moving along the edge of the strand.
-And he knew there were no wild geese near him. So he watched and waited
-till the black mass came closer, and then he distinctly perceived four
-stout men carrying a bier on their shoulders, on which lay a corpse
-covered with a white cloth. For a few moments they laid it down,
-apparently to rest themselves, and the Kern instantly fired; on which
-the four men ran away shrieking, and the corpse was left alone on the
-bier. Kern of Querin immediately sprang to the place, and lifting the
-cloth from the face of the corpse, beheld by the freezing starlight,
-the form of a beautiful young girl, apparently not dead but in a deep
-sleep.
-
-Gently he passed his hand over her face and raised her up, when she
-opened her eyes and looked around with wild wonder, but spake never a
-word, though he tried to soothe and encourage her. Then, thinking it
-was dangerous for them to remain in that place, he raised her from the
-bier, and taking her hand led her away to his own house. They arrived
-safely, but in silence. And for twelve months did she remain with the
-Kern, never tasting food or speaking word for all that time.
-
-When the next November Eve came round, he resolved to visit the
-east strand again, and watch from the same place, in the hope of
-meeting with some adventure that might throw light on the history of
-the beautiful girl. His way lay beside the old ruined fort called
-_Lios-na-fallainge_ (the Fort of the Mantle), and as he passed, the
-sound of music and mirth fell on his ear. He stopped to catch the words
-of the voices, and had not waited long when he heard a man say in a low
-whisper—
-
-“Where shall we go to-night to carry off a bride?”
-
-And a second voice answered—
-
-“Wherever we go I hope better luck will be ours than we had this day
-twelvemonths.”
-
-“Yes,” said a third; “on that night we carried off a rich prize, the
-fair daughter of O’Connor; but that clown, the Kern of Querin, broke
-our spell and took her from us. Yet little pleasure has he had of his
-bride, for she has neither eaten nor drank nor uttered a word since she
-entered his house.”
-
-“And so she will remain,” said a fourth, “until he makes her eat off
-her father’s table-cloth, which covered her as she lay on the bier, and
-which is now thrown up over the top of her bed.”
-
-On hearing all this, the Kern rushed home, and without waiting even for
-the morning, entered the young girl’s room, took down the table-cloth,
-spread it on the table, laid meat and drink thereon, and led her to it.
-“Drink,” he said, “that speech may come to you.” And she drank, and ate
-of the food, and then speech came. And she told the Kern her story—how
-she was to have been married to a young lord of her own country, and
-the wedding guests had all assembled, when she felt herself suddenly
-ill and swooned away, and never knew more of what had happened to
-her until the Kern had passed his hand over her face, by which she
-recovered consciousness, but could neither eat nor speak, for a spell
-was on her, and she was helpless.
-
-Then the Kern prepared a chariot, and carried home the young girl to
-her father, who was like to die for joy when he beheld her. And the
-Kern grew mightily in O’Connor’s favour, so that at last he gave him
-his fair young daughter to wife; and the wedded pair lived together
-happily for many long years after, and no evil befell them, but good
-followed all the work of their hands.
-
-This story of Kern of Querin still lingers in the faithful, vivid Irish
-memory, and is often told by the peasants of Clare when they gather
-round the fire on the awful festival of _Samhain_, or November Eve,
-when the dead walk, and the spirits of earth and air have power over
-mortals, whether for good or evil.
-
-
-FAIRY MUSIC.
-
-
-The evil influence of the fairy glance does not kill, but it throws
-the object into a death-like trance, in which the real body is carried
-off to some fairy mansion, while a log of wood, or some ugly, deformed
-creature is left in its place, clothed with the shadow of the stolen
-form. Young women, remarkable for beauty, young men, and handsome
-children, are the chief victims of the fairy stroke. The girls are
-wedded to fairy chiefs, and the young men to fairy queens; and if the
-mortal children do not turn out well, they are sent back, and others
-carried off in their place. It is sometimes possible, by the spells of
-a powerful fairy-man, to bring back a living being from Fairy-land. But
-they are never quite the same after. They have always a spirit-look,
-especially if they have listened to the fairy music. For the fairy
-music is soft and low and plaintive, with a fatal charm for mortal ears.
-
-One day a gentleman entered a cabin in the County Clare, and saw a
-young girl about twenty seated by the fire, chanting a melancholy song,
-without settled words or music. On inquiry he was told she had once
-heard the fairy harp, and those who hear it lose all memory of love or
-hate, and forget all things, and never more have any other sound in
-their ears save the soft music of the fairy harp, and when the spell is
-broken, they die.
-
-It is remarkable that the Irish national airs—plaintive, beautiful,
-and unutterably pathetic—should so perfectly express the spirit of the
-Céol-Sidhe (the fairy music), as it haunts the fancy of the people
-and mingles with all their traditions of the spirit world. Wild and
-capricious as the fairy nature, these delicate harmonies, with their
-mystic, mournful rhythm, seem to touch the deepest chords of feeling,
-or to fill the sunshine with laughter, according to the mood of the
-players; but, above all things, Irish music is the utterance of a
-Divine sorrow; not stormy or passionate, but like that of an exiled
-spirit, yearning and wistful, vague and unresting; ever seeking the
-unattainable, ever shadowed, as it were, with memories of some lost
-good, or some dim foreboding of a coming fate—emotions that seem to
-find their truest expression in the sweet, sad, lingering wail of the
-pathetic minor in a genuine Irish air. There is a beautiful phrase in
-one of the ancient manuscripts descriptive of the wonderful power of
-Irish music over the sensitive human organization: “Wounded men were
-soothed when they heard it, and slept; and women in travail forgot
-their pains.” There are legends concerning the subtle charm of the
-fairy music and dance, when the mortal under their influence seems to
-move through the air with “the naked, fleshless feet of the spirit,”
-and is lulled by the ecstasy of the cadence into forgetfulness of all
-things, and sometimes into the sleep of death.
-
-
-THE FAIRY DANCE.
-
-
-The following story is from the Irish, as told by a native of one of
-the Western Isles, where the primitive superstitions have still all the
-freshness of young life.
-
-One evening late in November, which is the month when spirits have
-most power over all things, as the prettiest girl in all the island
-was going to the well for water, her foot slipped and she fell. It was
-an unlucky omen, and when she got up and looked round it seemed to her
-as if she were in a strange place, and all around her was changed as
-if by enchantment. But at some distance she saw a great crowd gathered
-round a blazing fire, and she was drawn slowly on towards them, till at
-last she stood in the very midst of the people; but they kept silence,
-looking fixedly at her; and she was afraid, and tried to turn and leave
-them, but she could not. Then a beautiful youth, like a prince, with a
-red sash, and a golden band on his long yellow hair, came up and asked
-her to dance.
-
-“It is a foolish thing of you, sir, to ask me to dance,” she said,
-“when there is no music.”
-
-Then he lifted his hand and made a sign to the people, and instantly
-the sweetest music sounded near her and around her, and the young man
-took her hand, and they danced and danced till the moon and the stars
-went down, but she seemed like one floating on the air, and she forgot
-everything in the world except the dancing, and the sweet low music,
-and her beautiful partner.
-
-At last the dancing ceased, and her partner thanked her, and invited
-her to supper with the company. Then she saw an opening in the ground,
-and a flight of steps, and the young man, who seemed to be the king
-amongst them all, led her down, followed by the whole company. At
-the end of the stairs they came upon a large hall, all bright and
-beautiful with gold and silver and lights; and the table was covered
-with everything good to eat, and wine was poured out in golden cups for
-them to drink. When she sat down they all pressed her to eat the food
-and to drink the wine; and as she was weary after the dancing, she took
-the golden cup the prince handed to her, and raised it to her lips to
-drink. Just then, a man passed close to her, and whispered—
-
-“Eat no food, and drink no wine, or you will never reach your home
-again.”
-
-So she laid down the cup, and refused to drink. On this they were
-angry, and a great noise arose, and a fierce, dark man stood up, and
-said—
-
-“Whoever comes to us must drink with us.”
-
-And he seized her arm, and held the wine to her lips, so that she
-almost died of fright. But at that moment a red-haired man came up, and
-he took her by the hand and led her out.
-
-“You are safe for this time,” he said. “Take this herb, and hold it in
-your hand till you reach home, and no one can harm you.” And he gave
-her a branch of a plant called the _Athair-Luss_ (the ground ivy).[4]
-
- [4] In Ancient Egypt the ivy was sacred to Osiris, and a safeguard
- against evil.
-
-This she took, and fled away along the sward in the dark night; but all
-the time she heard footsteps behind her in pursuit. At last she reached
-home and barred the door, and went to bed, when a great clamour arose
-outside, and voices were heard crying to her—
-
-“The power we had over you is gone through the magic of the herb; but
-wait—when you dance again to the music on the hill, you will stay with
-us for evermore, and none shall hinder.”
-
-However, she kept the magic branch safely, and the fairies never
-troubled her more; but it was long and long before the sound of the
-fairy music left her ears which she had danced to that November night
-on the hillside with her fairy lover.
-
-
-FAIRY JUSTICE.
-
-A LEGEND OF SHARK ISLAND.
-
-
-The “Red-haired Man,” although he is considered very unlucky in actual
-life, yet generally acts in the fairy world as the benevolent _Deus
-ex machina_, that saves and helps and rescues the unhappy mortal, who
-himself is quite helpless under the fairy spells.
-
-There was a man in Shark Island who used to cross over to Boffin[5]
-to buy tobacco, but when the weather was too rough for the boat his
-ill-temper was as bad as the weather, and he used to beat his wife, and
-fling all the things about, so that no one could stand before him. One
-day a man came to him.
-
- [5] The correct names for these islands are Innis-Erk (the Island of
- St. Erk), and Innis-bo-finn (the Island of the White Cow).
-
-“What will you give me if I go over to Boffin,” said he, “and bring you
-the tobacco?”
-
-“I will give you nothing,” said the other. “Whatever way you go I can
-go also.”
-
-“Then come with me to the shore,” said the first man, “and I’ll show
-you how to get across; but as only one can go, you must go alone.”
-
-And as they went down to the sea, they saw a great company of horsemen
-and ladies galloping along, with music and laughter.
-
-“Spring up now on a horse and you will get across,” said the first man.
-
-So the other sprang up as he was told, and in an instant they all
-jumped right across the sea and landed at Boffin. Then he ran to buy
-the tobacco and was back again in a minute, and found all the same
-company by the sea-shore. He sprang again upon a horse and they all
-jumped right into the sea, but suddenly stopped midway between the two
-islands, where there was a great rock, and beyond this they could not
-force the horses to move. Then there was great disquietude amongst
-them, and they called a council.
-
-“There is a mortal amongst us,” they said. “Let us drown him.”
-
-And they carried the man up to the top of the rock and cast him down;
-and when he rose to the surface again they caught him by the hair, and
-cried—
-
-“Drown him! Drown him! We have the power over life and death; he must
-be drowned.”
-
-And they were going to cast him down a second time, when a red-haired
-man pleaded for him, and carried him off with a strong hand safe to
-shore.
-
-“Now,” said he, “you are safe, but mind, the spirits are watching you,
-and if ever again you beat your poor good wife, and knock about the
-things at home just to torment her out of her life, you will die upon
-that rock as sure as fate.” And he vanished.
-
-So from that time forth the man was as meek as a mouse, for he was
-afraid; and whenever he went by the rock in his boat he always stopped
-a minute, and said a little prayer for his wife with a “God bless her.”
-And this kept away the evil, and they both lived together happily ever
-after to a great old age.
-
-This is but a rude tale. Yet the moral is good, and the threat of
-retributive justice shows a laudable spirit of indignation on the part
-of the fairy race against the tyranny of man over the weaker vessel.
-
-
-THE PRIEST’S SOUL.
-
-
-An ethical purpose is not often to be detected in the Irish legends;
-but the following tale combines an inner meaning with the incidents in
-a profound and remarkable manner. The idea that underlies the story
-is very subtle and tragic; Calderon or Goethe might have founded a
-drama on it; and Browning’s genius would find a fitting subject in
-this contrast between the pride of the audacious, self-relying sceptic
-in the hour of his triumph and the moral agony that precedes his
-punishment and death.
-
-In former days there were great schools in Ireland where every sort
-of learning was taught to the people, and even the poorest had more
-knowledge at that time than many a gentleman has now. But as to the
-priests, their learning was above all, so that the fame of Ireland went
-over the whole world, and many kings from foreign lands used to send
-their sons all the way to Ireland to be brought up in the Irish schools.
-
-Now at this time there was a little boy learning at one of them who
-was a wonder to every one for his cleverness. His parents were only
-labouring people, and of course very poor; but young as he was, and
-poor as he was, no king’s or lord’s son could come up to him in
-learning. Even the masters were put to shame, for when they were
-trying to teach him he would tell them something they never heard of
-before, and show them their ignorance. One of his great triumphs was
-in argument; and he would go on till he proved to you that black was
-white, and then when you gave in, for no one could beat him in talk,
-he would turn round and show you that white was black, or may be that
-there was no colour at all in the world. When he grew up his poor
-father and mother were so proud of him that they resolved to make him a
-priest, which they did at last, though they nearly starved themselves
-to get the money. Well, such another learned man was not in Ireland,
-and he was as great in argument as ever, so that no one could stand
-before him. Even the Bishops tried to talk to him, but he showed them
-at once they knew nothing at all.
-
-Now there were no schoolmasters in those times but it was the priests
-taught the people; and as this man was the cleverest in Ireland all the
-foreign kings sent their sons to him as long as he had house-room to
-give them. So he grew very proud, and began to forget how low he had
-been, and worst of all, even to forget God, who had made him what he
-was. And the pride of arguing got hold of him, so that from one thing
-to another he went on to prove that there was no Purgatory, and then no
-Hell, and then no Heaven, and then no God; and at last that men had no
-souls, but were no more than a dog or a cow, and when they died there
-was an end of them. “Who ever saw a soul?” he would say. “If you can
-show me one, I will believe.” No one could make any answer to this;
-and at last they all came to believe that as there was no other world,
-every one might do what they liked in this; the priest setting the
-example, for he took a beautiful young girl to wife. But as no priest
-or bishop in the whole land could be got to marry them, he was obliged
-to read the service over for himself. It was a great scandal, yet no
-one dared to say a word, for all the kings’ sons were on his side,
-and would have slaughtered any one who tried to prevent his wicked
-goings-on. Poor boys! they all believed in him, and thought every word
-he said was the truth. In this way his notions began to spread about,
-and the whole world was going to the bad, when one night an angel came
-down from Heaven, and told the priest he had but twenty-four hours to
-live. He began to tremble, and asked for a little more time.
-
-But the angel was stiff, and told him that could not be.
-
-“What do you want time for, you sinner?” he asked.
-
-“Oh, sir, have pity on my poor soul!” urged the priest.
-
-“Oh, ho! You have a soul, then,” said the angel. “Pray, how did you
-find that out?”
-
-“It has been fluttering in me ever since you appeared,” answered the
-priest. “What a fool I was not to think of it before.”
-
-“A fool indeed,” said the angel. “What good was all your learning, when
-it could not tell you that you had a soul?”
-
-“Ah, my lord,” said the priest, “if I am to die, tell me how soon I may
-be in Heaven?”
-
-“Never,” replied the angel. “You denied there was a Heaven.”
-
-“Then, my lord, may I go to Purgatory?”
-
-“You denied Purgatory also; you must go straight to Hell,” said the
-angel.
-
-“But, my lord, I denied Hell also,” answered the priest, “so you can’t
-send me there either.”
-
-The angel was a little puzzled.
-
-“Well,” said he, “I’ll tell you what I can do for you. You may either
-live now on earth for a hundred years enjoying every pleasure, and then
-be cast into Hell for ever; or you may die in twenty-four hours in the
-most horrible torments, and pass through Purgatory, there to remain
-till the Day of Judgment, if only you can find some one person that
-believes, and through his belief mercy will be vouchsafed to you and
-your soul will be saved.”
-
-The priest did not take five minutes to make up his mind.
-
-“I will have death in the twenty-four hours,” he said, “so that my soul
-may be saved at last.”
-
-On this the angel gave him directions as to what he was to do, and left
-him.
-
-Then, immediately, the priest entered the large room where all his
-scholars and the kings’ sons were seated, and called out to them—
-
-“Now, tell me the truth, and let none fear to contradict me. Tell me
-what is your belief. Have men souls?”
-
-“Master,” they answered, “once we believed that men had souls; but,
-thanks to your teaching, we believe so no longer. There is no Hell, and
-no Heaven, and no God. This is our belief, for it is thus you taught
-us.”
-
-Then the priest grew pale with fear and cried out—“Listen! I taught you
-a lie. There is a God, and man has an immortal soul. I believe now all
-I denied before.”
-
-But the shouts of laughter that rose up drowned the priest’s voice, for
-they thought he was only trying them for argument.
-
-“Prove it, master,” they cried, “prove it. Who has ever seen God? Who
-has ever seen the soul?”
-
-And the room was stirred with their laughter.
-
-The priest stood up to answer them, but no word could he utter; all his
-eloquence, all his powers of argument had gone from him, and he could
-do nothing but wring his hands and cry out—
-
-“There is a God! there is a God! Lord have mercy on my soul!”
-
-And they all began to mock him, and repeat his own words that he had
-taught them—
-
-“Show him to us; show us your God.”
-
-And he fled from them groaning with agony, for he saw that none
-believed, and how then could his soul be saved?
-
-But he thought next of his wife.
-
-“She will believe,” he said to himself. “Women never give up God.”
-
-And he went to her; but she told him that she believed only what he
-taught her, and that a good wife should believe in her husband first,
-and before and above all things in heaven or earth.
-
-Then despair came on him, and he rushed from the house and began to ask
-every one he met if they believed. But the same answer came from one
-and all—“We believe only what you have taught us,” for his doctrines
-had spread far and wide through the county.
-
-Then he grew half mad with fear, for the hours were passing. And he
-flung himself down on the ground in a lonesome spot, and wept and
-groaned in terror, for the time was coming fast when he must die.
-
-Just then a little child came by.
-
-“God save you kindly,” said the child to him.
-
-The priest started up.
-
-“Child, do you believe in God?” he asked.
-
-“I have come from a far country to learn about Him,” said the child.
-“Will your honour direct me to the best school that they have in these
-parts?”
-
-“The best school and the best teacher is close by,” said the priest,
-and he named himself.
-
-“Oh, not to that man,” answered the child, “for I am told he denies
-God, and Heaven, and Hell, and even that man has a soul, because we
-can’t see it; but I would soon put him down.”
-
-The priest looked at him earnestly. “How?” he inquired.
-
-“Why,” said the child, “I would ask him if he believed he had life to
-show me his life.”
-
-“But he could not do that, my child,” said the priest. “Life cannot be
-seen; we have it, but it is invisible.”
-
-“Then if we have life, though we cannot see it, we may also have a
-soul, though it is invisible,” answered the child.
-
-When the priest heard him speak these words he fell down on his knees
-before him, weeping for joy, for now he knew his soul was safe; he had
-met at last one that believed. And he told the child his whole story:
-all his wickedness, and pride, and blasphemy against the great God; and
-how the angel had come to him and told him of the only way in which he
-could be saved, through the faith and prayers of some one that believed.
-
-“Now then,” he said to the child, “take this penknife and strike it
-into my breast, and go on stabbing the flesh until you see the paleness
-of death on my face. Then watch—for a living thing will soar up from
-my body as I die, and you will then know that my soul has ascended to
-the presence of God. And when you see this thing, make haste and run to
-my school and call on all my scholars to come and see that the soul of
-their master has left the body, and that all he taught them was a lie,
-for that there is a God who punishes sin, and a Heaven and a Hell,
-and that man has an immortal soul, destined for eternal happiness or
-misery.”
-
-“I will pray,” said the child, “to have courage to do this work.”
-
-And he kneeled down and prayed. Then when he rose up he took the
-penknife and struck it into the priest’s heart, and struck and
-struck again till all the flesh was lacerated; but still the priest
-lived though the agony was horrible, for he could not die until the
-twenty-four hours had expired. At last the agony seemed to cease, and
-the stillness of death settled on his face. Then the child, who was
-watching, saw a beautiful living creature, with four snow white wings,
-mount from the dead man’s body into the air and go fluttering round his
-head.
-
-So he ran to bring the scholars; and when they saw it they all knew
-it was the soul of their master, and they watched with wonder and awe
-until it passed from sight into the clouds.
-
-And this was the first butterfly that was ever seen in Ireland; and now
-all men know that the butterflies are the souls of the dead waiting for
-the moment when they may enter Purgatory, and so pass through torture
-to purification and peace.
-
-But the schools of Ireland were quite deserted after that time, for
-people said, What is the use of going so far to learn when the wisest
-man in all Ireland did not know if he had a soul till he was near
-losing it; and was only saved at last through the simple belief of a
-little child?
-
- * * * * *
-
-The allusion in this clever tale to the ancient Irish schools is based
-on historical fact. From the seventh to the tenth century Ireland was
-the centre of learning. The great Alfred of England was a student at
-one of the famous Irish seminaries, along with other royal and noble
-youths, and there formed a life-long friendship with the learned
-Adamnanl who often afterwards was a welcome guest at the Court of King
-Alfred. Other eminent Irishmen are known to history as the teachers and
-evangelizers of Europe. Alcuin, the Irish monk, became the friend and
-secretary of Charlemagne, and founded, at Aix-la-Chapelle, the first
-Grammar School in the imperial dominions. And the celebrated Clemens
-and Albinus, two Irishmen of distinguished ability and learning, aided
-the emperor not only in educating the people, but also to found a
-school for the nobles within his own palace.
-
-
-THE FAIRY RACE.
-
-
-The _Sidhe_, or spirit race, called also the _Feadh-Ree_ or fairies,
-are supposed to have been once angels in heaven, who were cast out by
-Divine command as a punishment for their inordinate pride.
-
-Some fell to earth, and dwelt there, long before man was created, as
-the first gods of the earth. Others fell into the sea, and they built
-themselves beautiful fairy palaces of crystal and pearl underneath the
-waves; but on moonlight nights they often come up on the land, riding
-their white horses, and they hold revels with their fairy kindred of
-the earth, who live in the clefts of the hills, and they dance together
-on the greensward under the ancient trees, and drink nectar from the
-cups of the flowers, which is the fairy wine.
-
-Other fairies, however, are demoniacal, and given to evil and malicious
-deeds; for when cast out of heaven they fell into hell, and there the
-devil holds them under his rule, and sends them forth as he wills
-upon missions of evil to tempt the souls of men downward by the false
-glitter of sin and pleasure. These spirits dwell under the earth
-and impart their knowledge only to certain evil persons chosen of
-the devil, who gives them power to make incantations, and brew love
-potions, and to work wicked spells, and they can assume different forms
-by their knowledge and use of certain magical herbs.
-
-The witch women who have been taught by them, and have thus become
-tools of the Evil One, are the terror of the neighbourhood; for they
-have all the power of the fairies and all the malice of the devil, who
-reveals to them secrets of times and days, and secrets of herbs, and
-secrets of evil spells; and by the power of magic they can effect all
-their purposes, whether for good or ill.
-
-The fairies of the earth are small and beautiful. They passionately
-love music and dancing, and live luxuriously in their palaces under the
-hills and in the deep mountain caves; and they can obtain all things
-lovely for their fairy homes, merely by the strength of their magic
-power. They can also assume all forms, and will never know death until
-the last day comes, when their doom is to vanish away—to be annihilated
-for ever. But they are very jealous of the human race who are so tall
-and strong, and to whom has been promised immortality. And they are
-often tempted by the beauty of a mortal woman and greatly desire to
-have her as a wife.
-
-The children of such marriages have a strange mystic nature, and
-generally become famous in music and song. But they are passionate,
-revengeful, and not easy to live with. Every one knows them to be of
-the Sidhe or spirit race, by their beautiful eyes and their bold,
-reckless temperament.
-
-The fairy king and princes dress in green, with red caps bound on
-the head with a golden fillet. The fairy queen and the great court
-ladies are robed in glittering silver gauze, spangled with diamonds,
-and their long golden hair sweeps the ground as they dance on the
-greensward.
-
-Their favourite camp and resting-place is under a hawthorn tree, and
-a peasant would die sooner than cut down one of the ancient hawthorns
-sacred to the fairies, and which generally stands in the centre of a
-fairy ring. But the people never offer worship to these fairy beings,
-for they look on the Sidhe as a race quite inferior to man. At the same
-time they have an immense dread and fear of the mystic fairy power, and
-never interfere with them nor offend them knowingly.
-
-The Sidhe often strive to carry off the handsome children, who are then
-reared in the beautiful fairy palaces under the earth, and wedded to
-fairy mates when they grow up.
-
-The people dread the idea of a fairy changeling being left in the
-cradle in place of their own lovely child; and if a wizened little
-thing is found there, it is sometimes taken out at night and laid in
-an open grave till morning, when they hope to find their own child
-restored, although more often nothing is found save the cold corpse of
-the poor outcast.
-
-Sometimes it is said the fairies carry off the mortal child for a
-sacrifice, as they have to offer one every seven years to the devil
-in return for the power he gives them. And beautiful young girls are
-carried off, also, either for sacrifice or to be wedded to the fairy
-king.
-
-The fairies are pure and cleanly in their habits, and they like above
-all things a pail of water to be set for them at night, in case they
-may wish to bathe.
-
-They also delight in good wines, and are careful to repay the donor in
-blessings, for they are truly upright and honest. The great lords of
-Ireland, in ancient times, used to leave a keg of the finest Spanish
-wine frequently at night out on the window-sill for the fairies, and in
-the morning it was all gone.
-
-Fire is a great preventative against fairy magic, for fire is the
-most sacred of all created things, and man alone has power over it.
-No animal has ever yet attained the knowledge of how to draw out
-the spirit of fire from the stone or the wood, where it has found a
-dwelling-place. If a ring of fire is made round cattle or a child’s
-cradle, or if fire is placed under the churn, the fairies have no power
-to harm. And the spirit of the fire is certain to destroy all fairy
-magic, if it exist.
-
-
-THE TRIAL BY FIRE.
-
-
-The ordeal by fire is the great test adopted by the peasants to try if
-a child or any one is fairy-struck. There was a man in Mayo who was
-bedridden for months and months, and though he ate up all the food they
-brought him, he never grew a bit stronger, and on Sundays when they
-went to mass, they locked him up and left him alone in the place with
-plenty of food. Now there was a fine field close by, and one Sunday,
-coming home from mass earlier than usual, they saw a great company of
-people bowling in the field, and the sick man amongst them, but at that
-moment he vanished away; and when the family reached home, there was
-the sick man lying fast asleep in his bed.
-
-“Get up,” they said, “for we have seen you bowling with the fairies,
-and you sha’n’t eat or drink any more at our expense.”
-
-But he refused, and said he was too ill to move. Then they made down a
-large fire of turf and said, “Get up, or we’ll lay you on the fire and
-break the fairy spell.” And they took hold of him to burn him. Then he
-was frightened, and rose up and went out at the door, and they watched
-him till he stopped in the field where the hurlers played, and lay down
-there in the grass; but when they went up to him he was dead.
-
-A man going to his work one morning early saw two women going up to a
-house, and one said, “There is a beautiful boy in this house, go in
-and hand it out to me, and we’ll leave the dead child in its place.”
-And the other went in at the window as she was told, and handed out a
-sleeping child, and took the dead child and laid it in the bed within.
-Now the man saw it was fairy work, and he went over and made the sign
-of the cross on the sleeping child, whereupon the two women shrieked
-as if they had been struck, and fled away, dropping the child on the
-grass. Then the man took it up gently, and put it under his coat, and
-went away to his wife.
-
-“Here,” he said, “take care of this child till I come back, and burn a
-turf beside the cradle to keep off the fairies.”
-
-When he passed by the house again, where he had seen the two women, he
-heard a great crying and lamentation; and he entered in and asked what
-ailed them.
-
-“See here,” said the mother, “my child is dead in its cradle. It died
-in the night, and no one near.” And she wept bitterly.
-
-“Be comforted,” said the man; “this is a fairy changeling, your child
-is safe!” and he told her the story. “Now,” he said, “if you don’t
-believe me, just lay this dead child on the fire, and we’ll see what
-will happen.”
-
-So she made down a good fire, and took the dead child in her arms, and
-laid it on the hot turf, saying, “Burn, burn, burn—if of the devil,
-burn; but if of God and the Saints, be safe from harm.” And the child
-no sooner felt the fire than it sprang up the chimney with a cry and
-disappeared.
-
-
-THE LADY WITCH.
-
-
-About a hundred years ago there lived a woman in Joyce County, of whom
-all the neighbours were afraid, for she had always plenty of money,
-though no one knew how she came by it; and the best of eating and
-drinking went on at her house, chiefly at night—meat and fowls and
-Spanish wines in plenty for all comers. And when people asked how it
-all came, she laughed and said, “I have paid for it,” but would tell
-them no more.
-
-So the word went through the county that she had sold herself to the
-Evil One, and could have everything she wanted by merely wishing and
-willing, and because of her riches they called her “The Lady Witch.”
-
-She never went out but at night, and then always with a bridle and whip
-in her hand; and the sound of a horse galloping was heard often far on
-in the night along the roads near her house.
-
-Then a strange story was whispered about, that if a young man drank
-of her Spanish wines at supper and afterwards fell asleep, she would
-throw the bridle over him and change him to a horse, and ride him all
-over the country, and whatever she touched with her whip became hers.
-Fowls, or butter, or wine, or the new-made cakes—she had but to wish
-and will and they were carried by spirit hands to her house, and laid
-in her larder. Then when the ride was done, and she had gathered enough
-through the country of all she wanted, she took the bridle off the
-young man, and he came back to his own shape and fell asleep; and when
-he awoke he had no knowledge of all that had happened, and the Lady
-Witch bade him come again and drink of her Spanish wines as often as it
-pleased him.
-
-Now there was a fine brave young fellow in the neighbourhood, and he
-determined to make out the truth of the story. So he often went back
-and forwards, and made friends with the Lady Witch, and sat down to
-talk to her, but always on the watch. And she took a great fancy to him
-and told him he must come to supper some night, and she would give him
-the best of everything, and he must taste her Spanish wine.
-
-So she named the night, and he went gladly, for he was filled with
-curiosity. And when he arrived there was a beautiful supper laid, and
-plenty of wine to drink; and he ate and drank, but was cautious about
-the wine, and spilled it on the ground from his glass when her head was
-turned away. Then he pretended to be very sleepy, and she said—
-
-“My son, you are weary. Lie down there on the bench and sleep, for the
-night is far spent, and you are far from your home.”
-
-So he lay down as if he were quite dead with sleep, and closed his
-eyes, but watched her all the time.
-
-And she came over in a little while and looked at him steadily, but he
-never stirred, only breathed the more heavily.
-
-Then she went softly and took the bridle from the wall, and stole over
-to fling it over his head; but he started up, and, seizing the bridle,
-threw it over the woman, who was immediately changed into a spanking
-grey mare. And he led her out and jumped on her back and rode away as
-fast as the wind till he came to the forge.
-
-“Ho, smith,” he cried, “rise up and shoe my mare, for she is weary
-after the journey.”
-
-And the smith got up and did his work as he was bid, well and strong.
-Then the young man mounted again, and rode back like the wind to
-the house of the Witch; and there he took off the bridle, and she
-immediately regained her own form, and sank down in a deep sleep.
-
-But as the shoes had been put on at the forge without saying the proper
-form of words, they remained on her hands and feet, and no power on
-earth could remove them.
-
-So she never rose from her bed again, and died not long after of grief
-and shame. And not one in the whole country would follow the coffin of
-the Lady Witch to the grave; and the bridle was burned with fire, and
-of all her riches nothing was left but a handful of ashes, and this was
-flung to the four points of earth and the four winds of heaven; so the
-enchantment was broken and the power of the Evil One ended.
-
-
-ETHNA THE BRIDE.
-
-
-The fairies, as we know, are greatly attracted by the beauty of mortal
-women, and Finvarra the king employs his numerous sprites to find out
-and carry off when possible the prettiest girls and brides in the
-country. These are spirited away by enchantment to his fairy palace at
-Knockma in Tuam, where they remain under a fairy spell, forgetting all
-about the earthly life and soothed to passive enjoyment, as in a sweet
-dream, by the soft low melody of the fairy music, which has the power
-to lull the hearer into a trance of ecstasy.
-
-There was once a great lord in that part of the country who had a
-beautiful wife called Ethna, the loveliest bride in all the land. And
-her husband was so proud of her that day after day he had festivals
-in her honour; and from morning till night his castle was filled with
-lords and ladies, and nothing but music and dancing and feasting and
-hunting and pleasure was thought of.
-
-One evening while the feast was merriest, and Ethna floated through
-the dance in her robe of silver gossamer clasped with jewels, more
-bright and beautiful than the stars in heaven, she suddenly let go the
-hand of her partner and sank to the floor in a faint.
-
-They carried her to her room, where she lay long quite insensible; but
-towards the morning she woke up and declared that she had passed the
-night in a beautiful palace, and was so happy that she longed to sleep
-again and go there in her dreams. And they watched by her all day,
-but when the shades of evening fell dark on the castle, low music was
-heard at her window, and Ethna again fell into a deep trance from which
-nothing could rouse her.
-
-Then her old nurse was set to watch her; but the woman grew weary in
-the silence and fell asleep, and never awoke till the sun had risen.
-And when she looked towards the bed, she saw to her horror that the
-young bride had disappeared. The whole household was roused up at once,
-and search made everywhere, but no trace of her could be found in all
-the castle, nor in the gardens, nor in the park. Her husband sent
-messengers in every direction, but to no purpose—no one had seen her;
-no sign of her could be found, living or dead.
-
-Then the young lord mounted his swiftest steed and galloped right off
-to Knockma, to question Finvarra, the fairy king, if he could give
-any tidings of the bride, or direct him where to search for her; for
-he and Finvarra were friends, and many a good keg of Spanish wine had
-been left outside the window of the castle at night for the fairies to
-carry away, by order of the young lord. But he little dreamed now that
-Finvarra himself was the traitor; so he galloped on like mad till he
-reached Knockma, the hill of the fairies.
-
-And as he stopped to rest his horse by the fairy rath, he heard voices
-in the air above him, and one said—
-
-“Right glad is Finvarra now, for he has the beautiful bride in his
-palace at last; and never more will she see her husband’s face.”
-
-“Yet,” answered another, “if he dig down through the hill to the centre
-of the earth, he would find his bride; but the work is hard and the way
-is difficult, and Finvarra has more power than any mortal man.”
-
-“That is yet to be seen,” exclaimed the young lord. “Neither fairy,
-nor devil, nor Finvarra himself shall stand between me and my fair
-young wife;” and on the instant he sent word by his servants to gather
-together all the workmen and labourers of the country round with their
-spades and pickaxes, to dig through the hill till they came to the
-fairy palace.
-
-And the workmen came, a great crowd of them, and they dug through the
-hill all that day till a great deep trench was made down to the very
-centre. Then at sunset they left off for the night; but next morning
-when they assembled again to continue their work, behold, all the clay
-was put back again into the trench, and the hill looked as if never a
-spade had touched it—for so Finvarra had ordered; and he was powerful
-over earth and air and sea.
-
-But the young lord had a brave heart, and he made the men go on with
-the work; and the trench was dug again, wide and deep into the centre
-of the hill. And this went on for three days, but always with the same
-result, for the clay was put back again each night and the hill looked
-the same as before, and they were no nearer to the fairy palace.
-
-Then the young lord was ready to die for rage and grief, but suddenly
-he heard a voice near him like a whisper in the air, and the words it
-said were these—
-
-“Sprinkle the earth you have dug up with salt, and your work will be
-safe.”
-
-On this new life came into his heart, and he sent word through all the
-country to gather salt from the people; and the clay was sprinkled with
-it that night, when the men had left off their work at the hill.
-
-Next morning they all rose up early in great anxiety to see what had
-happened, and there to their great joy was the trench all safe, just as
-they had left it, and all the earth round it was untouched.
-
-Then the young lord knew he had power over Finvarra, and he bade the
-men work on with a good heart, for they would soon reach the fairy
-palace now in the centre of the hill. So by the next day a great glen
-was cut right through deep down to the middle of the earth, and they
-could hear the fairy music if they put their ear close to the ground,
-and voices were heard round them in the air.
-
-“See now,” said one, “Finvarra is sad, for if one of those mortal men
-strike a blow on the fairy palace with their spades, it will crumble to
-dust, and fade away like the mist.”
-
-“Then let Finvarra give up the bride,” said another, “and we shall be
-safe.”
-
-On which the voice of Finvarra himself was heard, clear like the note
-of a silver bugle through the hill.
-
-“Stop your work,” he said. “Oh, men of earth, lay down your spades, and
-at sunset the bride shall be given back to her husband. I, Finvarra,
-have spoken.”
-
-Then the young lord bade them stop the work, and lay down their spades
-till the sun went down. And at sunset he mounted his great chestnut
-steed and rode to the head of the glen, and watched and waited; and
-just as the red light flushed all the sky, he saw his wife coming along
-the path in her robe of silver gossamer, more beautiful than ever; and
-he sprang from the saddle and lifted her up before him, and rode away
-like the storm wind back to the castle. And there they laid Ethna on
-her bed; but she closed her eyes and spake no word. So day after day
-passed, and still she never spake or smiled, but seemed like one in a
-trance.
-
-And great sorrow fell upon every one, for they feared she had eaten of
-the fairy food, and that the enchantment would never be broken. So her
-husband was very miserable. But one evening as he was riding home late,
-he heard voices in the air, and one of them said—
-
-“It is now a year and a day since the young lord brought home his
-beautiful wife from Finvarra; but what good is she to him? She is
-speechless and like one dead; for her spirit is with the fairies though
-her form is there beside him.”
-
-Then another voice answered—
-
-“And so she will remain unless the spell is broken. He must unloose the
-girdle from her waist that is fastened with an enchanted pin, and burn
-the girdle with fire, and throw the ashes before the door, and bury
-the enchanted pin in the earth; then will her spirit come back from
-Fairy-land, and she will once more speak and have true life.”
-
-Hearing this the young lord at once set spurs to his horse, and on
-reaching the castle hastened to the room where Ethna lay on her couch
-silent and beautiful like a waxen figure. Then, being determined to
-test the truth of the spirit voices, he untied the girdle, and after
-much difficulty extracted the enchanted pin from the folds. But still
-Ethna spoke no word; then he took the girdle and burned it with fire,
-and strewed the ashes before the door, and he buried the enchanted
-pin in a deep hole in the earth, under a fairy thorn, that no hand
-might disturb the spot. After which he returned to his young wife, who
-smiled as she looked at him, and held forth her hand. Great was his
-joy to see the soul coming back to the beautiful form, and he raised
-her up and kissed her; and speech and memory came back to her at that
-moment, and all her former life, just as if it had never been broken
-or interrupted; but the year that her spirit had passed in Fairy-land
-seemed to her but as a dream of the night, from which she had just
-awoke.
-
-After this Finvarra made no further efforts to carry her off; but the
-deep cut in the hill remains to this day, and is called “The Fairy’s
-Glen.” So no one can doubt the truth of the story as here narrated.
-
-
-THE FAIRIES’ REVENGE.
-
-
-The fairies have a great objection to the fairy raths, where they meet
-at night, being built upon by mortal man. A farmer called Johnstone,
-having plenty of money, bought some land, and chose a beautiful green
-spot to build a house on, the very spot the fairies loved best.
-
-The neighbours warned him that it was a fairy rath; but he laughed and
-never minded (for he was from the north), and looked at such things
-as mere old-wives’ tales. So he built the house and made it beautiful
-to live in; and no people in the country were so well off as the
-Johnstones, so that the people said the farmer must have found a pot of
-gold in the fairy rath.
-
-But the fairies were all the time plotting how they could punish the
-farmer for taking away their dancing ground, and for cutting down the
-hawthorn bush where they held their revels when the moon was full. And
-one day when the cows were milking, a little old woman in a blue cloak
-came to Mrs. Johnstone and asked her for a porringer of milk.
-
-“Go away,” said the mistress of the house, “you shall have no milk from
-me. I’ll have no tramps coming about my place.” And she told the farm
-servants to chase her away.
-
-Some time after, the best and finest of the cows sickened and gave no
-milk, and lost her horns and teeth and finally died.
-
-Then one day as Mrs. Johnstone was sitting spinning flax in the
-parlour, the same little woman in the blue cloak suddenly stood before
-her.
-
-“Your maids are baking cakes in the kitchen,” she said; “give me some
-off the griddle to carry away with me.”
-
-“Go out of this,” cried the farmer’s wife, angrily; “you are a wicked
-old wretch, and have poisoned my best cow.” And she bade the farm
-servants drive her off with sticks.
-
-Now the Johnstones had one only child; a beautiful bright boy, as
-strong as a young colt, and as full of life and merriment. But soon
-after this he began to grow queer and strange, and was disturbed in
-his sleep; for he said the fairies came round him at night and pinched
-and beat him, and some sat on his chest and he could neither breathe
-nor move. And they told him they would never leave him in peace unless
-he promised to give them a supper every night of a griddle cake and a
-porringer of milk. So to soothe the child the mother had these things
-laid every night on a table beside his bed, and in the morning they
-were gone.
-
-But still the child pined away, and his eyes got a strange, wild look,
-as if he saw nothing near or around him, only something far, far away
-that troubled his spirit. And when they asked him what ailed him, he
-said the fairies carried him away to the hills every night, where he
-danced and danced with them till the morning, when they brought him
-back and laid him again in his bed.
-
-At last the farmer and his wife were at their wits’ end from grief and
-despair, for the child was pining away before their eyes, and they
-could do nothing for him to help him. One night he cried out in great
-agony—
-
-“Mother! mother! send for the priest to take away the fairies, for they
-are killing me; they are here on my chest, crushing me to death,” and
-his eyes were wild with terror.
-
-Now the farmer and his wife believed in no fairies, and in no priest,
-but to soothe the child they did as he asked and sent for the priest,
-who prayed over him and sprinkled him with holy water.
-
-The poor little fellow seemed calmer as the priest prayed, and he said
-the fairies were leaving him and going away, and then he sank into a
-quiet sleep. But when he woke in the morning he told his parents that
-he had a beautiful dream and was walking in a lovely garden with the
-angels; and he knew it was heaven, and that he would be there before
-night, for the angels told him they would come for him.
-
-Then they watched by the sick child all through the night, for they
-saw the fever was still on him, but hoped a change would come before
-morning; for he now slept quite calmly with a smile on his lips.
-
-But just as the clock struck midnight he awoke and sat up, and when his
-mother put her arms round him weeping, he whispered to her—“The angels
-are here, mother,” and then he sank back, and so died.
-
-Now after this calamity the farmer never held up his head. He ceased
-to mind his farm, and the crops went to ruin and the cattle died, and
-finally before a year and a day were over he was laid in the grave by
-the side of his little son; and the land passed into other hands, and
-as no one would live in the house it was pulled down. No one, either,
-would plant on the rath; so the grass grew again all over it, green
-and beautiful, and the fairies danced there once more in the moonlight
-as they used to do in the old time, free and happy; and thus the evil
-spell was broken for evermore.
-
-But the people would have nothing to do with the childless mother,
-so she went away back to her own people, a broken-hearted, miserable
-woman—a warning to all who would arouse the vengeance of the fairies by
-interfering with their ancient rights and possessions and privileges.
-
-
-FAIRY HELP.
-THE PHOUKA.
-
-
-The Phouka is a friendly being, and often helps the farmer at his work
-if he is treated well and kindly. One day a farmer’s son was minding
-cattle in the field when something rushed past him like the wind; but
-he was not frightened, for he knew it was the Phouka on his way to the
-old mill by the moat where the fairies met every night. So he called
-out, “Phouka, Phouka! show me what you are like, and I’ll give you my
-big coat to keep you warm.” Then a young bull came to him lashing his
-tail like mad; but Phadrig threw the coat over him, and in a moment he
-was quiet as a lamb, and told the boy to come to the mill that night
-when the moon was up, and he would have good luck.
-
-So Phadrig went, but saw nothing except sacks of corn all lying about
-on the ground, for the men had fallen asleep, and no work was done.
-Then he lay down also and slept, for he was very tired: and when he
-woke up early in the morning there was all the meal ground, though
-certainly the men had not done it, for they still slept. And this
-happened for three nights, after which Phadrig determined to keep awake
-and watch.
-
-Now there was an old chest in the mill, and he crept into this to hide,
-and just looked through the keyhole to see what would happen. And
-exactly at midnight six little fellows came in, each carrying a sack
-of corn upon his back; and after them came an old man in tattered rags
-of clothes, and he bade them turn the mill, and they turned and turned
-till all was ground.
-
-Then Phadrig ran to tell his father, and the miller determined to watch
-the next night with his son, and both together saw the same thing
-happen.
-
-“Now,” said the farmer, “I see it is the Phouka’s work, and let him
-work if it pleases him, for the men are idle and lazy and only sleep.
-So I’ll pack the whole set off to-morrow, and leave the grinding of the
-corn to this excellent old Phouka.”
-
-After this the farmer grew so rich that there was no end to his money,
-for he had no men to pay, and all his corn was ground without his
-spending a penny. Of course the people wondered much over his riches,
-but he never told them about the Phouka, or their curiosity would have
-spoiled the luck.
-
-Now Phadrig went often to the mill and hid in the chest that he might
-watch the fairies at work; but he had great pity for the poor old
-Phouka in his tattered clothes, who yet directed everything and had
-hard work of it sometimes keeping the little Phoukas in order. So
-Phadrig, out of love and gratitude, bought a fine suit of cloth and
-silk and laid it one night on the floor of the mill just where the old
-Phouka always stood to give his orders to the little men, and then he
-crept into the chest to watch.
-
-“How is this?” said the Phouka when he saw the clothes. “Are these for
-me? I shall be turned into a fine gentleman.”
-
-And he put them on, and then began to walk up and down admiring
-himself. But suddenly he remembered the corn and went to grind as
-usual, then stopped and cried out—
-
-“No, no. No more work for me. Fine gentlemen don’t grind corn. I’ll go
-out and see a little of the world and show my fine clothes.” And he
-kicked away the old rags into a corner, and went out.
-
-No corn was ground that night, nor the next, nor the next; all the
-little Phoukas ran away, and not a sound was heard in the mill. Then
-Phadrig grew very sorry for the loss of his old friend, and used to go
-out into the fields and call out, “Phouka, Phouka! come back to me. Let
-me see your face.” But the old Phouka never came back, and all his life
-long Phadrig never looked on the face of his friend again. However, the
-farmer had made so much money that he wanted no more help; and he sold
-the mill, and reared up Phadrig to be a great scholar and a gentleman,
-who had his own house and land and servants. And in time he married a
-beautiful lady, so beautiful that the people said she must be daughter
-to the king of the fairies.
-
-A strange thing happened at the wedding, for when they all stood up to
-drink the bride’s health, Phadrig saw beside him a golden cup filled
-with wine. And no one knew how the golden cup had come to his hand; but
-Phadrig guessed it was the Phouka’s gift, and he drank the wine without
-fear and made his bride drink also. And ever after their lives were
-happy and prosperous, and the golden cup was kept as a treasure in the
-family, and the descendants of Phadrig have it in their possession to
-this day.
-
-
-THE FARMER PUNISHED.
-
-
-The fairies, with their free, joyous temperament and love of beauty and
-luxury, hold in great contempt the minor virtues of thrift and economy,
-and, above all things, abhor the close, hard, niggardly nature that
-spends grudgingly and never gives freely. Indeed, they seem to hold it
-as their peculiar mission to punish such people, and make them suffer
-for the sins of the hard heart and niggard hand, as may be seen by the
-following tale:—
-
-A farmer once lived near the Boyne, close to an old churchyard. He was
-very rich, and had crops and cattle, but was so hard and avaricious
-that the people hated him; for his habit was to get up very early
-in the morning and go out to the fields to watch that no one took a
-cabbage or a turnip, or got a cup of milk when the cows were being
-milked, for the love of God and the saints.
-
-One morning, as he was out as usual by sunrise spying about the place,
-he heard a child crying bitterly—
-
-“Oh, mother, mother! I am hungry. Give me something, or I’ll die.”
-
-“Hush, darling,” said the mother, “though the hunger is on you, wait;
-for the farmer’s cow will be milked presently, and I’ll knock down the
-pail so the milk will be spilt upon the ground, and you can drink your
-fill.”[6]
-
- [6] The fairies have a right to whatever is spilt or falls upon the
- ground.
-
-When the farmer heard this he sent a stout man to watch the girl that
-milked, and to tie the cow’s feet that she should not kick. So that
-time no milk was spilled upon the ground.
-
-Next morning he went out again by sunrise, and he heard the child
-crying more bitterly even than before—
-
-“Mother, mother! I am hungry. Give me to eat.”
-
-“Wait, my child,” said the mother; “the farmer’s maid bakes cakes
-to-day, and I’ll make the dish to fall just as she is carrying them
-from the griddle. So we shall have plenty to eat this time.”
-
-Then the farmer went home and locked up the meal, and said—
-
-“No cakes shall be baked to-day, not till the night.”
-
-But the cry of the child was in his ears, and he could not rest. So
-early in the morning he was out again, and bitter was the cry of the
-child as he passed the copse—
-
-“Mother, mother!” it said, “I have had no milk, I have had no cake; let
-me lay down my head on your breast and die.”
-
-“Wait,” said the mother, “some one will die before you, my darling. Let
-the old man look to his son, for he will be killed in battle before
-many days are over; and then the curse will be lifted from the poor,
-and we shall have food in plenty.”
-
-But the farmer laughed. “There is no war in Ireland now,” he said to
-himself. “How then can my son be killed in battle?” And he went home
-to his own house, and there in the courtyard was his son cleaning
-his spear and sharpening his arrows. He was a comely youth, tall and
-slender as a young oak-tree, and his brown hair fell in long curls over
-his shoulders.
-
-“Father,” he said, “I am summoned by the king, for he is at war with
-the other kings. So give me the swiftest horse you have, for I must
-be off to-night to join the king’s men. And see, I have my spears and
-arrows ready.”
-
-Now at that time in Ireland there were four great kings, and each of
-them had two deputies. And the king of Leinster made a great feast
-for the deputies, and to seven of them he gave a brooch of gold each,
-but to the eighth only a brooch of silver, for, he said, the man is
-not a prince like the others. Then the eighth deputy was angry, and he
-struck the king’s page full in the face for handing him the brooch. On
-this all the knights sprang up and drew their swords, and some took one
-part and some another, and there was a great fight in the hall. And
-afterwards the four kings quarrelled, and the king of Leinster sent out
-messengers to bid all his people come to help him. So the farmer’s son
-got the message as well as the others, and he made ready at once to
-join the battle with a proud heart for the sake of the king and a young
-man’s love of adventure.
-
-Then the farmer was filled with rage.
-
-“This is the wicked work of the witch woman,” he said; “but as I would
-not give her the milk to spill, nor the cakes when baked, so I will not
-give her the life of my only son.”
-
-And he took large stones and built up great walls the height of a man,
-round a hut, and set a great stone at the top to close it, only leaving
-places for a vessel of food to be handed down. And he placed the lad
-within the hut.
-
-“Now,” he said, “the king shall not have him, nor the king’s men; he is
-safe from the battle and the spears of the warriors.”
-
-So the next morning he rose up quite content, and was out at sunrise as
-usual; and as he walked by the churchyard, he heard the child laughing.
-And the mother said—
-
-“Child, you laugh by a grave. For the farmer’s son will be laid in that
-ground before three days are over, and then the curse will be lifted
-from the poor. He would not let the milk be spilled, nor the cakes to
-be baked, but he cannot keep his son from death. The spell is on him
-for evil.”
-
-Then a voice said—
-
-“But his father has walled him round in a hut with strong walls, high
-as a man. How then can he die in battle?”
-
-And the woman answered—
-
-“I climbed the hut last night and gave him nine stones, and bade him
-throw them one by one over his left shoulder, and each time a stone
-of the wall would fall down, till free space was left him to escape,
-and this he did; and before sunrise this morning he fled away, and has
-joined the king’s army; but his grave is ready, and in three days he
-will be in this ground, for his doom is spoken.”
-
-When the farmer heard these words, he rushed like mad to the hut, and
-called his son by name; but no answer came. Then he climbed up and
-looked in through the hole at the top, but no sign of his son was
-there. And he wrung his hands in despair, and went home and spake no
-word, but sat moaning with his head buried in his hands.
-
-And on the third day he heard the steps of men outside, and he rose up,
-for he knew they were bearing the body of his dead son to the door. And
-he went out to meet them, and there lay the corpse of the young man on
-the bier, pale and beautiful, struck through and through by a spear,
-even as he had died in battle.
-
-And they laid him in the churchyard, just as the witch-woman had
-foretold, while all the people wept, for the young man was noble to
-look upon, and of a good and upright spirit.
-
-But the father neither spoke nor wept. His mind was gone, and his heart
-was broken. And soon he lay down and died, unpitied by all; for he
-was hard and cruel in his life, and no man wept for him; and all the
-riches he had gathered by grinding down the poor melted away, and his
-race perished from the land, and his name was heard of no more, and no
-blessing rested on his memory.
-
-
-THE FARMER’S WIFE.
-
-
-Down in the South there lived another rich farmer and his wife, who
-were both of them hated by the people for their stingy, hard-hearted
-ways. Never a word of kindness was on their lips, and never a blessing
-from the poor was invoked on their heads.
-
-One day an old woman came to the door to beg a little food—a cake from
-the griddle, or a few potatoes, or a handful of meal; but she was
-harshly refused by the farmer’s wife and turned away.
-
-Then she came back in a little while, and begged for a drink of milk,
-for she was faint and weary, she said, and had travelled far. This was
-also refused, and she was ordered to leave the place at once. But the
-woman still begged hard for leave to rest herself a little, and for
-even a drink of butter milk, for it was churning day and she knew there
-must be plenty in the house. Then the farmer’s wife grew very angry,
-and said she would turn the dogs on her if she didn’t go away, and
-that no tramp should get anything from her. On this the woman muttered
-some words, with her hand on the lintel of the door, and then went her
-way. Soon after, being much heated by the violence of her anger, the
-farmer’s wife went to the dairy for a drink; but as she poured out
-the draught she saw something black in the cup, and she tried to take
-it out with her finger, but it always escaped her. Then, being very
-thirsty, she drank off the milk, and still another and another cup,
-and in the drinking the black object disappeared. That night, however,
-she felt nigh to death, for her body began to swell, and turned black
-all over. Medical aid was sent for, but the doctor could make out
-nothing of the cause or nature of the strange disease. Then the priest
-was summoned, and he at once, having heard the story, said there was
-witchcraft in it; and he proceeded to pray, and to exorcise the evil
-spirit in the woman. Besides this he made her be placed in a hot bath,
-into which he poured some holy water.
-
-At first the woman uttered fierce cries, and said her body seemed rent
-and torn; but gradually she became calmer, and the blackness slowly
-went down from head to feet, and finally disappeared, leaving the body
-fair and whole, all except one hand, and this remained still as black
-as ink. The holy water was poured on it, and the priest prayed, but
-nothing would remove the devil’s mark.
-
-So the priest told her at last that the blackness would remain as a
-sign and token of her sins against the poor; and from that day forth
-to her death the mark of the evil spell remained on her, but she grew
-kinder to the poor, for her heart was shaken by terror. And when she
-came to die there was no blackness on her hand, for the tears of the
-poor she had succoured and befriended had washed all the devil’s mark
-away, before the moment came when her soul was to appear before God.
-
-
-THE MIDNIGHT RIDE.
-A PEASANT’S TALE.
-
-
-One evening a man called Shawn Ruadh was out looking for a red cow that
-had strayed away, when he heard voices round him, and one said “Get me
-a horse,” and another cried “Get me a horse.”
-
-“And get me a horse, too,” said Shawn, “since they seem so plenty, for
-I’d like a ride along with you,” and with that he found himself on the
-instant mounted on a fine grey horse beside another man who rode a
-black horse. And they rode away and away till they came to a great city.
-
-“Now, do you know where you are?” said the black horseman. “You are in
-London, and whatever you want you can have.”
-
-“Thank you kindly, my friend,” said the other, “so, with your leave,
-I’ll just have a good suit of clothes, for I’m much in want of that
-same. Can I have them?”
-
-“By all means,” said the black horseman; “there, go into that
-merchant’s shop and ask for what you like, and if he refuses just throw
-the stone I give you on the floor and the whole place will seem on
-fire. But don’t be frightened; only wait your good luck.”
-
-So Shawn went into the biggest shop there, and he spoke to the merchant
-quite stiff and proud.
-
-“Show me the best suit of clothes you have,” said he. “Never mind the
-price, that’s of no consequence, only be very particular as to the fit.”
-
-But the shopman laughed aloud.
-
-“We don’t make clothes for beggars like you,” he said. “Be off out of
-this.”
-
-Then Shawn threw down the stone on the floor, and immediately the whole
-place seemed on fire, and the merchant ran out himself and all the
-shopmen after him to get pails of water, and Shawn laughed when he saw
-them all drenched.
-
-“Now what will you give me,” said he, “if I put out the fire for you?”
-
-“You shall have the price of the best suit of clothes in the shop,”
-answered the merchant, “all paid down in gold; only help me to put out
-the fire.”
-
-So Shawn stooped down and picked up the stone, and put it quietly into
-his pocket, and instantly all the flames disappeared: and the merchant
-was so grateful that he paid him down all the gold for the clothes and
-more. And Shawn bid him good-night, and mounted the grey steed again
-quite happy in himself.
-
-“Now,” said the black horseman, “is there anything else you desire? for
-it is near ten o’clock, and we must be back by midnight; so just say
-what you would like to do.”
-
-“Well,” said Shawn Ruadh, “I would like of all things to see the Pope
-of Rome, for two of our priests are disputing as to who is to get
-the parish, and I want Father M’Grath to have it, for I have a great
-opinion of him, and if I ask his Holiness he’ll settle it all in no
-time and for ever.”
-
-“Come then,” said the black horseman; “it is a long way to Rome,
-certainly, but I think we’ll manage it in the two hours, and be back
-before twelve o’clock.”
-
-So away they rode like the wind, and in no time Shawn found himself
-before the great palace of the Pope; and all the grand servants with
-gold sticks in their hands stared at him, and asked him what he wanted.
-
-“Just go in,” said he, “and tell his Holiness that Shawn Ruadh, all the
-way from Ireland, is here and wants to see him very particularly.”
-
-But the servants laughed, and struck him with their gold sticks and
-hunted him away from the gate. Now the Pope hearing the rout looked out
-of the window, and seeing Shawn Ruadh he came down and asked him what
-he wanted.
-
-“Just this, your Holiness,” answered Shawn, “I want a letter on behalf
-of Father M’Grath bidding the Bishop give him the parish, and I’ll
-wait till your Holiness writes it; and meanwhile let me have a little
-supper, for it’s hungry I am after my long ride.”
-
-Then the Pope laughed, and told the servants to drive the fellow away,
-for he was evidently out of his wits.
-
-So Shawn grew angry, and flung down the stone on the floor, and
-instantly all the palace seemed on fire, and the Pope ordered the grand
-servants to go for water; and they had to run about like mad getting
-pails and jugs of water, whatever they could lay hands on; and all
-their fine clothes were spoiled, and the beautiful gold sticks were
-flung away in their fright, while they took the jugs and splashed and
-dashed the water over each other.
-
-Now it was Shawn’s turn to laugh till his sides ached, but his Holiness
-looked very grave.
-
-“Well,” said Shawn, “if I put out the fire what will you do for me?
-Will you write that letter?”
-
-“Ay, I will,” said the Pope, “and you shall have your supper also; only
-help us to put out the fire, my fine fellow.”
-
-So Shawn quietly put the stone back in his pocket, and instantly all
-the flames disappeared.
-
-“Now,” said the Pope, “you shall have supper of the best in the palace;
-and I’ll write a letter to the Bishop ordering him to give Father
-M’Grath the parish. And here, besides, is a purse of gold for yourself,
-and take it with my blessing.”
-
-Then he ordered all the grand servants to get supper for the excellent
-young man from Ireland, and to make him comfortable. So Shawn was
-mightily pleased, and ate and drank like a prince. Then he mounted his
-grey steed again, and just as midnight struck he found himself at his
-own door, but all alone; for the grey steed and the black horseman had
-both vanished. But there stood his wife crying her eyes out and in
-great trouble.
-
-“O Shawn, Agra! I thought you were dead or that evil had fallen on you.”
-
-“Not a bit of it,” said Shawn, “I’ve been supping with the Pope of
-Rome, and look here at all the gold I’ve brought home for you, my
-darlint.”
-
-And he put his hand in his pocket to get the purse; but lo! there was
-nothing there except a rough, grey stone. And from that hour to this
-his wife believes that he dreamed the whole story as he lay under the
-hay-rick, on his way home from a carouse with the boys.
-
-However, Father M’Grath got the parish, and Shawn took good care to
-tell him how he had spoken up boldly for him to the Pope of Rome, and
-made his Holiness write the letter to the Bishop about him. And Father
-M’Grath was a nice gentleman, and he smiled and told Shawn he thanked
-him kindly for his good word.
-
-
-THE LEPREHAUN.[7]
-
-
-The Leprehauns are merry, industrious, tricksy little sprites, who do
-all the shoemaker’s work and the tailor’s and the cobbler’s for the
-fairy gentry, and are often seen at sunset under the hedge singing
-and stitching. They know all the secrets of hidden treasure, and if
-they take a fancy to a person will guide him to the spot in the fairy
-rath where the pot of gold lies buried. It is believed that a family
-now living near Castlerea came by their riches in a strange way, all
-through the good offices of a friendly Leprehaun. And the legend has
-been handed down through many generations as an established fact.
-
- [7] Leprehaun, or _Leith Brogan_, means the “Artisan of the Brogae.”
-
-There was a poor boy once, one of their forefathers, who used to drive
-his cart of turf daily back and forward, and make what money he could
-by the sale; but he was a strange boy, very silent and moody, and the
-people said he was a fairy changeling, for he joined in no sports and
-scarcely ever spoke to any one, but spent the nights reading all the
-old bits of books he picked up in his rambles. The one thing he longed
-for above all others was to get rich, and to be able to give up the
-old weary turf cart, and live in peace and quietness all alone, with
-nothing but books round him, in a beautiful house and garden all by
-himself.
-
-Now he had read in the old books how the Leprehauns knew all the secret
-places where gold lay hid, and day by day he watched for a sight of the
-little cobbler, and listened for the click, click of his hammer as he
-sat under the hedge mending the shoes.
-
-At last, one evening just as the sun set, he saw a little fellow under
-a dock leaf, working away, dressed all in green, with a cocked hat on
-his head. So the boy jumped down from the cart and seized him by the
-neck.
-
-“Now, you don’t stir from this,” he cried, “till you tell me where to
-find the hidden gold.”
-
-“Easy now,” said the Leprehaun, “don’t hurt me, and I will tell you all
-about it. But mind you, I could hurt you if I chose, for I have the
-power; but I won’t do it, for we are cousins once removed. So as we are
-near relations I’ll just be good, and show you the place of the secret
-gold that none can have or keep except those of fairy blood and race.
-Come along with me, then, to the old fort of Lipenshaw, for there it
-lies. But make haste, for when the last red glow of the sun vanishes
-the gold will disappear also, and you will never find it again.”
-
-“Come off, then,” said the boy, and he carried the Leprehaun into the
-turf cart, and drove off. And in a second they were at the old fort,
-and went in through a door made in the stone wall.
-
-“Now, look round,” said the Leprehaun; and the boy saw the whole ground
-covered with gold pieces, and there were vessels of silver lying about
-in such plenty that all the riches of all the world seemed gathered
-there.
-
-“Now take what you want,” said the Leprehaun, “but hasten, for if that
-door shuts you will never leave this place as long as you live.”
-
-So the boy gathered up his arms full of gold and silver, and flung them
-into the cart; and was on his way back for more when the door shut with
-a clap like thunder, and all the place became dark as night. And he saw
-no more of the Leprehaun, and had not time even to thank him.
-
-So he thought it best to drive home at once with his treasure, and when
-he arrived and was all alone by himself he counted his riches, and all
-the bright yellow gold pieces, enough for a king’s ransom.
-
-And he was very wise and told no one; but went off next day to Dublin
-and put all his treasures into the bank, and found that he was now
-indeed as rich as a lord.
-
-So he ordered a fine house to be built with spacious gardens, and he
-had servants and carriages and books to his heart’s content. And he
-gathered all the wise men round him to give him the learning of a
-gentleman; and he became a great and powerful man in the country, where
-his memory is still held in high honour, and his descendants are living
-to this day rich and prosperous; for their wealth has never decreased
-though they have ever given largely to the poor, and are noted above
-all things for the friendly heart and the liberal hand.
-
- * * * * *
-
-But the Leprehauns can be bitterly malicious if they are offended, and
-one should be very cautious in dealing with them, and always treat them
-with great civility, or they will take revenge and never reveal the
-secret of the hidden gold.
-
-One day a young lad was out in the fields at work when he saw a
-little fellow, not the height of his hand, mending shoes under a dock
-leaf. And he went over, never taking his eyes off him for fear he
-would vanish away; and when he got quite close he made a grab at the
-creature, and lifted him up and put him in his pocket.
-
-Then he ran away home as fast as he could, and when he had the
-Leprehaun safe in the house, he tied him by an iron chain to the hob.
-
-“Now, tell me,” he said, “where am I to find a pot of gold? Let me know
-the place or I’ll punish you.”
-
-“I know of no pot of gold,” said the Leprehaun; “but let me go that I
-may finish mending the shoes.”
-
-“Then I’ll make you tell me,” said the lad.
-
-And with that he made down a great fire, and put the little fellow on
-it and scorched him.
-
-“Oh, take me off, take me off!” cried the Leprehaun, “and I’ll tell
-you. Just there, under the dock leaf, where you found me, there is a
-pot of gold. Go; dig and find.”
-
-So the lad was delighted, and ran to the door; but it so happened that
-his mother was just then coming in with the pail of fresh milk, and in
-his haste he knocked the pail out of her hand, and all the milk was
-spilled on the floor.
-
-Then, when the mother saw the Leprehaun, she grew very angry and beat
-him. “Go away, you little wretch!” she cried. “You have overlooked the
-milk and brought ill-luck.” And she kicked him out of the house.
-
-But the lad ran off to find the dock leaf, though he came back very
-sorrowful in the evening, for he had dug and dug nearly down to the
-middle of the earth; but no pot of gold was to be seen.
-
-That same night the husband was coming home from his work, and as he
-passed the old fort he heard voices and laughter, and one said—
-
-“They are looking for a pot of gold; but they little know that a crock
-of gold is lying down in the bottom of the old quarry, hid under the
-stones close by the garden wall. But whoever gets it must go of a dark
-night at twelve o’clock, and beware of bringing his wife with him.”
-
-So the man hurried home and told his wife he would go that very night,
-for it was black dark, and she must stay at home and watch for him, and
-not stir from the house till he came back. Then he went out into the
-dark night alone.
-
-“Now,” thought the wife, when he was gone, “if I could only get to the
-quarry before him I would have the pot of gold all to myself; while if
-he gets it I shall have nothing.”
-
-And with that she went out and ran like the wind until she reached the
-quarry, and than she began to creep down very quietly in the black
-dark. But a great stone was in her path, and she stumbled over it,
-and fell down and down till she reached the bottom, and there she lay
-groaning, for her leg was broken by the fall.
-
-Just then her husband came to the edge of the quarry and began to
-descend. But when he heard the groans he was frightened.
-
-“Cross of Christ about us!” he exclaimed; “what is that down below? Is
-it evil, or is it good?”
-
-“Oh, come down, come down and help me!” cried the woman. “It’s your
-wife is here, and my leg is broken, and I’ll die if you don’t help me.”
-
-“And is this my pot of gold?” exclaimed the poor man. “Only my wife
-with a broken leg lying at the bottom of the quarry.”
-
-And he was at his wits’ end to know what to do, for the night was so
-dark he could not see a hand before him. So he roused up a neighbour,
-and between them they dragged up the poor woman and carried her home,
-and laid her on the bed half dead from fright, and it was many a day
-before she was able to get about as usual; indeed she limped all her
-life long, so that the people said the curse of the Leprehaun was on
-her.
-
-But as to the pot of gold, from that day to this not one of the family,
-father or son, or any belonging to them, ever set eyes on it. However,
-the little Leprehaun still sits under the dock leaf of the hedge and
-laughs at them as he mends the shoes with his little hammer—tick tack,
-tick tack—but they are afraid to touch him, for now they know he can
-take his revenge.
-
-
-LEGENDS OF THE WESTERN ISLANDS.
-
-
-In the islands off the West Coast of Ireland the inhabitants are still
-very primitive in their habits, and cling to their old superstitions
-with a fanatical fervour that makes it dangerous for any one to
-transgress or disregard the old customs, usages, and prejudices of the
-islanders.
-
-Curses heavy and deep would fall on the head of the unbelieving
-stranger who dared to laugh or mock at the old traditions of the
-ancient pagan creed, whose dogmas are still regarded with a mysterious
-awe and dread, and held sacred as a revelation from heaven.
-
-The chief islands are Aran and Innismore, the latter about nine
-miles long. The cattle live on the fine grass of the rocks, and turf
-is brought from the mainland. The views are magnificent of sea and
-mountain, and the islands contain a greater number of pagan and early
-Christian monuments than could be found in the same area in any other
-part of Europe.
-
-Some of the _Duns_ or forts include several acres. The walls are
-cyclopean, about sixteen feet thick and from eighteen to twenty feet
-high, with steps inside leading to the top. Amongst the monuments are
-cromlechs, tumuli, and pillar stones, those earliest memorials set up
-by humanity. The Irish call these huge stones _Bothal_, or House of
-God, as the Hebrews called them Bethel, or God’s house.
-
-Dun Ængus, the greatest barbaric monument of the kind in existence,
-stands on a cliff three hundred feet above the sea. It is a hundred
-and forty-two feet in diameter, and has two cyclopean walls fifteen
-feet thick and eighteen high. The sea front measures a thousand feet,
-and several acres are included within the outer wall. The roof of the
-dun is formed of large flag-stones, and the doorway slopes, after the
-Egyptian fashion, up to three feet in width at the top. A causeway of
-sharp, upright stones jammed into the ground leads to the entrance.
-
-This fort was the great and last stronghold of the Firbolg race, and
-they long held it as a refuge against the _Tuatha-de-Danann_ invaders,
-who at that time conquered and took possession of Ireland.
-
-All the islands were originally peopled by the Firbolg race many
-centuries before the Christian era, and the Irish language, as still
-spoken by the people, is the purest and most ancient of all the
-dialects of Erin. Afterwards so many Christian saints took up their
-abode there that the largest of the islands was called _Ara-na-naomh_
-(Aran of the Saints), and numerous remains of churches, cells, crosses
-and stone-roofed oratories, with the ruins of a round tower, testify to
-the long habitation of the islands by these holy men.
-
-There is an old wooden idol on one of the Achil islands called Father
-Molosh—probably a corruption of Moloch. In former times offerings and
-sacrifices were made to it, and it was esteemed as the guardian or god
-of the sacred fire, and held in great reverence, though but a rude
-semblance of a human head. Many miracles also were performed by the
-tooth of St. Patrick, which fell from the saint’s mouth one day when
-he was teaching the alphabet to the new converts. And a shrine was
-afterwards made for the tooth that was held in the greatest honour by
-the kings, chiefs, and people of Ireland.
-
-The stupendous barbaric monuments of the islands, according to Irish
-antiquarians, offer the best exposition of early military architecture
-at present known, and are only equalled by some of those in Greece.
-There are also many sacred wells, and the whole region is haunted by
-strange, wild superstitions of fairies and demons and witches; legends
-filled with a weird and mystic poetry that thrill the soul like a
-strain of music from spirit voices coming to us from the far-off elder
-world. The following pathetic tale is a good specimen of these ancient
-island legends:—
-
-
-THE BRIDE’S DEATH-SONG.
-
-
-On a lone island by the West Coast there dwelt an old fisherman and his
-daughter, and the man had power over the water spirits, and he taught
-his daughter the charms that bind them to obey.
-
-One day a boat was driven on the shore, and in it was a young handsome
-gentleman, half dead from the cold and the wet. The old fisherman
-brought him home and revived him, and Eileen the daughter nursed and
-watched him. Naturally the two young people soon fell in love, and the
-gentleman told the girl he had a beautiful house on the mainland ready
-for her, with plenty of everything she could desire—silks to wear and
-gold to spend. So they were betrothed, and the wedding day was fixed.
-But Dermot, the lover, said he must first cross to the mainland and
-bring back his friends and relations to the wedding, as many as the
-boat would hold.
-
-Eileen wept and prayed him not to leave, or at least to take her to
-steer the boat, for she knew there was danger coming, and she alone
-could have power over the evil spirits and over the waves and the
-winds. But she dared not tell the secret of the spell to Dermot or it
-would fail, and the charm be useless for ever after.
-
-Dermot, however, only laughed at her fears, for the day was bright and
-clear, and he scorned all thought of danger. So he put off from the
-shore, and reached the mainland safely, and filled the boat with his
-friends to return to the island for the wedding. All went well till
-they were within sight of the island, when suddenly a fierce gust of
-wind drove the boat on a rock, and it was upset, and all who were in it
-perished.
-
-Eileen heard the cry of the drowning men as she stood watching on the
-beach, but could give no help. And she was sore grieved for her lover,
-and sang a funeral wail for him in Irish, which is still preserved by
-the people. Then she lay down and died, and the old man, her father,
-disappeared. And from that day no one has ever ventured to live on the
-island, for it is haunted by the spirit of Eileen. And the mournful
-music of her wail is still heard in the nights when the winds are
-strong and the waves beat upon the rocks where the drowned men lay dead.
-
-The words of the song are very plaintive and simple, and may be
-translated literally—
-
- “I a virgin and a widow mourn for my lover.
- Never more will he kiss me on the lips;
- The cold wave is his bridal bed,
- The cold wave is his wedding shroud.
- O love, my love, had you brought me in the boat
- My spirit and my spells would have saved from harm.
- For my power was strong over waves and wind,
- And the spirits of evil would have feared me.
- O love, my love, I go to meet you in heaven.
- I will ask God to let me see your face.
- If the fair angels give me back my lover,
- I will not envy the Almighty on His throne.”
-
-
-THE CHILD’S DREAM.
-
-
-The island of Innis-Sark (Shark Island) was a holy and peaceful place
-in old times; and so quiet that the pigeons used to come and build in a
-great cave by the sea, and no one disturbed them. And the holy saints
-of God had a monastery there, to which many people resorted from the
-mainland, for the prayers of the monks were powerful against sickness
-or evil, or the malice of an enemy.
-
-Amongst others, there came a great and noble prince out of Munster,
-with his wife and children and their nurse; and they were so pleased
-with the island that they remained a year or more; for the prince loved
-fishing, and often brought his wife along with him.
-
-One day, while they were both away, the eldest child, a beautiful boy
-of ten years old, begged his nurse to let him go and see the pigeons’
-cave, but she refused.
-
-“Your father would be angry,” she cried, “if you went without leave.
-Wait till he comes home, and see if he will allow you.”
-
-So when the prince returned, the boy told him how he longed to see the
-cave, and the father promised to bring him next day.
-
-The morning was beautiful and the wind fair when they set off. But the
-child soon fell asleep in the boat, and never wakened all the time his
-father was fishing. The sleep, however, was troubled, and many a time
-he started and cried aloud. So the prince thought it better to turn the
-boat and land, and then the boy awoke.
-
-After dinner the father called for the child. “Tell me now,” he said,
-“why was your sleep troubled, so that you cried out bitterly in your
-dream.”
-
-“I dreamed,” said the boy, “that I stood upon a high rock, and at the
-bottom flowed the sea, but the waves made no noise; and as I looked
-down I saw fields and trees and beautiful flowers and bright birds in
-the branches, and I longed to go down and pluck the flowers. Then I
-heard a voice, saying, ‘Blessed are the souls that come here, for this
-is heaven.’
-
-“And in an instant I thought I was in the midst of the meadows amongst
-the birds and the flowers; and a lovely lady, bright as an angel, came
-up to me, and said, ‘What brings you here, dear child; for none but the
-dead come here.’
-
-“Then she left me, and I wept for her going; when suddenly all the sky
-grew black, and a great troop of wild wolves came round me, howling and
-opening their mouths wide as if to devour me. And I screamed, and tried
-to run, but I could not move, and the wolves came closer, and I fell
-down like one dead with fright, when, just then, the beautiful lady
-came again, and took my hand and kissed me.
-
-“‘Fear not,’ she said, ‘take these flowers, they come from heaven. And
-I will bring you to the meadow where they grow.’
-
-“And she lifted me up into the air, but I know nothing more; for then
-the boat stopped and you lifted me on shore, but my beautiful flowers
-must have fallen from my hands, for I never saw them more. And this is
-all my dream; but I would like to have my flowers again, for the lady
-told me they had the secret that would bring me to heaven.”
-
-The prince thought no more of the child’s dream, but went off to fish
-next day as usual, leaving the boy in the care of his nurse. And again
-the child begged and prayed her so earnestly to bring him to the
-pigeons’ cave, that at last she consented; but told him he must not go
-a step by himself, and she would bring two of the boys of the island to
-take care of him.
-
-So they set off, the child and his little sister with the nurse. And
-the boy gathered wild flowers for his sister, and ran down to the
-edge of the cave where the cormorants were swimming; but there was no
-danger, for the two young islanders were minding him.
-
-So the nurse was content, and being weary she fell asleep. And the
-little sister lay down beside her, and fell asleep likewise.
-
-Then the boy called to his companions, the two young islanders, and
-told them he must catch the cormorants. So away they ran, down the
-path to the sea, hand in hand, and laughing as they went. Just then a
-piece of rock loosened and fell beside them, and trying to avoid it
-they slipped over the edge of the narrow path down a steep place, where
-there was nothing to hold on by except a large bush, in the middle of
-the way. They got hold of this, and thought they were now quite safe,
-but the bush was not strong enough to bear their weight, and it was
-torn up by the roots. And all three fell straight down into the sea and
-were drowned.
-
-Now, at the sound of the great cry that came up from the waves, the
-nurse awoke, but saw no one. Then she woke up the little sister. “It is
-late,” she cried, “they must have gone home. We have slept too long, it
-is already evening; let us hasten and overtake them, before the prince
-is back from the fishing.”
-
-But when they reached home the prince stood in the doorway. And he was
-very pale, and weeping.
-
-“Where is my brother?” cried the little girl.
-
-“You will never see your brother more,” answered the prince. And
-from that day he never went fishing any more, but grew silent and
-thoughtful, and was never seen to smile. And in a short time he and his
-family quitted the island, never to return.
-
-But the nurse remained. And some say she became a saint, for she
-was always seen praying and weeping by the entrance to the great sea
-cave. And one day, when they came to look for her, she lay dead on the
-rocks. And in her hand she held some beautiful strange flowers freshly
-gathered, with the dew on them. And no one knew how the flowers came
-into her dead hand. Only some fishermen told the story of how the
-night before they had seen a bright fairy child seated on the rocks
-singing; and he had a red sash tied round his waist, and a golden
-circlet binding his long yellow hair. And they all knew that he was
-the prince’s son, who had been drowned in that spot just a twelvemonth
-before. And the people believe that he had brought the flowers from the
-spirit-land to the woman, and given them to her as a death sign, and a
-blessed token from God that her soul would be taken to heaven.
-
-
-THE FAIRY CHILD.
-
-
-An ancient woman living at Innis-Sark said that in her youth she knew a
-young woman who had been married for five years, but had no children.
-And her husband was a rough, rude fellow, and used to taunt her and
-beat her often, because she was childless. But in the course of time
-it came to pass that a man-child was born to her; and he was beautiful
-to look on as an angel from heaven. And the father was so proud of the
-child that he often stayed at home to rock the cradle, and help his
-wife at the work.
-
-One day, however, as he rocked the cradle, the child looked up suddenly
-at him, and lo! there was a great beard on its face. Then the father
-cried out to his wife—
-
-“This is not a child, but a demon! You have put an evil spell on him.”
-
-And he struck her and beat her worse than ever he had done in his life
-before, so that she screamed aloud for help. On this the place grew
-quite dark, and thunder rolled over their heads, and the door flew wide
-open with a great crash, and in walked two strange women, with red caps
-on their heads and stout sticks in their hands. And they rushed at the
-man, and one held his arms while the other beat him till he was nearly
-dead.
-
-“We are the avengers,” they said; “look on us and tremble; for if you
-ever beat your wife again, we will come and kill you. Kneel down now,
-and ask her pardon.”
-
-And when the poor wretch did so, all trembling with fright, they
-vanished away.
-
-“Now,” said the man, when they were gone, “this house is no fit place
-for me. I’ll leave it for ever.”
-
-So he went his way, and troubled his wife no more.
-
-Then the child sat up in the cradle.
-
-“Now, mother,” says he, “since that man has gone, I’ll tell you what
-you are to do. There is a holy well near this that you have never seen,
-but you will know it by the bunch of green rushes that grows over the
-mouth. Go there and stoop down and cry out aloud three times, and an
-old woman will come up, and whatever you want she will give it to you.
-Only tell no one of the well or of the woman, or evil will come of it.”
-
-So the mother promised, and went to the well, and cried out three
-times; and an old woman came up, and said—
-
-“Woman, why dost thou call me?”
-
-And the poor mother was afraid, and answered all trembling—
-
-“The child sent me, and I pray thee to do me good, and not evil.”
-
-“Come down, then, with me into the well,” said the woman, “and have no
-fear.”
-
-So the mother held out her hand, and the other drew her down a flight
-of stone steps, and then they came to a massive closed door, and the
-old woman unlocked it and bade her enter. But the mother was afraid,
-and wept.
-
-“Enter,” said the other, “and fear nothing. For this is the gate of the
-king’s palace, and you will see the queen of the fairies herself, for
-it is her son you are nursing; and the king, her husband, is with her
-on his golden throne. And have no fear, only ask no questions, and do
-as they order.”
-
-Then they entered into a beautiful hall, and the floor was of marble,
-and the walls were of solid gold, and a great light shone over
-everything, so that the eyes could hardly see for the light. Then they
-passed on into another room, and at the end of it, on a golden throne,
-sat the king of the fairies. He was very handsome, and beside him sat
-his queen, fair and beautiful to look upon, all clad in silver.
-
-“This, madam, is the nurse of your son, the young prince,” said the old
-woman.
-
-The queen smiled, and bade the nurse to sit down, and asked her how she
-came to know of the place.
-
-“My son it is who told her,” said the king, looking very angry.
-
-But the queen soothed him, and turning to one of her ladies, said—
-
-“Bring here the other child.”
-
-Then the lady brought in an infant, and placed him in the arms of the
-mother.
-
-“Take him,” said the queen, “he is your own child, that we carried
-away, for he was so beautiful; and the boy you have at home is mine,
-a little elfish imp. Still, I want him back, and I have sent a man to
-bring him here; and you may take your own lovely child home in safety,
-for the fairy blessings are on him for good. And the man that beat you
-was not your husband at all, but our messenger, that we sent to change
-the children. So now go back, and you will find your own true husband
-at home in your own place, watching and waiting for you by day and by
-night.”
-
-With that the door opened, and the man who had beaten her came in; and
-the mother trembled and was afraid. But the man laughed, and told her
-not to fear, but to eat what was set before her, and then to go in
-peace.
-
-So they brought her to another hall, where was a table covered with
-golden dishes and beautiful flowers, and red wine in crystal cups.
-
-“Eat,” they said; “this feast has been prepared for you. As to us, we
-cannot touch it, for the food has been sprinkled with salt.”
-
-So she ate, and drank of the red wine, and never in all her life were
-so many things set before her that were lovely and good. And, as was
-right and proper, after dinner was over, she stood up, and folded her
-hands together to give God thanks. But they stopped her, and drew her
-down.
-
-“Hush!” they said, “that name is not to be named here.”
-
-There was an angry murmur in the hall. But just then beautiful music
-was heard, and singing like the singing of priests, and the poor mother
-was so enchanted that she fell on her face as one dead. And when she
-came to herself it was noonday, and she was standing by the door of
-her own house. And her husband came out and took her by the hand, and
-brought her in. And there was her child, more beautiful than ever, as
-handsome as a young prince.
-
-“Where have you been all this while?” asked the husband.
-
-“It is only an hour since I went away, to look for my child, that the
-fairies stole from me,” she answered.
-
-“An hour!” said the husband; “you have been three years away with
-your child! And when you were gone, a poor sickly thing was laid in
-the cradle—not as big as a mushroom, and I knew well it was a fairy
-changeling. But it so happened that one day, a tailor came by, and
-stopped to rest; and when he looked hard at the child, the ugly
-misshapen thing sat up quite straight in the cradle, and called out—
-
-“‘Come now, what are you looking at? Give me four straws to play with.’
-
-“And the tailor gave him the straws. And when he got them, the child
-played and played such sweet music on them as if they were pipes, that
-all the chairs and tables began to dance; and when he grew tired, he
-fell back in the cradle and dropped asleep.
-
-“‘Now,’ said the tailor, ‘that child is not right; but I’ll tell you
-what to do. Make down a great fire to begin with.’
-
-“So we made the fire. Then the tailor shut the door, and lifted the
-unlucky little wretch out of the cradle, and sat it on the fire. And no
-sooner had the flames caught it, than it shrieked aloud and flew up the
-chimney and disappeared. And when everything was burned that belonged
-to it, I knew you would come back to me with our own fine boy. And now
-let us name the name of God, and make the sign of the Cross over him,
-and ill luck will never again fall on our house—no more for ever.”
-
-So the man and his wife lived happily from that day forth, and the
-child grew up and prospered, and was beautiful to look at and happy in
-his life; for the fairy blessings were on him of health, wealth, and
-prosperity, even as the queen of the fairies had promised to the mother.
-
-
-THE DOOM.
-
-
-There was a young man of Innismore, named James Lynan, noted through
-all the island for his beauty and strength. Never a one could beat him
-at hunting or wrestling, and he was, besides, the best dancer in the
-whole townland. But he was bold and reckless, and ever foremost in all
-the wild wicked doings of the young fellows of the place.
-
-One day he happened to be in chapel after one of these mad freaks, and
-the priest denounced him by name from the altar.
-
-“James Lynan,” he said, “remember my words; you will come to an ill
-end. The vengeance of God will fall on you for your wicked life; and by
-the power that is in me I denounce you as an evil liver and a limb of
-Satan, and accursed of all good men.”
-
-The young man turned pale, and fell on his knees before all the people,
-crying out bitterly, “Have mercy, have mercy; I repent, I repent,” and
-he wept like a woman.
-
-“Go now in peace,” said the priest, “and strive to lead a new life, and
-I’ll pray to God to save your soul.”
-
-From that day forth James Lynan changed his ways. He gave up drinking,
-and never a drop of spirits crossed his lips. And he began to attend to
-his farm and his business, in place of being at all the mad revels and
-dances and fairs and wakes in the island. Soon after he married a nice
-girl, a rich farmer’s daughter, from the mainland, and they had four
-fine children, and all things prospered with him.
-
-But the priest’s words never left his mind, and he would suddenly turn
-pale and a shivering would come over him when the memory of the curse
-came upon him. Still he prospered, and his life was a model of sobriety
-and order.
-
-One day he and his wife and their children were asked to the wedding
-of a friend about four miles off; and James Lynan rode to the place,
-the family going on their own car. At the wedding he was the life of
-the party as he always was; but never a drop of drink touched his lips.
-When evening came on, the family set out for the return home just
-as they had set out; the wife and children on the car, James Lynan
-riding his own horse. But when the wife arrived at home, she found her
-husband’s horse standing at the gate riderless and quite still. They
-thought he might have fallen in a faint, and went back to search; when
-he was found down in a hollow not five perches from his own gate, lying
-quite insensible and his features distorted frightfully, as if seized
-while looking on some horrible vision.
-
-They carried him in, but he never spoke. A doctor was sent for, who
-opened a vein, but no blood came. There he lay like a log, speechless
-as one dead. Amongst the crowd that gathered round was an old woman
-accounted very wise by the people.
-
-“Send for the fairy doctor,” she said; “he is struck.”
-
-So they sent off a boy on the fastest horse for the fairy man. He could
-not come himself, but he filled a bottle with a potion. Then he said—
-
-“Ride for your life; give him some of this to drink and sprinkle his
-face and hands also with it. But take care as you pass the lone bush
-on the round hill near the hollow, for the fairies are there and will
-hinder you if they can, and strive to break the bottle.”
-
-Then the fairy man blew into the mouth and the eyes and the nostrils of
-the horse, and turned him round three times on the road and rubbed the
-dust off his hoofs.
-
-“Now go,” he said to the boy; “go and never look behind you, no matter
-what you hear.”
-
-So the boy went like the wind, having placed the bottle safely in his
-pocket; and when he came to the lone bush the horse started and gave
-such a jump that the bottle nearly fell, but the boy caught it in time
-and held it safe and rode on. Then he heard a cluttering of feet behind
-him, as of men in pursuit; but he never turned or looked, for he knew
-it was the fairies who were after him. And shrill voices cried to him,
-“Ride fast, ride fast, for the spell is cast!” Still he never turned
-round, but rode on, and never let go his hold of the fairy draught
-till he stopped at his master’s door, and handed the potion to the
-poor sorrowing wife. And she gave of it to the sick man to drink, and
-sprinkled his face and hands, after which he fell into a deep sleep.
-But when he woke up, though he knew every one around him, the power
-of speech was gone from him; and from that time to his death, which
-happened soon after, he never uttered word more.
-
-So the doom of the priest was fulfilled—evil was his youth and evil
-was his fate, and sorrow and death found him at last, for the doom of
-the priest is as the word of God.
-
-
-THE CLEARING FROM GUILT.
-
-
-To prove innocence of a crime a certain ancient form is gone through,
-which the people look on with great awe, and call it emphatically—“The
-Clearing.” It is a fearful ordeal, and instances are known of men who
-have died of fear and trembling from having passed through the terrors
-of the trial, even if innocent. And it is equally terrible for the
-accuser as well as the accused.
-
-On a certain day fixed for the ordeal the accused goes to the
-churchyard and carries away a skull. Then, wrapped in a white sheet,
-and bearing the skull in his hand, he proceeds to the house of the
-accuser, where a great crowd has assembled; for the news of “A
-Clearing” spreads like wildfire, and all the people gather together as
-witnesses of the ceremony. There, before the house of his accuser, he
-kneels down on his bare knees, makes the sign of the cross on his face,
-kisses the skull, and prays for some time in silence; the people also
-wait in silence, filled with awe and dread, not knowing what the result
-may be. Then the accuser, pale and trembling, comes forward and stands
-beside the kneeling man; and with uplifted hand adjures him to speak
-the truth. On which the accused, still kneeling and holding the skull
-in his hand, utters the most fearful imprecation known in the Irish
-language; almost as terrible as that curse of the Druids, which is so
-awful that it never yet was put into English words. The accused prays
-that if he fail to speak the truth all the sins of the man whose skull
-he holds may be laid upon his soul, and all the sins of his forefathers
-back to Adam, and all the punishment due to them for the evil of their
-lives, and all their weakness and sorrow both of body and soul be laid
-on him both in this life and in the life to come for evermore. But if
-the accuser has accused falsely and out of malice, then may all the
-evil rest on his head through this life for ever, and may his soul
-perish everlastingly.
-
-It would be impossible to describe adequately the awe with which the
-assembled people listen to these terrible words, and the dreadful
-silence of the crowd as they wait to see the result. If nothing happens
-the man rises from his knees after an interval, and is pronounced
-innocent by the judgment of the people, and no word is ever again
-uttered against him, nor is he shunned or slighted by the neighbours.
-But the accuser is looked on with fear and dislike; he is considered
-unlucky, and seeing that his life is often made so miserable by the
-coldness and suspicion of the people, many would rather suffer wrong
-than force the accused person to undergo so terrible a trial as “The
-Clearing.”
-
-
-THE HOLY WELL AND THE MURDERER.
-
-
-The Well of St. Brendan, in High Island, has great virtue, but the
-miraculous power of the water is lost should a thief or a murderer
-drink of it. Now a cruel murder had been committed on the mainland, and
-the priest noticed the people that if the murderer tried to conceal
-himself in the island no one should harbour him or give him food
-or drink. It happened at that time there was a woman of the island
-afflicted with pains in her limbs, and she went to the Holy Well to
-make the stations and say the prayers, and so get cured. But many a day
-passed and still she got no better, though she went round and round the
-well on her knees, and recited the paters and aves as she was told.
-
-Then she went to the priest and told him the story, and he perceived
-at once that the well had been polluted by the touch of some one who
-had committed a crime. So he bade the woman bring him a bottle of the
-water, and she did as he desired. Then having received the water,
-he poured it out, and breathed on it three times in the name of the
-Trinity; when, lo! the water turned into blood.
-
-“Here is the evil,” cried the priest. “A murderer has washed his hands
-in the well.”
-
-He then ordered her to make a fire in a circle, which she did, and he
-pronounced some words over it; and a mist rose up with the form of a
-spirit in the midst, holding a man by the arm.
-
-“Behold the murderer,” said the spirit; and when the woman looked on
-him she shrieked—
-
-“It is my son! my son!” and she fainted.
-
-For the year before her son had gone to live on the mainland, and
-there, unknown to his mother, he had committed the dreadful murder for
-which the vengeance of God lay on him. And when she came to herself the
-spirit of the murderer was still there.
-
-“Oh, my Lord! let him go, let him go!” she cried.
-
-“You wretched woman!” answered the priest. “How dare you interpose
-between God and vengeance. This is but the shadowy form of your son;
-but before night he shall be in the hands of the law, and justice shall
-be done.”
-
-Then the forms and the mist melted away, and the woman departed in
-tears, and not long after she died of a broken heart. But the well
-from that time regained all its miraculous powers, and the fame of its
-cures spread far and wide through all the islands.
-
-
-LEGENDS OF INNIS-SARK.
-A WOMAN’S CURSE.
-
-
-There was a woman of the Island of Innis-Sark who was determined to
-take revenge on a man because he called her by an evil name. So she
-went to the Saints’ Well, and, kneeling down, she took some of the
-water and poured it on the ground in the name of the devil, saying,
-“So may my enemy be poured out like water, and lie helpless on the
-earth!” Then she went round the well backwards on her knees, and at
-each station she cast a stone in the name of the devil, and said, “So
-may the curse fall on him, and the power of the devil crush him!” After
-this she returned home.
-
-Now the next morning there was a stiff breeze, and some of the men were
-afraid to go out fishing; but others said they would try their luck,
-and amongst them was the man on whom the curse rested. But they had not
-gone far from land when the boat was capsized by a heavy squall. The
-fishermen, however, saved themselves by swimming to shore; all except
-the man on whom the curse rested, and he sank like lead to the bottom,
-and the waves covered him, and he was drowned.
-
-When the woman heard of the fate that had befallen her enemy, she ran
-to the beach and clapped her hands with joy and exulted. And as she
-stood there laughing with strange and horrid mirth, the corpse of the
-man she had cursed slowly rose up from the sea, and came drifting
-towards her till it lay almost at her very feet. On this she stooped
-down to feast her eyes on the sight of the dead man, when suddenly a
-storm of wind screamed past her, and hurled her from the point of rock
-where she stood. And when the people ran in all haste to help, no trace
-of her body could be seen. The woman and the corpse of the man she had
-cursed disappeared together under the waves, and were never seen again
-from that time forth.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Another woman in Shark Island was considered to have an evil influence
-over any one she disliked. One day a man called her a devil’s hag in
-his anger. The woman answered nothing, but that night she went to a
-Holy Well near the place, and kneeling down, invoked a curse in the
-name of the devil. Then she went round the well three times backward
-on her knees, and each time threw a stone in the name of the devil,
-saying, “So may the curse fall on his head!” Then she returned home,
-and told the people to wait for three days, and they would see her
-words had power. During this time the man was afraid to go out in his
-boat because of the curse. But on the third day as he was walking by
-the cliff he fell and broke his leg. And then every one knew that the
-woman had the witch-secret of evil, and she was held in much fear.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The most effective way of neutralizing the evil influence is to spit
-on the object and say, “God bless it!” But another must do it at your
-request, and sometimes people refuse, fearing to anger the fairies
-by interfering with their work, whether for good or evil. But the
-islanders have such faith in the anointing with spittle that they will
-often solicit a passing stranger to spit on the afflicted person.
-Indeed, a stranger is considered to have more power than a neighbour.
-
-A woman who kept a small day-school had reason to think that her son, a
-fine lad of twelve years old, was bewitched, for when he had eaten up
-the whole dish of stirabout at supper, he asked for more. And she said—
-
-“My son, you had enough for three men. Go to your bed and sleep.”
-
-But next morning he was worse and more ravenous, for he ate up all
-the bread that his mother had made for the scholars just as she took
-it from the oven, and not a single cake was left. Then she knew that
-witchcraft was on the boy, and she stood by the door to watch for a
-stranger. At last one came by, and she cried to him—
-
-“Come in, come in, for the love of God, and spit on the face of my son!”
-
-“Why should I spit on your son, O woman?” he answered; and he fled
-away, for he thought she was mad.
-
-Then she sent for the priest, and his reverence poured holy water over
-him, and laid his hands upon his head while he prayed. So, after a
-time, the power of the witchcraft was broken, and the boy was restored
-to his right mind.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The islanders believe also that angels are constantly present amongst
-them, and all blessed things—the rain, and the dew, and the green
-crops—come from their power; but the fairies often bring sickness,
-and will do malicious tricks, and lame a horse, or steal the milk and
-butter, if they have been offended or deprived of their rights.
-
-There are certain days on which it is not right to speak of the
-fairies. These days are Wednesdays and Fridays, for then they are
-present though invisible, and can hear everything, and lay their plans
-as to what they will carry off. On Friday especially their power for
-evil is very strong, and misfortunes are dreaded in the household.
-Therefore, on that day the children and cattle are strictly watched; a
-lighted wisp of straw is turned round the baby’s head, and a quenched
-coal is set under the cradle and under the churn. And if the horses
-are restive in the stable, then the people know the fairies are riding
-on their backs. So they spit three times at the animal, when the
-fairies scamper off. This cure by the saliva is the most ancient of all
-superstitions, and the islanders still have the greatest faith in its
-mysterious power and efficacy.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At Innisboffin the fairies hold a splendid court, with revelry and
-dancing, when the moon is full; and it is very dangerous for young
-girls to be out at that time, for they will assuredly be carried off.
-And if they once hear the fairy music or drink of the fairy wine, they
-will never be the same again—a fate is on them, and before the year is
-out they will either disappear or die.
-
-And the fairies are always on the watch for the handsome girls or
-children; for they look on mortals as of much higher race than
-themselves. And they are also glad to have the fine young men, the sons
-of mortal women, to assist them in their wars with each other; for
-there are two parties amongst the fairy spirits, one a gentle race that
-loves music and dancing, the other that has obtained power from the
-devil, and is always trying to work evil.
-
-A young man lay down to sleep one Friday evening in summer under a
-hay-rick, and the fairies must have carried him off as he slept; for
-when he woke he found himself in a great hall, where a number of little
-men were at work—some spinning, some making shoes, some making spears
-and arrow-heads out of fish-bones and elf-stones; but all busy laughing
-and singing with much glee and merriment, while the little pipers
-played the merriest tunes.
-
-Then an old man who sat in the corner came over, and looking very
-angry, told him he must not sit there idle; there were friends coming
-to dinner, and he must go down and help in the kitchen. So he drove the
-poor young fellow before him down into a great vaulted place, where a
-huge fire was burning, and a large pot was set over it.
-
-“Now,” said the old man, “prepare the dinner. There is the old hag we
-are going to eat.”
-
-And true enough, to his horror, on looking round, there was an old
-woman hung up by the arms, and an old man skinning her.
-
-“Now make haste and let the water boil,” said the old man; “don’t you
-see the pot on the fire, and I am nearly ready for you to begin. The
-company will soon be here, and there is no time to lose, for this old
-hag will take a good while to boil. Cut her up into little bits, and
-throw her into the pot.”
-
-However, the young fellow was so frightened that he fell down on the
-floor speechless, and could neither move hand nor foot.
-
-“Get up, you fool,” said another old man, who seemed to be the head
-over all; and he laughed at him. “Do your work and never mind; this
-does not hurt her a bit. When she was there above in the world she
-was a wicked miser, hard to the world, and cruel and bitter in her
-words and works; so now we have her here, and her soul will never rest
-in peace, because we shall cut up the body in little bits, and the
-soul will not be able to find it, but wander about in the dark to all
-eternity without a body.”
-
-Then the young man knew no more till he found himself in a beautiful
-hall, where a banquet was laid out; but, in place of the old hag, the
-table was covered with fruit, and chickens, and young turkeys, and
-butter, and cakes fresh from the oven, and crystal cups of bright red
-wine.
-
-“Now sit down and eat,” said the prince, who sat at the top on a
-throne, with a red sash round his waist, and a gold band on his head.
-“Sit down with this pleasant company and eat with us; you are welcome.”
-
-And there were many beautiful ladies seated round, and grand noblemen,
-with red caps and sashes; and they all smiled at him and bade him eat.
-
-“No,” said the young man; “I cannot eat with you, for I see no priest
-here to bless the food. Let me go in peace.”
-
-“Not at least till you taste our wine,” said the prince with a friendly
-smile.
-
-And one of the beautiful ladies rose up and filled a crystal cup with
-the bright red wine, and gave it him. And when he saw it, the sight of
-it tempted him, and he could not help himself, but drank it all off
-without stopping; for it seemed to him the most delicious draught he
-ever had in his whole life.
-
-But no sooner had he laid down the glass, than a noise like thunder
-shook the building, and all the lights went out; and he found himself
-alone in the dark night lying under the very same hay-rick where he had
-cast himself down to sleep, tired after his work. So he made his way
-home at last; but the taste of the fairy wine burned in his veins, and
-a fever was on him night and day for another draught; and he did no
-good, but pined away, seeking the fairy mansion, though he never found
-it any more. And so he died in his youth, a warning to all who eat of
-the fairy food, or drink of the fairy wine; for never more will they
-know peace or content, or be fit for their work, as in the days before
-the fairy spell was on them, which brings doom and death to all who
-fall under the fatal enchantment of its unholy power.
-
-
-LEGENDS OF THE DEAD IN THE WESTERN ISLANDS.
-
-
-When young people die, either men or women, who were remarkable for
-beauty, it is supposed that they are carried off by the fairies to the
-fairy mansions under the earth, where they live in splendid palaces and
-are wedded to fairy queens or princes. But sometimes, if their kindred
-greatly desire to see them, they are allowed to visit the earth, though
-no enchantment has yet been discovered powerful enough to compel them
-to remain or resume again the mortal life.
-
-Sometimes when the fishermen are out they meet a strange boat filled
-with people; and when they look on them they know that they are the
-dead who have been carried off by the fairies with their wiles and
-enchantments to dwell in the fairy palaces.
-
-One day a man was out fishing, but caught nothing; and was just turning
-home in despair at his ill-luck when he suddenly saw a boat with three
-persons in it; and it seemed to him that they were his comrades, the
-very men who just a year before had been drowned in that spot, but
-whose bodies were never recovered, and he knew that he looked upon the
-dead. But the men were friendly, and called out to him—
-
-“Cast your line as we direct, and you will have luck.”
-
-So he cast his line as they bade him, and presently drew up a fine fish.
-
-“Now, cast again,” they said, “and keep beside us, and row to shore,
-but do not look on us.”
-
-So he did as directed and hauled up fish after fish till his boat was
-full, and then he drew it up to the landing-place.
-
-“Now,” they said, “wait and see that no one is about before you land.”
-
-So the man looked up and down the shore, but saw no one; then he
-turned to land his fish, when, behold, the men and the second boat
-had vanished, and he saw them no more. However, he landed his fish
-with much joy and brought them all safely home, though the wise people
-said that if he had not turned away his head that time, but kept his
-eyes steadily on the men till he landed, the enchantment would have
-been broken that held them in fairy-land, and the dead would have been
-restored to the earthly life, and to their kindred in the island who
-mourned for them.
-
-
-THE DEATH SIGN.
-
-
-A woman was out one day looking after her sheep in the valley, and
-coming by a little stream she sat down to rest, when suddenly she
-seemed to hear the sound of low music, and turning round, beheld at
-some distance a crowd of people dancing and making merry. And she grew
-afraid and turned her head away not to see them. Then close by her
-stood a young man, pale and strange looking, and she beheld him with
-fear.
-
-“Who are you?” she said at last; “and why do you stand beside me?”
-
-“You ought to know me,” he replied, “for I belong to this place; but
-make haste now and come away, or evil will befall you.”
-
-Then she stood up and was going away with him, when the crowd left off
-their dancing and ran towards them crying—
-
-“Come back; come back; come back!”
-
-“Don’t stop; don’t listen,” said the young man, “but follow me.”
-
-Then they both began to run, and ran on until they reached a hillock.
-
-“Now we are safe,” said he; “they can’t harm us here.” And when they
-stopped he said to her again, “Look me in the face and say if you know
-me now?”
-
-“No,” she answered, “you are a stranger to me.”
-
-“Look again,” he said, “look me straight in the face and you will know
-me.”
-
-Then she looked, and knew instantly that he was a man who had been
-drowned the year before in the dark winter time, and the waves had
-never cast up his body on the shore. And she threw up her arms and
-cried aloud—
-
-“Have you news of my child? Have you seen her, my fair-haired girl,
-that was stolen from me this day seven years? Will she come back to me
-never no more?”
-
-“I have seen her,” said the man, “but she will never come back, never
-more, for she has eaten of the fairy food and must now stay with the
-spirits under the sea, for she belongs to them body and soul. But go
-home now, for it is late, and evil is near you; and perhaps you will
-meet her sooner than you think.”
-
-Then as the women turned her face homeward, the man disappeared and she
-saw him no more.
-
-When at last she reached the threshold of her house a fear and
-trembling came on her, and she called to her husband that some one
-stood in the doorway and she could not pass. And with that she fell
-down on the threshold on her face, but spake no word more. And when
-they lifted her up she was dead.
-
-
-KATHLEEN.
-
-
-A young girl from Innis-Sark had a lover, a fine young fellow, who met
-his death by an accident, to her great grief and sorrow.
-
-One evening at sunset, as she sat by the roadside crying her eyes out,
-a beautiful lady came by all in white, and tapped her on the cheek.
-
-“Don’t cry, Kathleen,” she said, “your lover is safe. Just take this
-ring of herbs and look through it and you will see him. He is with a
-grand company, and wears a golden circlet on his head and a scarlet
-sash round his waist.”
-
-So Kathleen took the ring of herbs and looked through it, and there
-indeed was her lover in the midst of a great company dancing on the
-hill; and he was very pale, but handsomer than ever, with the gold
-circlet round his head, as if they had made him a prince.
-
-“Now,” said the lady, “here is a larger ring of herbs. Take it, and
-whenever you want to see your lover, pluck a leaf from it and burn it;
-and a great smoke will arise, and you will fall into a trance; and in
-the trance your lover will carry you away to the fairy rath, and there
-you may dance all night with him on the greensward. But say no prayer,
-and make no sign of the cross while the smoke is rising, or your lover
-will disappear for ever.”
-
-From that time a great change came over Kathleen. She said no prayer,
-and cared for no priest, and never made the sign of the cross, but
-every night shut herself up in her room, and burned a leaf of the ring
-of herbs as she had been told; and when the smoke arose she fell into
-a deep sleep and knew no more. But in the morning she told her people
-that, though she seemed to be lying in her bed, she was far away with
-the fairies on the hill dancing with her lover. And she was very happy
-in her new life, and wanted no priest nor prayer nor mass any more,
-and all the dead were there dancing with the rest, all the people she
-had known; and they welcomed her and gave her wine to drink in little
-crystal cups, and told her she must soon come and stay with them and
-with her lover for evermore.
-
-Now Kathleen’s mother was a good, honest, religious woman, and she
-fretted much over her daughter’s strange state, for she knew the girl
-had been fairy-struck. So she determined to watch; and one night when
-Kathleen went to her bed as usual all alone by herself in the room, for
-she would allow no one to be with her, the mother crept up and looked
-through a chink in the door, and then she saw Kathleen take the round
-ring of herbs from a secret place in the press and pluck a leaf from it
-and burn it, on which a great smoke arose and the girl fell on her bed
-in a deep trance.
-
-Now the mother could no longer keep silence, for she saw there was
-devil’s work in it; and she fell on her knees and prayed aloud—
-
-“O Maia, mother, send the evil spirit away from the child!”
-
-And she rushed into the room and made the sign of the cross over the
-sleeping girl, when immediately Kathleen started up and screamed—
-
-“Mother! mother! the dead are coming for me. They are here! they are
-here!”
-
-And her features looked like one in a fit. Then the poor mother sent
-for the priest, who came at once, and threw holy water on the girl, and
-said prayers over her; and he took the ring of herbs that lay beside
-her and cursed it for evermore, and instantly it fell to powder and lay
-like grey ashes on the floor. After this Kathleen grew calmer, and the
-evil spirit seemed to have left her, but she was too weak to move or to
-speak, or to utter a prayer, and before the clock struck twelve that
-night she lay dead.
-
-
-NOVEMBER EVE.
-
-
-It is esteemed a very wrong thing amongst the islanders to be about on
-November Eve, minding any business, for the fairies have their flitting
-then, and do not like to be seen or watched; and all the spirits come
-to meet them and help them. But mortal people should keep at home, or
-they will suffer for it; for the souls of the dead have power over all
-things on that one night of the year; and they hold a festival with the
-fairies, and drink red wine from the fairy cups, and dance to fairy
-music till the moon goes down.
-
-There was a man of the village who stayed out late one November Eve
-fishing, and never thought of the fairies until he saw a great number
-of dancing lights, and a crowd of people hurrying past with baskets and
-bags, and all laughing and singing and making merry as they went along.
-
-“You are a merry set,” he said, “where are ye all going to?”
-
-“We are going to the fair,” said a little old man with a cocked hat and
-a gold band round it. “Come with us, Hugh King, and you will have the
-finest food and the finest drink you ever set eyes upon.”
-
-“And just carry this basket for me,” said a little red-haired woman.
-
-So Hugh took it, and went with them till they came to the fair, which
-was filled with a crowd of people he had never seen on the island in
-all his days. And they danced and laughed and drank red wine from
-little cups. And there were pipers, and harpers, and little cobblers
-mending shoes, and all the most beautiful things in the world to eat
-and drink, just as if they were in a king’s palace. But the basket was
-very heavy, and Hugh longed to drop it, that he might go and dance with
-a little beauty with long yellow hair, that was laughing up close to
-his face.
-
-“Well, here put down the basket,” said the red-haired woman, “for you
-are quite tired, I see;” and she took it and opened the cover, and out
-came a little old man, the ugliest, most misshapen little imp that
-could be imagined.
-
-“Ah, thank you, Hugh,” said the imp, quite politely; “you have carried
-me nicely; for I am weak on the limbs—indeed I have nothing to speak
-of in the way of legs: but I’ll pay you well, my fine fellow; hold
-out your two hands,” and the little imp poured down gold and gold and
-gold into them, bright golden guineas. “Now go,” said he, “and drink
-my health, and make yourself quite pleasant, and don’t be afraid of
-anything you see and hear.”
-
-So they all left him, except the man with the cocked hat and the red
-sash round his waist.
-
-“Wait here now a bit,” says he, “for Finvarra, the king, is coming, and
-his wife, to see the fair.”
-
-As he spoke, the sound of a horn was heard, and up drove a coach and
-four white horses, and out of it stepped a grand, grave gentleman all
-in black and a beautiful lady with a silver veil over her face.
-
-“Here is Finvarra himself and the queen,” said the little old man; but
-Hugh was ready to die of fright when Finvarra asked—
-
-“What brought this man here?”
-
-And the king frowned and looked so black that Hugh nearly fell to the
-ground with fear. Then they all laughed, and laughed so loud that
-everything seemed shaking and tumbling down from the laughter. And the
-dancers came up, and they all danced round Hugh, and tried to take his
-hands to make him dance with them.
-
-“Do you know who these people are; and the men and women who are
-dancing round you?” asked the old man. “Look well, have you ever seen
-them before?”
-
-And when Hugh looked he saw a girl that had died the year before, then
-another and another of his friends that he knew had died long ago;
-and then he saw that all the dancers, men, women, and girls, were the
-dead in their long, white shrouds. And he tried to escape from them,
-but could not, for they coiled round him, and danced and laughed and
-seized his arms, and tried to draw him into the dance, and their laugh
-seemed to pierce through his brain and kill him. And he fell down
-before them there, like one faint from sleep, and knew no more till he
-found himself next morning lying within the old stone circle by the
-fairy rath on the hill. Still it was all true that he had been with the
-fairies; no one could deny it, for his arms were all black with the
-touch of the hands of the dead, the time they had tried to draw him
-into the dance; but not one bit of all the red gold, which the little
-imp had given him, could he find in his pocket. Not one single golden
-piece; it was all gone for evermore.
-
-And Hugh went sadly to his home, for now he knew that the spirits
-had mocked him and punished him, because he troubled their revels on
-November Eve—that one night of all the year when the dead can leave
-their graves and dance in the moonlight on the hill, and mortals should
-stay at home and never dare to look on them.
-
-
-THE DANCE OF THE DEAD.
-
-
-It is especially dangerous to be out late on the last night of
-November, for it is the closing scene of the revels—the last night
-when the dead have leave to dance on the hill with the fairies, and
-after that they must all go back to their graves and lie in the chill,
-cold earth, without music or wine till the next November comes round,
-when they all spring up again in their shrouds and rush out into the
-moonlight with mad laughter.
-
-One November night, a woman of Shark Island, coming home late at the
-hour of the dead, grew tired and sat down to rest, when presently a
-young man came up and talked to her.
-
-“Wait a bit,” he said, “and you will see the most beautiful dancing you
-ever looked on there by the side of the hill.”
-
-And she looked at him steadily. He was very pale, and seemed sad.
-
-“Why are you so sad?” she asked, “and as pale as if you were dead?”
-
-“Look well at me,” he answered. “Do you not know me?”
-
-“Yes, I know you now,” she said. “You are young Brien that was drowned
-last year when out fishing. What are you here for?”
-
-“Look,” he said, “at the side of the hill and you will see why I am
-here.”
-
-And she looked, and saw a great company dancing to sweet music; and
-amongst them were all the dead who had died as long as she could
-remember—men, women, and children, all in white, and their faces were
-pale as the moonlight.
-
-“Now,” said the young man, “run for your life; for if once the fairies
-bring you into the dance you will never be able to leave them any more.”
-
-But while they were talking, the fairies came up and danced round her
-in a circle, joining their hands. And she fell to the ground in a
-faint, and knew no more till she woke up in the morning in her own bed
-at home. And they all saw that her face was pale as the dead, and they
-knew that she had got the fairy-stroke. So the herb doctor was sent
-for, and every measure tried to save her, but without avail, for just
-as the moon rose that night, soft, low music was heard round the house,
-and when they looked at the woman she was dead.
-
-It is a custom amongst the people, when throwing away water at night,
-to cry out in a loud voice, “Take care of the water;” or, literally
-from the Irish, “Away with yourself from the water”—for they say the
-spirits of the dead last buried are then wandering about, and it would
-be dangerous if the water fell on them.
-
-One dark winter’s night a woman suddenly threw out a pail of boiling
-water without thinking of the warning words. Instantly a cry was heard
-as of a person in pain, but no one was seen. However, the next night a
-black lamb entered the house, having the back all fresh scalded, and it
-lay down moaning by the hearth and died. Then they all knew this was
-the spirit that had been scalded by the woman. And they carried the
-dead lamb out reverently and buried it deep in the earth. Yet every
-night at the same hour it walked again into the house and lay down and
-moaned and died. And after this had happened many times, the priest was
-sent for, and finally, by the strength of his exorcism, the spirit of
-the dead was laid to rest, and the black lamb appeared no more. Neither
-was the body of the dead lamb found in the grave when they searched for
-it, though it had been laid by their own hands deep in the earth and
-covered with the clay.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Before an accident happens to a boat, or a death by drowning, low
-music is often heard, as if under the water, along with harmonious
-lamentations, and then every one in the boat knows that some young man
-or beautiful young girl is wanted by the fairies, and is doomed to
-die. The best safeguard is to have music and singing in the boat, for
-the fairies are so enamoured of the mortal voices and music that they
-forget to weave the spell till the fatal moment has passed, and then
-all in the boat are safe from harm.
-
-
-SUPERSTITIONS CONCERNING THE DEAD.
-
-
-Many strange spells are effected by the means of a dead man’s
-hand—chiefly to produce butter in the churn. The milk is stirred round
-nine times with the dead hand, the operator crying aloud all the time,
-“Gather! gather! gather!” While a secret form of words is used which
-none but the initiated know.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Another use is to facilitate robberies. If a candle is placed in a dead
-hand, neither wind nor water can extinguish it. And if carried into
-a house the inmates will sleep the sleep of the dead as long as it
-remains under the roof, and no power on earth can wake them while the
-dead hand holds the candle.
-
- * * * * *
-
-For a mystic charm, one of the strongest known is the hand of an
-unbaptized infant fresh taken from the grave in the name of the Evil
-One.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A dead hand is esteemed also a certain cure for most diseases, and many
-a time sick people have been brought to a house where a corpse lay that
-the hand of the dead might be laid on them.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The souls of the dead who may happen to die abroad, greatly desire to
-rest in Ireland. And the relations deem it their duty to bring back the
-body to be laid in Irish earth. But even then the dead will not rest
-peaceably unless laid with their forefathers and their own people, and
-not amongst strangers.
-
-A young girl happened to die of a fever while away on a visit to some
-friends, and her father thought it safer not to bring her home, but to
-have her buried in the nearest churchyard. However, a few nights after
-his return home, he was awakened by a mournful wail at the window, and
-a voice cried, “I am alone; I am alone; I am alone!” Then the poor
-father knew well what it meant, and he prayed in the name of God that
-the spirit of his dead child might rest in peace until the morning. And
-when the day broke he arose and set off to the strange burial ground,
-and there he drew the coffin from the earth, and had it carried all the
-way back from Cork to Mayo; and after he had laid the dead in the old
-graveyard beside his people and his kindred, the spirit of his child
-had rest, and the mournful cry was no more heard in the night.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The corner of a sheet that has wrapped a corpse is a cure for headache
-if tied round the head.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The ends of candles used at wakes are of great efficacy in curing burns.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A piece of linen wrap taken from a corpse will cure the swelling of a
-limb if tied round the part affected.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is believed that the spirit of the dead last buried has to watch in
-the churchyard until another corpse is laid there; or has to perform
-menial offices in the spirit world, such as carrying wood and water
-until the next spirit comes from earth. They are also sent on messages
-to earth, chiefly to announce the coming death of some relative, and
-at this they are glad, for then their time of peace and rest will come
-at last.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If any one stumbles at a grave it is a bad omen; but if he falls and
-touches the clay, he will assuredly die before the year is out.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Any one meeting a funeral must turn back and walk at least four steps
-with the mourners.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If the nearest relative touches the hand of a corpse it will utter a
-wild cry if not quite dead.
-
- * * * * *
-
-On Twelfth Night the dead walk, and on every tile of the house a soul
-is sitting, waiting for your prayers to take it out of purgatory.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There are many strange superstitions in the western islands of
-Connemara. At night the dead can be heard laughing with the fairies and
-spinning the flax. One girl declared that she distinctly heard her dead
-mother’s voice singing a mournful Irish air away down in the heart of
-the hill. But after a year and a day the voices cease, and the dead are
-gone for ever.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is a custom in the West, when a corpse is carried to the grave, for
-the bearers to stop half way, while the nearest relatives build up a
-small monument of loose stones, and no hand would ever dare to touch or
-disturb this monument while the world lasts.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When the grave is dug, a cross is made of two spades, and the coffin is
-carried round it three times before being placed in the clay. Then the
-prayers for the dead are said, all the people kneeling with uncovered
-head.
-
-
-THE FATAL LOVE-CHARM.
-
-
-A potent love-charm used by women is a piece of skin taken from the arm
-of a corpse and tied on the person while sleeping whose love is sought.
-The skin is then removed after some time, and carefully put away before
-the sleeper awakes or has any consciousness of the transaction. And as
-long as it remains in the woman’s possession the love of her lover will
-be unchanged. Or the strip of skin is placed under the head to dream
-on, in the name of the Evil One, when the future husband will appear in
-the dream.
-
-A young girl who was servant in the large and handsome house of a rich
-family tried this charm for fun, thinking she would dream of one of her
-fellow-servants, and next morning her mistress asked the result.
-
-“Throth, ma’am,” she answered, “there never was such a foolish trick,
-for it was of the master himself I was dreaming all night, and of no
-one else.”
-
-Soon after the lady died, and the girl, remembering her dream, watched
-her opportunity to tie a piece of skin taken from a corpse recently
-buried round the arm of her master while he slept. After this he became
-violently in love with the girl, though she was exceedingly ugly,
-and within the year he married her, his love all the while remaining
-fervent and unchanged.
-
-But exactly one year and a day after her marriage her bedroom took fire
-by accident, and the strip of skin, which she had kept carefully hidden
-in her wardrobe, was burnt, along with all her grand wedding-clothes.
-Immediately the magic charm was broken, and the hatred of the gentleman
-for his low-born wife became as strong as the love he had once felt for
-her.
-
-In her rage and grief at finding nothing but coldness and insult, she
-confessed the whole story; and, in consequence, the horror she inspired
-amongst the people was so great that no one would serve her with food
-or drink, or sit near her, or hold any intercourse with her; and she
-died miserably and half mad before the second year was out—a warning
-and a terror to all who work spells in the name of the Evil One.
-
-
-THE FENIAN KNIGHTS.
-A LEGEND OF THE WEST.
-
-
-There is a fort near the Killeries in Connemara called _Lis-na-Keeran_.
-One day the powerful chief that lived there invited the great Fionn
-Ma-Coul, with his son Oscar and a band of Fenian knights, to a great
-banquet. But when the guests arrived they found no chairs prepared for
-them, only rough benches of wood placed round the table.
-
-So Oscar and his father would take no place, but stood watching, for
-they suspected treachery. The knights, however, fearing nothing, sat
-down to the feast, but were instantly fixed to the benches so firmly by
-magic, that they could neither rise nor move.
-
-Then Fionn began to chew his thumb, from which he always derived
-knowledge of the future, and by his magic power he saw clearly a great
-and terrible warrior riding fiercely towards the fort, and Fionn knew
-that unless he could be stopped before crossing a certain ford, they
-must all die, for they had been brought to Lis-na-Keeran only to be
-slain by their treacherous host; and unless the warrior was killed and
-his blood sprinkled on the Fenian knights, they must remain fixed on
-the wooden benches for ever.
-
-So Oscar of the Lion heart rushed forth to the encounter. And he flung
-his spear at the mighty horseman, and they fought desperately till the
-setting of the sun. Then at last Oscar triumphed; victory was his; and
-he cut off the head of his adversary, and carried it on his spear all
-bleeding to the fort, where he let the blood drop down upon the Fenian
-knights that were transfixed by magic. On this they at once sprang up
-free and scatheless, all except one, for on him unhappily no blood had
-fallen, and so he remained fixed to the bench. His companions tried to
-drag him up by main force, but as they did so the skin of his thighs
-was left on the bench, and he was like to die.
-
-Then they killed a sheep, and wrapped the fleece round him warm from
-the animal to heal him. So he was cured, but ever after, strange to
-relate, seven stone of wool were annually shorn from his body as long
-as he lived.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The manner in which Fionn learned the mystery of obtaining wisdom from
-his thumb was in this wise.
-
-It happened one time when he was quite a youth that he was taken
-prisoner by a one-eyed giant, who at first was going to kill him,
-but then he changed his mind and sent him to the kitchen to mind the
-dinner. Now there was a great and splendid salmon broiling on the fire,
-and the giant said—
-
-“Watch that salmon till it is done; but if a single blister rise on the
-skin you shall be killed.”
-
-Then the giant threw himself down to sleep while waiting for the dinner.
-
-So Fionn watched the salmon with all his eyes, but to his horror saw
-a blister rising on the beautiful silver skin of the fish, and in his
-fright and eagerness he pressed his thumb down on it to flatten it;
-then the pain of the burn being great, he clapped the thumb into his
-mouth and kept it there to suck out the fire. When he drew it back,
-however, he found, to his surprise that he had a knowledge of all that
-was going to happen to him, and a clear sense of what he ought to do.
-And it came into his mind that if he put out the giant’s eye with an
-iron rod heated in the fire, he could escape from the monster. So he
-heated the rod, and while the giant slept he plunged it into his eye,
-and before the horrid being recovered from the shock, Fionn escaped,
-and was soon back safe amongst his own people, the Fenian knights; and
-ever after in moments of great peril and doubt, when he put his thumb
-into his mouth and sucked it, the vision of the future came on him,
-and he could foresee clearly whatever danger lay in his path, and how
-to avoid it. But it was only in such extreme moments of peril that the
-mystic power was granted to him. And thus he was enabled to save his
-own life and the lives of his chosen Fenian guard when all hope seemed
-well-nigh gone.
-
-
-RATHLIN ISLAND.
-
-
-There is an old ruin called Bruce’s Castle on this island, and the
-legend runs that Bruce and his chief warriors lie in an enchanted sleep
-in a cave of the rock on which stands the castle, and that one day they
-will rise up and unite the island to Scotland.
-
-The entrance to this cave is visible only once in seven years. A
-man who happened to be travelling by at the time discovered it,
-and entering in he found himself all at once in the midst of the
-heavy-handed warriors. He looked down and saw a sabre half unsheathed
-in the earth at his feet, and on his attempting to draw it every man
-of the sleepers lifted up his head and put his hand on his sword. The
-man being much alarmed fled from the cave, but he heard voices calling
-fiercely after him: “Ugh! ugh! Why could we not be left to sleep?” And
-they clanged their swords on the ground with a terrible noise, and then
-all was still, and the gate of the cave closed with a mighty sound like
-a clap of thunder.
-
-
-THE STRANGE GUESTS.
-
-
-A company of strangers came one day to Rathlin island and the people
-distrusted them, but pretended to be friendly, and invited them to a
-feast, meaning to put an end to them all when they came unarmed to the
-festival, and the drink flowed freely. So the strangers came, but each
-man as he sat down drew his knife and stuck it in the table before
-him ere he began to eat. When the islanders saw their guests so well
-prepared, they were afraid; and the feast passed off quietly.
-
-The next morning early, the strangers sailed away before any one was
-aware on the island; but on the table where each guest had sat, a
-piece of silver was found, covering the hole made by the knife. So the
-islanders rejoiced, and determined never again to plot evil against the
-wayfaring guests; but to be kind and hospitable to all wanderers for
-the sake of the Holy Mother, who had sent them to the island to bring
-good luck to the people. But they never saw the strangers more.
-
-The islanders have great faith in the power of the Virgin Mary, for our
-Lord Himself told St. Bridget that His mother had a throne in heaven
-near His own; and whatever she asked of God it was granted, especially
-if it was any grace or favour for the Irish people, because He held
-them in great esteem on account of their piety and good works.
-
-
-THE DEAD SOLDIER.
-
-
-There is an island in the Shannon, and if a mermaid is seen sitting
-on the rocks in the sunshine, the people know that a crime has been
-committed somewhere near; for she never appears but to announce
-ill-luck, and she has a spite against mortals, and rejoices at their
-misfortunes.
-
-One day a young fisherman was drawn by the current towards the island,
-and he came on a long streak of red blood, and had to sail his boat
-through it till he reached the rocks where the mermaid was seated; and
-then the boat went round and round as in a whirlpool, and sank down at
-last under the waves.
-
-Still he did not lose consciousness. He looked round and saw that he
-was in a beautiful country, with tall plants growing all over it; and
-the mermaid came and sang sweetly to him, and offered him wine to
-drink, but he would not taste it, for it was red like blood. Then he
-looked down, and to his horror he saw a soldier lying on the floor
-with his throat cut; and all round him was a pool of blood, and he
-remembered no more till he found himself again in his boat drifting
-against a hurricane, and suddenly he was dashed upon a rock, where his
-friends who were in search of him found him, and carried him home.
-There he heard a strange thing: a soldier, a deserter from the Athlone
-Barracks, being pursued had cut his throat and flung himself over the
-bridge into the river; and this was the very man the young fisher had
-seen lying a corpse in the mermaid’s cave. After this he had no peace
-or comfort till he went to the priest, who exorcised him and gave him
-absolution; and then the wicked siren of the rocks troubled him no
-more, though she still haunts the islands of the Shannon and tries to
-lure victims to their death.
-
-
-THE THREE GIFTS.
-
-
-A great, noble-looking man called one night at a cottage, and told the
-woman that she must come away with him then and there on the instant,
-for his wife wanted a nurse for her baby. And so saying, before she
-could answer, he swung her up on his great black horse on a pillion
-behind him. And she sat wondering at his tall, shadowy form, for she
-could see the moonlight through him.
-
-“Do not fear,” he said, “and no harm will happen to you. Only ask no
-questions whatever happens, and drink no wine that may be offered to
-you.”
-
-On reaching the palace she saw the most beautiful ladies going about
-all covered with jewels, and she was led into a chamber hung with silk
-and gold, and lace as fine as cobwebs; and there on a bed supported by
-crystal pillars lay the mother, lovely as an angel, and her little baby
-beside her. And when the nurse had dressed the baby and handed it to
-the mother, the lady smiled and offered her wine; “for then,” she said,
-“you will never leave us, and I would love to have you always near me.”
-
-But the woman refused, though she was sorely tempted by the beautiful
-bright red wine.
-
-“Well, then,” said the lord and master, “here are three gifts, and you
-may take them away in safety, for no harm will come to you by them. A
-purse, never to be opened, but while you have it, you will never want
-money; a girdle, and whoso wears it will never be slain in battle; and
-an herb that has power to cure all diseases for seven generations.”
-
-So the woman was put again upon the horse with her three gifts, and
-reached her home safely. Then, from curiosity, the first thing she did
-was to open the purse, and behold, there was nothing in it but some
-wild flowers. On seeing this, she was so angry that she flung away the
-herb, “for they were only making a fool of me,” she said, “and I don’t
-believe one word of their stories.” But the husband took the belt and
-kept it safe, and it went down in the family from father to son; and
-the last man who wore it was out in all the troubles of ’98, and fought
-in every one of the battles, but he never got hurt or wound. However,
-after his death, no one knew what became of the belt; it was never seen
-more.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A woman was carried off one night to a fairy palace to attend one of
-the beautiful fairy ladies who lay sick on her golden bed. And as she
-was going in at the gate a man whispered to her, “Eat no food, and
-take no money from the fairies; but ask what you like and it will be
-granted.” So when the fairy lady was well, she bade the nurse ask what
-she pleased. The woman answered, “I desire three things for my sons and
-their race—luck in fishing, luck in learning, and luck in gambling,”
-which things were granted—and to this day the family are the richest,
-the wisest, and the luckiest in the whole neighbourhood. They win at
-every game, and at every race, but always by fair play and without
-cheating; and not the priest himself can beat them at book learning.
-And every one knows that the power comes to them from the fairy gift,
-though good luck comes with it and not evil; and all the work of their
-hands has prospered through every generation since the day of the Three
-Wishes.
-
-
-THE FAIRIES AS FALLEN ANGELS.
-
-
-The islanders, like all the Irish, believe that the fairies are the
-fallen angels who were cast down by the Lord God out of heaven for
-their sinful pride. And some fell into the sea, and some on the dry
-land, and some fell deep down into hell, and the devil gives to these
-knowledge and power, and sends them on earth where they work much
-evil. But the fairies of the earth and the sea are mostly gentle and
-beautiful creatures, who will do no harm if they are let alone, and
-allowed to dance on the fairy raths in the moonlight to their own sweet
-music, undisturbed by the presence of mortals. As a rule, the people
-look on fire as the great preservative against witchcraft, for the
-devil has no power except in the dark. So they put a live coal under
-the churn, and they wave a lighted wisp of straw above the cow’s head
-if the beast seems sickly. But as to the pigs, they take no trouble,
-for they say the devil has no longer any power over them now. When
-they light a candle they cross themselves, because the evil spirits
-are then clearing out of the house in fear of the light. Fire and Holy
-Water they hold to be sacred, and are powerful; and the best safeguard
-against all things evil, and the surest test in case of suspected
-witchcraft.
-
-
-THE FAIRY CHANGELING.
-
-
-One evening, a man was coming home late, and he passed a house where
-two women stood by a window, talking.
-
-“I have left the dead child in the cradle as you bid me,” said one
-woman, “and behold here is the other child, take it and let me go;”
-and she laid down an infant on a sheet by the window, who seemed in a
-secret sleep, and it was draped all in white.
-
-“Wait,” said the other, “till you have had some food, and then take it
-to the fairy queen, as I promised, in place of the dead child that we
-have laid in the cradle by the nurse. Wait also till the moon rises,
-and then you shall have the payment which I promised.”
-
-They then both turned from the window. Now the man saw that there was
-some devil’s magic in it all. And when the women turned away he crept
-up close to the open window and put his hand in and seized the sleeping
-child and drew it out quietly without ever a sound. Then he made off as
-fast as he could to his own home, before the women could know anything
-about it, and handed the child to his mother’s care. Now the mother was
-angry at first, but when he told her the story, she believed him, and
-put the baby to sleep—a lovely, beautiful boy with a face like an angel.
-
-Next morning there was a great commotion in the village, for the news
-spread that the first-born son of the great lord of the place, a
-lovely, healthy child, died suddenly in the night, without ever having
-had a sign of sickness. When they looked at him in the morning, there
-he laid dead in his cradle, and he was shrunk and wizened like a little
-old man, and no beauty was seen on him any more. So great lamentation
-was heard on all sides, and the whole country gathered to the wake.
-Amongst them came the young man who had carried off the child, and when
-he looked on the little wizened thing in the cradle he laughed. Now the
-parents were angry at his laughter, and wanted to turn him out.
-
-But he said, “Wait, put down a good fire,” and they did so.
-
-Then he went over to the cradle and said to the hideous little
-creature, in a loud voice before all the people—
-
-“If you don’t rise up this minute and leave the place, I will burn you
-on the fire; for I know right well who you are, and where you came
-from.”
-
-At once the child sat up and began to grin at him; and made a rush to
-the door to get away; but the man caught hold of it and threw it on the
-fire. And the moment it felt the heat it turned into a black kitten,
-and flew up the chimney and was seen no more.
-
-Then the man sent word to his mother to bring the other child, who
-was found to be the true heir, the lord’s own son. So there was great
-rejoicing, and the child grew up to be a great lord himself, and when
-his time came, he ruled well over the estate; and his descendants are
-living to this day, for all things prospered with him after he was
-saved from the fairies.
-
-
-FAIRY WILES.
-
-
-When the fairies steal away a beautiful mortal child they leave an
-ugly, wizened little creature in its place. And these fairy changelings
-grow up malicious and wicked, and have voracious appetites. The unhappy
-parents often try the test of fire for the child, in this wise—placing
-it in the centre of the cabin, they light a fire round it, and fully
-expect to see it changed into a sod of turf. But if the child survives
-the ordeal it is accepted as one of the family, though very grudgingly;
-and it is generally hated by all the neighbours for its impish ways.
-But the children of the Sidhe and a mortal mother are always clever
-and beautiful, and specially excel in music and dancing. They are,
-however, passionate and wilful, and have strange, moody fits, when they
-desire solitude above all things, and seem to hold converse with unseen
-spiritual beings.
-
-Fine young peasant women are often carried off by the fairies to nurse
-their little fairy progeny. But the woman is allowed to come back
-to her own infant after sunset. However, on entering the house, the
-husband must at once throw holy water over her in the name of God, when
-she will be restored to her own shape. For sometimes she comes with a
-hissing noise like a serpent; then she appears black, and shrouded like
-one from the dead; and, lastly, in her own shape, when she takes her
-old place by the fire and nurses her baby; and the husband must ask no
-questions, but give her food in silence. If she falls asleep the third
-night, all will be well, for the husband at once ties a red thread
-across the door to prevent the fairies coming in to carry her off, and
-if the third night passes over safely the fairies have lost their power
-over her for evermore.
-
-
-SHAUN-MOR.
-A LEGEND OF INNIS-SARK.
-
-
-The islanders believe firmly in the existence of fairies who live in
-the caves by the sea—little men about the height of a sod of turf, who
-come out of the fissures of the rocks and are bright and merry, wearing
-green jackets and red caps, and ready enough to help any one they like,
-though often very malicious if offended or insulted.
-
-There was an old man on the island called Shaun-Mor, who said that he
-had often travelled at night with the little men and carried their
-sacks for them; and in return they gave him strange fairy gifts and
-taught him the secret of power, so that he could always triumph over
-his enemies; and even as to the fairies, he was as wise as any of them,
-and could fight half a dozen of them together if he were so minded, and
-pitch them into the sea or strangle them with seaweed. So the fairies
-were angered at his pride and presumption, and determined to do him a
-malicious turn, just to amuse themselves when they were up for fun. So
-one night when he was returning home, he suddenly saw a great river
-between him and his house.
-
-“How shall I get across now?” he cried aloud; and immediately an eagle
-came up to him.
-
-“Don’t cry, Shaun-Mor,” said the eagle, “but get on my back and I’ll
-carry you safely.”
-
-So Shaun-Mor mounted, and they flew right up ever so high, till at last
-the eagle tumbled him off by the side of a great mountain in a place he
-had never seen before.
-
-“This is a bad trick you have played me,” said Shaun; “tell me where I
-am now?”
-
-“You are in the moon,” said the eagle, “and get down the best way you
-can, for now I must be off; so good-bye. Mind you don’t fall off the
-edge. Good-bye,” and with that the eagle disappeared.
-
-Just then a cleft in the rock opened, and out came a man as pale as the
-dead with a reaping-hook in his hand.
-
-“What brings you here?” said he. “Only the dead come here,” and he
-looked fixedly at Shaun-Mor so that he trembled like one already dying.
-
-“O your worship,” he said, “I live far from here. Tell me how I am to
-get down, and help me I beseech you.”
-
-“Ay, that I will,” said the pale-faced man. “Here is the help I give
-you,” and with that he gave him a blow with the reaping-hook which
-tumbled Shaun right over the edge of the moon; and he fell and fell
-ever so far till luckily he came in the midst of a flock of geese, and
-the old gander that was leading stopped and eyed him.
-
-“What are you doing here, Shaun-Mor?” said he, “for I know you well.
-I’ve often seen you down in Shark. What will your wife say when she
-hears of your being out so late at night, wandering about in this way.
-It is very disreputable, and no well brought up gander would do the
-like, much less a man; I am ashamed of you, Shaun-Mor.”
-
-“O your honour,” said the poor man, “it is an evil turn of the evil
-witches, for they have done all this; but let me just get up on your
-back, and if your honour brings me safe to my own house I shall be for
-ever grateful to every goose and gander in the world as long as I live.”
-
-“Well then, get up on my back,” said the bird, fluttering its wings
-with a great clatter over Shaun; but he couldn’t manage at all to get
-on its back, so he caught hold of one leg, and he and the gander went
-down and down till they came to the sea.
-
-“Now let go,” said the gander, “and find your way home the best way you
-can, for I have lost a great deal of time with you already, and must
-be away;” and he shook off Shaun-Mor, who dropped plump down into the
-sea, and when he was almost dead a great whale came sailing by, and
-flapped him all over with its fins. He knew no more till he opened his
-eyes lying on the grass in his own field by a great stone, and his wife
-was standing over him drenching him with a great pail of water, and
-flapping his face with her apron.
-
-And then he told his wife the whole story, which he said was true as
-gospel, but I don’t think she believed a word of it, though she was
-afraid to let on the like to Shaun-Mor, who affirms to this day that it
-was all the work of the fairies, though wicked people might laugh and
-jeer and say he was drunk.
-
-
-THE CAVE FAIRIES.
-
-
-THE TUATHA-DE-DANANN.
-
-
-It is believed by many people that the cave fairies are the remnant
-of the ancient Tuatha-de-Dananns who once ruled Ireland, but were
-conquered by the Milesians.
-
-These Tuatha were great necromancers, skilled in all magic, and
-excellent in all the arts as builders, poets, and musicians. At first
-the Milesians were going to destroy them utterly, but gradually were
-so fascinated and captivated by the gifts and power of the Tuatha that
-they allowed them to remain and to build forts, where they held high
-festival with music and singing and the chant of the bards. And the
-breed of horses they reared could not be surpassed in the world—fleet
-as the wind, with the arched neck and the broad chest and the quivering
-nostril, and the large eye that showed they were made of fire and
-flame, and not of dull, heavy earth. And the Tuatha made stables for
-them in the great caves of the hills, and they were shod with silver
-and had golden bridles, and never a slave was allowed to ride them.
-A splendid sight was the cavalcade of the Tuatha-de-Danann knights.
-Seven-score steeds, each with a jewel on his forehead like a star, and
-seven-score horsemen, all the sons of kings, in their green mantles
-fringed with gold, and golden helmets on their head, and golden greaves
-on their limbs, and each knight having in his hand a golden spear.
-
-And so they lived for a hundred years and more, for by their
-enchantments they could resist the power of death.
-
-
-EDAIN THE QUEEN.
-
-
-Now it happened that the king of Munster one day saw a beautiful girl
-bathing, and he loved her and made her his queen. And in all the land
-was no woman so lovely to look upon as the fair Edain, and the fame of
-her beauty came to the ears of the great and powerful chief and king of
-the Tuatha-de-Danann, Midar by name. So he disguised himself and went
-to the court of the king of Munster, as a wandering bard, that he might
-look on the beauty of Edain. And he challenged the king to a game of
-chess.
-
-“Who is this man that I should play chess with him?” said the king.
-
-“Try me,” said the stranger; “you will find me a worthy foe.”
-
-Then the king said—“But the chess-board is in the queen’s apartment,
-and I cannot disturb her.”
-
-However, when the queen heard that a stranger had challenged the king
-to chess, she sent her page in with the chess-board, and then came
-herself to greet the stranger. And Midar was so dazzled with her
-beauty, that he could not speak, he could only gaze on her. And the
-queen also seemed troubled, and after a time she left them alone.
-
-“Now, what shall we play for?” asked the king.
-
-“Let the conqueror name the reward,” answered the stranger, “and
-whatever he desires let it be granted to him.”
-
-“Agreed,” replied the monarch.
-
-Then they played the game and the stranger won.
-
-“What is your demand now?” cried the king. “I have given my word that
-whatever you name shall be yours.”
-
-“I demand the Lady Edain, the queen, as my reward,” replied the
-stranger. “But I shall not ask you to give her up to me till this day
-year.” And the stranger departed.
-
-Now the king was utterly perplexed and confounded, but he took good
-note of the time, and on that night just a twelvemonth after, he made a
-great feast at Tara for all the princes, and he placed three lines of
-his chosen warriors all round the palace, and forbade any stranger to
-enter on pain of death. So all being secure, as he thought, he took his
-place at the feast with the beautiful Edain beside him, all glittering
-with jewels and a golden crown on her head, and the revelry went on
-till midnight. Just then, to his horror, the king looked up, and there
-stood the stranger in the middle of the hall, but no one seemed to
-perceive him save only the king, He fixed his eyes on the queen, and
-coming towards her, he struck the golden harp he had in his hand and
-sang in a low sweet voice—
-
- “O Edain, wilt thou come with me
- To a wonderful palace that is mine?
- White are the teeth there, and black the brows,
- And crimson as the mead are the lips of the lovers.
-
- “O woman, if thou comest to my proud people,
- ’Tis a golden crown shall circle thy head,
- Thou shalt dwell by the sweet streams of my land,
- And drink of the mead and wine in the arms of thy lover.”
-
-Then he gently put his arm round the queen’s waist, and drew her up
-from her royal throne, and went forth with her through the midst of
-all the guests, none hindering, and the king himself was like one
-in a dream, and could neither speak nor move. But when he recovered
-himself, then he knew that the stranger was one of the fairy chiefs of
-the Tuatha-de-Danann who had carried off the beautiful Edain to his
-fairy mansion. So he sent round messengers to all the kings of Erin
-that they should destroy all the forts of the hated Tuatha race, and
-slay and kill and let none live till the queen, his young bride, was
-brought back to him. Still she came not. Then the king out of revenge
-ordered his men to block up all the stables where the royal horses of
-the Dananns were kept, that so they might die of hunger; but the horses
-were of noble blood, and no bars or bolts could hold them, and they
-broke through the bars and rushed out like the whirlwind, and spread
-all over the country. And the kings, when they saw the beauty of the
-horses, forgot all about the search for Queen Edain, and only strove
-how they could seize and hold as their own some of the fiery steeds
-with the silver hoofs and golden bridles. Then the king raged in his
-wrath, and sent for the chief of the Druids, and told him he should
-be put to death unless he discovered the place where the queen lay
-hid. So the Druid went over all Ireland, and searched, and made spells
-with oghams, and at last, having carved four oghams on four wands of a
-hazel-tree, it was revealed to him that deep down in a hill in the very
-centre of Ireland, Queen Edain was hidden away in the enchanted palace
-of Midar the fairy chief.
-
-Then the king gathered a great army, and they circled the hill, and
-dug down and down till they came to the very centre; and just as
-they reached the gate of the fairy palace, Midar by his enchantments
-sent forth fifty beautiful women from the hillside, to distract the
-attention of the warriors, all so like the queen in form and features
-and dress, that the king himself could not make out truly, if his own
-wife were amongst them or not. But Edain, when she saw her husband so
-near her, was touched by love of him in her heart, and the power of
-the enchantment fell from her soul, and she came to him, and he lifted
-her up on his horse and kissed her tenderly, and brought her back
-safely to his royal palace of Tara, where they lived happily ever after.
-
- * * * * *
-
-But soon after the power of the Tuatha-de-Danann was broken for ever,
-and the remnant that was left took refuge in the caves where they exist
-to this day, and practise their magic, and work spells, and are safe
-from death until the judgment day.
-
-
-THE ROYAL STEED.
-
-
-Of the great breed of splendid horses, some remained for several
-centuries, and were at once known by their noble shape and qualities.
-The last of them belonged to a great lord in Connaught, and when he
-died, all his effects being sold by auction, the royal steed came to
-the hammer, and was bought up by an emissary of the English Government,
-who wanted to get possession of a specimen of the magnificent ancient
-Irish breed, in order to have it transported to England.
-
-But when the groom attempted to mount the high-spirited animal, it
-reared, and threw the base-born churl violently to the ground, killing
-him on the spot.
-
-Then, fleet as the wind, the horse galloped away, and finally plunged
-into the lake and was seen no more. So ended the great race of the
-mighty Tuatha-de-Danann horses in Ireland, the like of which has never
-been seen since in all the world for majesty and beauty.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Sometimes the cave fairies make a straight path in the sea from one
-island to another, all paved with coral, under the water; but no
-one can tread it except the fairy race. Fishermen coming home late
-at night, on looking down, have frequently seen them passing and
-re-passing—a black band of little men with black dogs, who are very
-fierce if any one tries to touch them.
-
-There was an old man named Con, who lived on an island all alone,
-except for a black dog who kept him company. Now all the people knew
-right well that he was a fairy king, and could walk the water at night
-like the other fairies. So they feared him greatly, and brought him
-presents of cakes and fowls, for they were afraid of him and of his
-evil demon, the dog. For often, men coming home late have heard the
-steps of this dog and his breathing quite close to them, though they
-could not see him; and one man nearly died of fright, and was only
-saved by the priest who came and prayed over him.
-
-But the cave fairies can assume many forms.
-
-One summer’s evening, a young girl, the daughter of the man who owned
-the farm, was milking the cows in the yard, when three beautiful
-ladies, all in white, suddenly appeared, and asked her for a drink of
-milk. Now the girl knew well that milk should not be given away without
-using some precaution against fairy wiles, so she hesitated, fearing to
-bring ill-luck on the cows.
-
-“Is that the way you treat us?” said one of the ladies, and she slapped
-the girl on the face.
-
-“But, you’ll remember us,” said the second lady, and she took hold of
-the girl’s thumb and twisted it out of joint.
-
-“And your lover will be false to you,” said the third, and with that
-she turned the girl’s mantle crooked, the back to the front.
-
-Then the first lady took a vessel and milked the cow, and they all
-drank of the milk as much as they wanted; after which they turned to
-the girl and bade her beware of again offending the spirits of the
-cave, for they were very powerful, and would not let her off so easily
-another time.
-
-The poor girl fainted from fright, and was found quite senseless when
-they came to look for her; but the white ladies had disappeared. Though
-the story must have been true, just as she told it when she came to her
-senses, for not a drop of milk was left in the pail, nor could a drop
-more be got from the cows all that evening.
-
-
-EVIL SPELLS.
-
-
-CATHAL THE KING.
-
-
-It is said by the wise women and fairy doctors that the roots of the
-elder tree, and the roots of an apple tree that bears red apples, if
-boiled together and drunk fasting, will expel any evil living thing or
-evil spirit that may have taken up its abode in the body of a man.
-
-But an evil charm to produce a living thing in the body can also be
-made, by pronouncing a certain magic and wicked spell over the food or
-drink taken by any person that an enemy wishes to injure.
-
-One should therefore be very cautious in accepting anything to eat from
-a person of known malicious tongue and spiteful heart, or who has an
-ill will against you, for poison lies in their glance and in the touch
-of their hands; and an evil spell is in their very presence, and on all
-they do, say, or touch.
-
-Cathal, king of Munster, was the tallest and handsomest of all the
-kings of Erin, and he fell deeply in love with the beautiful sister
-of Fergus, king of Ulster; and the lovers were happy in their love
-and resolved on marriage. But Fergus, King of the North, had a mortal
-hatred to Cathal, King of the South, and wished, in secret, to prevent
-the marriage. So he set a watch over his sister, and by this means
-found out that she was sending a basket of the choicest apples to her
-lover, by the hands of a trusty messenger. On this Fergus managed to
-get hold of the basket of fruit from the messenger; and he changed them
-secretly for another lot of apples, over which he worked an evil spell.
-Furnished with these the messenger set out for Cashel, and presented
-them to Cathal the king, who, delighted at this proof of love from his
-princess, began at once to eat the apples. But the more he ate, the
-more he longed for them, for a wicked spell was on every apple. When
-he had eaten them all up, he sent round the country for more, and ate,
-and ate, until there was not an apple left in Cashel, nor in all the
-country round.
-
-Then he bade his chieftains go forth and bring in food to appease his
-appetite; and he ate up all the cattle and the grain and the fruit, and
-still cried for more; and had the houses searched for food to bring
-to him. So the people were in despair, for they had no more food, and
-starvation was over the land.
-
-Now a great and wise man, the chief poet of his tribe, happened to be
-travelling through Munster at that time, and hearing of the king’s
-state, he greatly desired to see him, for he knew there was devil’s
-work in the evil spell. So they brought him to the king, and many
-strong invocations he uttered over him, and many powerful incantations,
-for poets have a knowledge of mysteries above all other men; until
-finally, after three days had passed, he announced to the lords and
-chiefs that on that night, when the moon rose, the spell would be
-broken, and the king restored to his wonted health. So all the chiefs
-gathered round in the courtyard to watch; but no one was allowed to
-enter the room where the king lay, save only the poet. And he was to
-give the signal when the hour had come and the spell was broken.
-
-So as they watched, and just as the moon rose, a great cry was heard
-from the king’s room, and the poet, flinging open the door, bade the
-chiefs enter; and there on the floor lay a huge dead wolf, who for
-a whole year had taken up his abode in the king’s body; but was now
-happily cast forth by the strong incantations of the poet.
-
-After this the king fell into a deep sleep, and when he arose he was
-quite well, and strong again as ever, in all the pride of his youth and
-beauty. At this the people rejoiced much, for he was greatly loved, and
-the poet who had restored him was honoured above all men in the land;
-for the king himself took off the golden torque from his own neck, and
-placed it on that of the poet, and he set him at his right hand at the
-feast.
-
-Now a strange thing happened just at this time; for Fergus, King
-of the North, fell ill, and wasted away to a shadow, and of all the
-beautiful meats and wines they set before him he could taste nothing.
-So he died before a year had passed by; and then Cathal the king wedded
-his beloved princess, and they lived happily through many years.
-
-
-THE POET’S MALEDICTION.
-
-
-The imprecations of the poets had often also a mysterious and fatal
-effect.
-
-King Breas, the pagan monarch, was a fierce, cruel, and niggardly man,
-who was therefore very unpopular with the people, who hate the cold
-heart and the grudging hand.
-
-Amongst others who suffered by the king’s inhospitality, was the
-renowned Carbury the poet, son of Eodain, the great poetess of the
-Tuatha-de-Danann race; she who chanted the song of victory when her
-people conquered the Firbolgs, on the plains of Moytura; and the stone
-that she stood on, during the battle, in sight of all the warriors, is
-still existing, and is pointed out as the stone of Eodain, the poetess,
-with great reverence, even to this day.
-
-It was her son, Carbury the poet, who was held in such high honour by
-the nation, that King Breas invited him to his court, in order that he
-might pronounce a powerful malediction over the enemy with whom he was
-then at war.
-
-Carbury came on the royal summons, but in place of being treated with
-the distinction due to his high rank, he was lodged and fed so meanly
-that the soul of the poet raged with wrath; for the king gave him for
-lodgement only a small stone cell without fire or a bed; and for food
-he had only three cakes of meal without any flesh meat or sauce, and
-no wine was given him, such wine as is fit to light up the poet’s soul
-before the divine mystic spirit of song can awake in its power within
-him. So very early the next morning, the poet rose up and departed,
-with much rage in his heart. But as he passed the king’s house he
-stopped, and in place of a blessing, pronounced a terrible malediction
-over Breas and his race, which can still be found in the ancient books
-of Ireland, commencing thus—
-
- “Without fire, without bed, on the surface of the floor!
- Without meat, without fowl, on the surface of the dish.
- Three little dishes and no flesh thereon,
- A cell without bed, a dish without meat, a cup without wine,
- Are these fit offerings from a king to a poet?
- May the king and his race be three times accursed for ever and
- for ever!”
-
-Immediately three large blisters rose on the king’s forehead, and
-remained there as a sign and mark of the poet’s vengeance.
-
-And from that day forth to his death, which happened not long after,
-the reign of Breas was a time of sore trouble and disaster, for he
-was three times defeated by his enemies, and from care and sorrow a
-grievous disease fell on him; for though hungry he could not swallow
-any food; and though all the meat and wine of the best was set before
-him, yet his throat seemed closed, and though raging with hunger yet
-not a morsel could pass his lips; and so he died miserably, starved
-in the midst of plenty, and accursed in all things by the power and
-malediction of the angry poet.
-
-
-DRIMIAL AGUS THORIAL.
-(A WICKED SPELL.)
-
-
-When a girl wishes to gain the love of a man, and to make him marry
-her, the dreadful spell is used called _Drimial Agus Thorial_. At
-dead of night, she and an accomplice go to a churchyard, exhume a
-newly-buried corpse, and take a strip of the skin from the head to the
-heel. This is wound round the girl as a belt with a solemn invocation
-to the devil for his help.
-
-After she has worn it for a day and a night she watches her opportunity
-and ties it round the sleeping man whose love she desires; during which
-process the name of God must not be mentioned.
-
-When he awakes the man is bound by the spell; and is forced to marry
-the cruel and evil harpy. It is said the children of such marriages
-bear a black mark round the wrist, and are known and shunned by the
-people, who call them “sons of the devil.”
-
-
-AN IRISH ADEPT OF THE ISLANDS.
-
-
-Some persons, even at the present day amongst the peasants, have
-strange gifts and a knowledge of the hidden mysteries, but they can
-only impart this knowledge when they know that death is on them, and
-then it must be to a female, to an unmarried man, or to a childless
-woman, for these are the most susceptible to the mysterious power by
-which miracles can be worked.
-
-A man now living at Innis-Sark has this strange and mystic gift. He
-can heal diseases by a word, even at a distance, and his glance sees
-into the very heart, and reads the secret thoughts of men. He never
-touched beer, spirits, or meat, in all his life, but has lived entirely
-on bread, fruit, and vegetables. A man who knew him thus describes
-him—“Winter and summer his dress is the same, merely a flannel shirt
-and coat. He will pay his share at a feast, but neither eats nor drinks
-of the food and drink set before him. He speaks no English, and never
-could be made to learn the English tongue, though he says it might be
-used with great effect to curse one’s enemy. He holds a burial-ground
-sacred, and would not carry away so much as a leaf of ivy from a
-grave. And he maintains that the people are right in keeping to their
-ancient usages, such as never to dig a grave on a Monday; and to carry
-the coffin three times round the grave, following the course of the
-sun, for then the dead rest in peace. Like the people, also, he holds
-suicides as accursed; for they believe that all the dead who have been
-recently buried turn over on their faces if a suicide is laid amongst
-them.
-
-“Though well off he never, even in his youth, thought of taking a wife,
-nor was he ever known to love a woman. He stands quite apart from life,
-and by this means holds his power over the mysteries. No money will
-tempt him to impart this knowledge to another, for if he did he would
-be struck dead—so he believes. He would not touch a hazel stick, but
-carries an ash wand, which he holds in his hand when he prays, laid
-across his knees, and the whole of his life is devoted to works of
-grace and charity.”
-
-Though now an old man he has never had a day’s sickness. No one has
-ever seen him in a rage, nor heard an angry word from his lips but
-once; and then being under great irritation, he recited the Lord’s
-Prayer backwards, as an imprecation on his enemy. Before his death he
-will reveal the mystery of his power, but not till the hand of death is
-on him for certain.
-
-
-THE MAY FESTIVAL.
-
-
-There were four great festivals held in Ireland from the most ancient
-pagan times, and these four sacred seasons were February, May,
-Midsummer, and November. May was the most memorable and auspicious of
-all; then the Druids lit the _Baal-Tinne_, the holy, goodly fire of
-Baal, the Sun-god, and they drove the cattle on a path made between two
-fires, and singed them with the flame of a lighted torch, and sometimes
-they cut them to spill blood, and then burnt the blood as a sacred
-offering to the Sun-god.
-
-The great feast of Bel, or the Sun, took place on May Eve; and that of
-Samhain, or the Moon, on November Eve; when libations were poured out
-to appease the evil spirits, and also the spirits of the dead, who come
-out of their graves on that night to visit their ancient homes.
-
-The Phœnicians, it is known, adored the Supreme Being under the name of
-Bel-Samen, and it is remarkable that the peasants in Ireland, wishing
-you good luck, say in Irish, “The blessing of Bel, and the blessing of
-Samhain, be with you,” that is, of the sun and of the moon.
-
-These were the great festivals of the Druids, when all domestic fires
-were extinguished, in order to be re-lit by the sacred fire taken from
-the temples, for it was deemed sacrilege to have any fires kindled
-except from the holy altar flame.
-
-St. Patrick, however, determined to break down the power of the Druids;
-and, therefore, in defiance of their laws, he had a great fire lit
-on May Eve, when he celebrated the paschal mysteries; and henceforth
-Easter, or the Feast of the Resurrection, took the place of the Baal
-festival.
-
-The Baal fires were originally used for human sacrifices and
-burnt-offerings of the first-fruits of the cattle; but after
-Christianity was established the children and cattle were only passed
-between two fires for purification from sin, and as a safeguard against
-the power of the devil.
-
-The Persians also extinguished the domestic fires on the Baal festival,
-the 21st of April, and were obliged to re-light them from the temple
-fires, for which the priests were paid a fee in silver money. A fire
-kindled by rubbing two pieces of wood together was also considered
-lucky by the Persians; then water was boiled over the flame, and
-afterwards sprinkled on the people and on the cattle. The ancient Irish
-ritual resembles the Persian in every particular, and the Druids, no
-doubt, held the traditional worship exactly as brought from the East,
-the land of the sun and of tree worship and well worship.
-
-May Day, called in Irish _Là-Beltaine_, the day of the Baal fires, was
-the festival of greatest rejoicing held in Ireland. But the fairies
-have great power at that season, and children and cattle, and the
-milk and butter, must be well guarded from their influence. A spent
-coal must be put under the churn, and another under the cradle; and
-primroses must be scattered before the door, for the fairies cannot
-pass the flowers. Children that die in April are supposed to be carried
-off by the fairies, who are then always on the watch to abduct whatever
-is young and beautiful for their fairy homes.
-
-Sometimes on the 1st of May, a sacred heifer, snow white, appeared
-amongst the cattle; and this was considered to bring the highest good
-luck to the farmer. An old Irish song that alludes to the heifer, may
-be translated thus—
-
- “There is a cow on the mountain,
- A fair white cow;
- She goes East and she goes West,
- And my senses have gone for love of her;
- She goes with the sun and he forgets to burn,
- And the moon turns her face with love to her,
- My fair white cow of the mountain.”
-
-The fairies are in the best of humours upon May Eve, and the music of
-the fairy pipes may be heard all through the night, while the fairy
-folk are dancing upon the rath. It is then they carry off the young
-people to join their revels; and if a girl has once danced to the fairy
-music, she will move ever after with such fascinating grace, that it
-has passed into a proverb to say of a good dancer, “She has danced to
-fairy music on the hill.”
-
-At the great long dance held in old times on May Day, all the people
-held hands and danced round a great May-bush erected on a mound. The
-circle sometimes extended for a mile, the girls wearing garlands, and
-the young men carrying wands of green boughs, while the elder people
-sat round on the grass as spectators, and applauded the ceremony. The
-tallest and strongest young men in the county stood in the centre and
-directed the movements, while the pipers and harpers, wearing green and
-gold sashes, played the most spirited dance tunes.
-
-The oldest worship of the world was of the sun and moon, of trees,
-wells, and the serpent that gave wisdom. Trees were the symbol of
-knowledge, and the dance round the May-bush is part of the ancient
-ophite ritual. The Baila also, or waltz, is associated with Baal
-worship, where the two circling motions are combined; the revolution of
-the planet on its own axis, and also round the sun.
-
-In Italy, this ancient festival, called _Calendi Maggio_, is celebrated
-in the rural districts much in the Irish way. Dante fell in love at the
-great May Day festival, held in the Portinari Palace. The Sclavonic
-nations likewise light sacred fires, and dance round a tree hung with
-garlands on May Day. This reverence for the tree is one of the oldest
-superstitions of humanity and the most universal, and the fires are a
-relic of the old pagan worship paid to the Grynian Apollo—fire above
-all things being held sacred by the Irish as a safeguard from evil
-spirits. It is a saying amongst them, “Fire and salt are the two most
-sacred things given to man, and if you give them away on May Day, you
-give away your luck for the year.” Therefore no one will allow milk, or
-fire, or salt, to be carried away from the house on that day; and if
-people came in and asked for a lighted sod, they would be driven away
-with curses, for their purpose was evil.
-
-The witches, however, make great efforts to steal the milk on May
-morning, and if they succeed, the luck passes from the family, and the
-milk and butter for the whole year will belong to the fairies. The best
-preventative is to scatter primroses on the threshold; and the old
-women tie bunches of primroses to the cows’ tails, for the evil spirits
-cannot touch anything guarded by these flowers, if they are plucked
-before sunrise, not else. A piece of iron, also, made red hot, is
-placed upon the hearth; any old iron will do, the older the better, and
-branches of whitethorn and mountain ash are wreathed round the doorway
-for luck. The mountain ash has very great and mysterious qualities. If
-a branch of it be woven into the roof, that house is safe from fire
-for a year at least, and if a branch of it is mixed with the timber
-of a boat, no storm will upset it, and no man in it will be drowned
-for a twelvemonth certain. To save milk from witchcraft, the people on
-May morning cut and peel some branches of the mountain ash, and bind
-the twigs round the milk pails and the churn. No witch or fairy will
-then be able to steal the milk or butter. But all this must be done
-_before sunrise_. However, should butter be missed, follow the cow to
-the field, and gather the clay her hoof has touched; then, on returning
-home, place it under the churn with a live coal and a handful of salt,
-and your butter is safe from man or woman, fairy or fiend, for that
-year. There are other methods also to preserve a good supply of butter
-in the churn; a horse-shoe tied on it; a rusty nail from a coffin
-driven into the side; a cross made of the leaves of veronica placed at
-the bottom of the milk pail; but the mountain ash is the best of all
-safeguards against witchcraft and devil’s magic. Without some of these
-precautions the fairies will certainly overlook the churn, and the milk
-and butter, in consequence, will fail all through the year, and the
-farmer suffer great loss. Herbs gathered on May Eve have a mystical and
-strong virtue for curing disease; and powerful potions are made then by
-the skilful herb women and fairy doctors, which no sickness can resist,
-chiefly of the yarrow, called in Irish “the herb of seven needs” or
-cures, from its many and great virtues. Divination is also practised to
-a great extent by means of the yarrow. The girls dance round it singing—
-
- “Yarrow, yarrow, yarrow,
- I bid thee good morrow,
- And tell me before to-morrow
- Who my true love shall be.”
-
-The herb is then placed under the head at night, and in dreams the
-true lover will appear. Another mode of divination for the future fate
-in life is by snails. The young girls go out early before sunrise
-to trace the path of the snails in the clay, for always a letter is
-marked, and this is the initial of the true lover’s name. A black snail
-is very unlucky to meet first in the morning, for his trail would read
-_death_; but a white snail brings good fortune. A white lamb on the
-right hand is also good; but the cuckoo is ominous of evil. Of old the
-year began with the 1st of May, and an ancient Irish rhyme says—
-
- “A white lamb on my right side,
- So will good come to me;
- But not the little false cuckoo
- On the first day of the year.”
-
-Prophecies were also made from the way the wind blew on May mornings.
-In ’98 an old man, who was drawing near to his end and like to die,
-inquired from those around him—
-
-“Where did you leave the wind last night?” (May Eve.)
-
-They told him it came from the north.
-
-“Then,” he said, “the country is lost to the Clan Gael; our enemies
-will triumph. Had it been from the south, we should have had the
-victory; but now the Sassenach will trample us to dust.” And he fell
-back and died.
-
-Ashes are often sprinkled on the threshold on May Eve; and if the print
-of a foot is found in the morning, turned inward, it betokens marriage;
-but if turned outward, death. On May Eve the fairy music is heard on
-all the hills, and many beautiful tunes have been caught up in this way
-by the people and the native musicians.
-
-About a hundred years ago a celebrated tune, called _Moraleana_, was
-learnt by a piper as he traversed the hills one evening; and he played
-it perfectly, note by note, as he heard it from the fairy pipes; on
-which a voice spoke to him and said that he would be allowed to play
-the tune _three times_ in his life before all the people, but never a
-fourth, or a doom would fall on him. However, one day he had a great
-contest for supremacy with another piper, and at last, to make sure
-of victory, he played the wonderful fairy melody; when all the people
-applauded and declared he had won the prize by reason of its beauty,
-and that no music could equal his. So they crowned him with the
-garland; but at that moment he turned deadly pale, the pipes dropped
-from his hand, and he fell lifeless to the ground. For nothing escapes
-the fairies; they know all things, and their vengeance is swift and
-sure.
-
-It is very dangerous to sleep out in the open air in the month of May,
-for the fairies are very powerful then, and on the watch to carry off
-the handsome girls for fairy brides, and the young mothers as nurses
-for the fairy babies; while the young men are selected as husbands for
-the beautiful fairy princesses.
-
-A young man died suddenly on May Eve while he was lying asleep under
-a hay-rick, and the parents and friends knew immediately that he had
-been carried off to the fairy palace in the great moat of Granard. So a
-renowned fairy man was sent for, who promised to have him back in nine
-days. Meanwhile he desired that food and drink of the best should be
-left daily for the young man at a certain place on the moat. This was
-done, and the food always disappeared, by which they knew the young man
-was living, and came out of the moat nightly for the provisions left
-for him by his people.
-
-Now on the ninth day a great crowd assembled to see the young man
-brought back from Fairyland. And in the midst stood the fairy doctor
-performing his incantations by means of fire and a powder which he
-threw into the flames that caused a dense grey smoke to arise. Then,
-taking off his hat, and holding a key in his hand, he called out three
-times in a loud voice, “Come forth, come forth, come forth!” On which a
-shrouded figure slowly rose up in the midst of the smoke, and a voice
-was heard answering, “Leave me in peace; I am happy with my fairy
-bride, and my parents need not weep for me, for I shall bring them good
-luck, and guard them from evil evermore.”
-
-Then the figure vanished and the smoke cleared, and the parents were
-content, for they believed the vision, and having loaded the fairy-man
-with presents, they sent him away home.
-
-
-MAY-DAY SUPERSTITIONS.
-
-
-The marsh marigold is considered of great use in divination, and is
-called “the shrub of Beltaine.” Garlands are made of it for the cattle
-and the door-posts to keep off the fairy power. Milk also is poured
-on the threshold, though none would be given away; nor fire, nor
-salt—these three things being sacred. There are many superstitions
-concerning May-time. It is not safe to go on the water the first Monday
-in May. Hares found on May morning are supposed to be witches, and
-should be stoned.
-
-If the fire goes out on May morning it is considered very unlucky,
-and it cannot be re-kindled except by a lighted sod brought from the
-priest’s house. And the ashes of this blessed turf are afterwards
-sprinkled on the floor and the threshold of the house. Neither fire,
-nor water, nor milk, nor salt should be given away for love or money,
-and if a wayfarer is given a cup of milk, he must drink it in the
-house, and salt must be mixed with it. Salt and water as a drink is at
-all times considered a potent charm against evil, if properly prepared
-by a fairy doctor and the magic words said over it.
-
-One day in May a young girl lay down to rest at noontide on a fairy
-rath and fell asleep—a thing of great danger, for the fairies are
-strong in power during the May month, and are particularly on the watch
-for a mortal bride to carry away to the fairy mansions, for they love
-the sight of human beauty. So they spirited away the young sleeping
-girl, and only left a shadowy resemblance of her lying on the rath.
-Evening came on, and as the young girl had not returned, her mother
-sent out messengers in all directions to look for her. At last she was
-found on the fairy rath, lying quite unconscious, like one dead.
-
-They carried her home and laid her on her bed, but she neither spoke
-nor moved. So three days passed over. Then they thought it right to
-send for the fairy doctor. At once he said that she was fairy struck,
-and he gave them a salve made of herbs to anoint her hands and her
-brow every morning at sunrise, and every night when the moon rose; and
-salt was sprinkled on the threshold and round her bed where she lay
-sleeping. This was done for six days and six nights, and then the girl
-rose up suddenly and asked for food. They gave her to eat, but asked
-no questions, only watched her that she should not quit the house. And
-then she fixed her eyes on them steadily and said—
-
-“Why did you bring me back? I was so happy. I was in a beautiful palace
-where lovely ladies and young princes were dancing to the sweetest
-music; and they made me dance with them, and threw a mantle over me of
-rich gold; and now it is all gone, and you have brought me back, and I
-shall never, never see the beautiful palace more.”
-
-Then the mother wept and said—
-
-“Oh, child, stay with me, for I have no other daughter, and if the
-fairies take you from me I shall die.”
-
-When the girl heard this, she fell on her mother’s neck and kissed her,
-and promised that she would never again go near the fairy rath while
-she lived, for the fairy doctor told her that if ever she lay down
-there again and slept, she would never return alive to her home any
-more.
-
-
-FESTIVALS.
-
-
-CANDLEMAS.
-
-
-Candlemas day, the 2nd of February, used to be held in the old pagan
-times as a kind of saturnalia, with dances and torches and many unholy
-rites. But these gave occasion to so much ill conduct that in the ninth
-century the Pope abolished the festival, and substituted for it the
-Feast of the Purification of the Blessed Virgin, when candles were lit
-in her honour. Hence the name of Candlemas.
-
-
-WHITSUNTIDE.
-
-
-Whitsuntide is a very fatal and unlucky time. Especially beware of
-water then, for there is an evil spirit in it, and no one should
-venture to bathe, nor to sail in a boat for fear of being drowned; nor
-to go a journey where water has to be crossed. And everything in the
-house must be sprinkled with holy water at Whitsuntide to keep away the
-fairies, who at that season are very active and malicious, and bewitch
-the cattle, and carry off the young children, and come up from the sea
-to hold strange midnight revels, when they kill with their fairy darts
-the unhappy mortal who crosses their path and pries at their mysteries.
-
-
-WHITSUNTIDE LEGEND OF THE FAIRY HORSES.
-
-
-There was a widow woman with one son, who had a nice farm of her own
-close to a lake, and she took great pains in the cultivation of the
-land, and her corn was the best in the whole country. But when nearly
-ripe, and just fit for cutting, she found to her dismay that every
-night it was trampled down and cruelly damaged; yet no one could tell
-by what means it was done.
-
-So she set her son to watch. And at midnight he heard a great noise and
-a rushing of waves on the beach, and up out of the lake came a great
-troop of horses, who began to graze the corn and trample it down madly
-with their hoofs.
-
-When he told all this to his mother she bade him watch the next night
-also, but to take several of the men with him furnished with bridles,
-and when the horses rose from the lake they were to fling the bridles
-over as many as they could catch.
-
-Now at midnight there was the same noise heard again, and the rush of
-the waves, and in an instant all the field was filled with the fairy
-horses, grazing the corn and trampling it down. The men pursued them,
-but only succeeded in capturing one, and he was the noblest of the lot.
-The rest all plunged back into the lake. However, the men brought home
-the captured horse to the widow, and he was put in the stable and grew
-big and strong, and never another horse came up out of the lake, nor
-was the corn touched after that night of his capture. But when a year
-had passed by the widow said it was a shame to keep so fine a horse
-idle, and she bade the young man, her son, take him out to the hunt
-that was held that day by all the great gentry of the country, for it
-was Whitsuntide.
-
-And, in truth, the horse carried him splendidly at the hunt, and every
-one admired both the fine young rider and his steed. But as he was
-returning home, when they came within sight of the lake from which the
-fairy steed had risen, he began to plunge violently, and finally threw
-his rider. And the young man’s foot being unfortunately caught in the
-stirrup, he was dragged along till he was torn limb from limb, while
-the horse still continued galloping on madly to the water, leaving some
-fragment of the unhappy lad after him on the road, till they reached
-the margin of the lake, when the horse shook off the last limb of the
-dead youth from him, and plunging into the waves disappeared from sight.
-
-The people reverently gathered up the remains of the dead, and erected
-a monument of stones over the lad in a field by the edge of the lake;
-and every one that passes by still lays a stone and says a prayer that
-the spirit of the dead may rest in peace.
-
-The phantom horses were never seen again, but the lake has an evil
-reputation even to this day amongst the people; and no one would
-venture a boat on it after sundown at Whitsuntide, or during the time
-of the ripening of the corn, or when the harvest is ready for the
-sickle, for strange sounds are heard at night, like the wild galloping
-of a horse across the meadow, along with the cries as of a man in his
-death agony.
-
-
-NOVEMBER SPELLS.
-
-
-The ancient Irish divided the year into summer and winter—_Samrath_
-and _Gheimrath_; the former beginning in May, the latter in November,
-called also _Sam-fuim_ (summer end). At this season, when the sun
-dies, the powers of darkness exercise great and evil influence over
-all things. The witch-women say they can then ride at night through
-the air with Diana of the Ephesians, and Herodias, and others leagued
-with the devil; and change men to beasts; and ride with the dead and
-cover leagues of ground on swift spirit-horses. Also on November Eve,
-by certain incantations, the dead can be made to appear and answer
-questions; but for this purpose blood must be sprinkled on the dead
-body when it rises; for it is said the spirits love blood. The colour
-excites them and gives them for the time the power and the semblance of
-life.
-
-Divination by fire, by earth, and by water, is also largely practised;
-but, as an ancient writer has observed, “All such divinations are
-accursed, for they are worked by the power of the fallen angels,
-who give knowledge only through malice, and to bring evil on the
-questioner. Neither should times and seasons be held lucky or unlucky,
-nor the course of the moon, nor the death of the sun, nor the so-called
-Egyptian days; for all things are blessed to a Christian. And this is
-the doctrine of the Holy Church, which all men should take to heart....
-But a prayer to God, written fine, may be worn tyed round the neck, for
-this is done in a holy spirit, and is not against the ordinances of the
-Church.”
-
-The scapular here alluded to is a piece of cloth on which the name
-of Mary is written on one side and I.H.S. on the other. It preserves
-against evil spirits, and is a passport to heaven, and ensures against
-the pains of hell; for the Blessed Virgin takes the wearer under her
-especial care. It is placed in a little silk bag and worn tied round
-the neck, and is left upon the dead in their coffin for the angels to
-see at the resurrection. The scapular is never given to an evil liver,
-so it is a sign both of a pious life here and a blessed life hereafter.
-
-
-NOVEMBER EVE.
-
-
-All the spells worked on November Eve are performed in the name of the
-devil, who is then forced to reveal the future fate of the questioner.
-The most usual spell is to wash a garment in a running brook, then
-hang it on a thorn bush, and wait to see the apparition of the lover,
-who will come to turn it. But the tricks played on this night by young
-persons on each other have often most disastrous consequences. One
-young girl fell dead with fright when an apparition really came and
-turned the garment she had hung on the bush. And a lady narrates that
-on the 1st of November her servant rushed into the room and fainted on
-the floor. On recovering, she said that she had played a trick that
-night in the name of the devil before the looking-glass; but what she
-had seen she dared not speak of, though the remembrance of it would
-never leave her brain, and she knew the shock would kill her. They
-tried to laugh her out of her fears, but the next night she was found
-quite dead, with her features horribly contorted, lying on the floor
-before the looking-glass, which was shivered to pieces.
-
-Another spell is the building of the house. Twelve couples are taken,
-each being made of two holly twigs tied together with a hempen thread;
-these are all named and stuck round in a circle in the clay. A live
-coal is then placed in the centre, and whichever couple catches fire
-first will assuredly be married. Then the future husband is invoked in
-the name of the Evil One to appear and quench the flame.
-
-On one occasion a dead man in his shroud answered the call, and
-silently drew away the girl from the rest of the party. The fright
-turned her brain, and she never recovered her reason afterwards. The
-horror of that apparition haunted her for ever, especially as on
-November Eve it is believed firmly that the dead really leave their
-graves and have power to appear amongst the living.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A young girl in a farmer’s service was in the loft one night looking
-for eggs when two men came into the stable underneath, and through a
-chink in the boards she could see them quite well and hear all they
-said. To her horror she found that they were planning the murder of a
-man in the neighbourhood who was suspected of being an informer, and
-they settled how they would get rid of the body by throwing it into
-the Shannon. She crept home half dead with fright, but did not venture
-to tell any one what she had heard. Next day, however, the news spread
-that the man was missing, and it was feared he was murdered. Still
-the girl was afraid to reveal what she knew, though the ghost of the
-murdered man seemed for ever before her. Finally she could bear the
-place no longer, and, giving up her situation, she went to another
-village some miles off and took service. But on November Eve, as she
-was washing clothes in the Shannon, the dead body of the murdered man
-arose from the water and floated towards her, until it lay quite close
-to her feet. Then she knew the hand of God was in it, and that the
-spirit of the dead would not rest till he was avenged. So she went and
-gave information, and on her evidence the two murderers were convicted
-and executed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If the cattle fall sick at this season, it is supposed that some old
-fairy man or woman is lying hid about the place to spy out the doings
-of the family and work some evil spells.
-
-A farmer had a splendid cow, the pride of his farm, but suddenly it
-seemed ailing and gave no milk, though every morning it went and
-stood quite patiently under an old hawthorn-tree as if some one were
-milking her. So the man watched the time, and presently the cow came
-of herself and stood under the hawthorn, when a little old wizened
-woman came forth from the trunk of the tree, milked the cow, and then
-retreated into the tree again. On this the farmer sent at once for a
-fairy doctor, who exorcised the cow and gave it a strong potion, after
-which the spell was broken and the cow was restored to its usual good
-condition and gave the milk as heretofore.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The fairies also exercise a malign influence by making a path through
-a house, when all the children begin to pine and a blight falls on the
-family.
-
-A farmer who had lost one son by heart disease (always a mysterious
-malady to the peasants) and another by gradual decay, consulted a wise
-fairy woman as to what should be done, for his wife also had become
-delicate and weak. The woman told him that on November Eve the fairies
-had made a road through the house, and were going back and forward ever
-since, and whatever they looked upon was doomed. The only remedy was to
-build up the old door and open another entrance. This the man did, and
-when the witch-women came as usual in the morning to beg for water or
-milk or meal they found no door, and were obliged to turn back. After
-this the spell was taken off the household, and they all prospered
-without fear of the fairies.
-
-
-A TERRIBLE REVENGE.
-
-
-The fairies often take a terrible revenge if they are ever slighted
-or offended. A whole family once came under their ban because a fairy
-woman had been refused admittance into the house. The eldest boy lost
-his sight for some time, and though he recovered the use of his eyes
-yet they always had a strange expression, as if he saw some terrible
-object in the distance that scared him. And at last the neighbours grew
-afraid of the family, for they brought ill-luck wherever they went, and
-nothing prospered that they touched.
-
-There were six children, all wizened little creatures with withered
-old faces and thin crooked fingers. Every one knew they were fairy
-changelings, and the smith wanted to put them on the anvil, and the
-wise women said they should be passed through the fire; but destiny
-settled the future for them, for one after another they all pined
-away and died, and the ban of the fairies was never lifted from the
-ill-fated house till the whole family lay in the grave.
-
-
-MIDSUMMER.
-
-
-THE BAAL FIRES AND DANCES.
-
-
-This season is still made memorable in Ireland by lighting fires on
-every hill, according to the ancient pagan usage, when the Baal fires
-were kindled as part of the ritual of sun-worship, though now they are
-lit in honour of St. John. The great bonfire of the year is still made
-on St. John’s Eve, when all the people dance round it, and every young
-man takes a lighted brand from the pile to bring home with him for good
-luck to the house.
-
-In ancient times the sacred fire was lighted with great ceremony on
-Midsummer Eve; and on that night all the people of the adjacent country
-kept fixed watch on the western promontory of Howth, and the moment the
-first flash was seen from that spot the fact of ignition was announced
-with wild cries and cheers repeated from village to village, when all
-the local fires began to blaze, and Ireland was circled by a cordon of
-flame rising up from every hill. Then the dance and song began round
-every fire, and the wild hurrahs filled the air with the most frantic
-revelry.
-
-Many of these ancient customs are still continued, and the fires are
-still lighted on St. John’s Eve on every hill in Ireland. When the fire
-has burned down to a red glow the young men strip to the waist and leap
-over or through the flames; this is done backwards and forwards several
-times, and he who braves the greatest blaze is considered the victor
-over the powers of evil, and is greeted with tremendous applause. When
-the fire burns still lower, the young girls leap the flame, and those
-who leap clean over three times back and forward will be certain of
-a speedy marriage and good luck in after life, with many children.
-The married women then walk through the lines of the burning embers;
-and when the fire is nearly burnt and trampled down, the yearling
-cattle are driven through the hot ashes, and their back is singed with
-a lighted hazel twig. These hazel rods are kept safely afterwards,
-being considered of immense power to drive the cattle to and from the
-watering places. As the fire diminishes the shouting grows fainter,
-and the song and the dance commence; while professional story-tellers
-narrate tales of fairy-land, or of the good old times long ago, when
-the kings and princes of Ireland dwelt amongst their own people, and
-there was food to eat and wine to drink for all comers to the feast at
-the king’s house. When the crowd at length separate, every one carries
-home a brand from the fire, and great virtue is attached to the lighted
-_brone_ which is safely carried to the house without breaking or
-falling to the ground. Many contests also arise amongst the young men;
-for whoever enters his house first with the sacred fire brings the good
-luck of the year with him.
-
-On the first Sunday in Midsummer all the young people used to stand in
-lines after leaving chapel, to be hired for service—the girls holding
-white hands, the young men each with an emblem of his trade. The
-evening ended with a dance and the revelry was kept up until the dawn
-of the next day, called “Sorrowful Monday,” because of the end of the
-pleasure and the frolic.
-
-
-THE FAIRY DOCTRESS.
-
-
-But all this time the fairies were not idle; for it was at this very
-season of dances and festivals, when the mortals around them were
-happiest, that Finvarra the king and his chosen band were on the watch
-to carry off the prettiest girls to the fairy mansions.
-
-There they kept them for seven years, and at the end of that time,
-when they grew old and ugly, they were sent back, for the fairies love
-nothing so much as youth and beauty. But as a compensation for the
-slight put on them, the women were taught all the fairy secrets and the
-magical mystery that lies in herbs, and the strange power they have
-over diseases. So by this means the women became all-powerful, and by
-their charms or spells or potions could kill or save as they chose.
-
-There was a woman of the islands greatly feared, yet respected by
-the people for her knowledge of herbs, which gave her power over all
-diseases. But she never revealed the nature of the herb, and always
-gathered the leaves herself at night and hid them under the eaves of
-the house. And if the person who carried the herb home let it fall to
-the ground by the way, it lost its power; or if they talked of it or
-showed it to any one, all the virtue went out of it. It was to be used
-secretly and alone, and then the cure would be perfected without fail.
-
-One time, a man who was told of this came over from the mainland in a
-boat with two other men to see the fairy woman; for he was lame from a
-fall and could do no work.
-
-Now the woman knew they were coming, for she had a knowledge of all
-things through the power of divination she had learned from the
-fairies, and could see and hear though no man told her. So she went out
-and prepared the herb, and made a salve and brewed a potion, and had
-all ready for the man and his friends.
-
-When they appeared she stood at the door and cried, “Enter! This is the
-lucky day and hour; have no fear, for you will be cured by the power
-that is in me, and by the herb I give you.”
-
-Then the man bowed down before her, and said, “Oh, mother, this is my
-case.” And he told her, that being out one day on the mountains, he
-slipped and fell on his face. A mere slight fall, but when he rose up
-his leg was powerless though no bone seemed broken.
-
-“I know how it happened,” she said. “You trod upon a fairy herb under
-which the fairies were resting, and you disturbed them and broke in the
-top of their dwelling, so they were angry and struck you on the leg and
-lamed you out of spite. But my power is greater than theirs. Do as I
-tell you and you will soon be cured.”
-
-So she gave him the salve and the bottle of potion, and bade him take
-it home carefully and use it in silence and alone, and in three days
-the power of the limb would come back to him.
-
-Then the man offered her silver; but she refused.
-
-“I do not sell my knowledge,” she said, “I give it. And so the strength
-and the power remain with me.”
-
-On this the men went their way. But after three days a message came
-from the man to say that he was cured. And he sent the wise woman a
-handsome present also; for a gift works no evil, though to sell the
-sacred power and mysteries of knowledge for money would be fatal; for
-then the spirit of healing that dwelt in the woman would have fled away
-and returned no more.
-
-
-MARRIAGE RITES.
-
-
-In old times in Ireland it was thought right and proper to seem to use
-force in carrying off the bride to her husband. She was placed on a
-swift horse before the bridegroom, while all her kindred started in
-pursuit with shouts and cries. Twelve maidens attended the bride, and
-each was placed on horseback behind the young men who rode after the
-bridal pair. On arriving at her future home, the bride was met on the
-threshold by the bridegroom’s mother, who broke an oaten cake over her
-head as a good augury of plenty in the future. In the mountains where
-horses cannot travel, the bridal party walk in procession; the young
-men carrying torches of dried bogwood to light the bride over the
-ravines, for in winter the mountain streams are rapid and dangerous to
-cross.
-
-The Celtic ceremonial of marriage resembles the ancient Greek ritual
-in many points. A traveller in Ireland some fifty years ago, before
-politics had quite killed romance and ancient tradition in the hearts
-of the people, thus describes a rustic marriage festival which he came
-on by chance one evening in the wilds of Kerry:—
-
-A large hawthorn tree that stood in the middle of a field near a
-stream was hung all over with bits of coloured stuff, while lighted
-rush candles were placed here and there amongst the branches, to
-symbolize, no doubt, the new life of brightness preparing for the
-bridal pair. Then came a procession of boys marching slowly with flutes
-and pipes made of hollow reeds, and one struck a tin can with a stick
-at intervals, with a strong rhythmical cadence. This represented the
-plectrum. Others rattled slates and bones between their fingers, and
-beat time, after the manner of the Crotolistrai—a rude attempt at
-music, which appears amongst all nations of the earth, even the most
-savage. A boy followed, bearing a lighted torch of bogwood. Evidently
-he was Hymen, and the flame of love was his cognizance. After him came
-the betrothed pair hand-in-hand, a large square canopy of black stuff
-being held over their heads; the emblem, of course, of the mystery of
-love, shrouded and veiled from the prying light of day.
-
-Behind the pair followed two attendants bearing high over the heads of
-the young couple a sieve filled with meal; a sign of the plenty that
-would be in their house, and an omen of good luck and the blessing of
-children.
-
-A wild chorus of dancers and singers closed the procession; the chorus
-of the epithalamium, and grotesque figures, probably the traditional
-fauns and satyrs, nymphs and bacchanals, mingled together with mad
-laughter and shouts and waving of green branches.
-
-The procession then moved on to a bonfire, evidently the ancient altar;
-and having gone round it three times, the black shroud was lifted from
-the bridal pair, and they kissed each other before all the people, who
-shouted and waved their branches in approval.
-
-Then the preparations for the marriage supper began, on which, however,
-the traveller left them, having laid some money on the altar as an
-offering of good-will for the marriage future. At the wedding supper
-there was always plenty of eating and drinking, and dancing and the
-feast were prolonged till near morning, when the wedding song was sung
-by the whole party of friends standing, while the bride and bridegroom
-remained seated at the head of the table. The chorus of one of these
-ancient songs may be thus literally translated from the Irish—
-
- “It is not day, nor yet day,
- It is not day, nor yet morning;
- It is not day, nor yet day,
- For the moon is shining brightly.”
-
-Another marriage song was sung in Irish frequently, each verse ending
-with the lines—
-
- “There is sweet enchanting music, and the golden harps are ringing;
- And twelve comely maidens deck the bride-bed for the bride.”
-
-A beautiful new dress was presented to the bride by her husband at the
-marriage feast; at which also the father paid down her dowry before the
-assembled guests; and all the place round the house was lit by torches
-when night came on, and the song and the dance continued till daylight,
-with much speech-making and drinking of poteen. All fighting was
-steadily avoided at a wedding; for a quarrel would be considered a most
-unlucky omen. A wet day was also held to be very unlucky, as the bride
-would assuredly weep for sorrow throughout the year. But the bright
-warm sunshine was hailed joyfully, according to the old saying—
-
- “Happy is the bride that the sun shines on;
- But blessed is the corpse that the rain rains on.”
-
-
-THE DEAD.
-
-
-There are many strange superstitions concerning the dead. The people
-seem to believe in their actual presence, though unseen, and to have a
-great fear and dread of their fatal and mysterious power.
-
-If a person of doubtful character dies, too bad for heaven, too good
-for hell, they imagine that his soul is sent back to earth, and obliged
-to obey the order of some person who bids him remain in a particular
-place until the Day of Judgment, or until another soul is found willing
-to meet him there, and then they may both pass into heaven together,
-absolved.
-
-An incident is related that happened in the County Galway, concerning
-this superstition.
-
-A gentleman of rank and fortune, but of a free and dissipated life,
-became the lover of a pretty girl, one of the tenant’s daughters. And
-the girl was so devoted to him that perhaps he might have married her
-at last; but he was killed suddenly, when out hunting, by a fall from
-his horse.
-
-Some time after, the girl, coming home late one evening, met the ghost
-of her lover, at a very lonesome part of the road. The form was the
-same as when living, but it had no eyes. The girl crossed herself, on
-which the ghost disappeared.
-
-Again she met the same apparition at night, and a third time, when the
-ghost stood right before her in the path, so that she could not pass.
-Then she spoke, and asked in the name of God and the good angels, why
-he appeared to her; and he answered, that he could not rest in his
-grave till he had received some command from her, which he was bound to
-obey.
-
-“Then,” she said, “go stand by the gate of heaven till the Judgment
-Day, and look in at the blessed dead on their thrones, but you may not
-enter. This is my judgment on your soul.”
-
-On this the ghost sighed deeply and vanished, and was seen no more.
-But the girl prayed earnestly that she soon might meet her lover at
-the gate of heaven, whither she had sent him, that so both might enter
-together into the blessed land. And thus it happened; for by that day
-year she was carried to her grave in the churchyard, but her soul went
-forth to meet her lover, where he waited for her by the gate of heaven;
-and through her love he was absolved, and permitted to enter within the
-gate before the Judgment Day.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was considered disrespectful to the dead to take a short cut when
-carrying the coffin to the grave.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the Islands, when a person is dying, they place twelve lighted
-rushes round the bed. This, they say, is to prevent the devil coming
-for the soul; for nothing evil can pass a circle of fire. They also
-forbid crying for the dead until three hours have passed by, lest the
-wail of the mourners should waken the dogs who are waiting to devour
-the souls of men before they can reach the throne of God.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is a very general custom during some nights after a death to leave
-food outside the house—a griddle cake, or a dish of potatoes. If it is
-gone in the morning, the spirits must have taken it; for no human being
-would touch the food left for the dead.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The great and old families of Ireland consider it right to be buried
-with their kindred, and are brought from any distance, however remote,
-to be laid in the ancient graveyard of the race.
-
-A young man of family having died far away, from fever, it was thought
-advisable not to bring him home, but to bury him where he died.
-However, on the night of the funeral a phantom hearse with four black
-horses stopped at the churchyard. Some men then entered with spades and
-shovels and dug a grave, after which the hearse drove away. But next
-morning no sign of the grave was to be found, except a long line marked
-out, the length of a man’s coffin.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is unlucky and a bad omen to carry fire out of a house where any
-one is ill. A gentleman one day stopped at a cabin to get a light
-for his cigar, and having wished good morning in the usual friendly
-fashion, he took a stick from the fire, blew it into a blaze, and was
-walking away, when the woman of the house rose up fiercely and told him
-it was an evil thing to take fire away when her husband was dying. On
-looking round he saw a wretched skeleton lying on a bed of straw; so
-he flung back the stick at once, and fled from the place, leaving his
-blessing in the form of a silver offering, to neutralize the evil of
-the abducted fire.
-
- * * * * *
-
-After the priest has left a dying person, and confession has been made,
-all the family kneel round the bed reciting the Litany for the Dying,
-and holy water is sprinkled over the room until the soul departs.
-
-Then they all rise and begin the mournful death-wail in a loud voice;
-and by this cry all the people in the village know the exact moment of
-the death, and each one that hears it utters a prayer for the departing
-soul.
-
-At the wake the corpse is often dressed in the habit of a religious
-order. A cross is placed in the hands and the scapular on the breast.
-Candles are lighted all round in a circle, and the friends and
-relatives arrange themselves in due order, the nearest of kin being at
-the head. At intervals they all stand up and intone the death-wail,
-rocking back and forward over the dead, and reciting his virtues; while
-the widow and orphans frequently salute the corpse with endearing
-epithets, and recall the happy days they spent together.
-
-When the coffin is borne to the grave each person present helps to
-carry it a little way; for this is considered a mode of showing honour
-to the dead. The nearest relatives take the front handles first; then
-after a little while they move to the back and others take their place,
-until every person in turn has borne the head of the coffin to the
-grave—for it would be dishonourable to the dead to omit this mark of
-respect.
-
-As the coffin is lowered into the grave the death-cry rises up with a
-loud and bitter wail, and the excitement often becomes so great that
-women have fallen into hysterics; and at one funeral a young girl in
-her agony of grief jumped into her father’s grave and was taken up
-insensible.
-
-
-THE WAKE ORGIES.
-
-
-From ancient times the wakes, or funeral games, in Ireland were held
-with many strange observances carried down by tradition from the
-pagan era. Some of the rites, however, were so revolting and monstrous
-that the priesthood used all their influence to put them down. The old
-funeral customs, in consequence, have now been discontinued almost
-entirely amongst the people, and the ancient traditional usages are
-unknown to the new generation, though the elders of the village can yet
-remember them. An old man still living thus described to an inquiring
-antiquary and lover of folk-lore, his experience of the ceremonial of a
-wake at which he had been present in the South of Ireland, when he was
-quite a youth, some fifty years before.
-
-“One dark winter’s night, about seven o’clock, a large party of us,” he
-said, “young men and women, perhaps thirty or more, set out across the
-mountain to attend a wake at the house of a rich farmer, about three
-miles off. All the young men carried lighted torches, for the way was
-rugged and dangerous; and by their light we guided the women as best we
-could over the deep clefts and across the rapid streams, swollen by the
-winter’s rain. The girls took off their shoes and stockings and walked
-barefoot, but where the water was heavy and deep the men carried them
-across in their arms or on their backs. In this way we all arrived at
-last at the farmhouse, and found a great assemblage in the large barn,
-which was hung throughout with branches of evergreen and festoons of
-laurel and holly.
-
-“At one end of the barn, on a bed decorated with branches of green
-leaves, lay the corpse, an old woman of eighty, the mother of the man
-of the house. He stood by the head of the dead woman, while all the
-near relatives had seats round. Then the mourning women entered and sat
-down on the ground in a circle, one in the centre cloaked and hooded,
-who began the chant or funeral wail, all the rest joining in chorus.
-After an interval there would come a deep silence; then the chant began
-again, and when it was over the women rose up and went out, leaving
-the place free for the next comers, who acted a play full of ancient
-symbolic meaning. But, first, whisky was served round, and the pipers
-played; for every village had sent their best player and singer to
-honour the wake.
-
-“When a great space was cleared in the centre of the barn, the first
-set of players entered. They wore masks and fantastic garments, and
-each carried a long spear and a bit of plaited straw on the arm for a
-shield. At once they began to build a fort, as it were, marking out the
-size with their spears, and using some rough play with the spectators.
-While thus engaged a band of enemies appeared, also masked and armed.
-And now a great fight began and many prisoners were taken; but to save
-slaughter a horn was blown, and a fight demanded between the two best
-champions of the hostile forces. Two of the finest young men were then
-selected and placed at opposite ends of the barn, when they ran a tilt
-against one another with their spears, uttering fierce, loud cries, and
-making terrible demonstrations. At length one fell down as if mortally
-wounded; then all the hooded women came in again and keened over him,
-a male voice at intervals reciting his deeds, while the pipers played
-martial tunes. But on its being suggested that perhaps he was not dead
-at all, an herb doctor was sent for to look at him; and an aged man
-with a flowing white beard was led in, carrying a huge bundle of herbs.
-With these he performed sundry strange incantations, until finally the
-dead man sat up and was carried off the field by his comrades, with
-shouts of triumph. So ended the first play.
-
-“Then supper was served and more whisky drunk, after which another play
-was acted of a different kind. A table was set in the middle of the
-barn, and two chairs, while all the people, about a hundred or more,
-gathered round in a circle. Then two men, dressed as judges, took their
-seats, with guards beside them, and called on another man to come forth
-and address the people. On this a young man sprang on the table and
-poured forth an oration in Irish, full of the most grotesque fun and
-sharp allusions, at which the crowd roared with laughter. Then he gave
-out a verse like a psalm, in gibberish Irish, and bade the people say
-it after him. It ran like this, being translated—
-
- “‘Yellow Macauly has come from Spain,
- He brought sweet music out of a bag,
- Sing _See-saw, Sulla Vick Dhau,
- Sulla, Sulla Vick Dhau righ_.’
-
- (That is, Solomon, son of David the King.)
-
-“If any one failed to repeat this verse after him he was ordered to
-prison by the judges, and the guards seized him to cut off his head;
-or if any one laughed the judge sentenced him, saying in Irish, ‘Seize
-that man, he is a pagan: he is mocking the Christian faith. Let him
-die!’
-
-“After this the professional story-teller was in great force, and
-held the listeners enchained by the wonders of his narration and the
-passionate force of his declamation. So the strange revelry went on,
-and the feasting and the drinking, till sunrise, when many of the
-guests returned to their homes, but others stayed with the family till
-the coffin was lifted for the grave.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Full details of these strange wake orgies can seldom be obtained, for
-the people are afraid of the priesthood, who have vehemently denounced
-them. Yet the peasants cling to them with a mysterious reverence, and
-do not see the immorality of many of the wake practices. They accept
-them as mysteries, ancient usages of their forefathers, to be sacredly
-observed, or the vengeance of the dead would fall on them.
-
-According to all accounts an immense amount of dramatic talent was
-displayed by the actors of these fantastic and symbolic plays. An
-intelligent peasant, who was brought to see the acting at the Dublin
-theatre, declared on his return: “I have now seen the great English
-actors, and heard plays in the English tongue, but poor and dull they
-seemed to me after the acting of our own people at the wakes and fairs;
-for it is a truth, the English cannot make us weep and laugh as I have
-seen the crowds with us when the players played and the poets recited
-their stories.”
-
-The Celts certainly have a strong dramatic tendency, and there are many
-peasant families in Ireland who have been distinguished for generations
-as bards and actors, and have a natural and hereditary gift for music
-and song.
-
-On the subject of wake orgies, a clever writer observes that they are
-evidently a remnant of paganism, and formed part of those Druidic rites
-meant to propitiate the evil spirits and the demons of darkness and
-doom; for the influence of Druidism lasted long after the establishment
-of Christianity. The Druid priests took shelter with the people, and
-exercised a powerful and mysterious sway over them by their magic
-spells. Druid practices were known to exist down to the time of
-the Norman invasion in the twelfth century, and even for centuries
-after; and to this Druidic influence may be traced the sarcasms on
-Christianity which are occasionally introduced into the mystery plays
-of the wake ceremonial. As in the one called “Hold the Light,” where
-the passion of the Lord Christ is travestied with grotesque imitation.
-The same writer describes the play acted at wakes called “The Building
-of the Ship,” a symbolic rite still older than Druidism, and probably
-a remnant of the primitive Arkite worship. This was followed by a
-scene called “Drawing the Ship out of the Mud.” It was against these
-two plays that the anathemas of the Church were chiefly directed, in
-consequence of their gross immorality, and they have now entirely
-ceased to form any portion of the wake ceremonial of Ireland. Hindu
-priests would recognize some of the ceremonies as the same which are
-still practised in their own temples; and travellers have traced a
-similarity also in these ancient usages to the “big canoe games” of the
-Mandan Indians.
-
-In the next play, the Hierophant, or teacher of the games, orders all
-the men out of the room; a young girl is then dressed with a hide
-thrown over her, and horns on her head, to simulate a cow, while her
-maidens form a circle and slowly dance round her to music, on which
-a loud knocking is heard at the door. “Who wants to enter?” asks the
-Hierophant. He is answered, “The guards demand admittance for the bull
-who is without.” Admittance is refused, and the maidens and the cow
-affect great alarm. Still the knocking goes on, and finally the door
-is burst open and the bull enters. He also is robed with a hide and
-wears horns, and is surrounded by a band of young men as his guards. He
-endeavours to seize the cow, who is defended by her maidens, forming
-the dramatic incidents of the play. A general mock fight now takes
-place between the guards and the maidens, and the scene ends with
-uproarious hilarity and the capture of the cow.
-
-There are other practices mentioned by writers on the subject, who
-trace in the Irish observances a tradition of the Cabyric rites, and
-also a striking similarity to the idolatrous practices of Hindustan as
-described in the “Asiatic Researches,” and in Moore’s “Hindu Pantheon.”
-
-It is remarkable also that in the Polynesian Islands the funeral rites
-were accompanied by somewhat similar ceremonies. These the early
-missionaries viewed with horror, and finally succeeded in extirpating
-them.
-
-These ancient funeral rites have now disappeared in Ireland; still
-the subject remains one of intense interest to the ethnologist and
-antiquary, who will find in the details indications of the oldest
-idolatries of the world, especially of that primitive religion called
-Arkite, as in the dramatic performance called “The Building of the
-Ship,” where one man prostrates himself on the ground as the ship,
-while two others sit head and foot to represent the prow and stern.
-This ship drama is, perhaps, a fragment of the earliest tradition of
-humanity represented by a visible symbol to illustrate the legend of
-the Deluge.
-
-
-THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES.
-
-
-Ireland, from its remote position and immunity from Roman conquest,
-remained longer in the possession of the Druidic mysteries than any
-other nation of Europe. Besides, the early missionaries adopted no
-intolerant measures against the ancient creed; no persecutions are
-recorded. The sacred trees were not cut down, nor the sacrificial
-stones destroyed; but the holy wells and the antique monuments were
-sanctified by association with a saint’s name and history, and from
-being objects of pagan idolatry became shrines of prayer and centres of
-holy worship, where enlightened men preached the new gospel of light,
-purity, and love to an awe-struck, wondering multitude.
-
-To this tolerant policy, as Mr. Windell, the learned antiquary,
-remarks, may be attributed the strong endurance of Druidic
-superstitions and usages in Ireland. Much also is due to the peculiar
-and truly Oriental tenacity with which the Irish at all times have
-clung to the customs and traditions of their forefathers. The belief in
-a fairy race ever present amongst them and around them, is one of these
-ineffaceable superstitions which the people still hold with a faith as
-fervent as those of the first Aryan tribes who wandered westward from
-the mystic East, where all creeds, symbols, and myths had their origin.
-
-Many other broken fragments of the early ritual of the world can also
-still be traced in the popular superstitions and usages of the people.
-The sun and moon with the mysterious powers of nature were the first
-gods of humanity. Astarte, Ashtaroth, and Isis were all the same
-moon-goddess under different names, and all were represented by the
-symbol of the horned cow. The Egyptians typified the sun and moon,
-Osiris and Isis, as the ox and the cow; and these symbols were still
-used at the Irish wake ceremonial until very recently: for the Druids
-also worshipped the sun and moon and the winds, and venerated trees,
-fountains, rivers, and pillar stones, like their Persian ancestry. But
-the Irish considered the east wind demoniacal, the Druidic wind of
-accursed power. They called it “The Red Wind,” “A wind that blasts the
-trees and withers men is that Red Wind,” according to a bard.
-
-The Hindus had their triad of Brahmȃ, Vishnu, and Siva, representing
-the sun at morning, noon, and evening; so the Irish Druids had their
-triad of Baal, Budh, and Grian, and they called the May festival _Lá
-Budha na Baal tinne_ (the day of Buddha of the Baal fires). Chrishna
-was another Hindu name for the sun, and the Irish had Crias, a name for
-the sun likewise.
-
-The Hindus had their cattle, or cow festival in spring, when they
-walked round the animals with great ceremony, always going westward,
-while they flung garlands on their horns. So in Ireland there was also
-a procession, when the cows were decorated with vervain and the rowan,
-and were sprinkled with the _Sgaith-an-Tobar_ (the purity of the well),
-that is, the first water drawn from a sacred well after midnight on
-May Eve. This was considered an effective antidote to witchcraft, and
-whoever succeeded in being first at the well, cast into it a tuft of
-grass, called _Cuisheag grass_, to show that the _Sgaith-an-Tobar_ had
-been abstracted. So also the Hindus esteem the _Cusha grass_ as sacred,
-and cast it into their wells for a like purpose. The ceremonial of
-wreathing the horns of the cows was in honour of the moon, the wife
-of the Sun-god, whose emblem, as we know, all through the East, as in
-Ireland, was the horned cow.
-
-Many and strange, indeed, are the analogies between the practices of
-the Egyptians, Hindus, Persians, and the Irish; and the legend may,
-after all, have some truth in it which brings the first Colonists of
-Ireland from Egypt, and makes the first Queen of Erin a daughter of
-Pharaoh. The ancient war-cry of the Irish clans was _Pharrah!_ a word
-that has no significance in the Irish language, but which is supposed
-by some antiquarians to be the same as _Phi-Ra_, the sun—the regal
-title of the Egyptian kings, by which they were invoked by the warriors
-as they rushed into battle.
-
-The ancient funeral ceremonies of Egypt can be still seen and studied
-at the wake of an Irish peasant; especially in that singular symbol,
-when a man and a woman appeared, one bearing the head of an ox, the
-other that of a cow at the funeral games; a custom which has now lost
-all its meaning, but which originally, no doubt, represented Isis and
-Osiris waiting to receive the soul of the dead.
-
-The Persians held that fire and water were the most sacred of all
-things and so did the Irish; hence their reverence for the waters
-of purification at the holy wells. And as the heathen passed their
-children and cattle through the fire to Moloch, so the Irish performed
-the same rite at the Baal festival, when the young men leaped through
-the flames, and the cattle were driven through the hot embers. Fire was
-held to be the visible symbol of the invisible God, endowed with mystic
-cleansing powers, and the ascending flame was thought to be a divine
-spirit dwelling in the substance ignited. For this reason the Irish
-made a circle of fire round their children and their cattle to guard
-them from evil, holding the belief that no evil spirit could pass this
-special emblem of divinity.
-
-But even in matters less divine there was a similarity between the
-Persian and Irish usages. The Persian Magi made a considerable revenue
-from the sacred fire; for each devotee paid a silver coin for the ember
-carried away from the holy temple, to light the home fire on the day
-of the Sun-festival. And fire was also a source of wealth to the Druid
-priests; each person being obliged to buy it from them on the great day
-of Baal. Therefore it was a sin to give away fire on that day; and the
-habit of borrowing it to light the home fire was denounced as fatal and
-unlucky. The true reason being that to borrow the sacred element was
-to injure the priestly revenue. Yet this ancient ordinance is still
-religiously observed in Ireland; and even to this day no peasant would
-venture to give away fire or milk on May Day, for fear of the worst
-consequences to the giver; while any one who came to borrow a lighted
-brand would be looked on as an emissary of Satan.
-
-The sacred fire of Tara (_Tamhair-na-Righ_, Tara of the Kings) was only
-lit every three years, and then with great ceremony. The sun’s rays
-were concentrated by means of a brazen lens, on some pieces of dried
-wood, and from this alone were all the sacred fires in Ireland kindled
-in the holy places.
-
-At the present time, if a peasant has to light a fire in the house on
-May morning, which does not often happen, as the custom is to keep the
-fire burning all night, a lighted sod taken from the priest’s house is
-esteemed of great virtue and sacredness, just as in old time a lighted
-brand from the altar of Baal was used to light the domestic fire.
-
-The sacred fire was also obtained from the friction of wood, or the
-striking of stones; and it was supposed that the spirits of fire dwelt
-in these objects, and when the priest invoked them to appear, they
-brought good luck to the household for the coming year; but if invoked
-by other hands on that special day their influence was malific.
-
-The migration of races can be clearly traced by their superstitions.
-The oldest seem to have come from Persia and Egypt; while mutilated,
-though still authentic portions of the old-world ritual can still be
-found all along the Mediterranean, marking the westward progress of the
-primitive nations, till the last wave found a resting-place on our own
-far-distant shores, washed by the waters of the Atlantic.
-
-Assyria was the teacher of Egypt; Egypt of Greece; and Greece of
-Europe; and little seems to have been lost during the progress of sixty
-centuries. The old myths still remain at the base of all thought and
-all creeds; broken fragments of the primal faith; shadowy traditions of
-some great human life that once was real and actual, or of some great
-event that changed the destiny of nations, and the echo of which still
-vibrates through the legends, the songs, the poetry, and the usages of
-every people on the face of the earth.
-
-Persia, Egypt, India, the Teuton, and the Celt, have all the
-same primal ideas in their mythology, and the same instincts of
-superstition; and the signs to which past ages have given a mystic
-meaning still come to us laden with a fateful significance, even in
-this advanced era of culture and the triumph of reason.
-
-We still cannot help believing that prophecies come in the night,
-for the mystical and prophetic nature of dreams is confirmed by the
-personal experience of almost every human being; and few are found
-brave enough, even amongst the educated classes, lightly to break
-through a traditional usage on which all the ages have set the seal of
-good or ill luck.
-
-Superstition, or the belief in unseen, mysterious, spiritual
-influences, is an instinct of human nature. A vague, shadowy, formless
-belief, certainly, yet ineradicable. We feel that our dual humanity,
-the material as well as the psychical, holds some strange and mystic
-relation with an unseen spiritual world, though we cannot define the
-limits, nor bring it under a law.
-
-Before the written word existed, the people strove to express their
-creed and history in symbols. Divine nations, like the Greeks, made the
-symbols beautiful, and these the uncultured tribes may afterwards have
-distorted into grotesque and rude imitations; but the same idea can
-be traced through all forms by which humanity has tried to represent
-history, nature, and God.
-
-And the old Pagan customs of the early world seem to have an enduring
-vitality, and to have become fixed, even in the usages of the
-enlightened nineteenth century. The Persian Magi and the Druid priest
-exacted a tribute of the firstlings of the flock as a burnt-offering
-to the Sun-god on the day of his festival; so in modern times, we
-sacrifice a lamb at Easter and an ox at Christmas, retaining the
-pagan rite while we honour the Christian legend. The Christmas-tree
-is still lighted to guide the Sun-god back to life; and the spotted
-cake, anciently made in his honour, of corn and fruit, still finds its
-place on our tables, as the plum pudding of civilization, even as its
-primitive prototype was laid on the sacred altars of the Persians as an
-offering of gratitude to the Lord of Light and Life.
-
-The widespread range of the same traditional customs and superstitions
-amongst all peoples and through every age is a most interesting study,
-as showing the primitive unity of the human race and the subsequent
-divergence of the nations, even as recorded in the Biblical narrative;
-but it would be endless to follow the lines of affinity that run
-through all the creeds, legends, usages and superstitions of the world.
-Thus the Algonquil Indians, according to Mr. Leland, held the ash-tree
-and the elm as sacred and mystical, because these trees were made
-human. Of the ash was made man, of the elm, woman.
-
-So in the Edda, we read of the mighty ash-tree whose summit reaches
-to heaven, and whose roots go down to hell. Two fountains sprang from
-beneath it—one the knowledge of all that is; the other of all that
-shall be. And out of the wood man was created.
-
-The Irish also hold the ash-tree as all-powerful against witchcraft;
-therefore branches of it were wreathed rounds the horns of the cattle,
-and round the child’s cradle to keep off evil influence; while in all
-their weird tales of the fairy dances with the dead, the mortals drawn
-into their company are infallibly safe if they get possession of a
-branch of the ash-tree, and hold it safely till out of reach of the
-evil spell.
-
-The alder is another of the mystical trees of Ireland, held sacred, as
-in Persia, on account of its possessing strange mysterious properties
-and powers to avert evil; and the hawthorn likewise was sacred to the
-Irish fairies, therefore a libation of milk was poured over the roots
-on May Day, as the Hindus poured milk on the earth round the sacred
-tree as an offering to the manes of the dead.
-
-In the Transylvanian legends and superstitions, of which Madame Gerard
-has recently given an interesting record, many will be found identical
-with the Irish; such as these—Friday is the most unlucky day of all
-the week; evil spirits are strongest between sunset and midnight; it
-is ill-luck to have your path crossed by a hare; on entering a strange
-house sit down a moment, or a death will happen; spitting is at all
-times most efficacious against the influence of the devil; an infant’s
-nails should be bitten, not cut; never rock an empty cradle; the robin
-and the swallow bring luck; never kill a spider; the crow and a black
-hen are ominous of evil. The dead are only in a trance; they hear
-everything but can make no sign. The Irish also believe that the dead
-are allowed at certain times to visit their living kindred. A whirlwind
-denotes that a devil is dancing with a witch; so the Irish believe that
-the fairies are rushing by in the whirlwind intent on carrying off some
-mortal victim to the fairy mansions; and the only help is to fling
-clay at the passing wind, when the fairies will be obliged to drop the
-mortal child, or the beautiful young girl they have abducted.
-
-But the Roumanians are a mixed race—Greek, Slav, Teuton, Gypsey—and
-many of their superstitions are dark and gloomy, especially those
-relating to vampires, wolves, and terrible demons, evil spirits, and
-fearful witches. The Irish legends rarely deal with anything terrible
-or revolting. They circle, in general, round the mythus of the fairy, a
-bright and beautiful creation, only living for pleasure, music, and the
-dance, and rarely malignant or ill-natured, except when their dancing
-grounds are interfered with, or when they are not treated with proper
-generous consideration in the matter of wine.
-
-The strange dance practised at Midsummer in Ireland round the Baal
-fires can clearly be traced from the East to Erin; and in its origin
-was evidently a religious symbol and rite. The Greeks practised it from
-the most ancient times. It was called the Pyrrhic dance—from _pur_
-fire—and simulated the windings of a serpent.
-
-The _Syrtos_, the great national dance of the Ægean Islands, so well
-described by Mr. Bent in his interesting book on the Cyclades, also
-resembles the winding of a serpent. The dancers hold hands and circle
-round in tortuous curves precisely as in Ireland, where the line of
-dancers with joined hands, always moving from east to west, extends
-sometimes for a mile in length. It was probably a mystic dance symbolic
-of the path of the sun, though the esoteric meaning has now been
-entirely lost; part of the primal range of ideas out of which man first
-formed a religion and ritual of worship.
-
-Many other practices and superstitions of the Greek islanders strongly
-resemble the Irish. The Nereids of the Ægean play the part of the Irish
-fairies, and are as capricious though often more malignant. If a child
-grows wan and weak the Nereids have struck it; and it is laid naked for
-a night on the altar steps to test the truth of the suspicion. If the
-poor child dies under the trial, then it certainly was bewitched by the
-evil spirits, and the parents are well content to be rid of the unholy
-thing.
-
-The funeral wail over the dead also closely resembles the Irish, when
-the hired mourning women sit round the corpse, tear their hair, beat
-their breast and rock to and fro, intoning in a monotone chant the
-praises of the deceased, the cries at times rising to a scream, in a
-frenzy of grief and despair.
-
-The islanders likewise use many charms and incantations like the Irish,
-while the old women amongst them display wonderful knowledge of the
-mystic nature and power of herbs, and are most expert in the cure of
-disease. It is indeed remarkable that, amongst all primitive tribes and
-nations, women have always shown the highest skill in the treatment of
-disease, and have been rightly accounted the best doctors, and the most
-learned in mystic medicinal lore.
-
-The Marquis of Lorne, in his graphic and instructive “Canadian
-Pictures,” speaks of the wonderful skill of the Indian women, and the
-remarkable cures effected by the squaws through their knowledge of
-the varied properties of herbs. The Indians also have a sweating bath
-for the sick, such as was used by the ancient Irish. A bath is made
-by stones covered over with branches; hot water is then poured on the
-stones, and the patient crouches over the heated vapour evolved until
-a violent perspiration is produced, which carries off the disease,
-or the pains in the members, without fail. The sweating bath of the
-Irish was made quite on the same principles, and is the most effective
-cure known for pains in the bones and feverish disorders. It is still
-used in the Western Islands. “The Sweating House,” as it is called, is
-made of rough stones with a narrow entrance, through which the patient
-creeps on all-fours; when inside, however, he can stand up. A peat fire
-is kindled, and divesting himself of all clothing, he undergoes the
-process of sweating in a profuse perspiration as he lies on the stone
-floor. The place is heated like a baker’s oven, but there is sufficient
-ventilation kept up by means of chinks and apertures through the stone
-work of the walls.
-
-The cures effected by this process are marvellous. As the people say of
-it themselves, “Any disease that has a hold on the bones can’t stand
-before it no time at all, at all.”
-
-
-THE POWER OF THE WORD.
-
-
-The belief in the malific influence of the Evil Eye pervades all
-the Greek islands, and the same preventive measures are used as in
-Ireland. An old woman is employed to spit three times at the person
-affected, if she is a person learned in the mysteries and accounted
-wise. Salt and fire are also used as safeguards, precisely as the
-Irish peasant employs them to guard his cattle and children from the
-evil influence. But no superstition is more widely spread; it seems
-to pervade all the world, and to be instinctive to humanity. The
-educated are as susceptible to it as the illiterate, and no nerves
-are strong enough, apparently, to resist the impression made by an
-envious, malicious glance, for a poison that blights and withers seems
-to emanate from it. Reason appeals in vain; the feelings cannot be
-overcome that the presence and glance of some one person in a room can
-chill all the natural flow of spirits, while the presence of another
-seems to intensify all our mental powers, and transform us for the
-moment into a higher being.
-
-But a malific power, stronger even than the glance of the Evil Eye, was
-exercised by the Bards of Erin: whom they would they blessed, but whom
-they would they also banned; and the poet’s malison was more dreaded
-and was more fatal than any other form of imprecation—for the bard had
-the mystic prophet power: he could foresee, and he could denounce. And
-no man could escape from the judgment pronounced by a poet over one he
-desired to injure; for the poet had the knowledge of all mysteries and
-was Lord over the secrets of life by the power of The Word. Therefore
-poets were emphatically called the tribe of _Duars_, that is, THE MEN
-OF THE WORD; for by a word the poets could produce deformities in those
-they disliked, and make them objects of scorn and hateful in the sight
-of other men.
-
-
-THE POET AND THE KING.
-
-
-Nuadhé, the celebrated poet, is remembered in history by a memorable
-exercise of his malific power, and the punishment that fell on him in
-consequence; for Heaven is just, and even a bard cannot escape the
-penalty due for sin.
-
-He was nephew to Caer, the king of Connaught, who reared him with all
-kindness and gentleness as his own son. But by an evil fate the wife
-of Caer the king loved the young man; and she gave him a silver apple
-in proof of her love, and further promised him the kingdom and herself
-if he could overthrow Caer and make the people depose him from the
-sovranty.
-
-“How can I do this?” answered Nuadhé, “for the king has ever been kind
-to me.”
-
-“Ask him for some gift,” said the queen, “that he will refuse, and
-then put a blemish on him for punishment, that so he can be no longer
-king;” for no one with a blemish was ever suffered to reign in Erin.
-
-“But he refuses me nothing,” answered Nuadhé.
-
-“Try him,” said the queen. “Ask of him the dagger he brought from Alba,
-for he is under a vow never to part with it.”
-
-So Nuadhé went to him, and asked for the dagger that came out of Alba
-as a gift.
-
-“Woe is me!” said the king. “This I cannot grant; for I am under a
-solemn vow never to part with it, or give it to another.”
-
-Then the poet by his power made a satire on him, and this was the form
-of the imprecation—
-
- “Evil death, and a short life
- Be on Caer the king!
- Let the spears of battle wound him,
- Under earth, under ramparts, under stones,
- Let the malediction be on him!”
-
-And when Caer rose up in the morning he put his hand to his face and
-found it was disfigured with three blisters, a white, a red, and a
-green. And when he saw the blemish he fled away filled with fear that
-any man should see him, and took refuge in a fort with one of his
-faithful servants, and no one knew where he lay hid.
-
-So Nuadhé took the kingdom and held it for a year, and had the queen to
-wife. But then grievous to him was the fate of Caer, and he set forth
-to search for him.
-
-And he was seated in the king’s own royal chariot, with the king’s wife
-beside him, and the king’s greyhound at his feet, and all the people
-wondered at the beauty of the charioteer.
-
-Now Caer was in the fort where he had found shelter, and when he saw
-them coming he said—
-
-“Who is this that is seated in my chariot in the place of the champion,
-and driving my steeds?”
-
-But when he saw that it was Nuadhé he fled away and hid himself for
-shame.
-
-Then Nuadhé drove into the fort in the king’s chariot, and loosed the
-dogs to pursue Caer. And they found him hid under the flagstone behind
-the rock even where the dogs tracked him. And Caer fell down dead
-from shame on beholding Nuadhé, and the rock where he fell flamed up
-and shivered into fragments, and a splinter leaped up high as a man,
-and struck Nuadhé on the eyes, and blinded him for life. Such was the
-punishment decreed, and just and right was the vengeance of God upon
-the sin of the poet.
-
-
-THE SIDHE RACE.
-
-
-The Sidhe dwell in the Sifra, or fairy palace of gold and crystal, in
-the heart of the hill, and they have been given youth, beauty, joy,
-and the power over music, yet they are often sad; for they remember
-that they were once angels in heaven though now cast down to earth,
-and though they have power over all the mysteries of Nature, yet they
-must die without hope of regaining heaven, while mortals are certain of
-immortality. Therefore this one sorrow darkens their life, a mournful
-envy of humanity; because, while man is created immortal, the beautiful
-fairy race is doomed to annihilation.
-
-One day a great fairy chief asked Columb-Kille if there were any hope
-left to the Sidhe that one day they would regain heaven and be restored
-to their ancient place amongst the angels. But the saint answered that
-hope there was none; their doom was fixed, and at the judgment-day they
-would pass through death into annihilation; for so had it been decreed
-by the justice of God.
-
-On hearing this the fairy chief fell into a profound melancholy, and
-he and all his court sailed away from Ireland, and went back to their
-native country of Armenia, there to await the coming of the terrible
-judgment-day, which is fated to bring the fairy race certain death on
-earth, without any hope of regaining heaven.
-
-The West of Ireland is peculiarly sacred to ancient superstitions of
-the Sidhe race. There is a poetry in the scenery that touches the heart
-of the people; they love the beautiful glens, the mountains rising
-like towers from the sea, the islands sanctified by the memory of a
-saint, and the green hills where Finvarra holds his court. Every lake
-and mountain has its legend of the spirit-land, some holy traditions
-of a saint, or some historic memory of a national hero who flourished
-in the old great days when Ireland had native chiefs and native swords
-to guard her; and amongst the Western Irish, especially, the old
-superstitions of their forefathers are reverenced with a solemn faith
-and fervour that is almost a religion. Finvarra the king is still
-believed to rule over all the fairies of the west, and _Onagh_ is
-the fairy queen. Her golden hair sweeps the ground, and she is robed
-in silver gossamer all glittering as if with diamonds, but they are
-dew-drops that sparkle over it.
-
-The queen is more beautiful than any woman of earth, yet Finvarra loves
-the mortal women best, and wiles them down to his fairy palace by the
-subtle charm of the fairy music, for no one who has heard it can resist
-its power, and they are fated to belong to the fairies ever after.
-Their friends mourn for them as dead with much lamentation, but in
-reality they are leading a joyous life down in the heart of the hill,
-in the fairy palace with the silver columns and the crystal walls.
-
-Yet sometimes they are not drawn down beneath the earth, but remain as
-usual in the daily life, though the fairy spell is still on them; and
-the young men who have once heard the fairy harp become possessed by
-the spirit of music which haunts them to their death, and gives them
-strange power over the souls of men. This was the case with Carolan,
-the celebrated bard. He acquired all the magic melody of his notes by
-sleeping out on a fairy rath at night, when the fairy music came to him
-in his dreams; and on awaking he played the airs from memory. Thus it
-was that he had power to madden men to mirth, or to set them weeping as
-if for the dead, and no one ever before or since played the enchanting
-fairy music like Carolan, the sweet musician of Ireland.
-
-There was another man also who heard the fairy music when sleeping on
-a rath, and ever after he was haunted by the melody day and night,
-till he grew mad and had no pleasure in life, for he longed to be with
-the fairies again that he might hear them sing. So one day, driven to
-despair by the madness of longing, he threw himself from the cliff into
-the mountain lake near the fairy rath, and so died and was seen no more.
-
-In the Western Islands they believe that the magic of fairy music is
-so strong that whoever hears it cannot choose but follow the sound,
-and the young girls are drawn away by the enchantment, and dance all
-night with Finvarra the king, though in the morning they are found fast
-asleep in bed, yet with a memory of all they had heard and seen; and
-some say that, while with the fairies, the young women learn strange
-secrets of love potions, by which they can work spells and dangerous
-charms over those whose love they desire, or upon any one who has
-offended and spoken ill of them.
-
-It is a beautiful idea that the Irish airs, so plaintive, mournful, and
-tear-compelling, are but the remembered echoes of that spirit music
-which had power to draw souls away to the fairy mansions, and hold them
-captive by the sweet magic of the melody.
-
-
-MUSIC.
-
-
-Music formed the chief part of education in ancient Ireland as in
-Greece, where the same word signified a song and a law. Laws, religion,
-sciences, and history were all taught in music to the Irish people
-by the _Ollamhs_, or learned men. The Poets chanted the _Ros-Catha_,
-or song of battle, to incite the warriors to deeds of bravery. The
-Bards recited the deeds of the chiefs, or pleasant tales of love, at
-the festivals, and struck the harp to sustain the voice. The Brehons
-intoned the law in a recitative or monotone chant, seated on an
-eminence in the open air, while all the people were gathered round to
-listen. The Senachie chanted the history, genealogies, and traditions
-of the tribe, and the female mourners were instructed by the poets in
-the elegiac measure, or funeral wail over the dead.
-
-The poet-power was also believed to confer the gift of prophecy; and
-no great expedition was undertaken by the tribe without the advice
-and sanction of the bard, and especially of the poet-priestess of the
-tribe. Thus Ethna the poetess stood on a high stone at the battle of
-Moytura, and gave inspiration by her chants to the warriors of the
-Tuatha-de-Dananns, and stimulated their courage by her prophecies of
-victory; and the stone she stood on is in existence to this day on the
-plain of the battle, and is still called by the people “the Stone of
-the Prophetess.”
-
-
-POET INSPIRATION.
-EODAIN THE POETESS.
-
-
-The _Leanan-Sidhe_, or the spirit of life, was supposed to be the
-inspirer of the poet and singer, as the _Ban-Sidhe_ was the spirit of
-death, the foreteller of doom.
-
-The Leanan-Sidhe sometimes took the form of a woman, who gave men
-valour and strength in the battle by her songs. Such was Eodain the
-poetess, by whom Eugene, king of Munster, gained complete victory over
-his foes. But afterwards he gave himself up to luxury and pleasure,
-and went away to Spain, where he remained nine years, and took to wife
-the daughter of the king of Spain. At the end of that time he returned
-to Ireland with a band of Spanish followers. But he found his kingdom
-plundered and ruined, and the revellers and drunkards were feasting in
-his banquet hall, and wasting his revenues for their pleasures while
-the people starved. And the whole nation despised the king, and would
-not hear his words when he sat down in his golden chair to give just
-judgment for iniquity. Then Eugene the king, in his deep sorrow and
-humiliation, sent for Eodain the poetess to come and give him counsel.
-So Eodain came to him, and upheld him with her strong spirit, for she
-had the power within her of the poet and the prophet, and she said—
-
-“Arise now, O king, and govern like a true hero, and bring confusion on
-the evil workers. Be strong and fear not, for by strength and justice
-kings should rule.”
-
-And Eugene the king was guided by her counsel and was successful. And
-he overthrew his enemies and brought back peace and order to the land.
-For the strength of the Leanan-Sidhe was in the words of Eodain, the
-power of the spirit of life which is given to the poet and the prophet,
-by which they inspire and guide the hearts of men.
-
-
-THE BANSHEE.
-
-
-The Banshee means, especially, the woman of the fairy race, from _van_,
-“the Woman—the Beautiful;” the same word from which comes _Venus_.
-Shiloh-Van was one of the names of Buddha—“the son of the woman;” and
-some writers aver that in the Irish—_Sullivan_ (Sulli-van), may be
-found this ancient name of Buddha.
-
-As the Leanan-Sidhe was the acknowledged _spirit of life_, giving
-inspiration to the poet and the musician, so the Ban-Sidhe was the
-_spirit of death_, the most weird and awful of all the fairy powers.
-
-But only certain families of historic lineage, or persons gifted with
-music and song, are attended by this spirit; for music and poetry are
-fairy gifts, and the possessors of them show kinship to the spirit
-race—therefore they are watched over by the spirit of life, which is
-prophecy and inspiration; and by the spirit of doom, which is the
-revealer of the secrets of death.
-
-Sometimes the Banshee assumes the form of some sweet singing virgin
-of the family who died young, and has been given the mission by the
-invisible powers to become the harbinger of coming doom to her mortal
-kindred. Or she may be seen at night as a shrouded woman, crouched
-beneath the trees, lamenting with veiled face; or flying past in the
-moonlight, crying bitterly: and the cry of this spirit is mournful
-beyond all other sounds on earth, and betokens certain death to some
-member of the family whenever it is heard in the silence of the night.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Banshee even follows the old race across the ocean and to distant
-lands; for space and time offer no hindrance to the mystic power which
-is selected and appointed to bear the prophecy of death to a family. Of
-this a well-authenticated instance happened a few years ago, and many
-now living can attest the truth of the narrative.
-
-A branch of the ancient race of the O’Gradys had settled in Canada,
-far removed, apparently, from all the associations, traditions, and
-mysterious influences of the old land of their forefathers.
-
-But one night a strange and mournful lamentation was heard outside the
-house. No word was uttered, only a bitter cry, as of one in deepest
-agony and sorrow, floated through the air.
-
-Inquiry was made, but no one had been seen near the house at the time,
-though several persons distinctly heard the weird, unearthly cry, and a
-terror fell upon the household, as if some supernatural influence had
-overshadowed them.
-
-Next day it so happened that the gentleman and his eldest son went out
-boating. As they did not return, however, at the usual time for dinner,
-some alarm was excited, and messengers were sent down to the shore to
-look for them. But no tidings came until, precisely at the exact hour
-of the night when the spirit-cry had been heard the previous evening,
-a crowd of men were seen approaching the house, bearing with them the
-dead bodies of the father and the son, who had both been drowned by the
-accidental upsetting of the boat, within sight of land, but not near
-enough for any help to reach them in time.
-
-Thus the Ban-Sidhe had fulfilled her mission of doom, after which she
-disappeared, and the cry of the spirit of death was heard no more.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At times the spirit-voice is heard in low and soft lamenting, as if
-close to the window.
-
-Not long ago an ancient lady of noble lineage was lying near the
-death-hour in her stately castle. One evening, after twilight, she
-suddenly unclosed her eyes and pointed to the window, with a happy
-smile on her face. All present looked in the direction, but nothing
-was visible. They heard, however, the sweetest music, low, soft, and
-spiritual, floating round the house, and at times apparently close to
-the window of the sick room.
-
-Many of the attendants thought it was a trick, and went out to search
-the grounds; but nothing human was seen. Still the wild plaintive
-singing went on, wandering through the trees like the night wind—a low,
-beautiful music that never ceased all through the night.
-
-Next morning the noble lady lay dead; then the music ceased, and the
-lamentation from that hour was heard no more.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There was a gentleman also in the same country who had a beautiful
-daughter, strong and healthy, and a splendid horsewoman. She always
-followed the hounds, and her appearance at the hunt attracted
-unbounded admiration, as no one rode so well or looked so beautiful.
-
-One evening there was a ball after the hunt, and the young girl moved
-through the dance with the grace of a fairy queen.
-
-But that same night a voice came close to the father’s window, as
-if the face were laid close to the glass, and he heard a mournful
-lamentation and a cry; and the words rang out on the air—
-
-“In three weeks death; in three weeks the grave—dead—dead—dead!”
-
-Three times the voice came, and three times he heard the words; but
-though it was bright moonlight, and he looked from the window over all
-the park, no form was to be seen.
-
-Next day, his daughter showed symptoms of fever, and exactly in three
-weeks, as the Ban-Sidhe had prophesied, the beautiful girl lay dead.
-
-The night before her death soft music was heard outside the house,
-though no word was spoken by the spirit-voice, and the family said
-the form of a woman crouched beneath a tree, with a mantle covering
-her head, was distinctly visible. But on approaching, the phantom
-disappeared, though the soft, low music of the lamentation continued
-till dawn.
-
-Then the angel of death entered the house with soundless feet, and he
-breathed upon the beautiful face of the young girl, and she rested in
-the sleep of the dead, beneath the dark shadows of his wings.
-
-Thus the prophecy of the Banshee came true, according to the time
-foretold by the spirit-voice.
-
-
-QUEEN MAEVE.
-
-
-A remarkable account is given in the Bardic Legends of a form that
-appeared to Maeve, queen of Connaught, on the eve of battle.
-
-Suddenly there stood before the queen’s chariot, a tall and beautiful
-woman. She wore a green robe clasped with a golden bodkin, a golden
-fillet on her head, and seven braids for the Dead of bright gold were
-in her hand. Her skin was white as snow that falls in the night; her
-teeth were as pearls; her lips red as the berries of the mountain ash;
-her golden hair fell to the ground; and her voice was sweet as the
-golden harp-string when touched by a skilful hand.
-
-“Who art thou, O woman?” asked the queen, in astonishment.
-
-“I am Feithlinn, the fairy prophetess of the Rath of Cruachan,” she
-answered.
-
-“’Tis well, O Feithlinn the prophetess,” said Maeve; “but what dost
-thou foresee concerning our hosts?”
-
-“I foresee bloodshed; I foresee power; I foresee defeat!” answered the
-prophetess.
-
-“My couriers have brought me good tidings!” said the queen; “my army
-is strong, my warriors are well prepared. But speak the truth, O
-prophetess; for my soul knows no fear.”
-
-“I foresee bloodshed; I foresee victory!” answered the prophetess the
-second time.
-
-“But I have nothing to fear from the Ultonians,” said the queen, “for
-my couriers have arrived, and my enemies are under dread. Yet, speak
-the truth, O prophetess, that our hosts may know it.”
-
-“I foresee bloodshed; I foresee conquest; I foresee _death_!” answered
-the prophetess, for the third time.
-
-“To me then it belongs not, thy prophecy of evil,” replied the queen,
-in anger.
-
-“Be it thine, and on thy own head.”
-
-And even as she spoke the prophet maiden disappeared, and the queen saw
-her no more.
-
-But it so happened that, some time afterwards, Queen Maeve was cruelly
-slain by her own kinsman, at Lough Rea by the Shannon, to avenge the
-assistance she had given in war to the king of Ulster; there is an
-island in the lake where is shown the spot where the great queen was
-slain, and which is still known to the people as—_the stone of the dead
-queen_.
-
-Maeve, the great queen of Connaught, holds a distinguished place in
-Bardic Legends. When she went to battle, it is said, she rode in an
-open car, accompanied by four chariots—one before, another behind, and
-one on each side—so that the golden _assion_ on her head and her royal
-robes should not be defiled by the dust of the horses’ feet, or the
-foam of the fiery steeds; for all the sovereigns of Ireland sat crowned
-with a diadem in battle, as they drove in their war-chariots, as well
-as in the festal and the public assemblies.
-
-
-DEATH SIGNS.
-
-
-In one Irish family a cuckoo always appears before a death. A lady who
-arrived on a visit at a house observed one morning a cuckoo perched on
-the window-sill, but she felt no alarm, for there was no sickness in
-the family. Next day, however, one of the sons was carried home dead.
-He had been thrown from his horse when hunting, and killed on the spot.
-
-In another family a mysterious sound is heard like the crashing of
-boards, and a rush of wind seems to pass through the house, yet nothing
-is broken or disturbed. The death of an officer in the Crimea was in
-this way announced to his family, for the news came immediately after
-the warning sound, and then they knew that the rush of the wind was the
-spirit of the dead which had passed by them, but without taking any
-visible form.
-
-
-THE HARTPOLE DOOM.
-
-
-There is a tradition concerning the Hartpole family of Shrule Castle in
-the Queen’s County (called the castle on the bloody stream, from the
-sanguinary deeds of the owner) that every male member of the family is
-doomed and fated to utter three screeches terrible to hear when dying.
-As to the origin of this doom the story goes that Sir Richard Hartpole
-about 300 years ago, in the time of the Elizabethan wars, committed
-many savage acts against the Irish, he being an upholder of the English
-faction.
-
-One day a priest named O’More, having come to the castle on some
-friendly mission, the savage Hartpole ordered his retainers to seize
-him and hang him up in the courtyard.
-
-“Good God!” exclaimed the priest. “Give me at least a moment to pray!”
-
-“Go then,” said Hartpole, “you may pray.”
-
-The priest kneeled down apart from the crowd. But Hartpole grew
-impatient, and ordered him to rise.
-
-“You have prayed long enough,” he said, “prepare for death.”
-
-And when the priest heard the order for his death, and saw the man
-approach to seize him, he swayed from right to left and gave three
-fearful screams.
-
-“Why do you screech?” asked the tyrant.
-
-“So shall you scream, and all your descendants in your last agony,”
-exclaimed O’More, “as a sign of the doom upon your race. You have
-murdered my people, you are now going to take my life; but I lay the
-curse of God on you and yours—your property shall pass away; your race
-shall perish off the earth; and by the three death screeches all men
-shall know that you and your posterity are accursed.”
-
-The words of O’More only made the tyrant more furious, and the priest
-was hung at once in the courtyard before the eyes of Hartpole. But the
-prophecy of doom was fulfilled—the property perished, the castle became
-a ruin. The last Hartpole died miserably of want and hunger, and the
-whole race finally has become extinct.
-
-
-SUPERSTITIONS.
-
-
-The two great festivals of the ancient Irish were _Lá Baal Tinné_, or
-May Day (sacred to the Sun), and _Lá Samnah_, or November Eve (sacred
-to the Moon).
-
- * * * * *
-
-Food should be left out on November Eve for the dead, who are then
-wandering about. If the food disappears, it is a sign that the spirits
-have taken it, for no mortal would dare to touch or eat of the food so
-left.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Never turn your head to look if you fancy you hear footsteps behind you
-on that night; for the dead are walking then, and their glance would
-kill.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In November a distaff is placed under the head of a young man at night
-to make him dream of the girl he is destined to marry.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If a ball of worsted is thrown into a lime-kiln and wound up till the
-end is caught by invisible hands, the person who winds it calls out,
-“Who holds the ball?” and the answer will be the name of the future
-husband or wife. But the experiment must be made only at midnight, and
-in silence and alone.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Whitsuntide is a most unlucky time; horses foaled then will grow up
-dangerous and kill some one.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A child born at Whitsuntide will have an evil temper, and may commit a
-murder.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Beware also of water at Whitsuntide, for an evil power is on the waves
-and the lakes and the rivers, and a boat may be swamped and men drowned
-unless a bride steers; then the danger ceases.
-
- * * * * *
-
-To turn away ill-luck from a child born at that time, a grave must be
-dug and the infant laid in it for a few minutes. After this process the
-evil spell is broken, and the child is safe.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If any one takes ill at Whitsuntide there is great danger of death, for
-the evil spirits are on the watch to carry off victims, and no sick
-person should be left alone at this time, nor in the dark. Light is a
-great safeguard, as well as fire, against malific influences.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In old times at Whitsuntide blood was poured out as a libation to the
-evil spirits; and the children and cattle were passed through two lines
-of fire.
-
- * * * * *
-
-On May morning the Skellig rocks go out full sail to meet the opposite
-rocks, which advance half way to meet them, and then slowly retire like
-retreating ships.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At Midsummer the fairies try to pass round the Baal fires in a
-whirlwind in order to extinguish them, but the spirits may be kept off
-by throwing fire at them. Then the young men are free to leap over the
-burning embers and to drive the cattle through the flames, while coals
-of fire must also be passed three times over and three times under the
-body of each animal.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Foot-worship was a homage to Buddha, and it was also a Christian
-ceremony to wash the feet of the saints. The Irish had many
-superstitions about foot-water, and no woman was allowed to wash her
-feet in the sacred wells though the lavation was permitted to men.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If a child is fairy-struck, give it a cup of cold water in the name of
-Christ and make the sign of the cross over it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-On St. Martin’s Day when blood is spilt, whoever is signed with the
-blood is safe, for that year at least, from disease.
-
- * * * * *
-
-For the Evil Eye, a piece cut from the garment of the evil-eyed, burned
-to tinder and ground to powder, must be given to the person under the
-baneful spell, while his forehead is anointed with spittle thrice. So
-the Greeks spat three times in the face of the evil-eyed to break the
-spell.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Pass a red-hot turf three times over and under the body of an animal
-supposed to be fairy-struck, singeing the hair along the back. This
-drives off the fairies.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Irish always went westward round a holy well, following the course
-of the sun, and creeping on their hands and knees. So did the ancient
-Persians when offering homage at the sacred fountains.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Red-haired people were held to be evil and malicious and unlucky,
-probably because Typhon, the evil principle, was red; and therefore a
-red heifer was sacrificed to him by the Egyptians.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the mystic, or snake dance, performed at the Baal festival, the
-gyrations of the dancers were always westward, in the track of the
-sun, for the dance was part of the ancient ritual of sun worship.
-
-
-THE FAIRY RATH.
-
-
-The ancient rath, or fort, or liss, generally enclosed about half an
-acre, and had two or more ramparts, formed by the heads of the tribe
-for defence. But when the race of the chieftains died out, then the
-Sidhe crowded into the forts, and there held their councils and revels
-and dances; and if a man put his ear close to the ground at night he
-could hear the sweet fairy music rising up from under the earth.
-
-The rath ever after is sacred to the fairies, and no mortal is allowed
-to cut down a tree that grows on it, or to carry away a stone. But
-dangerous above all would it be to build on a fairy rath. If a man
-attempted such a rash act, the fairies would put a blast on his eyes,
-or give him a crooked mouth; for no human hand should dare to touch
-their ancient dancing grounds.
-
-It is not right, the people say, to sing or whistle at night that old
-air, “The pretty girl milking her cow;” for it is a fairy tune, and
-the fairies will not suffer a mortal to sing their music while they
-are dancing on the grass. But if a person sleeps on the rath the music
-will enter into his soul, and when he awakes he may sing the air he has
-heard in his dreams.
-
-In this way the bards learned their songs, and they were skilled
-musicians, and touched the harp with a master hand, so that the fairies
-often gathered round to listen, though invisible to mortal eyes.
-
-
-FAIRY NATURE.
-
-
-The _Siodh-Dune_, or the Mount of Peace, is also a favourite resort
-of the fairies. It is an ancient, sacred place, where the Druids in
-old time used to retire to pray, when they desired solitude; and the
-fairies meet there every seven years to perform the act of lamentation
-and mourning for having been cast out of heaven.
-
-Earth, lake, and hill are peopled by these fantastic, beautiful gods
-of earth; the wilful, capricious child-spirits of the world. The Irish
-seem to have created this strange fairy race after their own image, for
-in all things they strangely resemble the Irish character.
-
-The Sidhe passionately love beauty and luxury, and hold in contempt all
-the mean virtues of thrift and economy. Above all things they hate
-the close, niggard hand that gathers the last grain, and drains the
-last drop in the milk-pail, and plucks the trees bare of fruit, leaving
-nothing for the spirits who wander by in the moonlight. They like food
-and wine to be left for them at night, yet they are very temperate; no
-one ever saw an intoxicated fairy.
-
-But people should not sit up too late; for the fairies like to gather
-round the smouldering embers after the family are in bed, and drain
-the wine-cup, and drink the milk which a good housewife always leaves
-for them, in case the fairies should come in and want their supper. A
-vessel of pure water should also be left for them to bathe in, if they
-like. And in all things the fairies are fond of being made much of,
-and flattered and attended to; and the fairy blessing will come back
-in return to the giver for whatever act of kindness he has done to
-the spirits of the hill and the cave. Some unexpected good fortune or
-stroke of luck will come upon his house or his children; for the fairy
-race is not ungrateful, and is powerful over man both for good and evil.
-
-Therefore be kind to the wayfarer, for he may be a fairy prince in
-disguise, who has come to test the depth of your charity, and of the
-generous nature that can give liberally out of pure love and kindliness
-to those who are in need, and not in hope of a reward.
-
-If treated well, the fairies will discover the hidden pot of gold, and
-reveal the mysteries of herbs, and give knowledge to the fairy women of
-the mystic spells that can cure disease, and save life, and make the
-lover loved.
-
-All they ask in return is to be left in quiet possession of the rath
-and the hill and the ancient hawthorn trees that have been theirs from
-time immemorial, and where they lead a joyous life with music and
-dance, and charming little suppers of the nectar of flowers, down in
-the crystal caves, lit by the diamonds that stud the rocks.
-
-But some small courtesies they require. Never drain your wine-glass at
-a feast, nor the poteen flask, nor the milk-pail; and never rake out
-all the fire at night, it looks mean, and the fairies like a little of
-everything going, and to have the hearth comfortable and warm when they
-come in to hold a council after all the mortal people have gone to bed.
-In fact, the fairies are born aristocrats, true ladies and gentlemen,
-and if treated with proper respect are never in the least malignant or
-ill-natured.
-
-All the traditions of the fairies show that they love beauty and
-splendour, grace of movement, music and pleasure; everything, in fact,
-that is artistic, in contradistinction to violent, brutal enjoyment.
-Only an Aryan people, therefore, could have invented the Sidhe race.
-
-
-IRISH NATURE.
-
-
-The Irish show their Aryan descent by the same characteristics as
-the Fairy race, for they also love everything that is artistic—the
-fascinations of life, beauty of form, music, poetry, song, splendour,
-and noble pleasures. Their kings in ancient times were elected for
-their personal beauty as much as for their chivalrous qualities. No
-man with a blemish or a deformity was allowed to reign. Then, their
-appreciation of intellect proved the value they set on the spiritual
-and ideal above the material and the brutal. The poet ranked next
-to the princes of the land. His person was sacred in battle; he was
-endowed with an estate, so that his soul might be free from sordid
-cares; and his robe of many colours, and the golden circlet on his brow
-at the festivals, showed his claim and right to rank next to royalty,
-and to sit at the right hand of the king. Poetry, learning, music,
-oratory, heroism, and splendour of achievement—these were the true
-objects of homage and admiration amongst the ancient Irish.
-
-There was nothing brutal in their ideal of life; no hideous images or
-revolting cruelties; and the beautiful and graceful Sidhe race, with
-their plaintive music and soft melancholy, and aspirations for a lost
-heaven, is the expression in a graceful and beautiful symbol of the
-instinctive tendencies of the Irish nature to all that is most divine
-in human intellect, and soft and tender in human emotion.
-
-Ireland is a land of mists and mystic shadows; of cloud-wraiths
-on the purple mountains; of weird silences in the lonely hills,
-and fitful skies of deepest gloom alternating with gorgeous sunset
-splendours. All this fantastic caprice of an ever-varying atmosphere
-stirs the imagination, and makes the Irish people strangely sensitive
-to spiritual influences. They see visions and dream dreams, and are
-haunted at all times by an ever-present sense of the supernatural.
-One can see by the form of the Irish head—a slender oval, prominent
-at the brows and high in the region of veneration, so different
-from the globular Teutonic head—that the people are enthusiasts,
-religious, fanatical; with the instincts of poetry, music, oratory,
-and superstition far stronger in them than the logical and reasoning
-faculties. They are made for worshippers, poets, artists, musicians,
-orators; to move the world by passion, not by logic. Scepticism will
-never take root in Ireland; infidelity is impossible to the people. To
-believe fanatically, trust implicitly, hope infinitely, and perhaps
-to revenge implacably—these are the unchanging and ineradicable
-characteristics of Irish nature, of Celtic nature, we may say; for it
-has been the same throughout all history and all ages. And it is these
-passionate qualities that make the Celt the great motive force of the
-world, ever striving against limitations towards some vision of ideal
-splendour; the restless centrifugal force of life, as opposed to the
-centripetal, which is ever seeking a calm quiescent rest within its
-appointed sphere.
-
-The very tendency to superstition, so marked in Irish nature, arises
-from an instinctive dislike to the narrow limitations of common sense.
-It is characterized by a passionate yearning towards the vague, the
-mystic, the invisible, and the boundless infinite of the realms of
-imagination. Therefore the _Daine-Sidhe_, the people of the fairy
-mansions, have an irresistible attraction for the Irish heart. Like
-them, the Irish love youth, beauty, splendour, lavish generosity,
-music and song, the feast and the dance. The mirth and the reckless
-gaiety of the national temperament finds its true exponent in the mad
-pranks of the _Phouka_ and the _Leprehaun_, the merry spirits that
-haunt the dells and glens, and look out at the wayfarer from under the
-dock-leaf with their glittering eyes. The inspiration that rises to
-poetry under the influence of excitement is expressed by the belief in
-the _Leanan-Sidhe_, who gives power to song; while the deep pathos of
-Irish nature finds its fullest representation in the tender, plaintive,
-spiritual music of the wail and lamentation of the _Ban-Sidhe_.
-
-
-
-
- LEGENDS OF ANIMALS.
-
-
-There are no traces in Irish legend of animal worship, but many
-concerning the influence of animals upon human life, and of their
-interference with human affairs.
-
-The peasants believe that the domestic animals know all about us,
-especially the dog and the cat. They listen to everything that is said;
-they watch the expression of the face, and can even read the thoughts.
-The Irish say it is not safe to ask a question of a dog, for he may
-answer, and should he do so the questioner will surely die.
-
-The position of the animal race in the life scheme is certainly full of
-mystery. Gifted with extraordinary intelligence, yet with dumb souls
-vainly struggling for utterance, they seem like prisoned spirits in
-bondage, suffering the punishment, perhaps, for sin in some former
-human life, and now waiting the completion of the cycle of expiation
-that will advance them again to the human state.
-
-The three most ancient words in the Irish language are, it is said,
-_Tor_, a tower; _Cu_, a hound, and _Bo_, a cow. The latter word is the
-same as is found in the Greek _Bosphorus_, and in the nomenclature of
-many places throughout Europe.
-
-
-CONCERNING DOGS.
-
-
-Some very weird superstitions exist in Ireland concerning the howlings
-of dogs. If a dog is heard to howl near the house of a sick person,
-all hope of his recovery is given up, and the patient himself sinks
-into despair, knowing that his doom is sealed. But the Irish are not
-alone in holding this superstition. The Egyptians, Hebrews, Greeks, and
-Romans all looked on the howling of the dog as ominous. The very word
-_howling_ may be traced in the Latin _ululu_, the Greek _holuluzo_, the
-Hebrew _hululue_, and the Irish _ulluloo_. In Ireland the cry raised at
-the funeral ceremony was called the _Caoin_, or keen, probably from
-χυων, a dog. And this doleful lamentation was also common to other
-nations of antiquity. The Hebrews, Greeks, and Romans had their hired
-mourners, who, with dishevelled hair and mournful cadenced hymns, led
-on the melancholy parade of death. Thus the Trojan women keened over
-Hector, the chorus being led by the beautiful Helen herself.
-
-The howling of the dog was considered by these nations as the first
-note of the funeral dirge and the signal that the coming of death was
-near.
-
-But the origin of the superstition may be traced back to Egypt, where
-dogs and dog-faced gods were objects of worship; probably because
-Sirius, the Dog-star, appeared precisely before the rising of the
-Nile, and thereby gave the people a mystic and supernatural warning to
-prepare for the overflow.
-
-The Romans held that the howling of dogs was a fatal presage of evil,
-and it is noted amongst the direful omens that preceded the death of
-Cæsar. Horace also says that Canidia by her spells and sorceries could
-bring ghosts of dogs from hell; and Virgil makes the dog to howl at the
-approach of Hecate.
-
-It is remarkable that when dogs see spirits (and they are keenly
-sensitive to spirit influence) they never bark, but only howl. The
-Rabbins say that “when the Angel of Death enters a city the dogs do
-howl. But when Elias appears then the dogs rejoice and are merry.” And
-Rabbi Jehuda the Just states, that once upon a time when the Angel of
-Death entered a house the dog howled and fled; but being presently
-brought back he lay down in fear and trembling, and so died.
-
-This strange superstition concerning the howling of dogs, when, as is
-supposed, they are conscious of the approach of the Spirit of Death,
-and see him though he is shrouded and invisible to human eyes, may be
-found pervading the legends of all nations from the earliest period
-down to the present time; for it still exists in full force amongst all
-classes, the educated, as well as the unlettered peasantry; and to this
-day the howling of a dog where a sick person is lying is regarded in
-Ireland in all grades of society with pale dismay as a certain sign of
-approaching death.
-
-The Irish may have obtained the superstition through Egypt, Phœnicia,
-or Greece, for it is the opinion of some erudite writers that the Irish
-wolf-dog (_Canis gracius Hibernicus_) was descended from the dogs of
-Greece.
-
-It is strange and noteworthy that although the dog is so faithful to
-man, yet it is never mentioned in the Bible without an expression
-of contempt; and Moses in his code of laws makes the dog an unclean
-animal, probably to deter the Israelites from the Egyptian worship of
-this animal. It was the lowest term of offence—“Is thy servant a dog?”
-False teachers, persecutors, Gentiles, unholy men, and others sunk in
-sin and vileness were called dogs; while at the same time the strange
-prophetic power of these animals was universally acknowledged and
-recognized.
-
-The Romans sacrificed a dog at the Lupercalia in February. And to meet
-a dog with her whelps was considered in the highest degree unlucky. Of
-all living creatures the name of “dog” applied to any one expressed the
-lowest form of insult, contempt, and reproach. Yet, of all animals, the
-dog has the noblest qualities, the highest intelligence, and the most
-enduring affection for man.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Irish wolf-dog had a lithe body, a slender head, and was fleet
-as the wind. The form of the animal is produced constantly in Irish
-ornamentation, but the body always terminates in endless twisted
-convolutions. The great Fionn Ma-Coul had a celebrated dog called
-“Bran,” who is thus described in the bardic legends: “A ferocious,
-small-headed, white-breasted, sleek-haunched hound; having the eyes of
-a dragon, the claws of a wolf, the vigour of a lion, and the venom of a
-serpent.”
-
-In the same poem Fionn himself is described in highly ornate bardic
-language, as he leads the hound by a chain of silver attached to a
-collar of gold: “A noble, handsome, fair-featured Fenian prince; young,
-courteous, manly, puissant; powerful in action; the tallest of the
-warriors; the strongest of the champions; the most beautiful of the
-human race.”
-
-Bran, like his master, was gifted in a remarkable degree with the
-foreknowledge of evil, and thus he was enabled to give his young lord
-many warnings to keep him from danger.
-
-Once, when victory was not for the Fenian host, Bran showed the deepest
-sorrow.
-
-“He came to Fionn, wet and weary, and by this hand,” says the
-chronicler, “his appearance was pitiful. He lay down before the chief,
-and cried bitterly and howled.
-
-“‘’Tis likely, my dog,’ saith Fionn, ‘that our heads are in great danger
-this day.’”
-
-Another time, the Fenian host having killed a huge boar, Ossian, the
-bard and prophet, ordered it to be burnt as of demon race. Bran,
-hearing this, went out readily and knowingly, and he brings in three
-trees in his paw; no one knew from whence; but the trees were put into
-the fire and the great pig was burnt, and the ashes of the beast were
-cast into the sea.
-
-The Fenian princes generally went to the hunt accompanied altogether by
-about three thousand hounds; Bran leading, the wisest and fleetest of
-all. The chiefs formed a goodly army, a thousand knights or more—each
-wearing a silken shirt and a _chotan_ of fine silk, a green mantle and
-fine purple cloak over to protect it; a golden diademed helmet on the
-head, and a javelin in each man’s hand.
-
-Once, a chief, being jealous of the splendour of the Fenian princes,
-became their bitter enemy, and set himself to curse Bran above all
-hounds in the land.
-
-But Fionn answered, “If thou shouldest curse Bran, my wise, intelligent
-dog, not a room east or west in thy great mansion but I will burn with
-fire.”
-
-So Bran rested on the mountain with Fionn, his lord and master, and was
-safe from harm.
-
-Yet, so fate decreed, Bran finally met his death by means of a woman.
-One day a snow-white hart, with hoofs that shone like gold, was scented
-on the hill, and all the hounds pursued, Bran leading. Hour after hour
-passed by, and still the hart fled on, the hounds following, till one
-by one they all dropped off from weariness, and not one was left save
-Bran. Then the hart headed for the lake, and reaching a high cliff, she
-plunged from it straight down into the water; the noble hound leaped
-in at once after her, and seized the hart as she rose to the surface;
-but at that instant she changed into the form of a beautiful lady, and
-laying her hand upon the head of Bran, she drew him down beneath the
-water, and the beautiful lady and Fionn’s splendid hound disappeared
-together and were seen no more. But in memory of the event the cliff
-from which he leaped is called Coegg-y-Bran; while the lake and the
-castle beside it are called _Tiernach Bran_ (the lordship of Bran) to
-this day. So the name and memory of Fionn’s hound, and his wisdom and
-achievements are not forgotten by the people; and many dogs of the
-chase are still called after him, for the name is thought to bring luck
-to the hunter and sportsman. But the _Cailleach Biorar_ (the Hag of the
-Water) is held in much dread, for it is believed that she still lives
-in a cave on the hill, and is ready to work her evil spells whenever
-opportunity offers, and her house is shown under the cairn, also the
-beaten path she traversed to the lake. Many efforts have been made to
-drain the lake, but the Druid priestess, the Hag of the Water, always
-interferes, and casts some spell to prevent the completion of the work.
-The water of the lake has, it is said, the singular property of turning
-the hair a silvery white; and the great Fionn having once bathed
-therein, he emerged a withered old man, and was only restored to youth
-by means of strong spells and incantations.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In Cormac’s Glossary there is an interesting account of how the
-first lapdog came into Ireland, for the men of Britain were under
-strict orders that no lapdog should be given to the Gael, either of
-solicitation or of free will, for gratitude or friendship.
-
-Now it happened that Cairbré Musc went to visit a friend of his in
-Britain, who made him right welcome and offered him everything he
-possessed, save only his lapdog, for that was forbidden by the law.
-Yet this beautiful lapdog was the one only possession that Cairbré
-coveted, and he laid his plans cunningly to obtain it.
-
-There was a law at that time in Britain to this effect: “Every criminal
-shall be given as a forfeit for his crime to the person he has injured.”
-
-Now Cairbré had a wonderful dagger, around the haft of which was an
-adornment of silver and gold. It was a precious jewel, and he took fat
-meat and rubbed it all over the haft, with much grease. Then he set it
-before the lapdog, who began to gnaw at the haft, and continued gnawing
-all night till the morning, so that the haft was spoiled and was no
-longer beautiful.
-
-Then on the morrow, Cairbré made complaint that his beautiful dagger
-was destroyed, and he demanded a just recompense.
-
-“That is indeed fair,” said his friend, “I shall pay a price for the
-trespass.”
-
-“I ask no other price,” said Cairbré, “than what the law of Britain
-allows me, namely, the criminal for his crime.”
-
-So the lapdog was given to Cairbré, and it was called ever after
-_Mug-Eimé_, the slave of the haft, which name clung to it because it
-passed into servitude as a forfeit for the trespass.
-
-Now when Cairbré brought it back to Erin with him, all the kings of
-Ireland began to wrangle and contend for possession of the lapdog, and
-the contention at last ended in this wise—it was agreed that the dog
-should abide for a certain time in the house of each king. Afterwards
-the dog littered, and each of them had a pup of the litter, and from
-this stock descends every lapdog in Ireland from that time till now.
-
-After a long while the lapdog died, and the bare skull being brought
-to the blind poet Maer to try his power of divination, he at once
-exclaimed, through the prophetic power and vision in him, “O Mug-Eimé!
-this is indeed the head of Mug-Eimé, the slave of the haft, that was
-brought into Ireland and given over to the fate of a bondsman, and to
-the punishment of servitude as a forfeit.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The word hound entered into many combinations as a name for various
-animals. Thus the rabbit was called, “the hound of the brake;” the hare
-was the “brown hound;” the moth was called “the hound of fur,” owing
-to the voracity with which it devoured raiment. And the otter is still
-called by the Irish _Madradh-Uisgue_ (the dog of the water).
-
-The names of most creatures of the animal kingdom were primitive, the
-result evidently of observation. Thus the hedgehog was named “the ugly
-little fellow.” The ant was the “slender one.” The trout, _Breac_, or
-“the spotted,” from the skin. And the wren was called “the Druid bird,”
-because if any one understood the chirrup, they would have a knowledge
-of coming events as foretold by the bird.
-
-
-CONCERNING CATS.
-
-
-Cats have been familiar to the human household from all antiquity, but
-they were probably first domesticated in Egypt, where, so far back
-as two thousand years ago, a temple was dedicated to the goddess of
-cats—Bubastis Pasht—represented with a cat’s head. The Greeks had this
-feline pet of the house from Egypt, and from Greece the cat race, such
-as we have it now, was disseminated over Europe. It was a familiar
-element in Greek household life, and if anything was broken, according
-to Aristophanes, the phrase went then as now, “The cat did it.” But
-cats were never venerated in Greece with religious adoration as in
-Egypt, the only country that gave them Divine honour, and where, if
-a cat died, the whole family shaved off their eyebrows in token of
-mourning.
-
-The Irish have always looked on cats as evil and mysteriously connected
-with some demoniacal influence. On entering a house the usual
-salutation is, “God save all here, except the cat.” Even the cake on
-the griddle may be blessed, but no one says, “God bless the cat.”
-
-It is believed that the devil often assumes the form of these animals.
-The familiar of a witch is always a black cat; and it is supposed that
-black cats have powers and faculties quite different from all other
-of the feline tribe. They are endowed with reason, can understand
-conversations, and are quite able to talk if they considered it
-advisable and judicious to join in the conversation. Their temperament
-is exceedingly unamiable, they are artful, malignant, and skilled in
-deception, and people should be very cautious in caressing them, for
-they have the venomous heart and the evil eye, and are ever ready to
-do an injury. Yet the liver of a black cat has the singular power to
-excite love when properly administered. If ground to powder and infused
-into potion, the recipient is fated to love passionately the person who
-offers it and has worked the charm.
-
-An instance of this is narrated as having happened not very long ago.
-A farmer’s daughter, a pretty coquette, attracted the attention of
-the young squire of the place. But though he was willing to carry on
-a flirtation, the young gentleman had no idea of debasing his proud
-lineage by an alliance. Yet a marriage was exactly what the girl
-desired, and which she was determined to accomplish. So she and a
-friend, an accomplice, searched the village till they found a black
-cat, black as night, with only three white hairs on the breast. Him
-they seized, and having tied up the animal in a bag, they proceeded to
-throw him from one to the other over a low wall, till the poor beast
-was quite dead. Then at midnight they began their unholy work. The
-liver and heart were extracted in the name of the Evil One, and then
-boiled down until they became so dry that they could easily be reduced
-to a powder, which was kept for use when opportunity offered. This
-soon came; the young squire arrived one evening as usual, to pay a
-visit to the pretty Nora, and began to make love to the girl with the
-ordinary amount of audacity and hypocrisy. But Nora had other views,
-so she made the tea by her little fire in a _black_ teapot, for this
-was indispensable, and induced her lover to stay and partake of it with
-her, along with a fresh griddle cake. Then cunningly she infused the
-powder into his cup and watched him as he drank the tea with feverish
-anxiety. The result was even beyond her hopes. A violent and ardent
-passion seemed suddenly to have seized the young man, and he not only
-made earnest love to the pretty Nora, but offered her his hand in
-marriage, vowing that he would kill himself if she refused to become
-his lawful bride. To avoid such a catastrophe, Nora gently yielded to
-his request, and from that evening they were engaged. Daily visits
-followed from the young squire, and each time that he came Nora took
-care to repeat the charm of the love powder, so that the love was kept
-at fever heat, and finally the wedding day was fixed.
-
-The family of the young squire were, however, not quite contented,
-especially as rumours of witchcraft and devil’s dealings were bruited
-about the neighbourhood. And on the very eve of the marriage, just
-as the young man was pouring forth his vows of eternal love to the
-bride expectant, the door was burst open, and a body of men entered,
-headed by the nearest relations of the squire, who proceeded at once to
-belabour the young bridegroom with hazel sticks in the most vigorous
-manner. In vain the bride tried to interpose. She only drew the blows
-on herself, and finally the young man was carried away half stunned,
-lifted into the carriage and driven straight home, where he was locked
-up in his own room, and not allowed to hold any communication with the
-bride elect.
-
-The daily doses of the powder having thus ceased, he began to recover
-from the love madness, and finally the fever passed away. And he looked
-back with wonder and horror on the fatal step he had so nearly taken.
-Now he saw there was really witchcraft in it, which the power of the
-hazel twigs had completely broken. And the accomplice having confessed
-the sorcery practised on him by Nora and herself, he hated the girl
-henceforth as much as he had once loved her.
-
-And after a little he went away on foreign travel, and remained abroad
-for three years. When he returned, he found that Nora had degenerated
-into a withered little witch-faced creature, who was shunned by every
-one, and jeered at for the failure of her wicked spells, which had
-all come to nothing, though she had the Evil One himself to aid her;
-for such is the fate of all who deal in sorcery and devil’s magic,
-especially with the help of Satan’s chief instrument of witchcraft—the
-black cat.
-
- * * * * *
-
-But there is a certain herb of more power even than the cat’s liver to
-produce love. Though what this herb is, only the adept knows and can
-reveal. The influence it exercises lasts, it is said, for twenty-one
-years, and then ceases and cannot be renewed.
-
-A gentleman, now living, once ate of this herb, which was given to
-him by his wife’s serving-maid, and in consequence he was fated to
-love the girl for the specified time. Not being then able to endure
-his wife’s presence, he sent her away from the house, and devoted
-himself exclusively to the servant. Nineteen years have now passed
-by, and the poor lady is still waiting patiently to the end of the
-twenty-one years, believing that the witch-spell will then cease, and
-that her husband’s love will be hers once more. For already he has been
-inquiring after her and his children, and has been heard lamenting
-the madness that forced him to drive them from the house for the sake
-of the menial, who usurped his wife’s place by means of some wicked
-sorcery which he had no power to resist.
-
-
-THE KING OF THE CATS.
-
-A most important personage in feline history is the King of the
-Cats. He may be in your house a common looking fellow enough, with
-no distinguishing mark of exalted rank about him, so that it is very
-difficult to verify his genuine claims to royalty. Therefore the best
-way is to cut off a tiny little bit of his ear. If he is really the
-royal personage, he will immediately speak out and declare who he is;
-and perhaps, at the same time, tell you some very disagreeable truths
-about yourself, not at all pleasant to have discussed by the house cat.
-
-A man once, in a fit of passion, cut off the head of the domestic
-pussy, and threw it on the fire. On which the head exclaimed, in a
-fierce voice, “Go tell your wife that you have cut off the head of the
-King of the Cats; but wait! I shall come back and be avenged for this
-insult,” and the eyes of the cat glared at him horribly from the fire.
-
-And so it happened; for that day year, while the master of the house
-was playing with a pet kitten, it suddenly flew at his throat and bit
-him so severely that he died soon after.
-
-A story is current also, that one night an old woman was sitting up
-very late spinning, when a knocking came to the door. “Who is there?”
-she asked. No answer; but still the knocking went on. “Who is there?”
-she asked a second time. No answer; and the knocking continued. “Who is
-there?” she asked the third time, in a very angry passion.
-
-Then there came a small voice—“Ah, Judy, agrah, let me in, for I am
-cold and hungry; open the door, Judy, agrah, and let me sit by the
-fire, for the night is cold out here. Judy, agrah, let me in, let me
-in!”
-
-The heart of Judy was touched, for she thought it was some small child
-that had lost its way, and she rose up from her spinning, and went and
-opened the door—when in walked a large black cat with a white breast,
-and two white kittens after her.
-
-They all made over to the fire and began to warm and dry themselves,
-purring all the time very loudly; but Judy said never a word, only went
-on spinning.
-
-Then the black cat spoke at last—“Judy, agrah, don’t stay up so late
-again, for the fairies wanted to hold a council here to-night, and to
-have some supper, but you have prevented them; so they were very angry
-and determined to kill you, and only for myself and my two daughters
-here you would be dead by this time. So take my advice, don’t interfere
-with the fairy hours again, for the night is theirs, and they hate
-to look on the face of a mortal when they are out for pleasure or
-business. So I ran on to tell you, and now give me a drink of milk, for
-I must be off.”
-
-And after the milk was finished the cat stood up, and called her
-daughters to come away.
-
-“Good-night, Judy, agrah,” she said. “You have been very civil to me,
-and I’ll not forget it to you. Good-night, good-night.”
-
-With that the black cat and the two kittens whisked up the chimney; but
-Judy looking down saw something glittering on the hearth, and taking it
-up she found it was a piece of silver, more than she ever could make in
-a month by her spinning, and she was glad in her heart, and never again
-sat up so late to interfere with the fairy hours, but the black cat and
-her daughters came no more again to the house.
-
-
-THE DEMON CAT.
-
-The cat of the foregoing legend had evidently charming manners, and was
-well intentioned; but there are other cats of evil and wicked ways,
-that are, in fact, demons or witches, who assume the cat-form, in order
-to get easy entrance to a house, and spy over everything.
-
-There was a woman in Connemara, the wife of a fisherman, and as he
-always had very good luck, she had plenty of fish at all times stored
-away in the house ready for market. But to her great annoyance she
-found that a great cat used to come in at night and devour all the best
-and finest fish. So she kept a big stick by her and determined to watch.
-
-One day, as she and a woman were spinning together, the house suddenly
-became quite dark; and the door was burst open as if by the blast of
-the tempest, when in walked a huge black cat, who went straight up to
-the fire, then turned round and growled at them.
-
-“Why, surely this is the devil!” said a young girl, who was by, sorting
-the fish.
-
-“I’ll teach you how to call me names,” said the cat; and, jumping at
-her, he scratched her arm till the blood came. “There now,” he said,
-“you will be more civil another time when a gentleman comes to see
-you.” And with that he walked over to the door and shut it close to
-prevent any of them going out, for the poor young girl, while crying
-loudly from fright and pain, had made a desperate rush to get away.
-
-Just then a man was going by, and hearing the cries he pushed open the
-door and tried to get in, but the cat stood on the threshold and would
-let no one pass. On this, the man attacked him with his stick, and gave
-him a sound blow; the cat, however, was more than his match in the
-fight, for it flew at him and tore his face and hands so badly that the
-man at last took to his heels and ran away as fast as he could.
-
-“Now it’s time for my dinner,” said the cat, going up to examine the
-fish that was laid out on the tables. “I hope the fish is good to-day.
-Now don’t disturb me, nor make a fuss; I can help myself.” With that he
-jumped up and began to devour all the best fish, while he growled at
-the woman.
-
-“Away, out of this, you wicked beast!” she cried, giving it a blow with
-the tongs that would have broken its back, only it was a devil; “out of
-this! No fish shall you have to-day.”
-
-But the cat only grinned at her, and went on tearing and spoiling and
-devouring the fish, evidently not a bit the worse for the blow. On
-this, both the women attacked it with sticks, and struck hard blows
-enough to kill it, on which the cat glared at them, and spit fire; then
-making a leap, it tore their hands and arms till the blood came, and
-the frightened women rushed shrieking from the house.
-
-But presently the mistress returned, carrying with her a bottle of holy
-water; and looking in, she saw the cat still devouring the fish, and
-not minding. So she crept over quietly and threw the holy water on it
-without a word. No sooner was this done than a dense black smoke filled
-the place, through which nothing was seen but the two red eyes of the
-cat, burning like coals of fire. Then the smoke gradually cleared away,
-and she saw the body of the creature burning slowly till it became
-shrivelled and black like a cinder, and finally disappeared. And from
-that time the fish remained untouched and safe from harm, for the power
-of the Evil One was broken, and the demon cat was seen no more.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Cats are very revengeful, and one should be very careful not to offend
-them. A lady was in the habit of feeding the cat from her own table
-at dinner, and no doubt giving it choice morsels; but one day there
-was a dinner party, and pussy was quite forgotten. So she sulked and
-plotted revenge; and that night, after the lady was in bed, the cat,
-who had hid herself in the room, sprang at the throat of her friend
-and mistress, and bit her so severely that in a week the lady died of
-virulent blood poisoning.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Yet it is singular that the blood of the black cat is esteemed of
-wonderful power when mixed with herbs, for charms; and also of great
-efficacy in potions for the cure of disease; but three drops of the
-blood are sufficient, and it is generally obtained by nipping off a
-small piece of the tail.
-
-
-CAT NATURE.
-
-The observation of cats is very remarkable, and also their intense
-curiosity. They examine everything in a house, and in a short time know
-all about it as well as the owner. They are never deceived by stuffed
-birds, or any such weak human delusions. They fathom it all at one
-glance, and then turn away with apathetic indifference, as if saying,
-in cat language—“We know all about it.”
-
-A favourite cat in a gentleman’s house was rather fond of nocturnal
-rambles and late hours, perhaps copying his master, but no matter what
-his engagements were the cat always returned regularly next morning
-precisely at nine o’clock, which was the breakfast hour, and _rang the
-house bell_ at the hall door. This fact was stated to me on undoubted
-authority; and, in truth, there is nothing too wonderful to believe
-about the intellect of cats; no matter what strange things may be
-narrated of them, nothing should be held improbable or impossible to
-their intelligence.
-
-But cats are decidedly malific; they are selfish, revengeful,
-treacherous, cunning, and generally dangerous. The evil spirit in them
-is easily aroused. It is an Irish superstition that if you are going
-a journey, and meet a cat, you should turn back. But the cat must meet
-you on the road, not simply be in the house; and it must look you full
-in the face. Then cross yourself and turn back; for a witch or a devil
-is in your path.
-
-It is believed also that if a black cat is killed and a bean placed in
-the heart, and the animal afterwards buried, the beans that grow from
-that seed will confer extraordinary power; for if a man places one
-in his mouth, he will become invisible, and can go anywhere he likes
-without being seen.
-
-Cats have truly something awful in them. According to the popular
-belief they know everything that is said, and can take various shapes
-through their demoniac power. A cat once lived in a farmer’s family for
-many years, and understood both Irish and English perfectly. Then the
-family grew afraid of it, for they said it would certainly talk some
-day. So the farmer put it into a bag, determined to get rid of it on
-the mountains. But on the way he met a pack of hounds, and the dogs
-smelt at the bag and dragged it open, on which the cat jumped out; but
-the hounds were on it in a moment, and tore the poor animal to pieces.
-However, before her death she had time to say to the farmer in very
-good Irish—“It is well for you that I must die to-day, for had I lived
-I meant to have killed you this very night.” These were the last dying
-words of the cat uttered in her death agonies, before the face of many
-credible witnesses, so there can be no doubt on the matter.
-
-Cats were special objects of mysterious dread to the ancient Irish.
-They believed that many of them were men and women metamorphosed into
-cats by demoniacal power. Cats also were the guardians of hidden
-treasure, and had often great battles among themselves on account of
-the hidden gold; when a demon, in the shape of the chief cat, led on
-the opposing forces on each side, and compelled all the cats in the
-district to take part in the conflict.
-
-The Druidical or royal cat, the chief monarch of all the cats in
-Ireland, was endowed with human speech and faculties, and possessed
-great and singular privileges. “A slender black cat, wearing a chain of
-silver,” so it is described.
-
-There is a legend that a beautiful princess, a king’s daughter,
-having gone down to bathe one day, was there enchanted by her wicked
-stepmother, who hated her; and by the spell of the enchantment she was
-doomed to be one year a cat, another a swan, and another an otter;
-but with the privilege of assuming her natural shape one day in each
-year, under certain conditions. It is to be regretted that we have no
-account as to the mode in which the Princess Faithlean exercised her
-brief enjoyment of human rights; for the narration would have had a
-mystic and deep psychological interest if the fair young victim had
-only retained during all her transformations the memory of each of her
-successive incarnations as the cat, the swan, and the otter.
-
-This abnormal mode of existence, however, was not unusual amongst the
-Irish. Fionn himself had a wife who for seven years was alive by day
-and dead by night; and the Irish Princess Zeba, being enchanted by her
-wicked stepfather, the king of Munster, died and came to life again
-each alternate year.
-
-All nations seem to have appreciated the mysterious and almost human
-qualities of cat nature; the profound cunning, the impertinent
-indifference, the intense selfishness, yet capable of the most
-hypocritical flatteries when some point has to be gained. Their
-traits are not merely the product of brute instinct with unvarying
-action and results, but the manifestation of a calculating intellect,
-akin to the human. Then their grace and flexile beauty make them
-very attractive; while the motherly virtues of the matron cat are
-singularly interesting as a study of order, education, and training
-for the wilful little kitten, quite on the human lines of salutary
-discipline. Humboldt declared that he could spend a whole day with
-immense profit and advantage to himself as a philosopher, by merely
-watching a cat with her kittens, the profound wisdom of the mother
-and the incomparable grace of the children. For cats are thoroughly
-well-bred, born aristocrats; never abrupt, fussy, or obtrusive like the
-dog, but gentle, grave, and dignified in manner. Cats never run, they
-glide softly, and always with perfect and beautiful curves of motion;
-and they express their affection, not violently, like the dog, but with
-the most graceful, caressing movements of the head.
-
-Their intellect also is very remarkable, they easily acquire the
-meaning of certain words, and have a singular and exact knowledge of
-hours.
-
-Mr. St. George Mivart, in his interesting and exhaustive work on cats,
-has devoted a whole chapter to the psychology of the cat; in which he
-shows that the race possesses evident mental qualities and peculiar
-intelligence, with also a decided and significant language of sounds
-and gestures to express the emotions of the cat mind. The highly
-reflective and observant nature of the cat is also admirably described
-in that very clever novel called “The Poison Tree,” recently translated
-from the Bengalee. There the house-cat is drawn with the most lifelike
-touches, as she sits watching the noble and beautiful lady at work
-on her embroidery, while her little child is playing beside her with
-all the pretty toys scattered over the carpet: “The cat’s disposition
-was grave: her face indicated much wisdom, and a heart devoid of
-fickleness. She evidently was thinking—‘the condition of human
-creatures is frightful; their minds are ever given to sewing of canvas,
-playing with dolls, or some such silly employment; their thoughts are
-not turned to good works, such as providing suitable food for cats.
-What will become of them hereafter!’ Then, seeing no means by which
-the disposition of mankind could be improved, the cat, heaving a sigh,
-slowly departs.”
-
-
-SEANCHAN THE BARD AND THE KING OF THE CATS.
-
-
-There is an amusing legend preserved in Ossianic tradition of the
-encounter between Seanchan, the celebrated chief poet of Ireland, and
-the King of all the Cats, who dwelt in a cave near Clonmacnoise.
-
-In ancient Ireland the men of learning were esteemed beyond all other
-classes; all the great ollaves and professors and poets held the very
-highest social position, and took precedence of the nobles, and ranked
-next to royalty. The leading men amongst them lived luxuriously in
-the great Bardic House; and when they went abroad through the country
-they travelled with a train of minor bards, fifty or more, and were
-entertained free of cost by the kings and chiefs, who considered
-themselves highly honoured by the presence of so distinguished a
-company at their court. If the receptions were splendid and costly,
-the praise of the entertainer was chanted by all the poets at the
-feast; but if any slight were offered, then the Ard-Filé poured forth
-his stinging satire in such bitter odes, that many declared they would
-sooner die than incur the anger of the poets or be made the subject of
-their scathing satire.
-
-All the learned men and professors, the ollaves of music, poetry,
-oratory, and of the arts and sciences generally, formed a great Bardic
-Association, who elected their own president, with the title of Chief
-Poet of all Ireland, and they also elected chief poets for each of
-the provinces. Learned women, likewise, and poetesses, were included
-in the Bardic Association, with distinct and recognized privileges,
-both as to revenue and costly apparel. Legal enactments even were
-made respecting the number of colours allowed to be worn in their
-mantles—the poet being allowed six colours, and the poetess five in her
-robe and mantle; the number of colours being a distinct recognition
-and visible sign of rank, and therefore very highly esteemed. But, in
-time, as a consequence of their many and great privileges, the pride
-and insolence of the learned class, the ollamhs, poets, and poetesses,
-became so insufferable, that even the kings trembled before them. This
-is shown in the Ossianic tale, from which we may gather that Seanchan
-the Bard, when entertained at the court of King Guaire, grew jealous of
-the attention paid to the nobles while he was present. So he sulked at
-the festival, and made himself eminently disagreeable, as will be seen
-by the following legend:—
-
-When Seanchan, the renowned Bard, was made _Ard-Filé_, or Chief Poet of
-Ireland, Guaire, the king of Connaught, to do him honour, made a great
-feast for him and the whole Bardic Association. And all the professors
-went to the king’s house, the great ollaves of poetry and history and
-music, and of the arts and sciences; and the learned, aged females,
-Grug and Grag and Grangait; and all the chief poets and poetesses of
-Ireland, an amazing number. But Guaire the king entertained them all
-splendidly, so that the ancient pathway to his palace is still called
-“The Road of the Dishes.”
-
-And each day he asked, “How fares it with my noble guests?” But they
-were all discontented, and wanted things he could not get for them.
-So he was very sorrowful, and prayed to God to be delivered from “the
-learned men and women, a vexatious class.”
-
-Still the feast went on for three days and three nights. And they drank
-and made merry. And the whole Bardic Association entertained the nobles
-with the choicest music and professional accomplishments.
-
-But Seanchan sulked and would neither eat nor drink, for he was jealous
-of the nobles of Connaught. And when he saw how much they consumed of
-the best meats and wine, he declared he would taste no food till they
-and their servants were all sent away out of the house.
-
-And when Guaire asked him again, “How fares my noble guest, and this
-great and excellent people?” Seanchan answered, “I have never had worse
-days, nor worse nights, nor worse dinners in my life.” And he ate
-nothing for three whole days.
-
-Then the king was sorely grieved that the whole Bardic Association
-should be feasting and drinking while Seanchan, the chief poet of Erin,
-was fasting and weak. So he sent his favourite serving-man, a person of
-mild manners and cleanliness, to offer special dishes to the bard.
-
-“Take them away,” said Seanchan; “I’ll have none of them.”
-
-“And why, oh, Royal Bard?” asked the servitor.
-
-“Because thou art an uncomely youth,” answered Seanchan. “Thy
-grandfather was chip-nailed—I have seen him; I shall eat no food from
-thy hands.”
-
-Then the king called a beautiful maiden to him, his foster daughter,
-and said, “Lady, bring thou this wheaten cake and this dish of salmon
-to the illustrious poet, and serve him thyself.” So the maiden went.
-
-But when Seanchan saw her he asked: “Who sent thee hither, and why hast
-thou brought me food?”
-
-“My lord the king sent me, oh, Royal Bard,” she answered, “because I
-am comely to look upon, and he bade me serve thee with food myself.”
-
-“Take it away,” said Seanchan, “thou art an unseemly girl, I know of
-none more ugly. I have seen thy grandmother; she sat on a wall one day
-and pointed out the way with her hand to some travelling lepers. How
-could I touch thy food?” So the maiden went away in sorrow.
-
-And then Guaire the king was indeed angry, and he exclaimed, “My
-malediction on the mouth that uttered that! May the kiss of a leper be
-on Seanchan’s lips before he dies!”
-
-Now there was a young serving-girl there, and she said to Seanchan,
-“There is a hen’s egg in the place, my lord, may I bring it to thee,
-oh, Chief Bard?”
-
-“It will suffice,” said Seanchan; “bring it that I may eat.”
-
-But when she went to look for it, behold the egg was gone.
-
-“Thou hast eaten it,” said the bard, in wrath.
-
-“Not so, my lord,” she answered; “but the mice, the nimble race, have
-carried it away.”
-
-“Then I will satirize them in a poem,” said Seanchan; and forthwith he
-chanted so bitter a satire against them that ten mice fell dead at once
-in his presence.
-
-“’Tis well,” said Seanchan; “but the cat is the one most to blame,
-for it was her duty to suppress the mice. Therefore I shall satirize
-the tribe of the cats, and their chief lord, Irusan, son of Arusan.
-For I know where he lives with his wife Spit-fire, and his daughter
-Sharp-tooth, with her brothers, the Purrer and the Growler. But I shall
-begin with Irusan himself, for he is king, and answerable for all the
-cats.”
-
-And he said—“Irusan, monster of claws, who strikes at the mouse, but
-lets it go; weakest of cats. The otter did well who bit off the tips of
-thy progenitor’s ears, so that every cat since is jagged-eared. Let thy
-tail hang down; it is right, for the mouse jeers at thee.”
-
-Now Irusan heard these words in his cave, and he said to his daughter,
-Sharp-tooth: “Seanchan has satirized me, but I will be avenged.”
-
-“Nay, father,” she said, “bring him here alive, that we may all take
-our revenge.”
-
-“I shall go then and bring him,” said Irusan; “so send thy brothers
-after me.”
-
-Now when it was told to Seanchan that the King of the Cats was on his
-way to come and kill him, he was timorous, and besought Guaire and all
-the nobles to stand by and protect him. And before long a vibrating,
-impressive, impetuous sound was heard, like a raging tempest of fire
-in full blaze. And when the cat appeared he seemed to them of the
-size of a bullock; and this was his appearance—rapacious, panting,
-jagged-eared, snub-nosed, sharp-toothed, nimble, angry, vindictive,
-glare-eyed, terrible, sharp-clawed. Such was his similitude. But he
-passed on amongst them, not minding till he came to Seanchan; and him
-he seized by the arm and jerked him up on his back, and made off the
-way he came before any one could touch him; for he had no other object
-in view but to get hold of the poet.
-
-Now Seanchan, being in evil plight, had recourse to flattery. “Oh,
-Irusan,” he exclaimed, “how truly splendid thou art, such running, such
-leaps, such strength, and such agility! But what evil have I done, oh,
-Irusan, son of Arusan? spare me, I entreat. I invoke the saints between
-thee and me, oh, great King of the Cats.”
-
-But not a bit did the cat let go his hold for all this fine talk, but
-went straight on to Clonmacnoise where there was a forge; and St.
-Kieran happened to be there standing at the door.
-
-“What!” exclaimed the saint; “is that the Chief Bard of Erin on the
-back of a cat? Has Guaire’s hospitality ended in this?” And he ran for
-a red-hot bar of iron that was in the furnace, and struck the cat on
-the side with it, so that the iron passed through him, and he fell down
-lifeless.
-
-“Now my curse on the hand that gave that blow!” said the bard, when he
-got upon his feet.
-
-“And wherefore?” asked St. Kieran.
-
-“Because,” answered Seanchan, “I would rather Irusan had killed me, and
-eaten me every bit, that so I might bring disgrace on Guaire for the
-bad food he gave me; for it was all owing to his wretched dinners that
-I got into this plight.”
-
-And when all the other kings heard of Seanchan’s misfortunes, they sent
-to beg he would visit their courts. But he would have neither kiss nor
-welcome from them, and went on his way to the bardic mansion, where the
-best of good living was always to be had. And ever after the kings were
-afraid to offend Seanchan.
-
-So as long as he lived he had the chief place at the feast, and all
-the nobles there were made to sit below him, and Seanchan was content.
-And in time he and Guaire were reconciled; and Seanchan and all the
-ollamhs, and the whole Bardic Association, were feasted by the king
-for thirty days in noble style, and had the choicest of viands and the
-best of French wines to drink, served in goblets of silver. And in
-return for his splendid hospitality the Bardic Association decreed,
-unanimously, a vote of thanks to the king. And they praised him in
-poems as “Guaire the Generous,” by which name he was ever after known
-in history, for the words of the poet are immortal.
-
-
-THE BARDS.
-
-
-The Irish kings in ancient times kept up splendid hospitality at their
-respective courts, and never sat down to an entertainment, it was
-said, without a hundred nobles at least being present. Next in rank
-and superb living to the royal race came the learned men, the ollamhs
-and poets; they were placed next the king, and above the nobles at
-the festivals, and very gorgeous was the appearance of the Ard-Filé
-on these occasions, in his white robes clasped with golden brooches,
-and a circlet of gold upon his head; while by his side lay the golden
-harp, which he seized when the poetic frenzy came upon him, and swept
-the chords to songs of love, or in praise of immortal heroes. The
-queen alone had the privilege to ask the poet to recite at the royal
-banquets, and while he declaimed, no man dared to interrupt him by a
-single word.
-
-A train of fifty minor bards always attended the chief poet, and they
-were all entertained free of cost wherever they visited, throughout
-Ireland, while the Ard-Filé was borne on men’s shoulders to the palace
-of the king, and there presented with a rich robe, a chain, and a
-girdle of gold. Of one bard, it is recorded that the king gave him, in
-addition, his horse and armour, fifty rings to his hand, one thousand
-ounces of pure gold, and his chess-board.
-
-The game of chess is frequently referred to in the old bardic tales;
-and chess seems to have been a favourite pastime with the Irish from
-the most remote antiquity. The pieces must have been of great size,
-for it is narrated that the great Cuchullen killed a messenger who had
-told him a lie, by merely flinging a chessman at him, which pierced his
-brain. The royal chess-board was very costly and richly decorated. One
-is described in a manuscript of the twelfth century: “It was a board
-of silver and pure gold, and every angle was illuminated with precious
-stones. And there was a man-bag of woven brass wire.” But the ancestors
-of the same king had in their hall a chess-board with the pieces formed
-of the _bones of their hereditary enemies_.
-
-The dress of the bards added to their splendour, for the Brehon laws
-enacted that the value of the robes of the chief poet should be five
-milch cows, and that of the poetess three cows; the queen’s robes being
-of the value of seven cows, including a diadem and golden veil, and a
-robe of scarlet silk, embroidered in divers colours. The scions of the
-royal house had also the right to seven colours in their mantle; while
-the poet was allowed six, and the poetess five—the number of colours
-being a sign of dignity and rank.
-
-Learning was always highly esteemed in Ireland, and in ancient Erin the
-_literati_ ranked next to the kings.
-
-The great and wise _Ollamh-Fodla_, king of Ireland in Druidic times,
-built and endowed a college at Tara, near the royal palace, which
-was called _Mur-Ollamh_, “the Wall of the Learned.” All the arts and
-sciences were represented there by eminent professors, the great
-ollaves of music, history, poetry, and oratory; and they lived and
-feasted together, and formed the great Bardic Association, ruled over
-by their own president, styled the Ard-Filé, or chief poet of Ireland,
-from _Filidecht_ (philosophy or the highest wisdom); for the poets,
-above all men, were required to be pure and free from all sin that
-could be a reproach to learning. From them was demanded—
-
- “Purity of hand,
- Purity of mouth,
- Purity of learning,
- Purity of marriage;”
-
-and any ollamh that did not preserve these four purities lost half his
-income and his dignity, the poet being esteemed not only the highest
-of all men for his learning and intellect, but also as being the true
-revealer of the supreme wisdom.
-
-Music was sedulously taught and cultivated at the college of the
-ollamhs; for all the ancient life of Ireland moved to music.
-
-The Brehons seated on a hill intoned the laws to the listening people;
-the Senachies chanted the genealogies of the kings; and the Poets
-recited the deeds of the heroes, or sang to their gold harps those
-exquisite airs that still enchant the world, and which have been wafted
-down along the centuries, an echo, according to tradition, of the soft,
-pathetic, fairy music, that haunted the hills and glens of ancient
-Ireland.
-
-The chief poet was required to know by heart four hundred poems, and
-the minor bards two hundred. And they were bound to recite any poem
-called for by the kings at the festivals. On one occasion a recitation
-was demanded of the legend of the _Taine-bo-Cuailne_, or The Great
-Cattle Raid, of which Maeve, queen of Connaught, was the heroine, but
-none of the bards knew it. This was felt to be a great disgrace, and
-Seanchan and the bards set forth to traverse Ireland in search of the
-story of the Taine, under _Geasa_, or a solemn oath, not to sleep twice
-in the same place till it was found.
-
-At length it was revealed to them that only the dead Fergus-Roy knew
-the poem, and forthwith they proceeded to his grave, and fasted and
-prayed for three days, while they invoked him to appear. And on their
-invocation Fergus-Roy uprose in awful majesty, and stood in his grave
-clothes before them, and recited the Taine from beginning to end to the
-circle of listening bards. Then, having finished, he descended again
-into the grave, and the earth closed over him.
-
-During this expedition, Guaire the Generous took charge of all the
-wives and the poetesses of the Bardic Association, so as they should
-not trouble the bards while on their wanderings in search of the ballad
-of the Taine. Yet they do not seem to have been great feeders, these
-learned ladies; for it is related of one of them, Brigit the poetess,
-that although she only ate one hen’s egg at a meal, yet she was called
-“Brigit of the great appetite.”
-
-It was on their return from the search for the Taine that the bards
-decreed a vote of thanks to Guaire the king.
-
-In order to keep up the dignity of the great bardic clan, an income
-was paid by the State to each of the professors and poets according to
-his eminence; that of the chief poet being estimated by antiquarians
-at about five thousand a year of our money, for the lofty and learned
-Bardic Association disdained commerce and toil. The Fileas lived only
-on inspiration and the hospitality of their royal and noble patrons,
-which they amply repaid by laudatory odes and sonnets. But, if due
-homage were denied them, they denounced the ungenerous and niggard
-defaulter in the most scathing and bitter satires. Of one chief it is
-recorded that he absolutely went mad and died in consequence of the
-malignant poems that were made on him by a clever satirical bard.
-
-At last the Brehons found it necessary to take cognizance of this
-cruel and terrible implement of social torture, and enactments were
-framed against it, with strict regulations regarding the quality and
-justice of the satires poured out by the poets on those who had the
-courage to resist their exactions and resent their insolence. Finally,
-however, the ollamhs, poets, and poetesses became so intolerable that
-the reigning king of Ireland about the seventh century made a great
-effort to extirpate the whole bardic race, but failed; they were too
-strong for him, though he succeeded in, at least, materially abridging
-their privileges, lessening their revenues, and reducing their numbers;
-and though they still continued to exist as the Bardic Association,
-yet they never afterwards regained the power and dignity which they
-once held in the land, before their pride and insolent contempt of
-all classes who were not numbered amongst the ollamhs and fileas, had
-aroused such violent animosity. The Brehon laws also decreed, as to
-the distraint of a poet, that his horsewhip be taken from him, “as a
-warning that he is not to make use of it until he renders justice.”
-Perhaps by the horsewhip was meant the wand or staff which the poets
-carried, made of wood, on which it is conjectured they may have
-inscribed their verses in the Ogham character.
-
-The Brehons seem to have made the most minute regulations as to the
-life of the people, even concerning the domestic cats. In the _Senchas
-Mor_ (The Great Antiquity) it is enacted that the cat is exempt from
-liability for eating the food which he finds in the kitchen, “owing
-to negligence in taking care of it.” But if it were taken from the
-security of a vessel, then the cat is in fault, and he may safely be
-killed. The cat, also, is exempt from liability for injuring an idler
-in catching mice while mousing; but _half-fines_ are due from him for
-the profitable worker he may injure, and the excitement of his mousing
-takes the other half. For the distraint of a dog, a stick was placed
-over his trough in order that he be not fed. And there was a distress
-of two days for a black and white cat if descended from the great
-champion, which was taken from the ship of Breasal Breac, in which were
-white-breasted black cats; the same for the lapdog of a queen.
-
-
-KING ARTHUR AND THE CAT.
-
-
-While on the subject of cats, the curious and interesting legend of
-“King Arthur’s Fight with the Great Cat” should not be passed over;
-for though not exactly Irish, yet it is at least Celtic, and belongs
-by affinity to our ancient race. It is taken from a prose romance of
-the fifteenth century, entitled, “Merlin; or, The Early Life of King
-Arthur,” recently edited, from the unique Cambridge Manuscript, by Mr.
-Wheatly.
-
-Merlin told the king that the people beyond the Lake of Lausanne
-greatly desired his help, “for there repaireth a devil that destroyeth
-the country. It is a cat so great and ugly that it is horrible to look
-on.” For one time a fisher came to the lake with his nets, and he
-promised to give our Lord the first fish he took. It was a fish worth
-thirty shillings; and when he saw it so fair and great, he said to
-himself softly, “God shall not have this; but I will surely give Him
-the next.” Now, the next was still better, and he said, “Our Lord may
-wait yet awhile; but the third shall be His without doubt.” So he cast
-his net, but drew out only a little kitten, as black as any coal.
-
-And when the fisher saw it he said he had need of it at home for
-rats and mice; and he nourished it and kept it in his house till it
-strangled him and his wife and children. Then the cat fled to a high
-mountain and destroyed and slew all that came in his way, and was great
-and terrible to behold.
-
-When the king heard this he made ready and rode to the Lac de Lausanne
-and found the country desolate and void of people, for neither man nor
-woman would inhabit the place for fear of the cat.
-
-And the king was lodged a mile from the mountain, with Sir Gawvain and
-Merlin and others. And they clomb the mountain, Merlin leading the way.
-And when they were come up, Merlin said to the king, “Sir, in that rock
-liveth the cat;” and he showed him a great cave, large and deep, in the
-mountain.
-
-“And how shall the cat come out?” said the king.
-
-“That shall ye see hastily,” quoth Merlin; “but look you, be ready to
-defend, for anon he will assail you.”
-
-“Then draw ye all back,” said the king, “for I will prove his power.”
-
-And when they withdrew, Merlin whistled loud, and the cat leaped out
-of the cave, thinking it was some wild beast, for he was hungry and
-fasting; and he ran boldly to the king, who was ready with his spear,
-and thought to smite him through the body. But the fiend seized the
-spear in his mouth and broke it in twain.
-
-Then the king drew his sword, holding his shield also before him. And
-as the cat leaped at his throat, he struck him so fiercely that the
-creature fell to the ground; but soon was up again, and ran at the king
-so hard that his claws gripped through the hauberk to the flesh, and
-the red blood followed the claws.
-
-Now the king was nigh falling to earth; but when he saw the red blood
-he was wonder-wrath, and with his sword in his right hand and his
-shield at his breast, he ran at the cat vigorously, who sat licking
-his claws, all wet with blood. But when he saw the king coming towards
-him, he leapt up to seize him by the throat, as before, and stuck his
-fore-feet so firmly in the shield that they stayed there; and the king
-smote him on the legs, so that he cut them off to the knees, and the
-cat fell to the ground.
-
-Then the king ran at him with his sword; but the cat stood on his
-hind-legs and grinned with his teeth, and coveted the throat of the
-king, and the king tried to smite him on the head; but the cat strained
-his hinder feet and leaped at the king’s breast, and fixed his teeth in
-the flesh, so that the blood streamed down from breast and shoulder.
-
-Then the king struck him fiercely on the body, and the cat fell head
-downwards, but the feet stayed fixed in the hauberk. And the king smote
-them asunder, on which the cat fell to the ground, where she howled and
-brayed so loudly that it was heard through all the host, and she began
-to creep towards the cave; but the king stood between her and the cave,
-and when she tried to catch him with her teeth he struck her dead.
-
-Then Merlin and the others ran to him and asked how it was with him.
-
-“Well, blessed be our Lord!” said the king, “for I have slain this
-devil; but, verily, I never had such doubt of myself, not even when I
-slew the giant on the mountain; therefore I thank the Lord.”
-
-(This was the great giant of St. Michael’s Mount, who supped all the
-season on seven knave children chopped in a charger of white silver,
-with powder of precious spices, and goblets full plenteous of Portugal
-wine.)
-
-“Sir,” said the barons, “ye have great cause for thankfulness.”
-
-Then they looked on the feet that were left in the shield and in the
-hauberk, and said, “Such feet were never seen before!” And they took
-the shield and showed it to the host with great joy.
-
-So the king let the shield be with the cat’s feet; but the other feet
-he had laid in a coffin to be kept. And the mountain was called from
-that day, “The Mountain of the Cat,” and the name will never be changed
-while the world endureth.
-
-
-CONCERNING COWS.
-
-
-The most singular legends of Ireland relate to bulls and cows, and
-there are hundreds of places all commencing with the word _Bo_ (one
-of the most ancient words in the Irish language), which recall some
-mystic or mythical story of a cow, especially of a white heifer, which
-animal seems to have been an object of the greatest veneration from all
-antiquity.
-
-In old times there arose one day a maiden from the sea, a beautiful
-Berooch, or mermaid, and all the people on the Western Coast of Erin
-gathered round her and wondered at her beauty. And the great chief of
-the land carried her home to his house, where she was treated like a
-queen.
-
-And she was very gentle and wise, and after some time she acquired the
-language, and could talk to the people quite well in their own Irish
-tongue, to their great delight and wonder. Then she informed them that
-she had been sent to their country by a great spirit, to announce the
-arrival in Ireland of the three sacred cows—_Bo-Finn_, _Bo-Ruadh_, and
-_Bo-Dhu_—the white, the red, and the black cows, who were destined to
-fill the land with the most splendid cattle, so that the people should
-never know want while the world lasted.
-
-This was such good news that the people in their delight carried the
-sea-maiden from house to house in procession, in order that she might
-tell it herself to every one; and they crowned her with flowers, while
-the musicians went before her, singing to their harps.
-
-After dwelling with them a little longer she asked to be taken back
-to the sea, for she had grown sad at being away so long from her own
-kindred. So, on May Eve, a great crowd accompanied her down to the
-strand, where she took leave of them, telling them that on that day
-year they should all assemble at the same place to await the arrival of
-the three cows. Then she plunged into the sea and was seen no more.
-
-However, on that day year all the people of Ireland assembled on the
-shore to watch, as they had been directed by the beautiful sea-maiden;
-and all the high cliffs and all the rocks were covered with anxious
-spectators from the early dawn. Nor did they wait in vain. Exactly at
-noon the waves were stirred with a mighty commotion, and three cows
-rose up from the sea—a white, a red, and a black—all beautiful to
-behold, with sleek skins, large soft eyes, and curved horns, white as
-ivory. They stood upon the shore for a while, looking around them.
-Then each one went in a different direction, by three roads; the
-black went south, the red went north, and the milk-white heifer—the
-_Bo-Finn_—crossed the plain of Ireland to the very centre, where stood
-the king’s palace. And every place she passed was named after her, and
-every well she drank at was called _Lough-na-Bo_, or _Tober-Bo-Finn_
-(the well of the white cow), so her memory remains to this day.
-
-In process of time the white heifer gave birth to twins, a male and
-female calf, and from them descended a great race, still existing in
-Ireland; after which the white cow disappeared into a great cave by
-the sea, the entrance to which no man knows. And there she remains,
-and will remain, in an enchanted sleep, until the true king of Eire,
-the lord of Ireland, shall come to waken her; but the lake near the
-cave is still known as _Lough-na-Bo-banna_ (the lake of the snow-white
-cow). Yet some say that it was the king’s daughter was carried off
-by enchantment to the cave, in the form of a cow, and she will never
-regain her form until she sleeps on the summit of each of the three
-highest mountains in Ireland; but only the true king of Eire can wake
-her from her sleep, and bring her to “the rock of the high place,” when
-she will be restored at last to her own beautiful form.
-
-Another legend says that a red-haired woman struck the beautiful
-Bo-Finn with her staff, and smote her to death; and the roar which the
-white cow gave in dying was heard throughout the whole of Ireland, and
-all the people trembled. This is evidently an allegory. The beautiful
-Bo-Finn—the white cow—is Ireland herself; and the red-haired woman who
-smote her to death was Queen Elizabeth, “in whose time, after her cruel
-wars, the cry of the slaughtered people was heard all over the land,
-and went up to heaven for vengeance against the enemies of Ireland;
-and the kingdom was shaken as by an earthquake, by the roar of the
-oppressed against the tyrant.”
-
-The path of the white cow across Ireland is marked by small rude
-stone monuments, still existing. They show the exact spot where she
-rested each night and had her bed, and the adjoining lands have names
-connected with the tradition—as, “The plain of the Fenian cows;”
-“The hill of worship;” “The pool of the spotted ox,” called after him
-because he always waited to drink till the white cow came, for they
-were much attached to each other.
-
-There are also Druid stones at one resting-place, with Ogham marks on
-them. Some time ago an endeavour was made to remove and carry off the
-stones of one of the monuments; but the man who first put a spade in
-the ground was “struck,” and remained bedridden for seven years.
-
-The plain of the death of the _Bo-banna_ (the white cow), where
-she gave the roar that shook all Ireland is called “the plain of
-lamentation.” It never was tilled, and never will be tilled. The people
-hold it as a sacred spot, and until recently it was the custom to have
-dances there every Sunday. But these old usages are rapidly dying out;
-for though meant originally as mystic ceremonies, yet by degrees they
-degenerated to such licentious revelry that the wrath of the priesthood
-fell on them, and they were discontinued.
-
-There is a holy well near “the plain of lamentation,” called
-_Tobar-na-Bo_ (the well of the white cow); and these ancient names,
-coming down the stream of time from the far-off Pagan era, attest the
-great antiquity of the legend of the coming to Ireland of the mystic
-and beautiful _Bo-Finn_.
-
-There is another legend concerning the arrival of the three cows—the
-white, the red, and the black—which is said to be taken from the Book
-of Enoch.
-
-Four cows sprang at once from the earth—two white, a red, and a
-black—and one of the four went over to the white cow and taught it a
-mystery. And it trembled and became a man, and this was the first man
-that appeared in Erin. And the man fashioned a ship and dwelt there
-with the cows while a deluge covered the earth. And when the waters
-ceased, the red and the black cows went their way, but the white
-remained.
-
-The story is supposed by Bryant to be a literal rendering of some
-ancient hieroglyph, descriptive of the three races of mankind, and of
-the dispersion of the primal human family.
-
-
-FAIRY WILES.
-
-The fairies are very desirous to abduct handsome cows and carry them
-off to the fairy palace under the earth; and if a farmer happens
-to find one of his stock ailing or diseased, the belief is that
-the fairies have carried off the real good animal, and sent an old
-wizened witch to take the form of the farmer’s cow. It is therefore
-to neutralize the fairy spells that the cattle are driven through
-the fire on St. John’s Eve; and other devices are employed—a bunch of
-primroses is very effective tied on the tail, or a hot coal run down
-the cow’s back to singe the hair.
-
-One evening a boy was driving home his father’s cows when a fairy
-blast arose in the form of a whirlwind of dust, on which the cows took
-fright, and one of them ran upon a fairy rath. The boy followed to turn
-her back, when he was met and stopped by an old witch-woman.
-
-“Let her alone, Alanna,” she cried, “she is on our ground now, and you
-can’t take her away. So just run home and tell your father that on
-this day twelvemonth the cow will be restored to him, and bring a fine
-young calf along with her. But the fairies want her badly now, for our
-beautiful queen down there is fretting her life out for want of some
-milk that has the scent of the green grass in it and of the fresh upper
-air. Now don’t fret, Alanna, but trust my words. There, take yon hazel
-stick and strike the cow boldly three times on the head, that so the
-way may be clear we have to travel.”
-
-With that the boy struck the animal as he was desired, for the old
-witch-woman was so nice and civil that he liked to oblige her, and
-immediately after she and the cow vanished away as if they had sunk
-into the earth.
-
-However, the father minded the time, and when that day year came round
-he sent his son to the fairy rath to see if the witch had kept her
-promise, and there truly was the cow standing quite patiently, and a
-fine white calf by her side. So there were great rejoicings when he
-brought them home, for the fairies had kept their promise and behaved
-honourably, as indeed they always do when properly treated and trusted.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Not but that the fairies will do wicked things sometimes, and, above
-all, steal the milk when they get a chance, or skim the cream off the
-milk crocks.
-
-A farmer had a fine cow that was the pride of his farm and gave
-splendid milk, but suddenly the animal seemed ailing and queer; for
-she gave no milk, but went every morning and stood under the old
-hawthorn-tree quite quietly as if some one were milking her.
-
-So the man watched the place at milking time, and as usual down the
-field came the cow and took up her position close under the old
-hawthorn. Then the farmer beheld the trunk of the tree open, and out of
-the cleft came a little witch-woman all in red, who milked the cow in a
-vessel she had with her, and then she retreated into the tree again.
-
-Here was devil’s work in earnest, so thought the farmer, and he
-hastened off for the greatest fairy doctor in the country. And when he
-came the cow was singed all along its back with a live coal; and then
-an incantation was said over it, but no one heard the words the fairy
-doctor uttered; after this he gave the animal a strong potion to drink,
-but no one knew the herbs of which it was made. However, the next day
-the cow was quite restored, and gave her milk as heretofore, and the
-spell was broken for ever and ever, after they had drawn a circle round
-the old hawthorn-tree with a red-hot piece of iron taken from the
-hearth; for neither witch nor fairy can pass a circle of fire.
-
-
-THE DEAD HAND.
-
-
-Witchcraft is sometimes practised by the people to produce butter in
-the churn, the most efficacious being to stir the milk round with the
-hand of a dead man, newly taken from the churchyard; but whoever is
-suspected of this practice is looked upon with great horror and dread
-by the neighbours.
-
-A woman of the mainland got married to a fine young fellow of one of
-the islands. She was a tall, dark woman who seldom spoke, and kept
-herself very close and reserved from every one. But she minded her
-business; for she had always more butter to bring to market than any
-one else, and could therefore undersell the other farmers’ wives. Then
-strange rumours got about concerning her, and the people began to
-whisper among themselves that something was wrong, and that there was
-witchcraft in it, especially as it was known that whenever she churned
-she went into an inner room off the kitchen, shut the door close, and
-would allow no one to enter. So they determined to watch and find out
-the secret, and one day a girl from the neighbourhood, when the woman
-was out, got in through a window and hid herself under the bed, waiting
-there patiently till the churning began.
-
-At last in came the woman, and having carefully closed the door began
-her work with the milk, churning in the usual way without any strange
-doings that might seem to have magic in them. But presently she
-stopped, and going over to a box unlocked it, and from this receptacle,
-to the girl’s horror, she drew forth the hand of a dead man, with which
-she stirred the milk round and round several times, going down on her
-knees and muttering an incantation all the while.
-
-Seven times she stirred the milk with the dead hand, and seven times
-she went round the churn on her knees muttering some strange charm.
-After this she rose up and began to gather the butter from the churn
-with the dead hand, filling a pail with as much butter as the milk of
-ten cows. When the pail was quite full she dipped the dead hand three
-times in the milk, then dried it and put it back again in the box.
-
-The girl, as soon as she could get away unperceived, fled in horror
-from the room, and spread the news amongst the people. At once a crowd
-gathered round the house with angry cries and threats to break open the
-door to search for the dead hand.
-
-At last the woman appeared calm and cold as usual, and told them they
-were taking a deal of trouble about nothing, for there was no dead hand
-in the house. However, the people rushed in and searched, but all they
-saw was a huge fire on the hearth, though the smell of burning flesh
-was distinctly perceptible, and by this they knew that she had burnt
-the dead hand. Yet this did not save her from the vengeance of the
-neighbours. She was shunned by every one; no one would eat with her, or
-drink with her, or talk to her, and after a while she and her husband
-quitted the island and were never more heard of.
-
-However, after she left and the butter was brought to the market, all
-the people had their fair and equal rights again, of which the wicked
-witchcraft of the woman had defrauded them for so long, and there was
-great rejoicing in the island over the fall and punishment of the
-wicked witch of the dead hand.
-
-
-THE WICKED WIDOW.
-
-
-The evil spells over milk and butter are generally practised by women,
-and arise from some feeling of malice or envy against a prosperous
-neighbour. But the spell will not work unless some portion of the milk
-is first given by consent. The people therefore are very reluctant
-to give away milk, unless to some friend that they could not suspect
-of evil. Tramps coming in to beg for a mug of milk should always be
-avoided, they may be witches in disguise; and even if milk is given, it
-must be drunk in the house, and not carried away out of it. In every
-case the person who enters must give a hand to the churn, and say, “God
-bless all here.”
-
-A young farmer, one of the fine handsome fellows of the West, named
-Hugh Connor, who was also well off and rich, took to wife a pretty
-young girl of the village called Mary, one of the Leydons, and there
-was no better girl in all the country round, and they were very
-comfortable and happy together. But Hugh Connor had been keeping
-company before his marriage with a young widow of the place, who had
-designs on him, and was filled with rage when Mary Leydon was selected
-for Connor’s bride, in place of herself. Then a desire for vengeance
-rose up in her heart, and she laid her plans accordingly. First she
-got a fairy woman to teach her some witch secrets and spells, and
-then by great pretence of love and affection for Mary Connor, she got
-frequent admission to the house, soothing and flattering the young
-wife; and on churning days she would especially make it a point to come
-in and offer a helping hand, and if the cakes were on the griddle, she
-would sit down to watch and turn them. But it so happened that always
-on these days the cakes were sure to be burned and spoiled, and the
-butter would not rise in the churn, or if any did come, it was sour
-and bad, and of no use for the market. But still the widow kept on
-visiting, and soothing, and flattering, till Mary Connor thought she
-was the very best friend to her in the whole wide world, though it was
-true that whenever the widow came to the house something evil happened.
-The best dish fell down of itself off the dresser and broke; or the
-rain got in through the roof, and Mary’s new cashmere gown, a present
-that had come to her all the way from Dublin, was quite ruined and
-spoiled. But worse came, for the cow sickened, and a fine young brood
-of turkeys walked straight into the lake and got drowned. And still
-worst of all, the picture of the Blessed Virgin Mother, that was pinned
-up to the wall, fell down one day, and was blown into the fire and
-burned.
-
-After this, what luck could be on the house? and Mary’s heart sank
-within her, and she fairly broke down, and cried her very life out in a
-torrent of tears.
-
-Now it so happened that an old woman with a blue cloak, and the hood
-of it over her head, a stranger, was passing by at the time, and she
-stepped in and asked Mary kindly what ailed her. So Mary told her all
-her misfortunes, and how everything in the house seemed bewitched for
-evil.
-
-“Now,” said the stranger, “I see it all, for I am wise, and know the
-mysteries. Some one with the Evil Eye comes to your house. We must find
-out who it is.”
-
-Then Mary told her that the nearest friend she had was the widow, but
-she was so sweet and kind, no one could suspect her of harm.
-
-“We’ll see,” said the stranger, “only do as I bid you, and have
-everything ready when she comes.”
-
-“She will be here soon,” said Mary, “for it is churning day, and she
-always comes to help exactly at noon.”
-
-“Then I’ll begin at once; and now close the door fast,” said the
-stranger.
-
-And with that, she threw some herbs on the fire, so that a great smoke
-arose. Then she took all the plough irons that were about, and one
-of them she drove into the ground close beside the churn, and put a
-live coal beside it; and the other irons she heated red-hot in the
-fire, and still threw on more herbs to make a thick smoke, which Mary
-thought smelt like the incense in the church. Then with a hot iron rod
-from the fire, the strange woman made the sign of the cross on the
-threshold, and another over the hearth. After which a loud roaring was
-heard outside, and the widow rushed in crying out that a hot stick was
-running through her heart, and all her body was on fire. And then she
-dropped down on the floor in a fit, and her face became quite black,
-and her limbs worked in convulsions.
-
-“Now,” said the stranger, “you see who it is put the Evil Eye on all
-your house; but the spell has been broken at last. Send for the men to
-carry her back to her own house, and never let that witch-woman cross
-your threshold again.”
-
-After this the stranger disappeared, and was seen no more in the
-village.
-
-Now when all the neighbours heard the story, they would have no
-dealings with the widow. She was shunned and hated; and no respectable
-person would be seen talking to her, and she went by the name of the
-Evil Witch. So her life was very miserable, and not long after she died
-of sheer vexation and spite, all by herself alone, for no one would go
-near her; and the night of the wake no one went to offer a prayer, for
-they said the devil would be there in person to look after his own. And
-no one would walk with her coffin to the grave, for they said the devil
-was waiting at the churchyard gate for her; and they firmly believe
-to this day that her body was carried away on that night from the
-graveyard by the powers of darkness. But no one ventured to test the
-truth of the story by opening the coffin, so the weird legend remains
-still unsolved.
-
-But as for Hugh Connor and the pretty Mary, they prospered after that
-in all things, and good luck and the blessing of God seemed to be
-evermore on them and their house, and their cattle, and their children.
-At the same time, Mary never omitted on churning days to put a red-hot
-horse-shoe under the churn according as the stranger had told her, who
-she firmly believed was a good fairy in disguise, who came to help her
-in the time of her sore trouble and anxiety.
-
-
-THE BUTTER MYSTERY.
-
-
-There were two brothers who had a small farm and dairy between them,
-and they were honest and industrious, and worked hard to get along,
-though they had barely enough, after all their labour, just to keep
-body and soul together.
-
-One day while churning, the handle of the dash broke, and nothing
-being near to mend it, one of the brothers cut off a branch from an
-elder-tree that grew close to the house, and tied it to the dash for a
-handle. Then the churning went on, but to their surprise, the butter
-gathered so thick that all the crocks in the house were soon full, and
-still there was more left. The same thing went on every churning day,
-so the brothers became rich, for they could fill the market with their
-butter, and still had more than enough for every buyer.
-
-At last, being honest and true men, they began to fear that there was
-witchcraft in it, and that they were wronging their neighbours by
-abstracting their butter, and bringing it to their own churn in some
-strange way. So they both went off together to a great fairy doctor,
-and told him the whole story, and asked his advice.
-
-“Foolish men,” he said to them, “why did you come to me? for now you
-have broken the spell, and you will never have your crocks filled with
-butter any more. Your good fortune has passed away, for know the truth
-now. You were not wronging your neighbours; all was fair and just that
-you did, but this is how it happened. Long ago, the fairies passing
-through your land had a dispute and fought a battle, and having no
-arms, they flung lumps of butter at each other, which got lodged in the
-branches of the elder-tree in great quantities, for it was just after
-May Eve, when butter is plenty. This is the butter you have had, for
-the elder-tree has a sacred power which preserved it until now, and it
-came down to you through the branch you cut for a handle to the dash.
-But the spell is broken now that you have uttered the mystery, and you
-will have no more butter from the elder-tree.”
-
-Then the brothers went away sorrowful, and never after did the butter
-come beyond the usual quantity. However, they had already made so much
-money that they were content. And they stocked their farm, and all
-things prospered with them, for they had dealt uprightly in the matter,
-and the blessing of the Lord was on them.
-
-
-CONCERNING BIRDS
-
-
-In all countries superstitions of good or evil are attached to certain
-birds. The raven, for instance, has a wide-world reputation as the
-harbinger of evil and ill-luck. The wild geese portend a severe winter;
-the robin is held sacred, for no one would think of harming a bird who
-bears on his breast the blessed mark of the blood of Christ; while the
-wren is hunted to death with intense and cruel hate on St. Stephen’s
-Day.
-
-
-THE MAGPIE.
-
-
-There is no Irish name for the Magpie. It is generally called
-_Francagh_, a Frenchman, though no one knows why. Many queer tales are
-narrated of this bird, arising from its quaint ways, its adroit cunning
-and habits of petty larceny. Its influence is not considered evil,
-though to meet one alone in the morning when going a journey is an ill
-omen, but to meet more than one magpie betokens good fortune, according
-to the old rhyme which runs thus—
-
- “One for Sorrow,
- Two for Mirth,
- Three for Marriage,
- Four for a Birth.”
-
-
-THE WREN.
-
-
-The wren is mortally hated by the Irish; for on one occasion, when the
-Irish troops were approaching to attack a portion of Cromwell’s army,
-the wrens came and perched on the Irish drums, and by their tapping and
-noise aroused the English soldiers, who fell on the Irish troops and
-killed them all. So ever since the Irish hunt the wren on St. Stephen’s
-Day, and teach their children to run it through with thorns and kill
-it whenever it can be caught. A dead wren was also tied to a pole and
-carried from house to house by boys, who demanded money; if nothing
-was given the wren was buried on the door-step, which was considered a
-great insult to the family and a degradation.
-
-
-THE RAVEN AND WATER WAGTAIL.
-
-
-If ravens come cawing about a house it is a sure sign of death, for the
-raven is Satan’s own bird; so also is the water wagtail, yet beware of
-killing it, for it has three drops of the devil’s blood in its little
-body, and ill-luck ever goes with it, and follows it.
-
-
-THE CUCKOO AND ROBIN REDBREAST.
-
-
-It is very unlucky to kill the cuckoo or break its eggs, for it brings
-fine weather; but most unlucky of all things is to kill the robin
-redbreast. The robin is God’s own bird, sacred and holy, and held in
-the greatest veneration because of the beautiful tradition current
-amongst the people, that it was the robin plucked out the sharpest
-thorn that was piercing Christ’s brow on the cross; and in so doing the
-breast of the bird was dyed red with the Saviour’s blood, and so has
-remained ever since a sacred and blessed sign to preserve the robin
-from harm and make it beloved of all men.
-
-
-CONCERNING LIVING CREATURES.
-
-
-THE CRICKET.
-
-
-The crickets are believed to be enchanted. People do not like to
-express an exact opinion about them, so they are spoken of with great
-mystery and awe, and no one would venture to kill them for the whole
-world. But they are by no means evil; on the contrary, the presence
-of the cricket is considered lucky, and their singing keeps away the
-fairies at night, who are always anxious, in their selfish way, to have
-the whole hearth left clear for themselves, that they may sit round the
-last embers of the fire, and drink the cup of milk left for them by the
-farmer’s wife, in peace and quietness. The crickets are supposed to be
-hundreds of years old, and their talk, could we understand it, would no
-doubt be most interesting and instructive.
-
-
-THE BEETLE.
-
-
-The beetle is not killed by the people for the following reason: they
-have a tradition that one day the chief priests sent messengers in
-every direction to look for the Lord Jesus, and they came to a field
-where a man was reaping, and asked him—
-
-“Did Jesus of Nazareth pass this way?”
-
-“No,” said the man, “I have not seen him.”
-
-“But I know better,” said a little clock running up, “for He was here
-to-day and rested, and has not long gone away.”
-
-“That is false,” said a great big black beetle, coming forward; “He has
-not passed since yesterday, and you will never find Him on this road;
-try another.”
-
-So the people kill the clock because he tried to betray Christ; but
-they spare the beetle and will not touch him, because he saved the Lord
-on that day.
-
-
-THE HARE.
-
-
-Hares are considered unlucky, as the witches constantly assume their
-form in order to gain entrance to a field where they can bewitch the
-cattle. A man once fired at a hare he met in the early morning, and
-having wounded it, followed the track of the blood till it disappeared
-within a cabin. On entering he found Nancy Molony, the greatest witch
-in all the county, sitting by the fire, groaning and holding her side.
-And then the man knew that she had been out in the form of a hare, and
-he rejoiced over her discomfiture.
-
-Still it is not lucky to kill a hare before sunrise, even when it
-crosses your path; but should it cross _three_ times, then turn back,
-for danger is on the road before you.
-
-A tailor one time returning home very late at night from a wake, or
-better, very early in the morning, saw a hare sitting on the path
-before him, and not inclined to run away. As he approached, with his
-stick raised to strike her, he distinctly heard a voice saying, “Don’t
-kill it.” However, he struck the hare three times, and each time heard
-the voice say, “Don’t kill it.” But the last blow knocked the poor hare
-quite dead; and immediately a great big weasel sat up, and began to
-spit at him. This greatly frightened the tailor who, however, grabbed
-the hare, and ran off as fast as he could. Seeing him look so pale and
-frightened, his wife asked the cause, on which he told her the whole
-story; and they both knew he had done wrong, and offended some powerful
-witch, who would be avenged. However, they dug a grave for the hare and
-buried it; for they were afraid to eat it, and thought that now perhaps
-the danger was over. But next day the man became suddenly speechless,
-and died off before the seventh day was over, without a word evermore
-passing his lips; and then all the neighbours knew that the witch-woman
-had taken her revenge.
-
-
-THE WEASEL.
-
-
-Weasels are spiteful and malignant, and old withered witches sometimes
-take this form. It is extremely unlucky to meet a weasel the first
-thing in the morning; still it would be hazardous to kill it, for it
-might be a witch and take revenge. Indeed one should be very cautious
-about killing a weasel at any time, for all the other weasels will
-resent your audacity, and kill your chickens when an opportunity
-offers. The only remedy is to kill one chicken yourself, make the sign
-of the cross solemnly three times over it, then tie it to a stick hung
-up in the yard, and the weasels will have no more power for evil, nor
-the witches who take their form, at least during the year, if the
-stick is left standing; but the chicken may be eaten when the sun goes
-down.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A goose is killed on St. Michael’s Day because the son of a king, being
-then at a feast, was choked by the bone of a goose; but was restored by
-St. Patrick. Hence the king ordered a goose to be sacrificed every year
-on the anniversary of the day to commemorate the event, and in honour
-of St. Michael.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A fowl is killed on St. Martin’s Day, and the blood sprinkled on the
-house. In Germany a black cock is substituted.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A crowing hen, a whistling girl, and a black cat, are considered most
-unlucky. Beware of them in a house.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If a cock comes on the threshold and crows, you may expect visitors.
-
- * * * * *
-
-To see three magpies on the left hand when on a journey is unlucky; but
-two on the right hand is a good omen.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If you hear the cuckoo on your right hand you will have luck all the
-year after.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Whoever kills a robin redbreast will never have good luck were they to
-live a thousand years.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A water wagtail near the house betokens bad news on its way to you.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If the first lamb of the season is born black, it foretells mourning
-garments for the family within the year.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is very lucky for a hen and her chickens to stray into your house.
-Also it is good to meet a white lamb in the early morning with the
-sunlight on its face.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is unlucky to meet a magpie, a cat, or a lame woman when going a
-journey. Or for a cock to meet a person in the doorway and crow before
-him—then the journey should be put off.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If one magpie comes chattering to your door it is a sign of death; but
-if two prosperity will follow. For a magpie to come to the door and
-look at you is a sure death-sign, and nothing can avert the doom.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A flight of rooks over an army betokens defeat; if over a house, or
-over people when driving or walking, death will follow.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is very unlucky to ask a man on his way to fish where he is going.
-And many would turn back, knowing that it was an evil spell.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When a swarm of bees suddenly quits the hive it is a sign that death is
-hovering near the house. But the evil may be averted by the powerful
-prayers and exorcism of the priest.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The shoe of a horse or of an ass nailed to the door-post will bring
-good luck; because these animals were in the stall when Christ was
-born, and are blessed for evermore. But the shoe must be found, not
-given, in order to bring luck.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In whatever quarter you are looking when you first hear the cuckoo in
-the season, you will be travelling in that direction before the year is
-over.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was the privilege of the chief bards to wear mantles made of birds’
-plumage. A short cape flung on the shoulders made of mallards’ necks
-and crests must have been very gorgeous in effect, glittering like
-jewels, when the torch-light played on the colours at the festivals.
-
-
-THE PROPERTIES OF HERBS AND THEIR USE IN MEDICINE.
-
-
-The Irish, according to the saying of a wise man of the race, are
-the last of the 305 great Celtic nations of antiquity spoken of by
-Josephus, the Jewish historian; and they alone preserve inviolate the
-ancient venerable language, minstrelsy, and Bardic traditions, with the
-strange and mystic secrets of herbs, through whose potent powers they
-can cure disease, cause love or hatred, discover the hidden mysteries
-of life and death, and dominate over the fairy wiles or the malific
-demons.
-
-The ancient people used to divine future events, victory in wars,
-safety in a dangerous voyage, triumph of a projected undertaking,
-success in love, recovery from sickness, or the approach of death;
-all through the skilful use of herbs, the knowledge of which had come
-down to them through the earliest traditions of the human race. One of
-these herbs, called the _Fairy-plant_, was celebrated for its potent
-power of divination; but only the adepts knew the mystic manner of its
-preparation for use.
-
-There was another herb of which a drink was made, called _the Bardic
-potion_, for the Bards alone had the secret of the herb, and of the
-proper mode of treatment by which its mystic power could be revealed.
-This potion they gave their infant children at their birth, for it had
-the singular property of endowing the recipient with a fairy sweetness
-of voice of the most rapturous and thrilling charm. And instances are
-recorded of men amongst the Celtic Bards, who, having drunk of this
-potion in early life, were ever after endowed with the sweet voice,
-like fairy music, that swayed the hearts of the hearers as they chose
-to love or war, joy or sadness, as if by magic influence, or lulled
-them into the sweet calm of sleep. Such, according to the Bardic
-legends, was the extraordinary power of voice possessed by the great
-Court Minstrel of Fionn Ma-Coul, who resided with the great chief at
-his palace of Almhuin, and always sat next him at the royal table.
-
-The virtue of herbs is great, but they must be gathered at night, and
-laid in the hand of a dead man to hold. There are herbs that produce
-love, and herbs that produce sterility; but only the fairy doctor knows
-the secrets of their power, and he will reveal the knowledge to no man
-unless to an adept. The wise women learn the mystic powers from the
-fairies, but how they pay for the knowledge none dare to tell.
-
-The fairy doctors are often seized with trembling while uttering a
-charm, and look round with a scared glance of terror, as if some awful
-presence were beside them. But the people have the most perfect faith
-in the herb-men and wise women, and the faith may often work the cure.
-
-There are seven herbs of great value and power; they are ground ivy,
-vervain, eyebright, groundsel, foxglove, the bark of the elder-tree,
-and the young shoots of the hawthorn.
-
-Nine balls of these mixed together may be taken, and afterwards a
-potion made of bog-water and salt, boiled in a vessel, with a piece of
-money and an elf-stone. The elf-stone is generally found near a rath;
-it has great virtues, but being once lifted up by the spade it must
-never again touch the earth, or all its virtue is gone. (This elf-stone
-is in reality only an ancient stone arrow-head.)
-
- * * * * *
-
-The _Mead Cailleath_, or wood anemone, is used as a plaister for wounds.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The hazel-tree has many virtues. It is sacred and powerful against
-devils’ wiles, and has mysteries and secret properties known to the
-wise and the adepts. The ancient Irish believed that there were
-fountains at the head of the chief rivers of Ireland, over each of
-which grew nine hazel-trees that at certain times produced beautiful
-red nuts. These nuts fell on the surface of the water, and the salmon
-in the river came up and ate of them, which caused the red spots on the
-salmon. And whoever could catch and eat one of these salmon would be
-indued with the sublimest poetic intellect. Hence the phrase current
-amongst the people: “Had I the net of science;” “Had I eaten of the
-salmon of knowledge.” And this supernatural knowledge came to the great
-Fionn through the touch of a salmon, and made him foreknow all events.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Of all herbs the yarrow is the best for cures and potions. It is even
-sewn up in clothes as a preventive of disease.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The _Liss-more_, or great herb, has also strong healing power, and is
-used as a charm.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is an herb, also, or fairy grass, called the _Faud Shaughran_, or
-the “stray sod,” and whoever treads the path it grows on is compelled
-by an irresistible impulse to travel on without stopping, all through
-the night, delirious and restless, over bog and mountain, through
-hedges and ditches, till wearied and bruised and cut, his garments
-torn, his hands bleeding, he finds himself in the morning twenty or
-thirty miles, perhaps, from his own home. And those who fall under
-this strange influence have all the time the sensation of flying and
-are utterly unable to pause or turn back or change their career. There
-is, however, another herb that can neutralize the effects of the _Faud
-Shaughran_, but only the initiated can utilize its mystic properties.
-
-Another grass is the _Fair-Gortha_, or the “hunger-stricken sod,” and
-if the hapless traveller accidentally treads on this grass by the
-road-side, while passing on a journey, either by night or day, he
-becomes at once seized with the most extraordinary cravings of hunger
-and weakness, and unless timely relief is afforded he must certainly
-die.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When a child is sick a fairy woman is generally sent for, who makes a
-drink for the patient of those healing herbs of which she only has the
-knowledge. A childless woman is considered to have the strongest power
-over the secrets of herbs, especially those used for the maladies of
-children.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is an herb, grown on one of the western islands off the coast
-of Connemara, which is reported to have great and mystic power. But
-no one will venture to pronounce its name. If it is desired to know
-for certain whether one lying sick will recover, the nearest relative
-must go out and look for the herb just as the sun is rising. And while
-holding it in the hand, an ancient form of incantation must be said. If
-the herb remains fresh and green the patient will certainly recover;
-but if it wither in the hand while the words of the incantation are
-said over it, then the sick person is doomed. He will surely die.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was from their great knowledge of the properties of herbs that
-the Tuatha-de-Dananns obtained the reputation of being sorcerers and
-necromancers. At the great battle of Moytura in Mayo, fought about
-three thousand years ago, Dianecht, the great, wise Druid physician
-to the army, prepared a bath of herbs and plants in the line of the
-battle, of such wonderful curative efficacy that the wounded who
-were plunged into it came out whole, it being a sovereign remedy for
-all diseases. But the king of the Tuatha having lost his hand in the
-combat, the bath had no power to heal him. So Dianecht made him a
-silver hand, and the monarch was ever after known in history as _Nuad
-Airgeat lamh_ (Nuad of the silver hand).
-
- * * * * *
-
-All herbs pulled on May Day Eve have a sacred healing power, if pulled
-in the name of the Holy Trinity; but if in the name of Satan, they
-work evil. Some herbs are malific if broken by the hand. So the plant
-is tied to a dog’s foot, and when he runs it breaks, without a hand
-touching it, and may be used with safety.
-
-A man pulled a certain herb on May Eve to cure his son who was sick to
-death. The boy recovered, but disappeared and was never heard of after,
-and the father died that day year. He had broken the fatal herb with
-the hand and so the doom fell on him.
-
-Another man did the like, and gave the herb to his son to eat, who
-immediately began to bark like a dog, and so continued till he died.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The fatal herbs have signs known only to the fairy doctors, who should
-always be consulted before treating the sick in the family.
-
-There are _seven_ herbs that nothing natural or supernatural can
-injure; they are vervain, John’s-wort, speedwell, eyebright, mallow,
-yarrow, and self-help. But they must be pulled at noon on a bright day,
-near the full of the moon, to have full power.
-
-It is firmly believed that the herb-women who perform curses receive
-their knowledge from the fairies, who impart to them the mystical
-secrets of herbs and where to find them; but these secrets must not
-be revealed except on the death-bed, and then only to the eldest of
-the family. Many mysterious rites are practised in the making and the
-giving of potions; and the messenger who carries the draught to the
-sufferer must never look behind him nor utter a word till he hands the
-medicine to the patient, who instantly swallows a cup of the mixture
-before other hands have touched it.
-
-A celebrated doctor in the south was an old woman, who had lived
-seven years with the fairies. She performed wonderful cures, and only
-required a silver tenpence to be laid on her table for the advice given
-and for the miraculous herb potion.
-
-
-A LOVE POTION.
-
-
-Some of the country people have still a traditional remembrance of very
-powerful herbal remedies, and love potions are even now frequently
-in use. They are generally prepared by an old woman; but must be
-administered by the person who wishes to inspire the tender passion. At
-the same time, to give a love potion is considered a very awful act, as
-the result may be fatal, or at least full of danger.
-
-A fine, handsome young man, of the best character and conduct, suddenly
-became wild and reckless, drunken and disorderly, from the effect, it
-was believed, of a love potion administered to him by a young girl who
-was passionately in love with him. When she saw the change produced in
-him by her act, she became moody and nervous, as if a constant terror
-were over her, and no one ever saw her smile again. Finally, she became
-half deranged, and after a few years of a strange, solitary life, she
-died of melancholy and despair. This was said to be “The Love-potion
-Curse.”
-
-
-LOVE DREAMS.
-
-
-The girl who wishes to see her future husband must go out and gather
-certain herbs in the light of the full moon of the new year, repeating
-this charm—
-
- “Moon, moon, tell unto me
- When my true love I shall see?
- What fine clothes am I to wear?
- How many children shall I bear?
- For if my love comes not to me
- Dark and dismal my life will be.”
-
-Then the girl, cutting three pieces of clay from the sod with a
-black-hafted knife, carries them home, ties them up in the left
-stocking with the right garter, places the parcel under her pillow, and
-dreams a true dream of the man she is to marry and of all her future
-fate.
-
-
-TO CAUSE LOVE.
-
-
-Ten leaves of the hemlock dried and powdered and mixed in food or drink
-will make the person you like to love you in return. Also keep a sprig
-of mint in your hand till the herb grows moist and warm, then take hold
-of the hand of the woman you love, and she will follow you as long as
-the two hands close over the herb. No invocation is necessary; but
-silence must be kept between the two parties for ten minutes, to give
-the charm time to work with due efficacy.
-
-
-MEDICAL SUPERSTITIONS AND ANCIENT CHARMS.
-
-
-The healing art in all the early stages of a nation’s life, and amongst
-all primitive tribes, has been associated with religion. For the
-wonderful effects produced by certain herbs and modes of treatment were
-believed by the simple and unlettered people to be due to supernatural
-influence acting in a mystic and magical manner on the person afflicted.
-
-The medicine men were therefore treated with the profoundest awe
-and respect. And the medicine women came in also for their share of
-veneration and often of superstitious dread; for their mysterious
-incantations were supposed to have been taught to them by fairies and
-the spirits of the mountain.
-
-The Irish from the most remote antiquity were devoted to mystical
-medicine, and had a remarkable knowledge of cures and remedies for
-disease, obtained through the power and action of herbs on the human
-frame.
-
-The physicians of the pagan era formed a branch of the Druid
-priesthood, and were treated with distinguished honour. They had
-special places assigned to them at the royal banqueting table at
-Tara, and a certain revenue was secured to them that they might live
-honourably.
-
-When in attendance on a patient the doctor was entitled by law to his
-diet, along with four of his pupils; but if he failed to cure from
-deficiency of skill, he was obliged to refund the fees and pay back all
-the expenses of his keep; a measure which no doubt greatly stimulated
-the serious attention of the learned ollamhs of healing to the case in
-hand.
-
-So great, indeed, was the importance attached to the healing art in
-Ireland, that even prior to the Christian era, a building of the nature
-of an hospital was erected at Tara, near to the palace of the king.
-This was called “The House of Sorrow,” and the sick and wounded were
-provided there with all necessary care.
-
-On one occasion it is recorded that a great chief and prince out of
-Munster was brought to “The House of Sorrow” to be treated of wounds
-received in battle, but the attendant, through treachery, placed
-poison in the wounds, and then closed them so carefully that there was
-no external sign, though the groans of the wounded man were terrible to
-hear. Then the learned Fioneen was sent for, “the prophetic physician,”
-as he was called, from his great skill in diagnosis; and when he
-arrived with three of his pupils at the hospital they found the chief
-lying prostrate, groaning in horrible agony.
-
-“What groan is that?” asked the master of the first pupil.
-
-“It is from a poisoned barb,” he answered.
-
-“And what groan is that?” asked the master, of the second pupil.
-
-“It is from a hidden reptile,” he answered.
-
-“And what groan is that?” asked Fioneen of the third pupil.
-
-“It is from a poisoned seed,” he answered.
-
-Then Fioneen set to work, and having cauterized the wounds with red hot
-irons, the poisonous bodies were extracted from beneath the skin, and
-the chief was healed.
-
-In later times the Irish physicians were much celebrated for their
-learning, and numerous Irish medical manuscripts are in existence,
-both in Ireland and England, and are also scattered through the public
-libraries of the continent. They are chiefly written in Latin, with a
-commentary in Irish, and show a thorough knowledge on the part of the
-writers of the works of Hippocrates, Galen, Aristotle, and others as
-celebrated. For after the introduction of Christianity Latin was much
-cultivated in the Irish schools, and the priests and physicians not
-only wrote, but could converse fluently in Latin, which language became
-the chief medium of communication between them and the learned men of
-the continent. But the most ancient mode of procedure amongst the Irish
-ollamhs and adepts was of a medico-religious character; consisting
-of herb cures, fairy cures, charms, invocations, and certain magical
-ceremonies. A number of these cures have been preserved traditionally
-by the people, and form a very interesting study of early medical
-superstitions, as they have been handed down through successive
-generations; for the profession of a physician was hereditary in
-certain families, and the accumulated lore of centuries was transmitted
-carefully from father to son by this custom and usage.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Many of the ancient cures and charms are strange and mystic, and were
-accompanied by singular mysterious forms, which no doubt in many
-cases aided the cure; especially amongst a people so imaginative and
-susceptible to spiritual influences as the Irish. Others show a fervent
-faith and have a pathetic simplicity of expression, such as we find in
-“The Charm against Sorrow,” and others, from the original Irish, of
-equal pathos and tenderness, to be quoted further on. The utterance
-evidently of a people of deep, almost sublime, faith in the Divine
-power of the Ruler of the world, and of the ever-present ministration
-of saints and angels to humanity.
-
-Every act of the Irish peasant’s life has always been connected
-with the belief in unseen spiritual agencies. The people live in an
-atmosphere of the supernatural, and nothing would induce them to slight
-an ancient form or break through a traditional usage. They believe
-that the result would be something awful; too terrible to be spoken of
-save in a whisper, should the customs of their forefathers be lightly
-interfered with.
-
-In the Western Islands especially, the old superstitions that have
-come down from the ancient times are observed with the most solemn
-reverence, and the people in fact, as to their habits and ideas, remain
-much the same as St. Patrick left them fourteen hundred years ago. The
-swift currents of thought that stir the great centres of civilization
-and impel the human intellect on its path of progress, have never
-reached them; all the waves of the centuries drift by their shores and
-leave them unchanged.
-
-It is therefore in the islands and along the western coast that one
-gathers most of those strange legends, charms, mysteries, and world-old
-superstitions which have lingered longer in Ireland than in any other
-part of Europe.
-
-Many of those included in the following selection were narrated by
-the peasants, either in Irish, or in the expressive Irish-English,
-which still retains enough of the ancient idiom to make the language
-impressively touching and picturesque. The ancient charms which
-have come down by tradition from a remote antiquity are peculiarly
-interesting from their deep human pathos, blended with the sublime
-trust in the Divine invisible power, so characteristic of the Irish
-temperament in all ages. A faith that believes implicitly, trusts
-devoutly, and hopes infinitely; when the soul in its sorrow turns to
-heaven for the aid which cannot be found on earth, or given by earthly
-hands. The following charms from the Irish express much of this mingled
-spirit of faith and hope:—
-
-
-AGAINST SORROW.
-
-
-A charm set by Mary for her Son, before the fair man and the turbulent
-woman laid Him in the grave.
-
- The charm of Michael with the shield;
- Of the palm-branch of Christ;
- Of Bridget with her veil.
-
-The charm which God set for Himself when the divinity within Him was
-darkened.
-
-A charm to be said by the cross when the night is black and the soul is
-heavy with sorrow.
-
-A charm to be said at sunrise, with the hands on the breast, when the
-eyes are red with weeping, and the madness of grief is strong.
-
-A charm that has no words, only the silent prayer.
-
-
-TO WIN LOVE.
-
-
-“O Christ, by your five wounds, by the nine orders of angels, if this
-woman is ordained for me, let me hold her hand now, and breathe her
-breath. O my love, I set a charm to the top of your head; to the sole
-of your foot; to each side of your breast, that you may not leave me
-nor forsake me. As a foal after the mare, as a child after the mother,
-may you follow and stay with me till death comes to part us asunder.
-AMEN.”
-
-
-_Another._
-
-A charm of most desperate love, to be written with a raven’s quill in
-the blood of the ring finger of the left hand.
-
-“By the power that Christ brought from heaven, mayest thou love me,
-woman! As the sun follows its course, mayest thou follow me. As light
-to the eye, as bread to the hungry, as joy to the heart, may thy
-presence be with me, O woman that I love, till death comes to part us
-asunder.”
-
-
-FOR THE NIGHT-FIRE (THE FEVER).
-
-
-“God save thee, Michael, archangel! God save thee!”
-
-“What aileth thee, O man?”
-
-“A headache and a sickness and a weakness of the heart. O Michael,
-archangel, canst thou cure me, O angel of the Lord?”
-
-“May three things cure thee, O man. May the shadow of Christ fall on
-thee! May the garment of Christ cover thee! May the breath of Christ
-breathe on thee! And when I come again thou wilt be healed.”
-
-These words are said over the patient while his arms are lifted in the
-form of a cross, and water is sprinkled on his head.
-
-
-FOR A PAIN IN THE SIDE.
-
-
-“God save you, my three brothers, God save you! And how far have ye to
-go, my three brothers?”
-
-“To the Mount of Olivet, to bring back gold for a cup to hold the tears
-of Christ.”
-
-“Go, then. Gather the gold; and may the tears of Christ fall on it, and
-thou wilt be cured, both body and soul.”
-
-These words must be said while a drink is given to the patient.
-
-
-FOR THE MEASLES.
-
-
-“‘The child has the measles,’ said John the Baptist.
-
-“‘The time is short till he is well,’ said the Son of God.
-
-“‘When?’ said John the Baptist.
-
-“‘Sunday morning, before sunrise,’ said the Son of God.”
-
-This is to be repeated three times, kneeling at a cross, for three
-mornings before sunrise, and the child will be cured by the Sunday
-following.
-
-
-FOR THE MAD FEVER.
-
-
-Three stones must be charmed by the hands of a wise fairy doctor, and
-cast by his hand, saying as he does so—
-
-“The first stone I cast is for the head in the mad fever; the second
-stone I cast is for the heart in the mad fever; the third stone I cast
-is for the back in the mad fever.
-
-“In the name of the Trinity, let peace come. AMEN.”
-
-
-AGAINST ENEMIES.
-
-
-Three things are of the Evil One—
-
- An evil eye;
- An evil tongue;
- An evil mind.
-
-Three things are of God; and these three are what Mary told to her Son,
-for she heard them in heaven—
-
- The merciful word;
- The singing word;
- And the good word.
-
-May the power of these three holy things be on all the men and women of
-Erin for evermore.
-
-
-TO EXTRACT A THORN.
-
-
-“The briar that spreads, the thorn that grows, the sharp spike that
-pierced the brow of Christ, give you power to draw this thorn from the
-flesh, or let it perish inside; in the name of the Trinity. AMEN.”
-
-
-TO CAUSE HATRED BETWEEN LOVERS.
-
-
-Take a handful of clay from a new-made grave, and shake it between
-them, saying—
-
-“Hate ye one another! May ye be as hateful to each other as sin to
-Christ, as bread eaten without blessing is to God.”
-
-
-FOR LOVE.
-
-
-This is a charm I set for love; a woman’s charm of love and desire; a
-charm of God that none can break—
-
-“You for me, and I for thee and for none else; your face to mine, and
-your head turned away from all others.”
-
-This is to be repeated three times secretly, over a drink given to the
-one beloved.
-
-
-HOW TO HAVE MONEY ALWAYS.
-
-
-Kill a black cock, and go to the meeting of three cross-roads where a
-murderer is buried. Throw the dead bird over your left shoulder then
-and there, after nightfall, in the name of the devil, holding a piece
-of money in your hand all the while. And ever after, no matter what you
-spend, you will always find the same piece of money undiminished in
-your pocket.
-
-
-FOR THE GREAT WORM.[8]
-
-
-“I kill a hound. I kill a small hound. I kill a deceitful hound. I kill
-a worm, wherein there is terror; I kill all his wicked brood. Seven
-angels from Paradise will help me, that I may do valiantly, and give no
-more time to the worm to live than while I recite this prayer. AMEN.”
-
- [8] The ancient serpent-idol was called in Irish, “The Great Worm.”
- St. Patrick destroyed it, and had it thrown into the sea. There are
- no serpents now to be found in Ireland, not even grass snakes or
- scorpions.
-
-
-FOR SORE EYES.
-
-
-“Take away the pain, O Mary, mother, and scatter the mist from the
-eyes. For all power is given to the mother of Christ to give light to
-the eyes, and to drive the red mist back to the billows whence it came.”
-
-
-FOR PAINS IN THE BODY.
-
-
-Rub the part affected with flax and tow, heated in the fire, repeating
-in Irish—
-
-“In the name of a rough man and a mild woman, and of the Lamb of God,
-be healed from your pains and your sins. So be it. AMEN.”
-
-This custom refers to the tradition that one day the Lord Christ, being
-weary, asked leave to rest in a house, but was refused by the master of
-the house, a rough, rude man. Then the wife, being a mild woman, had
-pity on the wayfarer, and brought Him in to rest, and gave Him a cup
-of water to drink, and spake kindly to Him. After which the man was
-suddenly taken with severe pains, and seemed like to die in his agony.
-
-On this Christ called for some flax and tow, and, breathing on it,
-placed it on the part affected, by which means the man was quite
-healed. And then the Lord Christ went His way, but not before the man
-had humbly asked pardon for his rudeness to a stranger.
-
-The tradition of this cure has remained ever since, and a hot plaster
-of flax and tow is used by the peasantry invariably for all sudden
-pains, and found to be most efficacious as a cure.
-
-
-AGAINST DROWNING.
-
-
- “May Christ and His saints stand between you and harm.
- Mary and her Son.
- St. Patrick with his staff.
- Martin with his mantle.
- Bridget with her veil.
- Michael with his shield.
- And God over all with His strong right hand.”
-
-
-IN TIME OF BATTLE.
-
-
-“O Mary, who had the victory over all women, give me victory now over
-my enemies, that they may fall to the ground, as wheat when it is mown.”
-
-
-FOR THE RED RASH.
-
-
-“Who will heal me from the red, thirsty, shivering cold disease that
-came from the foreigner, and kills people with its poisonous pain?”
-“The prayer of Mary to her Son, the prayer of Columbkill to God; these
-will heal thee. AMEN.”
-
-
-_Another._
-
-Say this oration three times over the patient, making the sign of the
-cross each time—
-
-“Bridget, Patrick, Solomon, and the great Mary, banish this redness off
-you.”
-
-Then take butter, breathe on it quite close, and give it to the person
-to chafe himself therewith.
-
-To ascertain if he will recover, put a handful of yarrow in his hand
-while he is sleeping; if it is withered in the morning he will die; but
-if it remains fresh the disease will leave him.
-
-
-TO TAME A HORSE.
-
-
-Whisper the Creed in his right ear on a Friday, and again in his left
-ear on a Wednesday. Do this weekly till he is tamed; for so he will be.
-
-
-A VERY ANCIENT CHARM AGAINST WOUNDS OR POISONS.
-
-
-“The poison of a serpent, the venom of the dog, the sharpness of the
-spear, doth not well in man. The blood of one dog, the blood of many
-dogs, the blood of the hound of Fliethas—these I invoke. It is not a
-wart to which my spittle is applied. I strike disease; I strike wounds.
-I strike the disease of the dog that bites, of the thorn that wounds,
-of the iron that strikes. I invoke the three daughters of Fliethas
-against the serpent. Benediction on this body to be healed; benediction
-on the spittle; benediction on him who casts out the disease. In the
-name of God. AMEN.”
-
-
-FOR A SORE BREAST.
-
-
-To be said in Irish, while a piece of butter is rubbed over the breast—
-
-
-“O Son, see how swelled is the breast of the woman! O, you that bore a
-Son, look at it yourself! O Mary! O King of Heaven, let this woman be
-healed! AMEN.”
-
-
-FOR A WOUND.
-
-
-Close the wound tightly with the two fingers, and repeat these words
-slowly—
-
-“In the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Mary. The wound was red, the
-cut was deep, and the flesh was sore; but there will be no more blood,
-and no more pain, till the blessed Virgin Mary bears a child again.”
-
-
-FOR THE EVIL EYE.
-
-
-This is a charm Mary gave to St. Bridget, and she wrote it down, and
-hid it in the hair of her head, without deceit—
-
-“If a fairy, or a man, or a woman hath overlooked thee, there are three
-greater in heaven who will cast all evil from thee into the great and
-terrible sea. Pray to them, and to the seven angels of God, and they
-will watch over thee. AMEN.”
-
-
-FOR ST. ANTHONY’S FIRE.
-
-
-“The fire of earth is hot, and the fire of hell is hotter; but the love
-of Mary is above all. Who will quench the fire? Who will heal the sick?
-May the fire of God consume the Evil One! AMEN.”
-
-
-HOW TO GO INVISIBLE.
-
-
-Get a raven’s heart, split it open with a black-hafted knife; make
-three cuts and place a black bean in each cut. Then plant it, and when
-the beans sprout put one in your mouth and say—
-
- “By virtue of Satan’s heart,
- And by strength of my great art,
- I desire to be invisible.”
-
-And so it will be as long as the bean is kept in the mouth.
-
-
-FOR PAINS.
-
-
-“I kill the evil; I kill the worm in the flesh, the worm in the grass.
-I put a venomous charm in the murderous pain. The charm that was set
-by Peter and Paul; the charm that kills the worm in the flesh, in the
-tooth, in the body.”
-
-This oration to be said three times, while the patient is rubbed with
-butter on the place of the pain.
-
-
-_Another._
-
-A happy mild charm, a charm which Christ discovered. The charm that
-kills the worm in the flesh.
-
-“May Peter take, may Paul take, may Michael take, the pain away, the
-cruel pain that kills the back and the life, and darkens the eyes.”
-
-This oration written, and tied to a hare’s foot, is always to be worn
-by the person afflicted, hung round the neck.
-
-
-FOR A SPRAIN.
-
-
-In the Western Isles the following charm is used for a sprain—
-
-A strand of black wool is wound round and round the ankle, while the
-operator recites in a low voice—
-
- “The Lord rade and the foal slade,
- He lighted and He righted;
- Set joint to joint and bone to bone,
- And sinew unto sinew.
- In the name of God and the Saints,
- Of Mary and her Son,
- Let this man be healed. AMEN.”
-
-A similar charm was used in Germany in the tenth century, according to
-Jacob Grimm.
-
-
-TO CAUSE LOVE.
-
-
-Golden butter on a new-made dish, such as Mary set before Christ. This
-to be given in the presence of a mill, of a stream, and the presence of
-a tree; the lover saying softly—
-
-“O woman, loved by me, mayest thou give me thy heart, thy soul and
-body. AMEN.”
-
-
-FOR THE BITE OF A MAD DOG.
-
-
-An oration which Colum-Cille set to a wound full of poison—“Arise, O
-Carmac, O Clunane, through Christ be thou healed. By the hand of Christ
-he thou healed in blood, in marrow, and in bone. AMEN.”
-
-This oration to be pronounced over a man or a woman, a horse or a cow,
-but never over a hog or a dog. The wound to be rubbed with butter
-during the oration.
-
-
-FOR TOOTHACHE.
-
-
-Go to a graveyard; kneel upon any grave; say three paters and three
-aves for the soul of the dead lying beneath. Then take a handful of
-grass from the grave, chew it well, casting forth each bite without
-swallowing any portion. After this process the sufferer, were he to
-live a hundred years, will never have toothache any more.
-
-
-_Another._
-
-The patient must vow a vow to God, the Virgin, and the new moon, never
-to comb his hair on a Friday, in remembrance of relief should he be
-cured; and whenever or wherever he first sees the moon he must fall
-on his knees and say five prayers in gratitude for the cure, even if
-crossing a river at the time.
-
-
-_Another._
-
-Carry in your pocket the two jaw-bones of a haddock; for ever since the
-miracle of the loaves and fishes these bones are an infallible remedy
-against toothache, and the older they are the better, as nearer the
-time of the miracle.
-
-Also this charm is to be sewn on the clothes—
-
- “As Peter sat on a marble stone,
- The Lord came to him all alone,
- ‘Peter, Peter, what makes you shake?’
- ‘O Lord and Master, it is the toothache.’
- Then Christ said, ‘Take these for My sake,
- And never more you’ll have toothache.’”
-
-To avoid toothache never shave on a Sunday.
-
-
-FOR FRECKLES.
-
-
-Anoint a freckled face with the blood of a bull, or of a hare, and it
-will put away the freckles and make the skin fair and clear. Also the
-distilled water of walnuts is good.
-
-
-FOR A BURN.
-
-
-There is a pretty secret to cure a burn without a scar: “Take sheep’s
-suet and the rind of the elder-tree, boil both together, and the
-ointment will cure a burn without leaving a mark.”
-
-
-FOR THE MEMORY.
-
-
-The whitest of frankincense beaten fine, and drunk in white wine,
-wonderfully assisteth the memory, and is profitable for the stomach
-also.
-
-
-FOR THE FALLING SICKNESS.
-
-
-Take a hank of grey yarn, a lock of the patient’s hair, some parings
-of his nails, and bury them deep in the earth, repeating, in Irish, as
-a burial service, “Let the great sickness lie there for ever. By the
-power of Mary and the soul of Paul, let the great sickness lie buried
-in the clay, and never more rise out of the ground. AMEN.”
-
-If the patient, on awaking from sleep, calls out the name of the person
-who uttered these words, his recovery is certain.
-
-If a person crosses over the patient while he is in a fit, or stands
-between him and the fire, then the sickness will cleave to him and
-depart from the other that was afflicted.
-
-
-FOR CHIN-COUGH.
-
-
-A griddle cake made of meal, to be given, not bought or made; but a
-cake _given_ of love or of charity, not for begging; a cake given
-freely, with a prayer and a blessing; and from the breakfast of a man
-and his wife who had the same name before marriage; this is the cure.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The touch of a piebald horse. Even a piebald horse pawing before the
-door helps the cure.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The child to be passed seven times under and over an ass while a red
-string is tied on the throat of the patient.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Nine hairs from the tail of a black cat, chopped up and soaked in
-water, which is then swallowed, and the cough will be relieved.
-
-“One day when out snipe shooting,” a gentleman writes, “I saw a
-horrid-looking insect staring up at me. I called to a man close by,
-and asked him the name of it. He told me it was called the _Thordall_,
-and was reckoned a great cure for the _chin-cough_; for if any one got
-it safe in a bottle and kept it prisoner till it died, the disease
-would go away from the patient. It was just the time to try the cure,
-for my child was laid up with the epidemic. So I bottled my friend and
-daily examined the state of his health. It lasted for a fortnight,
-and at the end of that time the child had quite recovered, and the
-horrible-looking insect creature lay dead.”
-
-
-FOR RHEUMATISM.
-
-
-The operator makes passes, like the mesmerist, over the member affected
-by the rheumatic pain, never touching the part, but moving his hand
-slowly over it at some distance, while he mutters a form of words in a
-low voice.
-
-
-FOR A STYE ON THE EYELID.
-
-
-Point a gooseberry thorn at it nine times, saying, “Away, away, away!”
-and the stye will vanish presently and disappear.
-
-
-TO CURE WARTS.
-
-
-On meeting a funeral, take some of the clay from under the feet of the
-men who bear the coffin and apply it to the wart, wishing strongly at
-the same time that it may disappear; and so it will be.
-
-
-FOR A STITCH IN THE SIDE.
-
-
-Rub the part affected with unsalted butter, and make the sign of the
-cross seven times over the place.
-
-
-FOR WEAK EYES.
-
-
-A decoction of the flowers of daisies boiled down is an excellent wash,
-to be used constantly.
-
-
-FOR WATER ON THE BRAIN.
-
-
-Cover the head well with wool, then place oil-skin over, and the water
-will be drawn up out of the head. When the wool is quite saturated the
-brain will be free and the child cured.
-
-
-FOR HIP DISEASE.
-
-
-Take three green stones, gathered from a running brook, between
-midnight and morning, while no word is said. In silence it must be
-done. Then uncover the limb and rub each stone several times closely
-downwards from the hip to the toe, saying in Irish—
-
- “Wear away, wear away,
- There you shall not stay,
- Cruel pain—away, away.”
-
-
-FOR THE MUMPS.
-
-
-Wrap the child in a blanket, take it to the pigsty, rub the child’s
-head to the back of a pig, and the mumps will leave it and pass from
-the child to the animal.
-
-
-_Another._
-
-Take nine black stones gathered before sunrise, and bring the patient
-with a rope round his neck to a holy well—not speaking all the while.
-Then cast in three stones in the name of God, three in the name of
-Christ, and three in the name of Mary. Repeat this process for three
-mornings and the disease will be cured.
-
-
-FOR EPILEPSY.
-
-
-Take nine pieces of young elder twig; run a thread of silk of three
-strands through the pieces, each piece being an inch long. Tie this
-round the patient’s neck next the skin. Should the thread break and the
-amulet fall, it must be buried deep in the earth and another amulet
-made like the first, for if once it touches the ground the charm is
-lost.
-
-
-_Another._
-
-Take nine pieces of a dead man’s skull, grind them to powder, and then
-mix with a decoction of wall rue. Give the patient a spoonful of this
-mixture every morning fasting, till the whole potion is swallowed. None
-must be left, or the dead man would come to look for the pieces of his
-skull.
-
-
-FOR DEPRESSION OF HEART.
-
-
-When a person becomes low and depressed and careless about everything,
-as if all vital strength and energy had gone, he is said to have got a
-fairy blast. And blast-water must be poured over him by the hands of a
-fairy doctor while saying, “In the name of the saint with the sword,
-who has strength before God and stands at His right hand.” Great care
-being taken that no portion of the water is profaned. Whatever is left
-after the operation, must be poured on the fire.
-
-
-FOR THE FAIRY DART.
-
-
-Fairy darts are generally aimed at the fingers, causing the joints to
-swell and grow red and inflamed. An eminent fairy-woman made the cure
-of fairy darts her speciality, and she was sent for by all the country
-round, and was generally successful. But she had no power unless
-_asked_ to make the cure, and she took no reward at the time; not till
-the patient was cured, and the dart extracted. The treatment included
-a great many prayers and much anointing with a salve, of which she
-only had the secret. Then she proceeded to extract the dart with great
-solemnity, working with a small instrument, on the point of which she
-finally produced the dart. This proved to be a bit of flax artfully
-laid under the skin by the malicious fairies, causing all the evil,
-and of course on seeing the flax no one could doubt the power of the
-operator, and the grateful patient paid his fee.
-
-
-VARIOUS SUPERSTITIONS AND CURES.
-
-
-There is a book, a little book, and the house which has it will never
-be burned; the ship that holds it will never founder; the woman who
-keeps it in her hand will be safe in childbirth. But none except a
-fairy man knows the name of the book, and he will not reveal it for
-love or money; only on his death-bed will he tell the secret of the
-name to the one person he selects.
-
-The adepts and fairy doctors keep their mysteries very secret, and it
-is not easy to discover the word of a charm, for the operator loses
-his power if the words are said without the proper preliminaries, or
-if said by a profane person without faith, for the operator should not
-have uttered the mystery in the hearing of one who would mock, or treat
-the matter lightly; therefore he is punished.
-
-Some years ago an old man lived in Mayo who had great knowledge of
-charms, and of certain love philtres that no woman could resist. But
-before his death he enclosed the written charms in a strong iron box,
-with directions that no one was to dare to open it except the eldest
-son of an eldest son in a direct line from himself.
-
-Some people pretend that they have read the charms; and one of them has
-the strange power to make every one in the house begin to dance, and
-they can never cease dancing till another spell has been said over them.
-
-But the guardian of the iron box is the only one who knows the magic
-secret of the spell, and he exacts a good price before he utters it,
-and so reveals or destroys the witchcraft of the dance.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The juice of deadly night-shade distilled, and given in a drink, will
-make the person who drinks believe whatever you will to tell him, and
-choose him to believe.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A bunch of mint tied round the wrist is a sure remedy for disorders of
-the stomach.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A sick person’s bed must be placed north and south, not cross ways.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Nettles gathered in a churchyard and boiled down for a drink have the
-power to cure dropsy.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The touch from the hand of a seventh son cures the bite of a mad dog.
-This is also an Italian superstition.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The hand of a dead man was a powerful incantation, but it was chiefly
-used by women. The most eminent fairy women always collected the mystic
-herbs for charms and cures by the light of a candle held by a dead
-man’s hand at midnight or by the full moon.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When a woman first takes ill in her confinement, unlock instantly every
-press and drawer in the house, but when the child is born, lock them
-all up again at once, for if care is not taken the fairies will get
-in and hide in the drawers and presses, to be ready to steal away the
-little mortal baby when they get the opportunity, and place some ugly,
-wizened changeling in the cradle beside the poor mother. Therefore
-every key should be turned, every lock made fast; and if the fairies
-are hidden inside, let them stay there until all danger is over for
-the baby by the proper precautions being taken, such as a red coal set
-under the cradle, and a branch of mountain ash tied over it, or of the
-alder-tree, according to the sex of the child, for both trees have
-mystic virtues, probably because of the ancient superstition that the
-first man was created from an alder-tree, and the first woman from the
-mountain ash.
-
-The fairies, however, are sometimes successful in carrying off a baby,
-and the mother finds in the morning a poor weakly little sprite in the
-cradle in place of her own splendid child. But should the mortal infant
-happen to grow up ugly, the fairies send it back, for they love beauty
-above all things; and the fairy chiefs greatly desire a handsome mortal
-wife, so that a handsome girl must be well guarded, or they will carry
-her off. The children of such unions grow up beautiful and clever, but
-are also wild, reckless and extravagant. They are known at once by the
-beauty of their eyes and hair, and they have a magic fascination that
-no one can resist, and also a fairy gift of music and song.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If a person is bitten by a dog, the dog must be killed, whether mad or
-not, for it might become mad; then, so also would the person who had
-been touched by the saliva of the animal.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If, by accident, you find the back tooth of a horse, carry it about
-with you as long as you live, and you will never want money; but it
-must be found by chance.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When a family has been carried off by fever, the house where they died
-may be again inhabited with safety if a certain number of sheep are
-driven in to sleep there for three nights.
-
- * * * * *
-
-An iron ring worn on the fourth finger was considered effective against
-rheumatism by the Irish peasantry from ancient times.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Paralysis is cured by stroking, but many forms and mystic incantations
-are also used during the process; and only certain persons have the
-power in the hands that can effect a cure by the magic of the stroke.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The seed of docks tied to the left arm of a woman will prevent her
-being barren.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A spoonful of _aqua vitæ_ sweetened with sugar, and a little grated
-bread added, that it may not annoy the brain or the liver, will
-preserve from lethargy and apoplexy and all cold diseases.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The juice of carrots boiled down is admirable for purifying the blood.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Clippings of the hair and nails of a child tied up in a linen cloth and
-placed under the cradle will cure convulsions.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Tober Maire_ (Mary’s well), near Dundalk, has a great reputation for
-cures. And thousands used to visit it on Lady Day for weak eyesight,
-and the lowness of heart. Nine times they must go round the well on
-their knees, always westward. Then drink a cup of the water, and not
-only are they cured of their ailment, but are as free from sin as the
-angels in heaven.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When children are pining away, they are supposed to be fairy-struck;
-and the juice of twelve leaves of foxglove may be given: also in cases
-of fever the same.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A bunch of mint tied round the wrist keeps off infection and disease.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is a well near the Boyne where King James washed his sword after
-the battle, and ever since the water has power to cure the king’s evil.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When a seventh son is born, if an earth-worm is put into the infant’s
-hand and kept there till it dies, the child will have power to charm
-away all diseases.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The ancient arrowheads, called elf-stones by the people, are used as
-charms to guard the cattle.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is not safe to take an unbaptized child in your arms without making
-the sign of the cross over it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is unlucky to give a coal of fire out of the house before the
-child is baptized. And a piece of iron should be sewn in the infant’s
-clothes, and kept there till after the baptism.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Take a piece of bride-cake and pass it three times through a
-wedding-ring, then sleep on it, and you will see in a dream the face of
-your future spouse.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is unlucky to accept a lock of hair, or a four-footed beast from a
-lover.
-
- * * * * *
-
-People ought to remember that egg-shells are favourite retreats of the
-fairies, therefore the judicious eater should always break the shell
-after use, to prevent the fairy sprite from taking up his lodgment
-therein.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Finvarra, the king of the fairies of the west, keeps up the most
-friendly relations with most of the best families of Galway, especially
-with the Kirwans of Castle Hacket, for Finvarra is a gentleman, every
-inch of him, and the Kirwans always leave out kegs of wine for him at
-night of the best Spanish wine. And in return, it is said, the wine
-vaults at Castle Hacket are never empty, though the wine flows freely
-for all comers.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If a living worm is put into the hand of a child before he is baptized,
-and kept there till the worm is dead, that child will have power in
-after life to cure all diseases to which children are subject.
-
- * * * * *
-
-After being cured from a sickness, take an oath never to comb the hair
-on a Friday, that so the memory of the grace received may remain by
-this sign till your death. Or whenever you first see the new moon,
-kneel down and say an ave and a pater; this also is for memory of grace
-done.
-
- * * * * *
-
-People born in the morning cannot see spirits or the fairy world; but
-those born at night have power over ghosts, and can see the spirits of
-the dead.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Unbaptized children are readily seized by the fairies. The best
-preventive is a little salt tied up in the child’s dress when it is
-laid to sleep in the cradle.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If pursued at night by an evil spirit, or the ghost of one dead, and
-you hear footsteps behind you, try and reach a stream of running water,
-for if you can cross it, no devil or ghost will be able to follow you.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If a chair fall as a person rises, it is an unlucky omen.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The fortunate possessor of the four-leaved shamrock will have luck in
-gambling, luck in racing, and witchcraft will have no power over him.
-But he must always carry it about his person, and never give it away,
-or even show it to another.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A purse made from a weasel’s skin will never want for money; but the
-purse must be found, not given or made.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If a man is ploughing, no one should cross the path of the horses.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is unlucky to steal a plough, or take anything by stealth from a
-smith’s forge.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When yawning make the sign of the cross instantly over the mouth, or
-the evil spirit will make a rush down and take up his abode within you.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Never give away water before breakfast, nor milk while churning is
-going on.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A married woman should not walk upon graves, or her child will have
-a club-foot. If by accident she treads on a grave she must instantly
-kneel down, say a prayer, and make the sign of the cross on the sole of
-her shoe three times over.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Never take an infant in your arms, nor turn your head to look at it
-without saying, “God bless it.” This keeps away the fatal influence of
-the Evil Eye.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If a bride steers a boat on the day of her marriage, the winds and
-the waves have no power over it, be the tempest ever so fierce or the
-stream ever so rapid.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Do not put out a light while people are at supper, or there will be one
-less at the table before the year is out.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Never give any salt or fire while churning is going on. To upset the
-salt is exceedingly unlucky and a bad omen; to avert evil gather up the
-salt and fling it over the right shoulder into the fire, with the left
-hand.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If you want a person to win at cards, stick a crooked pin in his coat.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The seventh son of a seventh son has power over all diseases, and can
-cure them by laying on of hands; and a son born after his father’s
-death has power over fevers.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is one hour in every day when whatever you wish will be granted,
-but no one knows what that hour is. It is all a chance if we come
-on it. There is also one hour in the day when ghost-seers can see
-spirits—but only one—at no other time have they the power, yet they
-never know the hour, the coming of it is a mystery.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In some parts of Ireland the people, it is said, on first seeing the
-new moon, fall on their knees and address her in a loud voice with the
-prayer: “O moon; leave us well as thou hast found us!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is unlucky to meet a cat, a dog, or a woman, when going out first
-in the morning; but unlucky above all is it to meet a woman with red
-hair the first thing in the morning when going on a journey, for her
-presence brings ill-luck and certain evil.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is unlucky to pass under a hempen rope; the person who does so will
-die a violent death, or is fated to commit an evil act in after life,
-so it is decreed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The cuttings of your hair should not be thrown where birds can find
-them; for they will take them to build their nests, and then you will
-have headaches all the year after.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The cause of a club-foot is this—The mother stood on a cross in a
-churchyard before her child was born—so evil came.
-
- * * * * *
-
-To cure fever, place the patient on the sandy shore when the tide is
-coming in, and the retreating waves will carry away the disease and
-leave him well.
-
- * * * * *
-
-To make the skin beautiful, wash the face in May dew upon May morning
-just at sunrise.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If the palm of the hand itches you will be getting money; if the elbow,
-you will be changing beds; if the ear itches and is red and hot, some
-one is speaking ill of you.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If three drops of water are given to an infant before it is baptized,
-it will answer the first three questions put to it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-To know the name of the person you are destined to marry, put a snail
-on a plate of flour—cover it over and leave it all night; in the
-morning the initial letter of the name will be found traced on the
-flour by the snail.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If one desires to know if a sick person will recover, take nine smooth
-stones from the running water; fling them over the right shoulder,
-then lay them in a turf fire to remain untouched for one night. If the
-disease is to end fatally the stones in the morning will emit a clear
-sound like a bell when struck together.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A whitethorn stick is a very unlucky companion on a journey; but a
-hazel switch brings good luck and has power over the devil.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A hen that crows is very unlucky and should be killed; very often the
-hen is stoned, for it is believed that she is bewitched by the fairies.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is asserted that on Christmas morning the ass kneels down in
-adoration of Christ, and if a person can manage to touch the cross on
-the back of the animal at that particular moment the wish of his heart
-will be granted, whatever it may be.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When taking possession of a new house, every one should bring in some
-present, however trifling, but nothing should be taken away, and a
-prayer should be said in each corner of your bedroom, and some article
-of your clothing be deposited there at the same time.
-
-
-TO FIND STOLEN GOODS.
-
-
-Place two keys on a sieve, in the form of a cross. Two men hold the
-sieve, while a third makes the sign of the cross on the forehead of the
-suspected party, and calls out his name loudly, three times over. If
-innocent, the keys remain stationary; but if guilty, the keys revolve
-slowly round the sieve, and then there is no doubt as to who is the
-thief.
-
-
-A PRAYER AGAINST THE PLAGUE.
-
-
-“O Star of Heaven, beloved of the Lord, drive away the foul
-constellation that has slain the people with the wound of dreadful
-death. O Star of the Sea, save us from the poison-breath that kills,
-from the enemy that slays in the night. AMEN.”
-
-
-A BLESSING.
-
-
-“O aged old woman of the grey locks, may eight hundred blessings twelve
-times over be on thee! Mayest thou be free from desolation, O woman of
-the aged frame! And may many tears fall on thy grave.”
-
-
-A CURE FOR CATTLE.
-
-
-
-Take nine leaves of the male crowfoot, plucked on a Sunday night;
-bruise them on a stone that never was moved since the world began, and
-never can be moved. Mix with salt and spittle, and apply the plaster to
-the ear of the sick beast. Repeat this three times for a man, and twice
-for a horse.
-
-
-A CHARM FOR SAFETY.
-
-Pluck ten blades of yarrow, keep nine, and cast the tenth away for
-tithe to the spirits. Put the nine in your stocking, under the heel of
-the right foot, when going a journey, and the Evil One will have no
-power over you.
-
-
-AN ELIXIR OF POTENCY.
-(FROM A MANUSCRIPT OF DATE 1770.)
-
-
-Two ounces of cochineal, one ounce of gentian root, two drachms of
-saffron, two drachms of snakeroot, two drachms of salt of wormwood, and
-the rind of ten oranges. The whole to be steeped in a quart of brandy,
-and kept for use.
-
-
-FOR THE BITE OF A MAD DOG.
-
-
-Six ounces of rue, four ounces of garlic, two ounces of Venice treacle,
-and two ounces of pewter filings. Boil for two hours in a close vessel,
-in two quarts of ale, and give a spoonful fasting each morning till the
-cure is effected. The liquor is to be strained before use.
-
-
-DREAMS.
-
-
-Never tell your dreams fasting, and always tell them first to a woman
-called Mary.
-
- * * * * *
-
-To dream of a hearse with white plumes is a wedding; but to dream of a
-wedding is grief, and death will follow.
-
- * * * * *
-
-To dream of a woman kissing you is deceit; but of a man, friendship;
-and to dream of a horse is exceedingly lucky.
-
- * * * * *
-
-To dream of a priest is bad; even to dream of the devil is better.
-Remember, also, either a present or a purchase from a priest is
-unlucky.
-
-
-FAIRY DOCTORS.
-
-
-The fairy doctors are generally females. Old women, especially, are
-considered to have peculiar mystic and supernatural power. They cure
-chiefly by charms and incantations, transmitted by tradition through
-many generations; and by herbs, of which they have a surprising
-knowledge.
-
-The fairies have an aversion to the sight of blood; and the peasants,
-therefore, have a great objection to being bled, lest “the good people”
-would be angry. Besides, they have much more faith in charms and
-incantations than in any dispensary doctor that ever practised amongst
-them.
-
-
-CHARMS BY CRYSTALS.
-
-
-The charms by crystals are of great antiquity in Ireland—a mode of
-divination, no doubt, brought from the East by the early wandering
-tribes. Many of these stones have been found throughout the country,
-and are held in great veneration. They are generally globular, and
-appear to have been originally set in royal sceptres or sacred shrines.
-A very ancient crystal globe of this kind, with miraculous curative
-powers, is still to be seen at Currahmore, the seat of the Marquis of
-Waterford, and it is believed to have been brought from the Holy Land
-by one of the Le Poers, who had it as a gift from Godfrey de Bouillon.
-The ball is of rock crystal, a little larger than an orange, and is
-circled round the middle by a silver band. It is still constantly
-borrowed by the people to effect cures upon cattle suffering from
-murrain or other distempers. This is done by placing the ball in a
-running stream, through which the cattle are driven backwards and
-forwards many times.
-
-The peasants affirm that the charm never fails in success, and the
-belief in its miraculous powers is so widespread that people from the
-most distant parts of Ireland send to Currahmore to borrow it. Even to
-this day the faith in its magic power continues unabated, and requests
-for the loan come from every quarter. The Marquis of Waterford leaves
-it in the care of his steward, and it is freely lent to all comers; but
-to the credit of the people it may be noted, that the magic crystal is
-always brought back to Currahmore with the most scrupulous care.[9]
-
- [9] Extract from a letter by the Marchioness of Waterford, on the
- Currahmore Crystal.
-
-
-ALECTROMANTIA.
-
-
-Should a person be bewitched by an evil neighbour, he must take two
-black cocks, lay a charm over the head of one and let it loose; but the
-other must be boiled down, feathers and all, and eaten. Then the malice
-of the neighbour will have no effect on him or his.
-
-Ancient Egypt and Greece had likewise superstitions on the subject of
-sacrificing a cock. Even the last words of Socrates had reference to
-this subject. It is remarkable also that in the Christian legend it
-was a cock that testified indignantly by his crowing against Peter’s
-treachery and cowardice, and aroused in him the remorse that was
-evidenced by his tears.
-
-
-FAIRY POWER.
-
-
-It is on Fridays that the fairies have the most power to work evil;
-therefore Friday is an unlucky day to begin work, or to go on a
-journey, or to have a wedding; for the spirits are then present
-everywhere, and hear and see everything that is going on, and will mar
-and spoil all they can, just out of malice and jealousy of the mortal
-race.
-
-It is then they strike cattle with their elfin arrows, lame a horse,
-steal the milk, and carry off the handsome children, leaving an ugly
-changeling in exchange, who is soon known to be a fairy sprite by its
-voracious appetite, without any natural increase in growth.
-
-This superstition makes the peasant-women often very cruel towards
-weakly children; and the trial by fire is sometimes resorted to in
-order to test the nature of the child who is suspected of being a
-changeling. For this purpose a fairy woman is usually sent for, who
-makes a drink for the little patient of certain herbs of whose power
-she alone has the secret knowledge; and a childless woman is considered
-the best to make the potion. Should there be no improvement in the
-child after the treatment with herbs, then the witch-women sometimes
-resort to terrible measures to test the fairy nature of the sufferer.
-
-A child who was suspected of being a changeling, because he was
-wasted and thin and always restless and fretful, was ordered by the
-witch-woman to be placed for three nights on a shovel outside the door
-from sunset to sunrise, during which time he was given foxglove to
-chew, and cold water was flung over him to banish the fire-devil. The
-screams of the child at night were frightful, calling on his mother
-to come and take him in; but the fairy doctor told the mother not to
-fear; the fairies were certainly tormenting him, but by the third
-night their power would cease, and the child would be quite restored.
-However, on the third night the poor little child lay dead.
-
-
-OMENS AND SUPERSTITIONS.
-
-
-Auguries and prophecies of coming fate may also be obtained from the
-flight of birds, the motion of the winds, from sneezing, dreams, lots,
-and the signs from a verse of the Psalter or Gospels. The peasantry
-attach great importance to the first verses of St. John’s Gospel, and
-maintain that when the cock crows in the morning he is repeating these
-verses (from the 1st to the 14th), and if we understood the language of
-animals and birds, we could often hear them quoting these same verses.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A charm against sickness is an amulet worn round the neck, enclosing
-a piece of paper, on which is written the first three verses of St.
-John’s Gospel.
-
-
-OMENS THAT FORBODE EVIL.
-
-
-To stick a penknife in the mast of a boat when sailing is most unlucky.
-
-To meet a man with red hair, or a woman with a red petticoat, the first
-thing in the morning.
-
-To kill the robin redbreast.
-
-To pass a churn and not give a helping hand.
-
-To meet a funeral and not go back three steps with it.
-
-To have a hare cross your path before sunrise.
-
-To take away a lighted sod on May days or churning days; for fire is
-the most sacred of all things, and you take away the blessing from the
-house along with it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Irish are very susceptible to omens. They say, “Beware of a
-childless woman who looks fixedly at your child.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Fire is the holiest of all things. Walk three times round a fire on St.
-John’s Eve, and you will be safe from disease for all that year.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is particularly unlucky to meet a red-haired man the first thing in
-the morning. There is a tradition that Judas Iscariot had red hair,
-and it is from this the superstitious dread of the evil interference of
-a red-haired man may have originated.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Never begin work on a Friday.
-
-Never remove from a house or leave a situation on Saturday.
-
-Never begin to make a dress on Saturday, or the wearer will die within
-the year.
-
-Never mend a rent in a dress while on, or evil and malicious reports
-will be spread about you.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Some days are unlucky to certain families—as Tuesday to the Tudors.
-Henry VIII., Edward, Mary, and Elizabeth all died upon a Tuesday.
-
- * * * * *
-
-To throw a slipper after a party going a journey is lucky. Also to
-breakfast by candle-light on Christmas morning.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is fatal at a marriage to tie a knot in a red handkerchief, and only
-an enemy would do it. To break the spell the handkerchief should be
-burned.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The first days of the year and of the week are the luckiest. Never
-begin a journey on a Friday or Saturday, nor move from your residence,
-nor change a situation. Never cut out a dress or begin to make it on a
-Friday, nor fix a marriage, for of all days the fairies have the most
-malific power on a Friday. They are present then, and hear all that is
-said, therefore beware of speaking ill of them, for they will work some
-evil if offended.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Never pay away money on the first Monday of the year, or you will lose
-your luck in gaining money all the year after.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Presents may be given on New Year’s Day, but no money should be paid
-away.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Those who marry in autumn will die in spring.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The yew-tree, the ash, and the elder-tree were sacred. The willow has
-a mystery in it of sound. The harp of King Brian-Boru was made of
-willow-wood.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When a servant leaves her place, if her mistress gives her a piece of
-bread let her put by some of it carefully, for as long as she has it
-good luck will follow her.
-
-
-TO ATTRACT BEES.
-
-
-Gather foxglove, raspberry leaves, wild marjorum, mint, camomile, and
-valerian; mix them with butter made on May Day, and let the herbs also
-be gathered on May Day. Boil them all together with honey; then rub the
-vessel into which the bees should gather, both inside and out, with
-the mixture; place it in the middle of a tree, and the bees will soon
-come. Foxglove or “fairy fingers” is called “the great herb” from its
-wondrous properties.
-
-
-SUPERSTITIONS OF THE ISLANDS.
-
-
-CONCERNING THE DEAD.
-
-
-It is ill luck when going with a funeral to meet a man on a white
-horse. No matter how high the rank of the rider may be, the people must
-seize the reins and force him to turn back and join the procession at
-least for a few yards.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The three most powerful divinations are by fire, by water, and by clay.
-These are the three great powers—the power that ascends, which is fire;
-the power that falls, which is water; and the power that lies level on
-the earth, and has the mystery of the dead, which is clay.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If a short cut should be taken while carrying a corpse to the grave the
-dead will be disturbed in the coffin, for it is a slight and an insult
-to the corpse.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When a death was expected it was usual to have a good deal of bread
-ready baked in the house in order that the evil spirits might be
-employed eating it, and so let the soul of the dying depart in peace.
-Twelve candles stuck in clay should also be placed round the dying.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If two funerals meet at the same churchyard, the last corpse that
-enters will have to supply the dead with water till the next corpse
-arrives.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Never take a child in your arms after being at a wake where a corpse
-was laid out unless you first dip your hands in holy water.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The moment the soul leaves the body the evil spirits try to seize it,
-but the guardian angel fights against them, and those around must pray
-earnestly that the angel may conquer. After death the body must not be
-disturbed, nor should the funeral chant be raised for one hour.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There are many superstitions prevalent in the Western Islands which
-are implicitly believed and acted on. Fishermen when going to sea must
-always enter the boat by the right side, no matter how inconvenient.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A coal of fire thrown after the fisherman brings him good fortune.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A sick person must not be visited on a Friday, nor by any person who
-has just quitted a wake and looked upon the dead. The hair and nails of
-a sick person must not be cut till after recovery.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If a corpse falls to the ground the most fatal events will happen to
-the family.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The lid must not be nailed on the coffin of a new-born child, or the
-mother that bore it will never have another.
-
-
-THE COASTGUARD’S FATE.
-
-
-One day a coastguard man was out in his boat with some of the islanders
-when a terrible storm arose with thunder and lightning. The poor people
-fell on their knees and prayed devoutly, but the man laughed at them,
-called them fools and cowards, and said he also could make lightning
-and thunder as well as the God they were praying to. So he immediately
-prepared a small cannon he had on board, and set a match to the powder
-and fired it off. But before the echo died away a stream of lightning
-passed over him, and he fell dead in the boat a blackened corpse—a
-dreadful sign of the vengeance of heaven on his blasphemous daring.
-
-
-RELICS.
-
-
-If a false oath is taken upon a relic the vengeance of God falls upon
-the swearer, and the doom that few can bear and live rests upon him
-and upon all his descendants even to the seventh generation. They are
-shunned by the people, and looked upon as unlucky and accursed. There
-are some living even now from whom the curse of the past is not lifted,
-because the seventh generation has not yet passed by.
-
-
-
-
- LEGENDS OF THE SAINTS.
-
-
-ST. PATRICK.
-
-
-Many saints in old time used to come and take up their abode in the
-wild desolate Western Islands for the rest and sanctity of solitude,
-and innumerable evidences of their presence still remain in the ancient
-ruins of the so-called cells or churches built in the rudest form, but
-always placed in a picturesque locality beside a well, which ever since
-has been held sacred, and no woman is allowed to wash her feet in the
-water.
-
-In one of these islands is a stone bed called “The Bed of the Holy
-Ghost,” and many people go from the mainland to lie a night in this
-bed, though the sea is always rough and dangerous, believing that it
-heals all diseases, and it brings good luck to all, and to women the
-blessing of children.
-
-If the lark sings on St. Bridget’s Day it is a good omen, and a sign
-of fine weather. And whoever hears it the first thing in the morning
-will have good luck in all he does for that whole day. St. Bridget was
-granted by the Lord to have every second Sunday fine so that she might
-preach to the converts that came to her.
-
-Then St. Patrick greatly desired that his day should also be fine so
-that the people might gather together in remembrance of him, and this
-also was granted. So from that time forth the Saints’ Day, the 17th of
-March, is always fine, for so it was decreed from the ancient times
-when he was upon earth.
-
-On St. Patrick’s Day it is the usage in the islands to affix large
-crosses made of straw and flowers on the door-posts, and a black cock
-is sacrificed in honour of the saint, though no one can tell why it
-is considered necessary that blood should be spilt, except that the
-idea of sacrifice is found in all religions and rituals of worship. At
-first the object most loved or most prized was sacrificed—a child, or
-a costly jewel. Then the human sacrifice began to be replaced by the
-offering of an animal, who was made the medium of expiation. And the
-god was satisfied so that blood was spilled to purify from sin.
-
-It is remarkable that relics of this ancient ritual of sacrifice can
-still be found even in the enlightened households of this advanced
-nineteenth century. An ox is still slaughtered at Christmas, though
-Baal is forgotten; and a lamb is sacrificed at Easter, as the Druids
-offered the firstlings of the flock to the Sun-god; while a goose is
-slain on St. Michael’s Day as a burnt-offering to the saint.
-
-
-THE WELL OF THE BOOK.
-
-
-When St. Patrick was one time amongst the Pagan Irish they grew very
-fierce and seemed eager to kill him. Then his life being in great
-danger, he kneeled down before them and prayed to God for help and for
-the conversion of their souls. And the fervour of the prayer was so
-great that as the saint rose up the mark of his knees was left deep in
-the stone, and when the people saw the miracle they believed.
-
-Now when he came to the next village the people said if he performed
-some wonder for them they also would believe and pray to his God. So
-St. Patrick drew a great circle on the ground and bade them stand
-outside it; and then he prayed, and lo! the water rushed up from the
-earth, and a well pure and bright as crystal filled the circle. And the
-people believed and were baptized.
-
-The well can be seen to this day, and is called _Tober-na-Lauer_ (The
-Well of the Book), because St. Patrick placed his own prayer-book in
-the centre of the circle before the water rose.
-
-
-ST. PATRICK AND THE SERPENT.
-
-
-There is a lake in one of the Galtee mountains where there is a great
-serpent chained to a rock, and he may be heard constantly crying out,
-“O Patrick, is the _Luan_, or Monday, long from us?” For when St.
-Patrick cast this serpent into the lake he bade him be chained to the
-rock till _La-an-Luan_ (The Day of Judgment). But the serpent mistook
-the word, and thought the saint meant _Luan_, Monday.
-
-So he still expects to be freed from one Monday to another, and the
-clanking of his chains on that day is awful to hear as he strives to
-break them and get free.
-
-In another lake there is a huge-winged creature, it is said, which
-escaped the power of St. Patrick, and when he gambols in the water such
-storms arise that no boat can withstand the tumult of the waves.
-
-
-ST. PATRICK AND THE PRINCESSES.
-
-
-One day the two daughters of the King of Meath, named Ethna and
-Fedalma, went down to the river to bathe, and there they beheld St.
-Patrick and his band of converts all draped in white robes, for they
-were celebrating morning prayers. And the princesses seeing strange men
-in white garments thought they were of the race of the male fairies,
-the _Daine-Sidhe_. And they questioned them. Then St. Patrick expounded
-the truth to them, and the maidens asked him many questions: “Who is
-your God? Is He Handsome? Are His daughters as handsome as we are? Is
-He rich? Is He young or aged? Is He to die, or does He live for ever?”
-
-Now St. Patrick having satisfied them on all these points the maidens,
-Ethna and Fedalma, were baptized, and became zealous workers for the
-Christian cause.
-
-
-THE POISON CUP.
-
-
-St. Patrick went on to Tara, and there he lit the Paschal fire and
-celebrated the Easter mysteries. But the Druids were wroth, for it was
-against their ordinances for any fire to be lit until the chief Druid
-himself had kindled the sacred fire. Therefore they sought to poison
-St. Patrick, and a cupful of poison was given him by one of the Druids;
-but the danger was revealed to him, and thereupon he pronounced certain
-words over the liquor, and whoever pronounceth these words over poison
-shall receive no injury from it. He also then composed the prayer, “In
-nomine Dei Patris,” and recited it over the cup of poison.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The number of companions with whom St. Patrick travelled through the
-country was seven score and ten, and before his time only three classes
-of persons were allowed to speak in public in Erin—the chronicler, to
-relate events; the poet, to eulogize and satirize; and the Brehon, to
-pass judgment according to the law. But after St. Patrick’s arrival
-every utterance of the three professions was subject to “the men of
-the white language”—that is, the Gospel—and only such utterances were
-allowed as did not clash with the Gospel.
-
-
-DIVINATION.
-
-
-In ancient Pagan times in Ireland the poets were supposed to possess
-the gift of prophecy, and by certain means could throw themselves into
-a state in which they had lucid vision of coming events. This state,
-called _Imbas for Osna_, was produced by incantations and the offering
-of the flesh of a red pig, a dog, or a cat to their idols. Then the
-poet, laying the two palms of his hands on his two cheeks, lay down
-and slept; his idol gods being beside him. And when he awoke he could
-see all things and foretell all things. He could make verses with the
-ends of his fingers, and repeat the same without studying, and in this
-way proved his right to be chief poet at the court of the king. Also
-he laid his staff upon the head of a person, and thus he found out his
-name, and the name of his father and mother, and all unknown things
-that were proposed to him. And this prophetic power was also obtained
-by _Imbas for Osna_, though a different kind of offering was made to
-the idol.
-
-But Patrick abolished these practices, and declared that whoever used
-them should enjoy neither heaven nor earth; and he substituted for
-them the _Corus Cerda_ (the Law of Poetry), in which no offering was
-made to demons; for the profession of the poet, he said, was pure, and
-should not be subject to the power of the devil. He left to the poets,
-however, the gift of extemporaneous recital, because it was acquired
-through great knowledge and diligent study, but all other rites he
-strictly forbade to the poets of Erin.
-
-
-THE BLIND POET.
-
-
-As a proof of the magnetic, lucid vision obtained by the great ollamhs
-of poetry, it is recorded of the blind poet, Louad Dall, that his
-attendants having brought him the skull of an animal found upon the
-strand, they asked him to declare its history. And thereupon placing
-the end of his wand upon the skull, he beheld with the inner vision,
-and said—
-
-“The tempestuous waters have destroyed Breccan, and this is the skull
-of his lapdog; and but little of greatness now remains, for Breccan and
-his people have perished in the waves.”
-
-And this was “divination by the staff”—a power possessed only by the
-chief poets, and by none else.
-
-
-THE STORY OF BRECCAN.
-
-
-The story of Breccan is related in Cormac’s Glossary. He was a merchant
-who traded between Ireland and Scotland with fifty corracles. Now there
-was a great whirlpool at Rathlin Island caused by the meeting of the
-seas, and they formed a caldron vast enough to swallow all Ireland. And
-it happened on a time that Breccan and all his corracles were lost and
-engulfed in this caldron. Not a man was left to tell the tale of how or
-where they had perished. Thus it was that the skull of a small animal
-being discovered on the beach, it was brought to the blind poet, who
-laying his staff on it obtained the inner vision by which he revealed
-the fate of Breccan and his fifty corracles.
-
-
-BARDIC PRIVILEGES.
-
-
-Now St. Patrick left the poets all their rights of divination by
-wisdom, and all their ancient rights over story-telling with the music
-of the harp, three hundred and fifty stories being allowed to the chief
-poet. He also secured just judgments for their professional rights; so
-that if land was mentioned in their songs as having been walled and
-trenched by them, that was considered to be sufficient legal evidence
-of title to the soil.
-
-But what they received of St. Patrick was better, he affirmed, than
-all the evil rites to devils which they had abandoned; along with the
-profane practice of magic by the two palms, called _Imbas for Osna_, by
-which lucid vision and the spirit of prophecy was supposed to come on
-them after invocations to idols and demons—all of which evil practices
-St. Patrick abolished, but left to the poets the skilled hand in music
-and the fluent tongue in recitation; for which none can equal the Bards
-of Ireland throughout all the world.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The ogham writing on the poet’s staff is mentioned in very old
-manuscripts as in use in the Pagan period, before St. Patrick’s time,
-though no specimen of ogham writing has yet been found of earlier date
-than the Christian era.
-
-St. Patrick introduced Latin and the Latin letters, which superseded
-ogham. And after his time Latin was taught very generally in the Irish
-schools.
-
-St. Patrick also confirmed as right and proper for observance, whatever
-was just in the Brehon laws, so as it was not at variance with the law
-of Christ, for the people had been guided by the Brehon laws from all
-antiquity, and it was not easy to overthrow them. Besides, many or most
-of them were framed with strict regard to justice and morality.
-
-When St. Patrick was dying, an angel of the Lord was sent to him,
-who announced to the great and holy saint that God had granted this
-favour to his prayers—namely, that his jurisdiction over the Church was
-ordained to be for ever at Armagh; and that Patrick, as the Apostle of
-Ireland, should be the judge of all the Irish at the last day, and none
-other, according to the promise made to the other apostles, “Ye shall
-sit upon twelve thrones judging the tribes of Israel.”
-
-
-ST. CIARON.
-
-
-This eminent saint died at the early age of thirty-three; and it is
-said that his death was caused by the prayers of the other saints of
-Ireland, who were jealous of his power and fame for sanctity. St.
-Ciaron knowing that death was coming upon him, composed a verse which
-has been preserved as an appeal against the cruel fate that ended his
-life while he was yet in his prime. And the pathos of the quatrain is
-very tender and natural—
-
- “I ask is it right, O King of Stars,
- To reap a cornfield before it is ripe?
- It is eating fruit before the time,
- It is plucking the blossom from a hazel when it is white.”
-
-
-ST. MARTIN.
-
-
-St. Martin was a bad man before his conversion, and, above all, was
-exceedingly close-fisted, as they say, to the poor; giving nothing and
-grasping all. So he was very rich but hated by every one.
-
-One day, when going out, he charged the servant to have a fine batch
-of loaves ready made and baked by the time he returned. While she was
-kneading the dough in came a poor man and begged for some as he was
-hungry; but she told him she dare not give away anything or the master
-would beat her. Still the poor man begged the harder, and at last she
-gave him dough enough for a couple of loaves. However, when the girl’s
-back was turned, he threw the dough into the oven and went his way
-without a word.
-
-Now when the dough was ready, the girl opened the oven to put in the
-loaves, but, behold, it was already quite full of baked bread, and
-would hold no more. So when Martin came home she told him all the
-truth; and his heart smote him, and he cried out, “An Angel of the Lord
-has been here; God has sent His messenger to rebuke me of my sins!” And
-he ran out to search for the man along the road, and at last saw him
-a great way off. Then Martin flung off his coat that he might run the
-faster; and when he came up to the man he fell on his knees before him
-on the ground, and cried out, “Oh, my Lord, I repent me of my sins;
-pray to God for me, for I know you are His angel.” And from that moment
-Martin’s heart was changed, and the devil left him; and he became a
-true saint and servant of God, and, above all, the saint and patron of
-the poor.
-
-Nevertheless, St. Bridget was offended with St. Martin, because
-she thought he did not receive her with sufficient hospitality and
-consideration. Perhaps some of the old stinginess of nature still clung
-to him. And she thus pronounced her malediction over him—
-
-“Oh, little man, the sea-wave shall come up over thy house, and thy
-name shall lie in ashes, while my name and fame shall be glorious all
-over the world.”
-
-And this was fulfilled; for the sea actually broke in and covered the
-saint’s dwelling; and the house of St. Martin can still be seen low
-down beneath the waves, but if any one tries to reach it the house
-fades away into the mist and is seen no more.
-
-There is an old superstition still observed by the people, that blood
-must be spilt on St. Martin’s Day; so a goose is killed, or a black
-cock, and the blood is sprinkled over the floor and on the threshold.
-And some of the flesh is given to the first beggar that comes by, in
-the name and in honour of St. Martin.
-
-In the Arran Isles St. Martin’s Day is observed with particular
-solemnity, and it was held necessary, from ancient times, to spill
-blood on the ground in honour of the saint. For this purpose a cock was
-sacrificed; but if such could not be procured people have been known
-to cut their finger in order to draw blood, and let it fall upon the
-earth. The custom arose in this way:—St. Martin, having given away
-all his goods to the poor, was often in want of food, and one day he
-entered a widow’s house and begged for something to eat. The widow was
-poor, and having no food in the house, she sacrificed her young child,
-boiled it, and set it before the saint for supper. Having eaten, and
-taken his departure, the woman went over to the cradle to weep for her
-lost child; when lo! there he was, lying whole and well, in a beautiful
-sleep, as if no evil had ever happened to him; and to commemorate this
-miracle and from gratitude to the saint, a sacrifice of some living
-thing is made yearly in his honour. The blood is poured or sprinkled on
-the ground, and along the door-posts, and both within and without the
-threshold, and at the four corners of each room in the house.
-
-For this symbol of purification by blood the rich farmers sacrifice a
-sheep; while the poorer people kill a black cock or a white hen, and
-sprinkle the blood according to ancient usage. Afterwards the whole
-family dine upon the sacrificial victim.
-
-In some places it was the custom for the master of the house to draw a
-cross on the arm of each member of the family and mark it out in blood.
-This was a very sacred sign which no fairy or evil spirit, were they
-ever so strong, could overcome; and whoever was signed with the blood
-was safe.
-
-There is a singular superstition forbidding work of a certain kind to
-be done on St. Martin’s Day, the 11th of November. No woman should spin
-on that day; no miller should grind his corn, and no wheel should be
-turned. And this custom was long held sacred, and is still observed in
-the Western Islands.
-
-
-ST. BRIDGET.
-
-
-At one time a certain leper came to St. Bridget to beg a cow from her.
-
-“Which would you prefer?” said the holy Bridget, “to be healed of your
-disease or to have the cow?”
-
-“I would be healed,” he answered.
-
-Then she touched him, and he became whole and went away rejoicing.
-
-After this Bridget’s fame spread all over Ireland; and a man of the
-Britons, and his son, came to be healed; but she was at Mass, and sent
-to them to wait till Mass was over.
-
-Now the Britons are a hasty people, and the man said, “You healed your
-own people yesterday and you shall heal us to-day.”
-
-Then Bridget came forth and prayed over them, and they were healed.
-
-Another time, two lepers came to beg, and Bridget said, “I have but
-this one cow—take it between you and go in peace.”
-
-But one leper was proud, and made answer: “I shall divide my goods with
-no man. Give me the cow and I shall go.”
-
-And she gave it to him.
-
-Then the other leper said, “Give me your prayers, holy Bridget, I ask
-no more.”
-
-And she gave him her blessing. And as he turned to depart a man came
-in, and offered a cow as a present to the holy woman.
-
-“Now the Lord has blessed you,” she said to the humble leper. “Take
-this cow and depart to your home.”
-
-So the man drove the cow before him, and presently came up with the
-proud leper just at the ford of the river. “Cross you first,” said the
-proud leper, “there is not room for two,” and the humble leper crossed
-in safety with his cow; but when the other entered the ford, the
-river rose, and he and his cow were carried away and drowned, for the
-blessing of St. Bridget was not on him.
-
-Another time, two lepers came to be healed, and Bridget ordered one of
-them to wash the other; which he did, and the man was healed.
-
-“Now,” she said, “do to your comrade as he has done to you; wash him
-with water that he may be made clean of his leprosy.”
-
-“Oh, veiled woman,” he answered, “why should I, that am clean now in
-body and limb, touch this filthy leper of the blue-grey skin? Ask me
-not to do this thing.”
-
-Then Bridget took water and washed the leper herself. Immediately the
-other who had been healed, cried out, “A fire is raging under my skin;”
-and the disease came again on him worse than ever. Thus was he punished
-for his pride.
-
-The lark is sacred to St. Bridget because its song woke her every
-morning to prayers, when she had service for the women who were her
-converts.
-
-The influence of St. Bridget remains a permanent power in Ireland even
-to this day, and she is much feared by the enemy of souls and the
-ill-doer. When Earl Strongbow was dying, he affirmed that he saw St.
-Bridget approaching his bed, and she struck him on the foot, and the
-wound she gave him mortified, and of this he died. This happened six
-hundred years after Bridget’s death.
-
-St. Bridget, throughout her long life, held the highest position and
-dignity in the Irish Church. She erected a temple in Kildare, ordained
-bishops, and was head and chief of all the sacred virgins.
-
-She also held equal rank with the archbishop; if he had an episcopal
-chair (_cathedra episcopalis_), so St. Bridget had a virginal chair
-(_cathedra puellaris_), and was pre-eminent above all the abbesses of
-Ireland, or of the Scots, for sanctity and power.
-
-
-ST. KIERAN.
-
-
-St. Kieran, also, did good service five hundred years after his death;
-for when a great chief and his band plundered Clonmacnoise and carried
-off the jewels from the shrine, the spirit of St. Kieran was seen in
-the doorway, crosier in hand, striking at the plunderers; and when they
-fled to their boat, St. Kieran raised up a strong wind that drove back
-the boat, and finally the chief robber was taken and put to death,
-having first confessed his crime, and testified as to St. Kieran’s
-wrath against him.
-
-
-ST. KEVIN.
-
-
-It is related of St. Kevin that after he had been seven years at
-Glendalough, a weariness of life came over him, and a longing to hear
-the voice of man once more. Then Satan came to him in the form of an
-angel, bright and beautiful, and persuaded him that he should quit
-the valley and travel abroad and see the world, while yet his youth
-was left to him. And St. Kevin was near yielding to the words of the
-tempter, when fortunately St. Munna came by that way, and he at once
-saw through the trick, and showed to St. Kevin that the advice was from
-the devil, and not from God. And St. Kevin promised St. Munna that he
-would never leave the valley till his death. However, God, not willing
-that the saint should eat his heart away in idleness, bade him build a
-monastery on the east of the lake, the place where the resurrection was
-to be; and he sent his angel to show him the exact spot.
-
-But St. Kevin, when he saw the place so wild and rude, could not help
-telling the friendly angel that it was very rugged and difficult to
-build on; and the stones were heavy and hard to be moved. Then the
-angel, to prevent any difficulty in the building, rendered the stones
-light and easy to move, and so the work of building went on to the
-glory of God; and St. Kevin rejoiced in the task set before him.
-
-And the monk who tells the story adds, that from that day in all the
-place which the angel appointed for the building, there is now no stone
-that cannot be lightly moved and easily worked all through the valley
-of Glendalough.
-
-
-CHRISTIAN LEGENDS.
-
-
-The Round Tower of Clonmacnoise was never finished, for the monks
-objected to the price demanded by the chief mason; and one day that he
-was at the top of the tower, they said he should never come down till
-he lowered the price; and they removed the scaffolding.
-
-Then he said, “It is easier to pull down than to build a tower,” and he
-began to cast down stone by stone, so that he could descend in safety.
-
-On this the monks grew alarmed, and prayed him to desist and the price
-should be paid; so he came down at their request, but would never again
-lay hand to the work, so the tower remains unfinished to this day.
-
-The first bells ever used in all Ireland were hung at Clonmacnoise, but
-the people of Athlone, being jealous, came at night to steal the bells,
-and succeeded in carrying them away in a boat. However, before they
-got out of sight of the church, the boat went down, and the bells were
-never recovered, though the river was dragged from Athlone to Shannon
-Bridge.
-
-At the seven churches of Clonmacnoise is to be seen the great cross of
-St. Kieran, beautifully carved of a stone not common to the country,
-called the Grecian stone, and if a woman can clasp the cross round with
-her arms she will never die in childbirth.
-
-At a pattern held there one time, a soldier from Athlone shot off the
-hand of a figure of St. Kieran, which was over the grand entrance, but
-returning home he fell from the boat, and was drowned in the very spot
-where the bells went down a hundred years before.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At Saints’ Island, in the Shannon, the ruins of a monastery, which
-was destroyed by King John, may still be seen. When the monks,
-broken-hearted and beggared, were leaving their beautiful home, one of
-them kneeled down and prayed to God for forgiveness of his enemies.
-Immediately a well of pure water sprang up where the monk had knelt;
-and the water even to this day is held by the people to have the power
-to cure all diseases, if the soul of the patient, as he drinks of the
-well, is free from all malice and the desire of revenge upon those who
-may have injured him.
-
-
-SWEARING STONES AND RELICS.
-
-
-THE CREMAVE.
-
-
-In the old churchyard of the monastery at Saints’ Island, there is
-an ancient black marble flagstone; and the monks gave it power as _A
-Revealer of Truth_, and it is called the _Cremave_, or Swearing Stone.
-
-Any one suspected of sin or crime is brought here from the country
-round, and if the accused swears falsely, the stone has the power to
-set a mark upon him and his race for seven generations. But if no mark
-appears then he is known to be innocent; and as long as the world
-lasts, the stone is to have this power, for so the monks decreed; and
-with many holy and mystic ceremonies they gave it consecration, as the
-“Revealer of Truth.” And though the English burned the monastery and
-defaced the altar and carried off the holy vessels, yet they had no
-power over the Cremave, or Swearing Stone, which remains to this day.
-
-Many years ago, so runs the tale, a murder was committed in the
-neighbourhood, and a certain man being suspected as the murderer, he
-was forced to go to the “clearing stone”; for the people said, “If he
-is innocent, the Cremave will clear him; and if guilty, let him suffer
-for his crime.”
-
-So, on the appointed day, he went with his friends and the accuser to
-the Swearing Stone; and there he was met by the priest, who adjured him
-to speak the truth in presence of all the people and before the face of
-God.
-
-The man laid his hand upon the stone, and solemnly swore that he was
-innocent; but instantly his right arm was shrivelled up, his feet
-failed, and he was carried home a miserable cripple, and so remained to
-the end of his life.
-
-Some weeks after a daughter was born to him, who bore across her
-forehead the impress of a bloody hand; and every one of his descendants
-have some strange mark, by which the people know that the race is
-accursed to the seventh generation; after which time the doom will be
-lifted, and the expiation made for the crime and the perjury will be
-considered sufficient by the Lord in heaven, who will then grant to the
-race pardon and grace at last.
-
-
-RELICS FOR CLEARING FROM GUILT.
-
-
-Another relic held in reverence for swearing on by an accused person
-is St. Finian’s Dish. This was found about one hundred and fifty years
-ago, buried in the ruins of an old abbey. It is of silver with stones
-set in it, which, the people say, are the eyes of Christ looking at
-them while they swear. And when the dish is shaken a rattling noise is
-heard, which they believe is made by the Virgin Mary’s bones that are
-enclosed therein.
-
-Should a false oath be taken on the relic, the perjurer will at once
-be stricken by disease, and die before the year is out. And so great
-is the terror inspired by this belief, that men have fainted from fear
-when brought up to swear on it. This is done by placing the hand on the
-cross that is engraved in the centre of the dish, while the two eyes of
-Christ are fixed on the swearer who comes for clearance from guilt.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The _Ghar-Barra_, or Crosier of St. Barry, is also a holy relic once
-overlaid with gold, on which it was the custom to take a clearing
-oath; as the people held it in great reverence, and nothing was more
-dreaded than the consequence of a false oath on the _Ghar-Barra_. Once
-a man who swore falsely thereon had his mouth turned awry, and it so
-remained to his life’s end, a proof of the saint’s hatred for the sin
-of perjury. The relic is kept covered carefully with green cloth, and
-whoever is brought to take a clearing oath thereon must first lay down
-a small piece of silver for the guardian of the shrine.
-
-
-INNIS-MURRY.
-
-
-At Innis-Murry, Sligo, there is a large table-stone supported on eight
-perpendicular stones as a pedestal. And on the table are seventy-three
-stones, from five to twenty inches in circumference, which have been
-lying there from the most ancient times; for to remove them would be at
-the peril of one’s life.
-
-On these seventy-three stones all the anathematic spirit of the island
-is concentrated. If the islanders suffer any injury, real or supposed,
-they come and turn these stones, uttering a malediction over their
-enemy, and should he be guilty he will assuredly die, or suffer some
-calamity before the year is out.
-
-A Scripture reader, having boldly taken away one of these stones to
-show the folly of the superstition, was obliged to restore it and to
-quit the island, or his life would not have been safe.
-
-There is another stone on the island where alone can fires be lighted,
-should all the domestic fires become extinct, and the spark must be
-struck from the stone itself.
-
-Innis-Murry is a desolate spot, rarely visited; the approach is so
-dangerous on account of the sunken rocks. The crops are scanty, and
-the soil is poor and light, growing only a short herbage of a spiral
-and sharp kind. Neither scythe nor sickle could be used in the entire
-island. Meal is unknown, and dairy produce scarcely to be had, as the
-grass can only support a few sheep; but the islanders have fish in
-abundance, crabs, lobsters, and mackerel especially.
-
-A traveller, who visited the island about fifty years ago, describes
-the manners and mode of living as most primitive; but the women have
-the reputation of being exceedingly virtuous, and the households are
-happy and well conducted. At that time a rude stone image was venerated
-by the people, called “Father Molosh,” but supposed to be an ancient
-pagan idol, probably Moloch. The priest, however, has since had it
-destroyed.
-
-
-
-
- MYSTERIES OF FAIRY POWER.
-
-
-THE EVIL STROKE.
-
-
-Some persons are possessed naturally with the power of the Evil Stroke,
-but it is not considered at all so unlucky as the Evil Eye; for the
-person who has it does not act from intentional malice but from
-necessity, from a force within him which acts without his will, and
-often to his deep regret: as in hurling matches, where a chance stroke
-of his may do serious injury, and even the dust of the earth raised by
-his foot has blinded his opponent for a week.
-
-One day a young man, while wrestling with another in play at a fair,
-where they met by chance, struck him on the arm, which immediately
-became fixed and powerless as stone. His friends brought him home, but
-nothing would restore the power of the arm or bring back the life; so
-after he had lain in this state for three days his family sent for the
-young man who had struck him, to ask for his help. When he came and saw
-the arm stiff as stone, he anointed it all over with spittle, making
-also the sign of the cross; and after some time the arm began to move
-again with life, and finally was quite restored. But the young man of
-the Evil Stroke was so dismayed at this proof of the strange power in
-him, that he would never again join in sports for fear of some unlucky
-accident.
-
-The power, however, is sometimes very useful, as in the case of attack
-from a bull or a ferocious dog; for a touch from the hand of a person
-possessing the Evil Stroke at once quells the madness in the animal,
-who will crouch down trembling with fear, and become as incapable of
-doing injury as if suddenly and powerfully mesmerized.
-
-But the power does not come by volition, only at intervals; and the
-person possessing it does not himself know the moment when it can be
-effectively exercised.
-
-Women, also, have the mysterious gift of this strange occult force,
-and one young girl was much dreaded in the country in consequence; for
-anything struck by her, beast or man, became instantly paralyzed, as
-if turned to stone. One day, at a hurling match, she threw a lump of
-clay at the winner in anger, because her own lover had failed to win
-the prize. Immediately the young victor fell down stunned and lifeless,
-and was so carried home to his mother. Then they sent in all haste
-for the young girl to restore him to consciousness; but she was so
-frightened at her own evil work that she went and hid herself. Finding
-it then impossible to bring her, his friends sent for the fairy doctor,
-who, by dint of many charms and much stroking, at last restored the
-young man to life. The girl, however, was in such dread of the curses
-of the mother, that she fled, and took service in a distant part of
-the country. And all the people rejoiced much over her departure from
-amongst them.
-
-Yet it was considered lucky in some ways to have a fairy-stricken child
-in the house, for the fairies generally did a good turn by the family
-to compensate for the evil. And so there was always plenty of butter in
-the churn, and the cattle did not sicken wherever there was a stricken
-child.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is also lucky to employ a half-simpleton about the farm, and to be
-kind to the deaf and dumb, and other afflicted creatures. No one in
-Ireland would harm them or turn them out of their way, and they always
-get food and drink for the asking, without any payment being thought of
-or accepted.
-
-
-THE CHANGELING.
-
-
-A woman was one night lying awake while her husband slept, when the
-door suddenly opened and a tall dark man entered, of fierce aspect,
-followed by an old hag with a child in her arms—a little, misshapen,
-sickly-looking little thing. They both sat down by the fire to warm
-themselves, and after some time the man looked over at the cradle that
-stood beside the mother’s bed with her boy in it, and kept his eyes
-on it for several minutes. Then he rose, and when the mother saw him
-walking over direct to the cradle, she fainted and knew no more.
-
-When she came to herself she called to her husband, and bade him light
-a candle; this he did, on which the old hag in the corner rose up at
-once and blew it out. Then he lit it a second time, and it was blown
-out; and still a third time he lit the candle, when again it was blown
-out, and a great peal of laughter was heard in the darkness.
-
-On this the man grew terribly angry, and taking up the tongs he made a
-blow at the hag; but she slipped away, and struck him on the arm with
-a stick she held in her hand. Then he grew more furious, and beat her
-on the head till she roared, when he pushed her outside and locked the
-door.
-
-After this he lit the candle in peace; but when they looked at the
-cradle, lo! in place of their own beautiful boy, a hideous little
-creature, all covered with hair, lay grinning at them. Great was their
-grief and lamentation, and both the man and his wife wept and wailed
-aloud for the loss of their child, and the cry of their sorrow was
-bitter to hear.
-
-Just then the door suddenly opened, and a young woman came in, with a
-scarlet handkerchief wound round her head.
-
-“What are you crying for,” she asked, “at this time of night, when
-every one should be asleep?”
-
-“Look at this child in the cradle,” answered the man, “and you will
-cease to wonder why we mourn and are sad at heart.” And he told her all
-the story.
-
-When the young woman went over to the cradle and looked at the child,
-she laughed, but said nothing.
-
-“Your laughter is stranger than our tears,” said the man. “Why do you
-laugh in the face of our sorrows?”
-
-“Because,” she said, “this is my child that was stolen from me
-to-night; for I am one of the fairy race, and my people, who live under
-the fort on the hill, thought your boy was a fine child, and so they
-changed the babies in the cradle; but, after all, I would rather have
-my own, ugly as he is, than any mortal child in the world. So now I’ll
-tell you how to get back your own son, and I’ll take away mine at once.
-Go to the old fort on the hill when the moon is full, and take with you
-three sheafs of corn and some fire, and burn them one after the other.
-And when the last sheaf is burning, an old man will come up through the
-smoke, and he will ask you what it is you desire. Then tell him you
-must have your child back, or you will burn down the fort, and leave
-no dwelling-place for his people on the hill. Now, the fairies cannot
-stand against the power of fire, and they will give you back your child
-at the mere threat of burning the fort. But mind, take good care of him
-after, and tie a nail from a horse-shoe round his neck, and then he
-will be safe.”
-
-With that the young woman took up the ugly little imp from the cradle
-in her arms, and was away before they could see how she got out of the
-house.
-
-Next night, when the moon was full, the man went to the old fort with
-the three sheafs of corn and the fire, and burned them one after the
-other; and as the second was lighted there came up an old man and asked
-him what was his desire.
-
-“I must have my child again that was stolen,” he answered, “or I’ll
-burn down every tree on the hill, and not leave you a stone of the fort
-where you can shelter any more with your fairy kindred.”
-
-Then the old man vanished, and there was a great silence, but no one
-appeared.
-
-On this the father grew angry, and he called out in a loud voice, “I
-am lifting the third sheaf now, and I’ll burn and destroy and make
-desolate your dwelling-place, if my child is not returned.”
-
-Then a great tumult and clamour was heard in the fort, and a voice
-said, “Let it be. The power of the fire is too strong for us. Bring
-forth the child.”
-
-And presently the old man appeared, carrying the child in his arms.
-
-“Take him,” he said. “By the spell of the fire, and the corn you have
-conquered. But take my advice, draw a circle of fire, with a hot coal
-this night, round the cradle when you go home, and the fairy power
-cannot touch him any more, by reason of the fire.”
-
-So the man did as he was desired, and by the spell of fire and of corn
-the child was saved from evil, and he grew and prospered. And the old
-fort stands to this day safe from harm, for the man would allow no hand
-to move a stone or harm a tree; and the fairies still dance there on
-the rath, when the moon is full, to the music of the fairy pipes, and
-no one hinders them.
-
-
-THE FAIRY DOCTOR.
-
-
-If a healthy child suddenly droops and withers, that child is
-fairy-struck, and a fairy doctor must be at once called in. Young girls
-also, who fall into rapid decline, are said to be fairy-struck; for
-they are wanted in Fairy-land as brides for some chief or prince, and
-so they pine away without visible cause till they die.
-
-The other malign influences that act fatally on life are the Wind and
-the Evil Eye. The evil power of the Wind is called a fairy-blast;
-while, of one suffering from the Evil Eye, they say he has been
-“overlooked.”
-
-The fairy doctor must pronounce from which of these three causes the
-patient is suffering. The fairy-stroke, or the fairy-blast, or the Evil
-Eye; but he must take no money for the opinion given. He is paid in
-some other way; by free gracious offerings in gratitude for help given.
-
-A person who visited a great fairy doctor for advice, thus describes
-the process of cure at the interview:—
-
-“The doctor always seems as if expecting you, and had full knowledge of
-your coming. He bids you be seated, and after looking fixedly on your
-face for some moments, his proceedings begin. He takes three rods of
-witch hazel, each three inches long, and marks them separately, ‘For
-the Stroke,’ ‘For the Wind,‘ ‘For the Evil Eye.’ This is to ascertain
-from which of these three evils you suffer. He then takes off his coat,
-shoes, and stockings; rolls up his shirt sleeves, and stands with his
-face to the sun in earnest prayer. After prayer he takes a dish of pure
-water and sets it by the fire, then kneeling down, he puts the three
-hazel rods he had marked into the fire, and leaves them there till they
-are burned black as charcoal. All the time his prayers are unceasing;
-and when the sticks are burned, he rises, and again faces the sun in
-silent prayer, standing with his eyes uplifted and hands crossed. After
-this he draws a circle on the floor with the end of one of the burned
-sticks, within which circle he stands, the dish of pure water beside
-him. Into this he flings the three hazel rods, and watches the result
-earnestly. The moment one sinks he addresses a prayer to the sun, and
-taking the rod out of the water he declares by what agency the patient
-is afflicted. Then he grinds the rod to powder, puts it in a bottle
-which he fills up with water from the dish, and utters an incantation
-or prayer over it, in a low voice, with clasped hands held over the
-bottle. But what the words of the prayer are no one knows, they are
-kept as solemn mysteries, and have been handed down from father to
-son through many generations, from the most ancient times. The potion
-is then given to be carried home, and drunk that night at midnight
-in silence and alone. Great care must be taken that the bottle never
-touches the ground; and the person carrying it must speak no word,
-and never look round till home is reached. The other two sticks he
-buries in the earth in some place unseen and unknown. If none of the
-three sticks sink in the water, then he uses herbs as a cure. Vervain,
-eyebright, and yarrow are favourite remedies, and all have powerful
-properties known to the adept; but the words and prayers he utters over
-them are kept secret, and whether they are good or bad, or addressed to
-Deity or to a demon, none but himself can tell.”
-
-These are the visible mysteries of the fairy doctor while working out
-his charms and incantations. But other fairy doctors only perform the
-mysteries in private, and allow no one to see their mode of operation
-or witness the act of prayer.
-
-If a potion is made up of herbs it must be paid for in silver but
-charms and incantations are never paid for, or they would lose their
-power. A present, however, may be accepted as an offering of gratitude.
-
-
-THE POET’S SPELL.
-
-
-A very ancient story, as old as the tenth century, is narrated, and
-firmly believed by the people, that once on a time when the reapers
-were at work, a fine handsome young married woman, who was in the
-field with them, suddenly fell down dead. This caused a great fear
-and consternation, especially as it was asserted that just before the
-fatal event, a fairy blast had passed over the field, carrying a cloud
-of dust and stones with it; and there could be no doubt but that the
-fairies had rushed by in the cloud, and struck the woman dead as they
-passed.
-
-Then her people sent for the great wise poet of the tribe, who
-was reputed to have the power by his song to break the strongest
-fairy spells: and he chanted low music over her, and uttered mystic
-incantations, the words of which no man heard; but after a while the
-woman unclosed her eyes and rose up, restored to life.
-
-When they questioned her, she told them all she knew.
-
-“In sickness I was,” she said, “and I appeared to be dead, for I could
-neither speak nor move, till the song of the poet gave me power. Then
-the life rose up in me again, and the strength, and I was healed.”
-
-
-CHARM FOR THE FAIRY STROKE.
-
-
-There is a very ancient and potent charm which may be tried with great
-effect in case of a suspected fairy-stroke.
-
-Place three rows of salt on a table in three lines, three equal
-measures to each row. The person performing the spell then encloses the
-rows of salt with his arm, leaning his head down over them, while he
-repeats the Lord’s Prayer three times over each row—that is, nine times
-in all. Then he takes the hand of the one who has been fairy-struck,
-and says over it, “By the power of the Father, and of the Son, and of
-the Holy Spirit, let this disease depart, and the spell of the evil
-spirits be broken! I adjure, I command you to leave this man [naming
-him]. In the name of God I pray; in the name of Christ I adjure; in the
-name of the Spirit of God I command and compel you to go back and leave
-this man free! AMEN! AMEN! AMEN!”
-
-
-THE FARMER’S FATE.
-
-
-The peasants have the greatest dread of the fairy-stroke, and consider
-it the most dangerous indication of fairy hostility. When a person is
-struck, he becomes wholly insensible to external things, as if his soul
-had been taken out of him and carried away.
-
-A farmer once began to build a barn on a fairy circle, to the great
-horror of the neighbours, who warned him of the danger; but he only
-laughed at their nonsense, and built and finished his barn on the fairy
-rath.
-
-However, riding home one evening after sunset, he was suddenly
-“struck,” and fell insensible to the ground. They carried him home and
-laid him on his bed, where he lay for several days, his eyes fixed and
-staring without any motion of the eyelids, and no indication of life
-remaining, except his colour which never changed.
-
-All the doctors came and looked at him, but could do nothing. There
-was no fracture nor injury of any kind to his frame; so the doctors
-shook their heads and went their way, saying they would call again in
-a day or two. But the family objected to delay, and sent at once for
-the great fairy doctor of the district. The moment he came he threw
-herbs on the fire, when a fragrant smell filled the room like church
-incense. Then he pounded some herbs and mixed a liquid with them, but
-what the herbs were, no one knew. And with this mixture he touched the
-brow and the lips and the hands of the man, and sprinkled the rest over
-his insensible form. After this he told them to keep silence round him
-for two hours, when he would return and finish the cure. And so it
-happened, for in two hours the life came back to the man, though he
-could not speak. But strength came gradually; and by the next day he
-rose up, and said he had dreamed a dream, and heard a voice saying to
-him, “Pull down the barn, for ill-luck is on it.” Accordingly he gave
-orders to his men, and every stick and stone was carried away, and
-the fairy rath left free again for the fairies to dance on, as in the
-olden time, when they were the gods of the earth, long before men came
-to dispute their rights, and take possession of their ancient pleasure
-grounds—an indignity no high-spirited fairy could calmly endure. For
-in their councils they had decreed that the fairy rath, at least,
-should be sacred for all time, and woe to the man who builds his house
-thereon. An evil fate is on him and on the house for evermore. Down it
-must come, or the evil spell will never be lifted. There is no hope for
-it, for the most dangerous and subtle of all enemies is an angry fairy.
-
-Nor should the paths even be crossed by work of human hand, which the
-fairies traverse from one palace to another. Their line of march
-must not be impeded. Finvarra and his men would resent such a gross
-insult to the royal fairy rights, and severely punish the audacious
-and offending mortal. Not even the Grand Jury would be allowed to
-interfere, for if they did, every man of them would be demolished in
-some way or other by fairy power.
-
-
-THE FAIRY RATH.
-
-
-The fairies, beside being revengeful, are also very arrogant, and allow
-no interference with their old-established rights.
-
-There is a rath in the Queen’s County, only four yards in diameter,
-but held so sacred as the fairies’ dancing ground that no one dared to
-remove a handful of earth from the mound; and at night the sweetest
-low music may be heard floating round the hill, as if played by silver
-bagpipes.
-
-One evening a boy lay down on the rath to listen to the music, and,
-without thinking, began to gather up balls of the clay and fling them
-hither and thither in sport, when suddenly he was struck down by a
-violent blow and became senseless.
-
-There he was found by his people, who went to search for him; and when
-he came to himself he bleated like a calf, and it was a long time
-before he recovered his reason, for the power of the fairies is great,
-and none can resist it.
-
-
-
-
- THE HOLY WELLS
-
-
-There is no superstition stronger in Ireland than a belief in the
-curative power of the sacred wells that are scattered over the
-country; fountains of health and healing which some saint had blessed,
-or by which some saint had dwelt in the far-off ancient times. But
-well-worship is even older than Christianity. It is part of the early
-ritual of humanity, brought from the Eastern lands by the first Aryan
-tribes who migrated westward, passing along from the Mediterranean to
-the Atlantic shores.
-
-The Delphic oracle in its origin was nothing more than a holy well,
-shadowed by trees, on which were hung the votive offerings of the
-praying peasants, long before the rival kings brought to the sacred
-spot their votive tributes of silver and gold, and crowns of precious
-stones.
-
-In Ireland the beautiful, picturesque, and tree-shadowed wells of
-the country were held sacred by the Druid priests, as is evident
-from the many remarkable Druidical remains that have been found in
-their vicinity—ruins of temples and pillar-stones, and stones with
-strange carvings. Much also of the ancient Druidic ceremonial has been
-preserved by the people, such as the symbolic dances, the traditions
-of sun-worship, and other pagan rites, which were incorporated into
-the Christian ritual of well-worship by the early converts, and are
-still retained, though, through the lapse of ages, they have entirely
-lost their original significance, and are now only practised as ancient
-customs, for which the Irish have great reverence, as having come down
-to them from their forefathers. The ceremonial is the same at all these
-places of devout pilgrimage. The pilgrims go round the well a certain
-number of times, either three or nine, creeping on their hands and
-knees, but always from east to west, following the apparent motion
-of the sun, and reciting paters and aves all the time. At the close
-of each round they build up a small pile of stones; for at the last
-day the angels will reckon these stones, and he who has said the most
-prayers will have the highest place in heaven, each saint keeping count
-for his own votaries. The patient then descends the broken steps to the
-well and, kneeling down, bathes his forehead and hands in the water,
-after which oblation the pain or disease he suffered from will be
-gradually removed, and depart from him for evermore.
-
-At some wells there is often a rude stone monument of the ancient
-times, and the eyes of the pilgrim must be kept steadily fixed on it
-while reciting the prayers.
-
-Whenever a white-thorn or an ash-tree shadows the place, the well is
-held to be peculiarly sacred; and on leaving, having first drunk of the
-water, the patient ties a votive offering to the branches—generally a
-coloured handkerchief or a bright red strip cut from a garment; and
-these offerings are never removed. They remain for years fluttering in
-the wind and the rain, just as travellers have described the votive
-offerings on the sacred trees that shadow the holy wells of Persia.
-They are signs and tokens of gratitude to the patron saint, and are
-meant to show the devil that he has no longer power to harm the praying
-pilgrim, or torment him with pains and aches as heretofore. It is
-not supposed that the water of the well has any natural medicinal
-properties. The curative efficacy is wholly due to the observance of
-the ritual in honour of the saint, whose spirit and influence is still
-over the well, by which he lived, and of which he drank while living on
-the earth.
-
-
-THE WHITE STONES.
-
-
-At many of the wells quantities of beautiful white stones are found
-that glitter in the sun, and these are highly esteemed by the pilgrims
-to build up their prayer monuments.
-
-One day some women were eagerly collecting these stones, after each
-round of praying, in order to build up a monument; when suddenly a
-strain of soft, exquisite music seemed to rise up from the water and
-float by them. In their joy and wonder the women clapped their hands
-and laughed aloud, when instantly the music ceased and the pile of
-stones fell down. By which sign they knew that they should not have
-laughed while the angels were singing; and they fell on their knees and
-prayed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A holy well once lost all its power because a murder had been committed
-near it; and another because it was cursed by a priest in consequence
-of the immorality that prevailed at the patterns.
-
-
-THE SACRED TROUT.
-
-
-The water of the sacred well must never be used for household
-purposes—cooking, washing, or the like. But after the well was cursed
-by the priest, and the tents were struck, and no pattern was held there
-any longer, it lost all its sanctity, and was no longer held sacred by
-the people, who began to fill their pails, and carry the water away
-home for cooking and household use; while also they all washed their
-clothes down at the well, just as if no sanctity had ever been in the
-water.
-
-However, one day a woman having put down a pot of water to boil, found
-that no amount of fire would heat it. Still it remained ice-cold, as
-if just drawn from the well. So she looked carefully into the pot, and
-there beheld the Sacred Speckled Trout sailing round and round quite
-contented and happy. On seeing this, she knew that the curse was lifted
-from the well, and she ran and told the priest. His reverence having
-seen the Sacred Trout with his own eyes, ordered it to be carried back
-to the well, the water of which at once regained all its sacred powers
-by the blessing of the priest; and he gave the people leave thenceforth
-to hold their pattern there, so as they behaved themselves like decent,
-God-fearing Christians for the future. But the water was not allowed to
-be carried away any more to their houses for household purposes; the
-desecration of the holy water of a sacred well being strictly forbidden
-as dangerous and unlucky.
-
-
-ST. AUGUSTINE’S WELL.
-
-
-At a holy well in the south, dedicated to St. Augustine, the friars
-began to build a convent. And during all the hours of work bells were
-heard ringing sweetly and voices singing; but one day a woman came and
-washed her feet in the water of the well, and thereupon all the bells
-ceased and the singing stopped, and the work could not go on. So the
-friars chose another site, and they drew a circle round it, within
-which no woman was to set her foot; and after this the bells began to
-ring again and the voices sang, and the work went on safely till the
-convent was completed in the name of God and St. Augustine; but no
-woman during all that time ever set foot on the holy ground.
-
-
-THE GRILLED TROUT.
-
-
-In Sligo there is a well called _Tober-na-alt_, beautifully shadowed by
-trees, the branches of which are thickly hung with all sorts of votive
-offerings from those who have been cured by the water; and miracle-men
-attended, who professed to heal diseases by charms, prayers, and
-incantations.
-
-A man who had been born blind once recited his experiences there. “Oh,
-Christians, look on me! I was blind from my birth and saw no light
-till I came to the blessed well; now I see the water and the speckled
-trout down at the bottom, with the white cross on his back. Glory be
-to God for the cure.” And when the people heard that he could really
-see the speckled trout, of course they all believed in the miracle.
-For a tradition exists that a sacred trout has lived there from time
-immemorial, placed in the well by the saint who first sanctified
-the water. Now there was an adventurous man who desired much to get
-possession of this trout, and he watched it till at last he caught it
-asleep. Then he carried it off and put it on the gridiron. The trout
-bore the grilling of one side very patiently; but when the man tried to
-turn it on the fire, the trout suddenly jumped up and made off as hard
-as it could back to the well, where it still lives, and can be seen at
-times by those who have done proper penance and paid their dues to the
-priest, with one side all streaked and marked brown by the bars of the
-gridiron, which can never be effaced.
-
-
-LEGEND OF NEAL-MOR.
-
-
-There is a great hole or well near the river Suir, always filled with
-water, whose depth no man has yet fathomed. Near it is a castle, which
-in old times belonged to a powerful chief called _Neal-mor_. One day
-while his servants were saving the hay, a violent tempest of wind and
-rain came on, which quite destroyed the crop. Then Neal-mor was filled
-with rage, and he mounted his horse and drew his sword, and rode forth
-to the field; and there he challenged the Lord God Himself to battle.
-And he swung his sword round his head and struck at the air, as if
-he would kill and slay the Great Invisible Spirit. On which suddenly
-a strange thing happened, for a great whirlwind arose and the earth
-opened, and Neal-mor, still astride on his horse and with his sword in
-his hand, was lifted high up into the air and then cast down alive into
-the great hole, called _Poul-mor_, which may be seen to this day, and
-the castle is still standing by the margin. But no trace of Neal-mor or
-his steed was ever again beheld. They perished utterly by the vengeance
-of God.
-
-But some time after his disappearance, a rude stone figure seated on
-a horse, was cast up out of the earth; and then all men knew the fate
-of the terrible chief who had braved the wrath of God, for here was
-his image and the sign of his destruction. The stone figure is still
-preserved at the castle, and tradition says that if it were removed,
-the whole castle would crumble to pieces in a single night and be cast
-into the _Poul-mor_.
-
-
-ST. JOHN’S WELL.
-
-
-At St. John’s well, County Cork, there is a large stone, believed to
-be the real true head of John the Baptist, grown hard and solid from
-time and the action of the elements. And the stone has certainly a rude
-resemblance to a human head.
-
-Suspected persons are brought to swear on it for a clearing from guilt;
-for it is held in high reverence. Compacts are also made there, which
-are held inviolate, for no one who swears with his hand on the stone,
-would ever dream of breaking the oath, and each person present as
-witness scratches a cross on the surface with a sharp piece of slate.
-
-A number of pagan remains are in the vicinity, but they are now held in
-reverence as places of Christian sanctity.
-
-Some time ago an ancient stone image was dug up from the earth, which
-antiquarians pronounced to be a pagan idol, probably the Irish Siva.
-This was at first consecrated as Saint Gobnath, but afterwards the
-priest destroyed the image with his own hands.
-
-All the paths round the well are marked deep by the lines of praying
-pilgrims who go round it on their knees. And there are piles of the
-little stones that mark the prayers of the penitents, all ready for
-the angels to count. Most of the stones are of pure quartz, white and
-glistening, and these are highly esteemed.
-
-
-THE WELL OF FIONN MA-COUL.
-
-
-The ancient churches and cells of the saints were generally placed in
-the vicinity of a well, which then became sanctified and endowed with
-miraculous healing power. Or the well may have been held sacred by the
-Druids, and the scene of their pagan rites; therefore selected by the
-saint specially as his dwelling-place, so that he might bring it under
-the fosterage and holy influence of Christianity.
-
-The grave of the great Fionn was laid by a celebrated well in the
-County Cork, and it is certain that a massive human jawbone was found
-there not long ago, far exceeding in size the bones of the present race
-of men. This jawbone was sent to London to be inspected by the learned
-philosophers, but was never returned—a great and grievous wrong to the
-renowned Irish chief, for no doubt the mighty Fionn will want it badly
-at the last day, when he is gathering up his bones to appear before the
-Lord.
-
-
-ST. SEENAN’S WELL.
-
-
-There is a place on the shore of Scattery Island, where, according to
-the most ancient tradition, a sacred well once existed, with miraculous
-curative powers. But no one could ever discover the place, for at high
-water the sea covered every point up to the edge of the land, and the
-shifting sand made all efforts to find the locality of the well vain
-and fruitless.
-
-But one day a young man who was lame in both legs from the effects of a
-fall, and much disabled in consequence, was going along the shore with
-some companions, when he suddenly sank up to his waist in the sand.
-With much difficulty, and after a long while, his comrades managed to
-haul him up, when to their amazement they found that his legs were now
-quite straight, and he stood up before them four inches taller than
-before he sank down into the sand.
-
-So at once they knew that the sacred well must have worked the cure,
-and they dug and dug and cleared away the sand, till at last they came
-on some ancient steps, and down below lay the well, clear and fresh,
-and untouched by the salt of the sea, the holy well of St. Seenan, that
-their fathers and forefathers had vainly looked for.
-
-Now there was great rejoicing in the country when the news spread; and
-all the people from far and near who had pains and ailments rushed off
-to the well and drank of the waters and poured libations of it over
-their persons, wherever the pain or the disease lay, and in a short
-time wonderful cures were effected. So next day still greater crowds
-arrived to try their good luck. But when they came to the place, not a
-vestige of the well could be found. The sand and the sea had covered
-all, and from that day to this the holy well of St. Seenan has never
-been seen by mortal eyes.
-
-
-KIL-NA-GREINA.
-
-
-_Tober Kil-na-Greina_ (the well of the fountain of the sun) was
-discovered only about eighty years ago, by a strange chance in the
-County Cork.
-
-The land was a desolate marsh, no one built on it, and nothing grew on
-it or near it. But a large grey stone lay there, with a natural hollow
-in the centre that would hold about a gallon of water, and close by
-were the remains of an old pagan fort.
-
-One day, the farmer who owned the land carried off this great grey
-stone to use as a drinking trough for his cattle. But not long after
-all the cattle grew sick, and then all the children sickened, so the
-farmer said there was ill luck in the business, and he carried back
-the stone to its old place, on which all the household recovered
-their health. Thereupon the farmer began to think there must be
-something wonderful and mysterious in the locality, so he had the marsh
-thoroughly drained, after which process they came upon an ancient stone
-circle, and in the midst was a well of beautiful fresh water. Some
-people said there was writing on the stones, and strange carvings; but
-it was generally believed to be a Druid temple and oracle, for there
-was a tradition that a woman called the _Ban-na-Naomha_ (the nymph of
-the well) had once lived there—and that she had the gift of prophecy,
-and uttered oracles to those who sought her at the shrine by the well;
-and there was a little wooden image of her, also, that used to speak to
-the people—so it was said and believed. It is certain, however, that a
-pagan temple once existed there, for which reason St. Patrick cursed
-the land and turned it into a marsh, and the well was hidden for a
-thousand years, according to St. Patrick’s word.
-
-On the discovery of the well the whole country flocked to it for cures.
-Tents were erected and a pattern was organized, which went on for some
-years with great success, and many authentic instances are recorded of
-marvellous miracles performed there.
-
-The ritual observed was very strict at the beginning, three draughts
-of water were taken by the pilgrims, the number of drinks three, the
-number of rounds on their knees were three, thus making the circuit of
-the well nine times. After each round the pilgrim laid a stone on the
-ancient altar in the Druid circle, called “the well of the sun,” and
-these stones, named in Irish “the stones of the sun,” are generally
-pure white, and about the size of a pigeon’s egg. They have a beautiful
-appearance after rain when the sun shines on them, and were doubtless
-held sacred to the sun in pagan times. The angels will reckon these
-stones at the last day, but each particular saint will take charge of
-his own votaries and see that the stones are properly counted, for each
-man will receive forgiveness according to their number.
-
-But gradually the revelry at the pattern gave occasion for so much
-scandal, that the priest denounced the well from the altar, along with
-all the wickedness it fostered and encouraged. Still the people would
-not give up the pattern, and the drinking, and dancing, and gambling,
-and fighting went on worse than ever, until one day a man was killed.
-After this a curse seemed to have fallen on the place. The well lost
-all its miraculous powers, no cures were effected; the maimed, the
-halt, and the blind prayed before it, and went the rounds, and piled
-the stones as usual, but no help came, and worst sign of all, a great
-pagan stone on which a cross had been erected, fell down of its own
-accord, and the cross lay shattered on the ground. Then all the people
-knew that the curse of blood and of St. Patrick was indeed over the
-well; so it was deserted, and the tents were struck, and no pattern was
-ever held there any more, for the virtue of healing had gone from “the
-fountain of the sun,” and never has come back to it through all the
-years.
-
-Even the _Ban-Naomha_, the nymph of the fountain, who used to manifest
-herself occasionally to the regenerate under the form of a trout,
-disappeared at the same time, and though she may be heard of at other
-sacred wells, was never again seen by the devout pilgrims who watched
-for her appearance at the _Tober-kil-na-Greina_.
-
-
-THE WELL OF WORSHIP.
-
-
-At _Tober Mire_, the well of the field of worship, County Cork, there
-are also many pagan monuments, and it is evident that the vicinity was
-one of the strongholds of the Druids in ancient times, where they had
-a temple, a burial-ground, and stones for sacrifice: a much larger
-population existed also round the temple than can now be numbered in
-the same locality.
-
-
-THE BRIDE’S WELL.
-
-
-Near the last-named well is the Bride’s Well, _Tober Breda_ (the
-holy well of St. Bridget). There is a stone oratory here of fabulous
-antiquity, with a doorway fashioned after the Egyptian model,
-sloping towards the top; also an ancient white-thorn covered with
-votive offerings, amongst which one may see many a long lock of the
-splendid dark hair of the Irish southern women, who adopt this antique
-traditional symbol of self-sacrifice to show their gratitude to the
-patron saint.
-
-St. Bridget took the name of the pagan goddess Brighita in order to
-destroy and obliterate the idolatrous rites and transfer the devotion
-of the people to the Christian ceremonies, and _Tober-Breda_ is now
-considered of the highest sanctity, being under the special patronage
-of St. Bridget.
-
-
-THE IRISH FAKIR.
-
-
-Many of the professional prayer-men, or Fakirs, resort to the
-_Tober-Breda_ during the pattern, and manage to obtain gifts and
-contributions and all sorts of excellent things in exchange for their
-prayers from the rich farmers and young girls, to whom they promise
-good luck, and perhaps also a lover who will be handsome and young.
-
-These Irish Fakirs, or sacred fraternity of beggars, lead a pleasant,
-thoroughly idle life. They carry a wallet and a staff, and being looked
-on as holy men endowed with strange spiritual gifts, they are entirely
-supported by the voluntary gifts of the people, who firmly believe in
-the mysterious efficacy of their prayers and blessings and prognostics
-of luck.
-
-One of these Fakirs towards the end of his life was glad to find
-shelter in the poor-house. He was then eighty years of age, but a tall,
-erect old man, with flowing white beard and hair, keen eyes, and of the
-most venerable aspect.
-
-A gentleman who saw him there, being much struck with his dignified and
-remarkable appearance, induced him to tell the story of his life, which
-was marked by several strange and curious incidents.
-
-He said he was a farmer’s son, but from his earliest youth hated work,
-and only liked to spend the long summer day lying on the grass gazing
-up into the clouds dreaming and thinking where they were all sailing
-to, and longing to float away with them to other lands.
-
-Meanwhile his father raged and swore and beat him, often cruelly,
-because he would not work. But all the same, he could not bring himself
-to be digging from morning to night, and herding cattle, and keeping
-company only with labourers.
-
-So when he was about twenty he formed a plan to run away; for, he
-thought, if the stupid old Fakirs who are lame and blind and deaf find
-people ready to support them, all for nothing, might not he have a
-better chance for getting board and lodging without work, since he had
-youth and health and could tell them stories to no end of the great old
-ancient times.
-
-So one night he quitted his father’s house secretly, and went forth on
-his travels into the wide world, only to meet bitter disappointment and
-rude repulse, for the farmers would have nothing to say to him, nor the
-farmers’ wives. Every one eyed him with suspicion. “Why,” they said,
-“should a great stalwart young fellow over six feet high go about the
-country begging? He was a tramp and meant no good.” And they chased him
-away from their grounds.
-
-Then he thought he would disguise himself as a regular Fakir; so he
-got a long cloak, and took a wallet and a staff, and hid his raven
-black hair under a close skull cap, and tried to look as old as he
-could.
-
-But the regular Fakirs soon found him out, and their spite and rage was
-great, for all of them were either lame of a leg or blind of an eye,
-and they said; “Why should this great broad-shouldered young fellow
-with the black eyes come and take away our chances of living, when
-he ought to be able to work and earn enough to keep himself without
-robbing us of our just rights?” And they grumbled and snarled at him
-like so many dogs, and set people to spy on him and watch him.
-
-Still he was determined to try his luck on every side: so he went to
-all the stations round about and prayed louder and faster than any
-pilgrim or Fakir amongst the whole lot.
-
-But wherever he went he saw a horrible old hag for ever following him.
-Her head was wrapped up in an old red shawl, and nothing was seen
-of her face except two eyes, that glared on him like coals of fire
-whichever way he turned. And now, in truth, his life became miserable
-to him because of this loathsome hag. So he went from station to
-station to escape her; but still she followed him, and the sound of
-her stick on the ground was ever after him like the hammering of a
-nail into his coffin, for he felt sure he would die of the torment and
-horror.
-
-At last he thought he would try _Tobar-Breda_ for his next station, as
-it was several miles off and she might not be able to follow him so
-far. So he went, and not a sign of her was to be seen upon the road.
-This rejoiced his heart, and he kneeled down at the well and was saying
-his prayers louder and faster than ever when he looked up, and there,
-kneeling right opposite to him at the other side of the road, was the
-detestable old witch. But she took no notice of him, only went on
-saying her prayers and telling her beads as if no one were by.
-
-Presently, however, she stooped down to wash her face in the well,
-and, as she threw up the water with her hands, she let the red shawl
-slip down over her shoulders, and then the young man beheld to his
-astonishment a beautiful young girl before him with a complexion like
-the lily and the rose, and soft brown hair falling in showers of curls
-over her snow-white neck.
-
-He had only a glimpse for a moment while she cast the water in her
-face, and then she drew the red shawl again over her head and shoulders
-and was the old hag once more that had filled him with horror. But that
-one glimpse was enough to make his heart faint with love; and now for
-the first time she turned her burning eyes full on him, and kept them
-fixed until he seemed to swoon away in an ecstacy of happiness, and
-knew nothing more till he found her seated beside him, holding his hand
-in hers, and still looking intently on his face with her glittering
-eyes.
-
-“Come away,” she whispered; “follow me. We must leave this crowd of
-pilgrims. I have much to say to you.”
-
-So he rose up, and they went away together to a secluded spot, far from
-the noise and tumult of the station. Then she threw off the shawl, and
-took the bandage from her face, and said, “Look on me. Can you love
-me? I have followed you day by day for love of you. Can you love me in
-return, and join your fate to mine? I have money enough for both, and
-I’ll teach you the mysteries by which we can gain more.”
-
-And from that day forth they two travelled together all over the
-country; and they practised many strange mysteries and charms, for
-Elaine, his wife, was learned in all the secrets of herb lore. And the
-people paid them well for their help and knowledge, so that they never
-wanted anything, and lived like princes, though never an evil act was
-done by their hands, nor did a word of strife ever pass between them.
-
-Thus they lived happily for many years, till an evil day came when
-Elaine was struck by sickness, and she died.
-
-Then the soul of the man seemed to die with her, and all his knowledge
-left him, and sad and weary, and tired of all things, he finally came
-to end his days in the poor-house, old, poor, and broken-hearted. Yet
-still he had the bearing of one born for a higher destiny, and the
-noble dignity as of a discrowned king.
-
-Such was the strange story told to the gentleman by the aged Fakir in
-the poor-house, a short time before his death.
-
-
-SACRED TREES.
-
-
-The large old hawthorns, growing singly in a field or by an ancient
-well, are considered very sacred; and no one would venture to cut them
-down, for the fairies dance under the branches at night, and would
-resent being interfered with.
-
-There is a Holy Stone in an island of the Shannon, called St. Patrick’s
-Stone. It is shadowed by an aged hawthorn, the perfume of which can be
-scented far off on the mainland in the flowering season. At the top
-of this stone is a large hollow, always filled with water by the rain
-or the dew, which is kept from evaporation by the heavy shadows of
-the branching hawthorn. It is believed that the water of this hollow
-has great healing power, and sometimes when a patient is brought from
-a distance, a rude stone shed is built under the tree, and there he
-is laid till the cure is completed by the water of the Holy Stone. On
-leaving he ties a votive offering to the tree, which is always covered
-with these memorials of gratitude.
-
-In autumn the people go to bewail the dead at St. Patrick’s Stone; and
-the mournful Irish chant may be often heard rising up in the still
-evening air with weird and solemn effect.
-
-
-TOBER-NA-DARA.
-
-
-_Tober-na-Dara_ (the well of tears) was so called because it overflowed
-one time for a mile round, from the tears of the Irish wives and
-mothers who came there to weep for their fallen kindred, who had been
-slain in a battle, fighting against Cromwell’s troopers of the English
-army.
-
-
-LOUGH NEAGH.
-
-
-Wonderful tales are related about the formation of Lough Neagh; and the
-whole country round abounds with traditions. One of them affirms that
-the great Fionn Ma-Coul being in a rage one day, took up a handful of
-earth and flung it into the sea; and the handful was of such a size
-that where it fell it formed the Isle of Man, and the hollow caused by
-its removal became the basin of the present Lough Neagh.
-
-Another legend is that a holy well once existed in the locality,
-blessed and sanctified by a saint with wonderful miraculous powers of
-healing; provided that every patient on leaving, after cure, carefully
-closed the wicket-gate that shut in the well. But once, however, a
-woman having forgotten this information, left the gate open, when
-instantly the indignant waters sprang from their bed and pursued the
-offender, who fled in terror before the advancing waves, until at last
-she sank down exhausted, when the waters closed over her, and she was
-no more seen. But along the track of her flight the waters remained,
-and formed the great lake now existing, which is exactly the length the
-woman traversed in her flight from the angry spirit of the lake.
-
-Mysterious influences still haunt the locality all round Lough Neagh;
-for it is the most ancient dwelling-place of the fairies, and when they
-pass at night, from one island to another, soft music is heard floating
-by, and then the boatmen know that the fairies are out for a pleasure
-trip; and one man even averred that he saw them going by in the track
-of the moonbeam, a crowd of little men all dressed in green with red
-caps, and the ladies in silver gossamer. And he liked these pretty
-creatures, and always left a little _poteen_ for them in the bottle
-when he was on the island. In return for which attention they gave him
-the best of good luck in fishing and in everything else; for never a
-gauger came next or nigh his place while the fairies protected him, and
-many a time they led the gauger into a bog, and otherwise discomfited
-him, when he and his men were after a still.
-
-So the fisherman loved his little friends, and they took great care of
-him; for even in the troublous times of ’98, when the wreckers were all
-over the country, they did him no harm; though indeed the same wreckers
-knew where to find a good glass of something when they came his way,
-and he always gave it to them with a heart and a half; for didn’t they
-tell him they were going to free Ireland from the Sassenach tyranny.
-
-Down deep, under the waters of Lough Neagh, can still be seen, by
-those who have the gift of fairy vision, the columns and walls of the
-beautiful palaces once inhabited by the fairy race when they were the
-gods of the earth; and this tradition of a buried town beneath the
-waves has been prevalent for centuries amongst the people.
-
-Giraldus Cambrensis states, that in his time the tops of towers, “built
-after the fashion of the country,” were distinctly visible in calm,
-clear weather, under the surface of the lake; and still the fairies
-haunt the ruins of their former splendour, and hold festivals beneath
-the waters when the full moon is shining; for the boatmen, coming home
-late at night, have often heard sweet music rising up from beneath the
-waves and the sound of laughter, and seen glimmering lights far down
-under the water, where the ancient fairy palaces are supposed to be.
-
-
-THE DOCTOR AND THE FAIRY PRINCESS.
-
-
-Late one night, so the story goes, a great doctor, who lived near
-Lough Neagh, was awoke by the sound of a carriage driving up to his
-door, followed by a loud ring. Hastily throwing on his clothes, the
-doctor ran down, when he saw a little sprite of a page standing at the
-carriage door, and a grand gentleman inside.
-
-“Oh, doctor, make haste and come with me,” exclaimed the gentleman.
-“Lose no time, for a great lady has been taken ill, and she will have
-no one to attend her but you. So come along with me at once in the
-carriage.”
-
-On this the doctor ran up again to finish his dressing, and to put up
-all that might be wanted, and was down again in a moment.
-
-“Now quick,” said the gentleman, “you are an excellent good fellow. Sit
-down here beside me, and do not be alarmed at anything you may see.”
-
-So on they drove like mad—and when they came to the ferry, the doctor
-thought they would wake up the ferryman and take the boat; but no, in
-they plunged, carriage and horses, and all, and were at the other side
-in no time without a drop of water touching them.
-
-Now the doctor began to suspect the company he was in; but he held his
-peace, and they went on up Shane’s Hill, till they stopped at a long,
-low, black house, which they entered, and passed along a narrow dark
-passage, groping their way, till, all at once, a bright light lit up
-the walls, and some attendants having opened a door, the doctor found
-himself in a gorgeous chamber all hung with silk and gold; and on a
-silken couch lay a beautiful lady, who exclaimed with the most friendly
-greeting—
-
-“Oh, doctor, I am so glad to see you. How good of you to come.”
-
-“Many thanks, my lady,” said the doctor, “I am at your ladyship’s
-service.”
-
-And he stayed with her till a male child was born; but when he looked
-round there was no nurse, so he wrapped it in swaddling clothes and
-laid it by the mother.
-
-“Now,” said the lady, “mind what I tell you. They will try to put a
-spell on you to keep you here; but take my advice, eat no food and
-drink no wine, and you will be safe; and mind, also, that you express
-no surprise at anything you see; and take no more than five golden
-guineas, though you may be offered fifty or a hundred, as your fee.”
-
-“Thank you, madam,” said the doctor, “I shall obey you in all things.”
-
-With this the gentleman came into the room, grand and noble as a
-prince, and then he took up the child, looked at it and laid it again
-on the bed.
-
-Now there was a large fire in the room, and the gentleman took the fire
-shovel and drew all the burning coal to the front, leaving a great
-space at the back of the grate; then he took up the child again and
-laid it in the hollow at the back of the fire and drew all the coal
-over it till it was covered; but, mindful of the lady’s advice, the
-doctor said never a word. Then the room suddenly changed to another
-still more beautiful, where a grand feast was laid out, of all sorts of
-meats and fair fruits and bright red wine in cups of sparkling crystal.
-
-“Now, doctor,” said the gentleman, “sit down with us and take what best
-pleases you.”
-
-“Sir,” said the doctor, “I have made a vow neither to eat nor drink
-till I reach my home again. So please let me return without further
-delay.”
-
-“Certainly,” said the gentleman, “but first let me pay you for your
-trouble,” and he laid down a bag of gold on the table and poured out a
-quantity of bright pieces.
-
-“I shall only take what is my right and no more,” said the doctor, and
-he drew over five golden guineas, and placed them in his purse. “And
-now, may I have the carriage to convey me back, for it is growing late?”
-
-On this the gentleman laughed. “You have been learning secrets from my
-lady,” he said. “However, you have behaved right well, and you shall be
-brought back safely.”
-
-So the carriage came, and the doctor took his cane, and was carried
-back as the first time through the water—horses, carriage, and all—and
-so on till he reached his home all right just before daybreak. But
-when he opened his purse to take out the golden guineas, there he saw
-a splendid diamond ring along with them in the purse worth a king’s
-ransom, and when he examined it he found the two letters of his own
-name carved inside. So he knew it was meant for him, a present from the
-fairy prince himself.
-
-All this happened a hundred years ago, but the ring still remains
-in the doctor’s family, handed down from father to son, and it is
-remarked, that whoever wears it as the owner for the time has good luck
-and honour and wealth all the days of his life.
-
-“And by the light that shines, this story is true,” added the narrator
-of the tale, using the strong form of asseveration by which the
-Irish-speaking peasants emphasize the truth of their words.
-
-
-A HOLY WELL.
-
-
-On the north side of Lough Neagh there is still a holy well of great
-power and sanctity. Three ancient white-thorn trees overshadow it, and
-about a mile distant is the fragmentary ruin of a wooden cross, erected
-in the olden time to mark the limit of the sacred ground.
-
-It was the custom up to a recent date for the pilgrims to go round this
-well thirteen times barefoot on the 27th of June, drink of the water,
-wash in it, and then, holding themselves freed from all past sin,
-return to the old worldly life, and begin again after the usual fashion
-the old routine of business or pleasure, or reckless folly, conscious
-that they could come once more the following year and clear off all the
-accumulated stains of an ill life by a lavation in the holy well.
-
-A number of yellow crystals are found near, which the people say grow
-in the rocks in one night upon Midsummer Eve. And these crystals have
-power to avert all evil and bring luck and blessing to a house and
-family, and certain words are said while gathering them, known only to
-the adepts. The crystals are, however, very plentiful, and are found
-scattered for a space of two miles round the well, and in the crannies
-of the rocks. When burned in a crucible they become pure lime in one
-hour, and the powder ferments with spirits of vitriol; yet the waters
-of the well when analyzed present no appearance of lime.
-
-At one time an effort was made to change the name of Lough Neagh to
-Lough Chichester, in honour of the Lord Deputy, Sir Arthur Chichester,
-but the Irish would not accept the new baptism, and the old name still
-remains unchanged.
-
-
-A SACRED ISLAND.
-
-
-At Toome Island there is the ruin of an ancient church, where the dead
-walk on November Eve. It is a solemn and sacred place, and nothing is
-allowed to be taken from it; neither stone nor branch of the shadowing
-trees, for fear of angering the spirits. One day three men who were on
-the island cut down some branches of an elder-tree that grew there to
-repair a private still, and carried them off in their boat; but when
-just close to the shore a violent gust of wind upset the boat, and the
-men were drowned. The wood, however, floated back to the island, and a
-cross was made of it which was erected on the beach, to commemorate the
-fate of the doomed men.
-
-It is recorded, also, that a certain stone having been taken away by
-some masons from the ancient ruin, to build into the wall of the parish
-church, which they were erecting in the place, the water in the town
-well suddenly began to diminish, and at last dried up, to the great
-consternation and terror of the inhabitants, who were at their wits’
-end to know the cause; when luckily an old woman of the place dreamed a
-dream about the abduction of the stone, which gave the solution of the
-mystery.
-
-At once the people took the matter into their own hands, and they went
-in a body and cast down the wall till they came on the stone, which was
-then placed in a boat, and carried back with solemn ceremonial to the
-island, where it was replaced in its original site, and, immediately
-after, the water flowed back again into the well, and the supply became
-even more copious than ever.
-
-
-THE LAKE OF REVENGE.
-
-
-Near the great mountain of Croagh-Patrick there is a lake called
-_Clonvencagh_, or the Lake of Revenge, to which evil-disposed persons
-used to resort in order to imprecate maledictions on their enemies. It
-was the custom also to erect monuments round the well by placing on
-end a long flagstone, and heaping round it a pyramid of sand in order
-to keep it fixed firmly in its place. Over these pillar-stones certain
-mystic rites were then performed by the pilgrims, and prayers were said
-which took the form of the most terrible imprecations. It was therefore
-with awe and terror that one man said of another, “He has been cursed
-by the stone.”
-
-
-SCENES AT A HOLY WELL.
-
-
-Scenes of holy faith, of tender love, and human pity are, however,
-happily more frequent amongst the devotees at the holy wells of Ireland
-than the fierce mutterings of malediction. At these sacred places may
-be seen the mother praying for her child, the girl for her lover, the
-wife for her husband; going the rounds on their bare knees, with the
-crucifix in their clasped hands and their eyes raised to heaven in
-silent prayer, with a divine faith that this prayer will be answered;
-and who can say but that the fervour of the supplication has often
-brought down the blessing of healing for the sick, or comfort for the
-sorrowing? The picturesque grouping round the holy well, the background
-of purple mountains, the antique stone cross at which the pilgrims
-kneel, the costumes and often the beautiful faces of the praying women,
-with their long dark hair and purple Irish eyes, form a scene of
-wonderful poetic and dramatic interest, which has been immortalized by
-Sir Frederick Burton in his great national picture, _The Blind Girl at
-the Holy Well_—a work that at once made the young painter famous, and
-laid the foundation of the subsequent career of this distinguished and
-perfect artist.
-
-
-LOUGH FOYLE.
-
-
-Lough Foyle means the borrowed lake, for in old times there were
-two weird sisters dwelling beyond the Shannon, who were skilled in
-necromancy. And the elder sister said to the younger—
-
-“Give me the loan of your silver lake, for I have none; and I promise
-to restore it to you next Monday.”
-
-So the younger, being good-natured, rolled up the lake in a sheet and
-despatched it over hills and dales to her sister. But when the time
-came for return, the elder sister, being deceitful and cunning, made
-answer to the messenger sent for it—
-
-“Truly, I said Monday, but I meant the Day of Judgment. So I shall keep
-the lake till then.”
-
-And the lake therefore remains in her country to this day, while the
-great hollow whence it was taken can still be seen in Connaught, bare
-and barren, waiting for the waters that never will return.
-
-
-THE HEN’S CASTLE.
-
-
-At the head of Lough Corrib, deep in the water about a gunshot from
-the land, stands the ancient castle of _Caisleen-na-Cearca_, said to
-have been built in one night by a cock and a hen, but in reality it was
-founded by the ill-fated Roderick O’Connor, the last king of Ireland.
-Strange lights are sometimes seen flitting through it, and on some
-particular midnight a crowd of boats gather round it, filled with men
-dressed in green with red sashes. And they row about till the cock
-crows, when they suddenly vanish and the cries of children are heard
-in the air. Then the people know that there has been a death somewhere
-in the region, and that the Sidhe have been stealing the young mortal
-children, and leaving some ill-favoured brat in the cradle in place of
-the true child.
-
-The old castle has many historic memories; the celebrated _Graina
-Uaile_, the great chieftainess of the West, made it her abode for
-some time, and carried thither the young heir of Howth, whom she had
-abducted from Howth Castle, when on one of her piratical expeditions.
-Afterwards, during the Wars of Elizabeth, a distinguished lady of
-the sept of the O’Flaherties, Bevinda O’Flahertie, shut herself up
-there with her only daughter and heiress, and a following of twenty
-resolute men. But further to ensure her safety, she wrote to the Queen,
-requesting permission to arm the guard; Queen Elizabeth in return
-sent an autograph letter granting the request, but addressed to “her
-good friend, Captain Bevan O’Flahertie,” evidently thinking that the
-custodian of such a castle must certainly be a man.
-
-In the solemn solitude of this picturesque and stately
-_Caisleen-na-Cearca_, the great lake fortress of Lough Corrib, with its
-rampart of purple mountains and its water pathway fifty miles long, the
-young heiress grew up tall and beautiful, the pride of the west. And in
-due time she married Blake of Menlo Castle. And from this historic pair
-is descended the present baronet and owner of the property, Sir John
-Blake of Menlo.
-
-Cromwell ruthlessly dismantled the castle, and it has remained a ruin
-ever since; but the massive walls, and the beautiful twelfth century
-ornamentation of doors and windows still attest the ancient grandeur
-of the edifice, before “the curse of Cromwell” fell upon it, and upon
-the country and on the people of Ireland.
-
-
-SLIABH-MISH, COUNTY KERRY.
-
-
-Every one knows that Sliabh-Mish, County Kerry, is haunted. The figure
-of a man, accompanied by a huge black dog, is frequently seen standing
-on a high crag, but as the traveller approaches, the forms disappear,
-although they rise up again before him on another crag, and so continue
-appearing and disappearing as he journeys on. Many travellers have
-seen them, but no one has ever yet been able to meet the man and the
-dog face to face on the mountain side, for they seem to melt away in
-the mist, and are seen no more on reaching the spot. It happened, once
-upon a time, that a man journeying alone over the mountain path, took
-out his snuff-box to solace himself with a pinch, and was putting it up
-again in his waistcoat pocket, when he heard a voice near him saying,
-“Not yet! not yet! I am near you, wait.”
-
-He looked-round, but not a soul was to be seen. However, he thought
-it right to be friendly, so he shook some snuff from the box in the
-palm of his hand and held it out in the air. But his hair stood on
-end, and he trembled with fright, when he felt invisible fingers on
-his hand picking up the snuff, and when he drew it back the snuff had
-disappeared.
-
-“God and the saints between us and harm!” exclaimed the poor man, ready
-to drop down from terror.
-
-“Amen,” responded the clear voice of some invisible speaker close
-beside him.
-
-Then the man quickly made the sign of the cross over the hand touched
-by the spirit, and so went on his way unharmed.
-
-
-THE SKELLIGS OF KERRY.
-
-
-The Skellig Rocks are situated about eleven miles from the mainland,
-and are considered of great sanctity. In the Middle Ages, during the
-penitential weeks of Lent, the monks used to leave the adjacent convent
-and retire to the Skelligs Rocks for silence, prayer, and abstinence.
-Several ancient stone-roofed cells are still in existence at the top of
-the rock, showing where they dwelt. These cells are of the most ancient
-cyclopean order of building known in Ireland, and are far older than
-the church near them, which does not date earlier than the seventh
-century.
-
-Certainly no place more awful in its loneliness and desolation could be
-imagined than the summit of the bleak rock, reached only by a narrow
-way, almost inaccessible, even to those accustomed to climb precipitous
-paths, but which makes the ordinary traveller giddy with fear and dread.
-
-As marriages were not allowed in Lent, it became a custom for the
-young people of both sexes to make a pilgrimage to the Skellig Rocks
-during the last Lenten week. A procession was formed of the young
-girls and bachelors, and tar-barrels were lighted to guide them on the
-dangerous paths. The idea was to spend the week in prayer, penance,
-and lamentation; the girls praying for good husbands, the bachelors
-repenting of their sins. But the proceedings gradually degenerated into
-such a mad carnival of dancing, drinking, and fun, that the priests
-denounced the pilgrimage, and forbade the annual migration to the
-Skelligs. Still the practice was continued until the police had orders
-to clear the rocks. Thus ended the ancient custom of “going to the
-Skelligs:” for the mayor having pronounced judgment over the usage as
-“subversive of all morality and decorum,” it was entirely discontinued;
-and the wild fun and frolic of the Skelligs is now but a tradition
-preserved in the memory of the oldest inhabitant.
-
-
-
-
- POPULAR NOTIONS CONCERNING THE SIDHE RACE.
-
-
-From the earliest ages the world has believed in the existence of a
-race midway between the angel and man, gifted with power to exercise a
-strange mysterious influence over human destiny. The Persians called
-this mystic race Peris; the Egyptians and the Greeks named them demons,
-not as evil, but as mysterious allies of man, invisible though ever
-present; capable of kind acts but implacable if offended.
-
-The Irish called them the Sidhe, or spirit-race, or the _Feadh-Ree_,
-a modification of the word Peri. Their country is the _Tir-na-oge_,
-the land of perpetual youth, where they live a life of joy and beauty,
-never knowing disease or death, which is not to come on them till the
-judgment day, when they are fated to pass into annihilation, to perish
-utterly and be seen no more. They can assume any form and they make
-horses out of bits of straw, on which they ride over the country, and
-to Scotland and back. They have no religion, but a great dread of the
-_Scapular_ (Latin words from the Gospels written by a priest and hung
-round the neck). Their power is great over unbaptized children, and
-such generally grow up evil and have the evil eye, and bring ill luck,
-unless the name of God is instantly invoked when they look at any one
-fixedly and in silence.
-
-All over Ireland the fairies have the reputation of being very
-beautiful, with long yellow hair sweeping the ground, and lithe light
-forms. They love milk and honey, and sip the nectar from the cups of
-the flowers, which is their fairy wine.
-
-Underneath the lakes, and deep down in the heart of the hills, they
-have their fairy palaces of pearl and gold, where they live in
-splendour and luxury, with music and song and dancing and laughter and
-all joyous things as befits the gods of the earth. If our eyes were
-touched by a fairy salve we could see them dancing on the hill in the
-moonlight. They are served on vessels of gold, and each fairy chief, to
-mark his rank, wears a circlet of gold round his head.
-
-The Sidhe race were once angels in heaven, but were cast out as a
-punishment for their pride. Some fell to earth, others were cast into
-the sea, while many were seized by demons and carried down to hell,
-whence they issue as evil spirits, to tempt men to destruction under
-various disguises; chiefly, however, as beautiful young maidens,
-endowed with the power of song and gifted with the most enchanting
-wiles. Under the influence of these beautiful sirens a man will commit
-any and every crime. Then when his soul is utterly black they carry him
-down to hell, where he remains for ever tortured by the demons to whom
-he sold himself.
-
-The fairies are very numerous, more numerous than the human race. In
-their palaces underneath the hills and in the lakes and the sea they
-hide away much treasure. All the treasure of wrecked ships is theirs;
-and all the gold that men have hidden and buried in the earth when
-danger was on them, and then died and left no sign of the place to
-their descendants. And all the gold of the mine and the jewels of the
-rocks belong to them; and in the Sifra, or fairy-house, the walls are
-silver and the pavement is gold, and the banquet-hall is lit by the
-glitter of the diamonds that stud the rocks.
-
-If you walk nine times round a fairy rath at the full of the moon, you
-will find the entrance to the Sifra; but if you enter, beware of eating
-the fairy food or drinking the fairy wine. The Sidhe will, indeed, wile
-and draw many a young man into the fairy dance, for the fairy women
-are beautiful, so beautiful that a man’s eyes grow dazzled who looks
-on them, with their long hair floating like the ripe golden corn and
-their robes of silver gossamer; they have perfect forms, and their
-dancing is beyond all expression graceful; but if a man is tempted to
-kiss a _Sigh-oge_, or young fairy spirit, in the dance, he is lost for
-ever—the madness of love will fall on him, and he will never again be
-able to return to earth or to leave the enchanted fairy palace. He is
-dead to his kindred and race for ever more.
-
-On Fridays the fairies have special power over all things, and chiefly
-on that day they select and carry off the young mortal girls as brides
-for the fairy chiefs. But after seven years, when the girls grow old
-and ugly, they send them back to their kindred, giving them, however,
-as compensation, a knowledge of herbs and philtres and secret spells,
-by which they can kill or cure, and have power over men both for good
-and evil.
-
-It is in this way the wise women and fairy doctors have acquired their
-knowledge of the mysteries and the magic of herbs. But the fairies
-do not always keep the mortal women in a seven years’ bondage. They
-sometimes only take away young girls for a dance in the moonlight, and
-then leave them back in their own home lulled in a sweet sleep. But the
-vision of the night was so beautiful that the young girls long to dream
-again and be made happy with the soft enchantments of the music and
-dance.
-
-The fairies are passionately fond of music; it is therefore dangerous
-for a young girl to sing when she is all alone by the lake, for the
-spirits will draw her down to them to sing to them in the fairy palace
-under the waves, and her people will see her no more. Yet sometimes
-when the moonlight is on the water, and the waves break against the
-crystal columns of the fairy palace far down in the depths, they can
-hear her voice, and they know that she is singing to the fairies in the
-spirit land beneath the waters of the lake.
-
-There was a girl in one of the villages that could see things no one
-else saw, and hear music no one else heard, for the fairies loved her
-and used to carry her away by night in a dream to dance with the fairy
-chiefs and princes. But, above all, she was loved by Finvarra the king,
-and used to dance with him all night till sunrise though her form
-seemed to be lying asleep on the bed.
-
-One day she told some of her young companions that she was going that
-night to a great fairy dance on the rath, and if they chose she would
-bring them and put a salve on their eyes so that they would see wonders.
-
-The young girls went with her, and on coming to the rath she said—
-
-“Now put your foot on my foot and look over my left shoulder, and you
-will see the king and queen and all the beautiful lords and ladies
-with gold bands round their heads dancing on the grass. But take care
-when you see them to make no sign of the cross, nor speak the name of
-God, or they will vanish away, and perhaps even your life would be in
-danger.”
-
-On hearing this the girls ran away in fear and terror without ever
-using the spell or seeing the fairies. But the other remained, and told
-her friends next day that she had danced all night to the fairy music,
-and had heard the sweetest singing, so that she longed to go back and
-live for ever with the spirits on the hill.
-
-And her wish was granted, for she died soon after, and on the night of
-her death soft music was heard floating round the house, though no one
-was visible. And it was said also that beautiful flowers grew on her
-grave, though no hand planted them there, and shadowy forms used to
-gather in the moonlight and sing a low chant over the place where she
-was laid.
-
-The fairies can assume all forms when they have special ends in view,
-such as to carry off a handsome girl to Fairyland. For this purpose
-they sometimes appear at the village festivities as tall, dark,
-noble-looking gentlemen, and they wile away the young girls as partners
-in the dance by their grand air and the grace of their dancing. And
-ever after the young girl who has danced with them moves and dances
-with a special fairy grace, though sometimes she pines away and seems
-to die, but every one knows that her soul has been carried off to the
-_Tir-na-oge_, where she will be made the bride of the fairy king and
-live in luxury and splendour evermore.
-
-Yet, though the fairies are fond of pleasure, they are temperate in
-their mode of living, and are besides honest in their dealings and
-faithful to their promises. If they borrow wine from the gentry they
-always repay it in blessings, and never indulge much in eating or
-drinking. But they have no objection to offer to mortals the subtle red
-wine at the fairy banquets, which lulls the soul to sleep and makes
-the reason powerless. The young men that they beguile into their fairy
-palaces become their bond-slaves, and are set to hard tasks. One man
-said he had marched with Finvarra’s men all the way from Mayo to Cork,
-but there they had to leave him as they were going to Spain and could
-not take him across the sea on their white horses.
-
-They also much desire the aid of a powerful mortal hand to assist them
-in their fairy wars, for they have often disputes and battles amongst
-themselves for the possession of some coveted rath or dancing ground.
-
-Once a fairy prince came to a great chieftain of Connaught, one of the
-Kirwans, and begged for aid against a hostile fairy tribe that had
-invaded his territories. The required aid being given, the fairies and
-their mortal auxiliaries plunged into the lake and fought the enemy
-and conquered; after which the Connaught men returned to shore laden
-with rich presents of silver and gold and crystal wine-cups as the
-expression of gratitude from the fairy prince.
-
-It is said that Kirwan of Castle Hackett, the great Connaught chief,
-also received a beautiful fairy bride on that occasion, and it is
-certain that all the female descendants of the family are noted for
-their beauty, their grace in dancing, and their sweet voices in
-speaking. Lady Cloncurry, mother of the present Lord Cloncurry, was of
-this race, and in her youth was the acknowledged leading beauty of the
-Irish Court and celebrated for the rare fascination of her manner and
-voice.
-
-
-THE HURLING MATCH.
-
-
-The fairies, with their true artistic love of all the gentle graces of
-life, greatly dislike coarse and violent gestures, and all athletic
-sports, such as hurling and wrestling; and they often try to put an end
-to them by some evil turn.
-
-One day a great cloud of dust came along the road during a hurling
-match and stopped the game. On this the people grew alarmed, for they
-said the fairies are out hunting and will do us harm by blinding us;
-and thousands of the Sidhe swept by, raising a terrific dust, though no
-mortal eye could see them.
-
-Then one man, a good player and musician, ran for his fiddle and began
-to play some vigorous dance tunes, “for now,” said he, “the fairies
-will begin to dance and forget us, and they will be off in no time to
-hold a revel on the rath to the music of their own fairy pipes.”
-
-And so it was, for at once the whirlwind of dust swept on to the hill
-of the fairy rath, and the hurling ground was left clear for the game
-to go on again in safety.
-
-It must be acknowledged that the fairies are a little selfish, or they
-would not have interfered with the great national sport of hurling,
-which is the favourite amusement of the country, and used to be held as
-a high festival, and arranged with all the ceremonial of a tournament;
-at least before the bad times destroyed all the fun and frolic of the
-peasant life.
-
-The prettiest girl of the village was chosen as the hurling girl—the
-_Colleen-a-bhailia_. Dressed in white, and accompanied by her maidens,
-she proceeded to the hurling ground, the piper and fiddlers going
-before her playing gay dance tunes.
-
-There she was met by the procession of the young men surrounding the
-chief hurler—always a stalwart youth of over six feet. And the youth
-and the maiden joined hands and began the dance—all the people cheering.
-
-This was called the opening of the hurling. And for the next match
-another pair would be selected, each village girl anxiously hoping to
-be the _Colleen-a-bhailia_ chosen to lead the ceremonial dance for
-the second or following games. Naturally the hurling tournament ended
-with a festive supper, much love-making, and many subsequent marriages
-between the pretty colleens and stalwart young hurlers, despite all
-the envy and jealousy of the fairies, who maliciously tried to mar the
-pleasures of the festival.
-
-
-THE RIDE WITH THE FAIRIES.
-
-
-The fairies take great delight in horsemanship, and are splendid
-riders. Many fine young men are enticed to ride with them, when they
-dash along with the fairies like the wind, Finvarra himself leading,
-on his great black horse with the red nostrils, that look like flames
-of fire. And ever after the young men are the most fearless riders in
-the country, so the people know at once that they have hunted with the
-fairies. And after the hunt some favourite of the party is taken to a
-magnificent supper in the fairy palace, and when he has drunk of the
-bright red wine they lull him to sleep with soft music. But never again
-can he find the fairy palace, and he looks in vain for the handsome
-horseman on his fine black steed, with all the gay young huntsmen in
-their green velvet dresses, who rushed over the field with him, like
-a flash of the storm wind. They have passed away for ever from his
-vision, like a dream of the night.
-
-Once on a time a gentleman, also one of the Kirwans of Galway, was
-riding by the fairy hill—where all the fairies of the West hold their
-councils and meetings, under the rule of Finvarra the king—when a
-strange horseman, mounted on a fiery black steed, suddenly appeared.
-But as the stranger bid him the time of day with distinguished grace,
-Mr. Kirwan returned his greeting courteously, and they rode on together
-side by side, discoursing pleasantly—for the stranger seemed to know
-every one and everything, though Mr. Kirwan could not remember ever
-having seen him before.
-
-“Now,” said the black horseman, “I know that you are to be at the races
-to-morrow, so just let me give you a hint: if you wish to be certain
-of winning, allow me to send you my man to ride your horse. He never
-failed in a race yet, and he shall be with you early, before the start.”
-
-With that, at a turn of the road, the stranger disappeared; for he
-was no other than Finvarra himself, who had a friendly liking for the
-tribe of the Kirwans, because all the men were generous who came of the
-blood, and all the women handsome.
-
-Next morning, as Mr. Kirwan was setting out for the race, his groom
-told him that a young jockey was waiting to see him. He was the
-strangest looking little imp, Mr. Kirwan thought, he had ever set eyes
-on, but he felt compelled to give him all the rights and power that was
-necessary for the race, and the young imp was off in a moment, like a
-flash of lightning.
-
-Mr. Kirwan knew no more—he seemed like one in a dream—till the silver
-cup was handed to him as winner of the race, and congratulations poured
-down on him, and every one asked eagerly where he got the wonderful
-jockey who seemed to make the horse fly like the spirit of the wind
-itself. But the jockey by this time had disappeared. However, the
-stranger on the black horse was there, and he constrained Mr. Kirwan
-to come with him to dinner; and they rode on pleasantly, as before,
-till they reached a grand, beautiful house, with a crowd of gorgeous
-servants waiting on the steps to receive the lord and master and his
-guest.
-
-One of them led Mr. Kirwan to his room to dress for dinner, and there
-he found a costly suit of violet velvet ready, in which the valet
-arrayed him. Then he entered the dining-hall. It was all lit up
-splendidly, and there were garlands of flowers twining round crystal
-columns, and golden cups set with jewels for the wine, and golden
-dishes.
-
-The host seemed an accomplished man of the world, and did the honours
-with perfect grace. Conversation flowed freely, while soft music was
-heard at intervals from invisible players, and Mr. Kirwan could not
-resist the charm and beauty of the scene, nor the bright red wine that
-his host poured out for him into the jewelled cups.
-
-Then, when the banquet was over, a great crowd of ladies and gentlemen
-came in and danced to sweet low music, and they circled round the guest
-and tried to draw him into the dance. But when he looked at them it
-seemed to him that they were all the dead he had once known; for his
-own brother was there, that had been drowned in the lake a year before;
-and a man who had been killed by a fall when hunting; and others whose
-faces he knew well. And they were all pale as death, but their eyes
-burned like coals of fire.
-
-And as he looked and wondered, a lovely lady came over to him, wearing
-a necklace of pearls. And she clasped his wrist with her little hand,
-and tried to draw him into the circle.
-
-“Dance with me,” she whispered, “dance with me again. Look at me, for
-you once loved me.”
-
-And when he looked at her he knew that she was dead, and the clasp of
-her hand was like a ring of fire round his wrist; and he drew back in
-terror, for he saw that she was a beautiful girl he had loved in his
-youth, and to whom he had given a necklace of pearls, but who died
-before he could make her his bride.
-
-Then his heart sank with fear and dread, and he said to his host—
-
-“Take me from this place. I know the dancers; they are dead. Why have
-you brought them up from their graves?”
-
-But the host only laughed and said, “You must take more wine to keep
-up your courage.” And he poured him out a goblet of wine redder than
-rubies.
-
-And when he drank it, all the pageant and the music and the crowd faded
-away from before his eyes, and he fell into a profound sleep, and knew
-no more till he found himself at home, laid on his bed. And the servant
-told him that a strange horseman had accompanied him to the door late
-in the night, who had charged them to lay the master gently in his bed
-and by no means to awake him till noon next day, for he was weary after
-the race; and he bade them take the hunter to the stables and tend him
-carefully, for the animal was covered with foam, and all trembling.
-
-At noon Mr. Kirwan awoke, and rose up as well as ever: but of all the
-fairy revels nothing remained to him but the mark round his wrist of
-the clasp of a woman’s hand, that seemed burned into his flesh.
-
-So he knew the night’s adventure was no mere dream of the fancy, and
-the mark of the dead hand remained with him to his last hour, and the
-form of the young girl with her necklace of pearls often came before
-him in a vision of the night; but he never again visited the fairy
-palace, and never saw the dark horseman any more. As to the silver cup,
-he flung it into the lake, for he thought it had come to him by devil’s
-magic and would bring no good luck to him or to his race. So it sank
-beneath the waves, and the silver cup was seen no more.
-
-
-THE FAIRY SPY.
-
-
-Sometimes the fairies appear like old men and women, and thus gain
-admission to houses that they may watch and spy, and bewitch the
-butter, and abduct the children, and carry off the young girls for
-fairy brides.
-
-There was a man in the west who was bedridden for seven years, and
-could do no work and had to be lifted by others when he moved. Yet the
-amount of food he consumed was enormous, and as every one pitied him,
-people were constantly bringing him all sorts of good things; and he
-ate up everything but grew no stronger.
-
-Now on Sundays when the family went to mass, they locked him up, but
-left him plenty of food, for there was no one in the house to help him.
-One Sunday, however, they left chapel earlier than usual, and as they
-were going by the shore they saw a great crowd of strangers hurling,
-and in the midst of them, hurling and running and leaping, was the sick
-man, as well and jolly as ever a man could be. They called out to him,
-on which he turned round to face them, but that instant he disappeared.
-
-So the family hastened home, unlocked the door, and went straight up to
-the room, where they found the man in bed as usual, thin and weak and
-unable to move; but he had eaten up all the food and was now crying out
-for more. On this the family grew very angry and cried, “You have been
-deceiving us. You are in league with the witch-folk; but we’ll soon see
-what you really are, for if you don’t get up out of that bed at once,
-we’ll make down a fire and lay you on it, and make you walk.”
-
-Then he cried and roared: but they seized him to drag him to the fire.
-So when he saw they were in earnest he jumped up and rushed to the
-door, and before they could touch him he had disappeared, and was seen
-no more.
-
-Now, indeed, they knew that he was in league with the devil, and they
-burned his bed and everything belonging to him, and poured holy water
-on the room. And when all was burned, nothing remained but a black
-stone with strange signs on it. And by this, no doubt, he performed
-his enchantments. And the people were afraid of it and gave it to the
-priest, who has it to this day, so there can be no doubt as to the
-truth of the story.
-
-And the priest knows the hidden meaning of the strange signs which give
-power to the stone; but will reveal the secret to no one, lest the
-people might try to work devil’s magic with it, and unlawful spells by
-the power of the stone and the power of the signs.
-
-
-THE DARK HORSEMAN.
-
-
-One day a fine, handsome young fellow, called Jemmy Nowlan, set off to
-walk to the fair at Slane, whither some cattle of his had been sent
-off for sale that same morning early. And he was dressed in his best
-clothes, spruce and neat; and not one in all the county round could
-equal Jemmy Nowlan for height, strength, or good looks. So he went
-along quite gay and merry in himself, till he came to a lonely bit
-of the road where never a soul was to be seen; but just then the sky
-became black-dark, as if thunder were in the air, and suddenly he heard
-the tramp of a horse behind him. On turning round he saw a very dark,
-elegant looking gentleman, mounted on a black horse, riding swiftly
-towards him.
-
-“Jemmy Nowlan,” said the dark horseman, “I have been looking for you
-all along the road. Get up now, quickly, behind me, and I’ll carry you
-in no time to the great fair of Slane; for, indeed, I am going there
-myself, and it would be very pleasant to have your company.”
-
-“Thank your honour kindly,” said Jemmy; “but it’s not for the likes of
-me to ride with your lordship; so I would rather walk, if it’s pleasing
-to your honour; but thanks all the same.”
-
-Truth to tell, Jemmy in his own mind had a fear of the strange
-gentleman and his black horse, and distrusted them both, for had he not
-heard the people tell strange stories of how young men had been carried
-off by the fairies, and held prisoners by their enchantments down deep
-in the heart of the hill under the earth, where never a mortal could
-see them again or know their fate; and they were only allowed to come
-up and see their kindred on the nights the dead walked, and then they
-walked with them as they rose from the graves? So again he began to
-make his excuses, and meanwhile kept looking round for some path by
-which he could escape if possible.
-
-“Come now,” said the dark horseman, “this is all nonsense, Jemmy
-Nowlan; you really must come with me.”
-
-And with that he stooped down and touched him lightly on the shoulder
-with his whip, and in an instant Jemmy found himself seated on the
-horse, and galloping away like the wind with the dark horseman; and
-they never stopped nor stayed till they came to a great castle in a
-wood, where a whole set of servants in green and gold were waiting on
-the steps to receive them. And they were the smallest people Jemmy had
-ever seen in his life; but he made no remark, for they were very civil,
-and crowded round to know what they could do for him.
-
-“Take him to a room and let him dress,” said the gentleman, who
-appeared to own the castle. And in the room Jemmy found a beautiful
-suit of velvet, and a cap and feather. And when the little servants had
-dressed him they led him to the large hall that was all lit up and hung
-with garlands of flowers; and music and dancing were going on, and many
-lovely ladies were present, but not one in the hall was handsomer than
-Jemmy Nowlan in his velvet suit and cap and feather.
-
-“Will you dance with me, Jemmy Nowlan?” said one lovely lady.
-
-“No, Jemmy: you must dance with me,” said another.
-
-And they all fought for him, so he danced with them all, one after the
-other, the whole night through, till he was dead tired and longed to
-lie down and sleep.
-
-“Take Jemmy Nowlan to his room, and put him to bed,” said the gentleman
-to a red-haired man; “but first he must tell me a story.”
-
-“I have no story, your honour,” said Jemmy, “for I am not book-learned;
-but I am very tired, let me lie down and sleep.”
-
-“Sleep, indeed,” said the gentleman; “not if I can help it. Here,
-Davy”—and he called the red-haired man—“take Jemmy Nowlan and put him
-out; he can tell no story. I will have no one here who can’t tell me a
-story. Put him out, he is not worth his supper.”
-
-So the red-haired man thrust Jemmy out at the castle gate, and he was
-just settling himself to sleep on a bench outside, when three men came
-by bearing a coffin.
-
-“Oho, Jemmy Nowlan,” they said, “you are welcome. We just wanted a
-fourth man to carry the coffin.”
-
-And they made him get under it with them, and away they marched over
-hedge and ditch, and field and bog, through briars and thorns, till
-they reached the old churchyard in the valley, and then they stopped.
-
-“Who will dig a grave?” said one.
-
-“Let us draw lots,” said another.
-
-And the lot fell on Jemmy. So they gave him a spade, and he worked and
-worked till the grave was dug broad and deep.
-
-“This is not the right place at all for a grave,” said the leader of
-the party when the grave was finished. “I’ll have no one buried in this
-spot, for the bones of my father rest here.”
-
-So they had to take up the coffin again, and carry it on over field and
-bog till they reached another churchward, where Jemmy was obliged to
-dig a second grave; and when it was finished, the leader cried out—
-
-“Who shall we place in the coffin?”
-
-And another voice answered—
-
-“We need draw no lots; lay Jemmy Nowlan in the coffin!”
-
-And the men seized hold of him and tried to cast him to the ground. But
-Jemmy was strong and powerful, and fought them all. Still they would
-not let go their hold, though he dealt them such blows as would have
-killed any other men. And at last he felt faint, for he had no weapon
-to fight with, and his strength was going.
-
-Then he saw that the leader carried a hazel switch in his hand, and he
-knew that a hazel switch brought luck; so he made a sudden spring and
-seized it, and whirled it three times round his head, and struck right
-and left at his assailants, when a strange and wondrous thing happened;
-for the three men who were ready to kill him, fell down at once to the
-ground, and remained there still as the dead. And the coffin stood
-white in the moonlight by itself, and no hand touched it, and no voice
-spoke.
-
-But Jemmy never waited to look or think, for the fear of the men was on
-him, lest they should rise up again; so he fled away, still holding the
-hazel twig in his hand, and ran on over field and bog, through briars
-and thorns, till he found himself again at the castle gate. Then all
-the grand servants came out, and the little men, and they said—
-
-“You are welcome, Jemmy Nowlan. Come in; his lordship is waiting for
-you.”
-
-And they brought him to a room where the lord was lying on a velvet
-couch, and he said—
-
-“Now, young man, tell me a story, for no one in my castle is allowed to
-eat, drink, or sleep till they have related something wonderful that
-has happened to them.”
-
-“Then, my lord,” said Jemmy, “I can tell you the most wonderful of
-stories; and very proud I am to be able to amuse your lordship.”
-
-So he told him the story of the three men and the coffin, and the lord
-was so pleased that he ordered the servants to bring the youth a fine
-supper, and the best of wine, and Jemmy ate like a prince from gold
-dishes, and drank from crystal cups of the wine, and had the best of
-everything; but after the supper he felt rather queer and dazed-like,
-and fell down on the ground asleep like one dead.
-
-After that he knew nothing till he awoke next morning, and found
-himself lying under a haystack in his own field, and all his beautiful
-clothes were gone—the velvet suit and cap and feather that he had
-looked so handsome in at the dance, when all the fine ladies fell in
-love with him. Nothing was left to him of all the night’s adventure
-save the hazel twig, which he still held firmly in his hand.
-
-And a very sad and down-hearted man was Jemmy Nowlan that day,
-especially when the herd came to tell him that none of the cattle
-were sold at the fair, for the men were waiting for the master, and
-wondering why he did not come to look after his money, while all the
-other farmers were selling their stock at the finest prices.
-
-And Jemmy Nowlan has never yet made out why the fairies played him
-such a malicious and ill turn as to prevent him selling his cattle.
-But if ever again he meets that dark stranger on the black horse, he
-is determined to try the strength of his shillelagh on his head, were
-he ever such a grand man among the fairies. For at least he might have
-left him the velvet suit; and it was a shabby thing to take it away
-just when he couldn’t help himself, and had fallen down from fair
-weakness and exhaustion after all the dancing, and the wine he drank at
-supper, when the lovely ladies poured it out for him with their little
-hands covered with jewels.
-
-It was truly a bad and shabby trick, as Jemmy said to himself that May
-morning, when he stood up from under the hay-rick; and just shows us
-never to trust the fairies, for with all their sweet words and pleasant
-ways and bright red wine, they are full of malice and envy and deceit,
-and are always ready to ruin a poor fellow and then laugh at him, just
-for fun, and for the spite and jealousy they have against the human
-race.
-
-
-SHEELA-NA-SKEAN.
-
-
-There is an old ruin of a farmhouse in the County Cork, near Fermoy,
-that has an evil reputation, and no one would build it up or inhabit it.
-
-Years and years ago a rich farmer lived there, who was reputed to have
-hoards of gold hid away in his sleeping-room. Some said he never slept
-without the sack of gold being laid under his pillow. However, one
-night he was found cruelly murdered, and all the gold in the house was
-missing except a few pieces stained with blood, that had evidently been
-dropped by the murderers in their flight.
-
-The old man at the time was living quite alone. His wife was dead, and
-his only son was away in a distant part of the country. But on news
-of the murder the son returned, and a close investigation was made.
-Suspicion finally fell on the housekeeper and a lover she used to bring
-to the house. They were arrested in consequence and brought to trial.
-The housekeeper, _Sheela-na-Skean_, or Sheela of the Knife, as she was
-called afterwards, was a dark, fierce, powerful woman, noted for her
-violent and vindictive temper. The lover was a weak, cowardly fellow,
-who at the last turned evidence to save his life. He had taken no part,
-he said, in the actual murder, though he had helped Sheela to remove
-and bury the gold. According to his story, Sheela entered the old man’s
-room at night, and taking a sharp short sword that always hung at the
-head of his bed, she stabbed him fiercely over and over till not a
-breath of life was left. Then, calling her lover, they ransacked the
-room, and found quantities of golden guineas, which they put in a bag
-and carried out to the field, where they buried it in a safe spot,
-known only to themselves; but this place neither Sheela nor the lover
-would reveal unless they received a pardon.
-
-The murder, however, was too atrocious for pardon, and Sheela was hung
-amid the howlings and execrations of the people. But she remained
-fierce and defiant to the last, still refusing obstinately to reveal
-the place where the money was buried.
-
-The lover, meanwhile, had died in prison from fright, for after
-sentence was pronounced, he fell down in a fit, from which he never
-recovered. So the secret of the gold died with them.
-
-After this the son came to live in the place; and the tradition of the
-hidden gold was still kept alive in the family, but all efforts to find
-it proved useless.
-
-Now a strange thing happened. The farmer dreamed for three nights in
-succession that if he went at midnight to an old ruined castle in the
-neighbourhood, he would hear words that might tell him the secret of
-the gold; but he must go alone. So after the third dream the farmer
-resolved to do as he was ordered, and he went forth at midnight to the
-place indicated. His two sons, grown-up young men, anxiously awaited
-his return. And about an hour after midnight the father came home
-pale as a ghost, haggard and trembling. They helped him to his bed,
-and after a little he was able to tell them his adventures. He said,
-on reaching the old ruin he leaned up straight against the wall, and
-waited for the promised words in silence. Then a breath seemed to pass
-over his face, and he heard a low voice whispering in his ear—
-
-“If you want to find the bag of gold, take out the third stone.”
-
-“But here,” said the farmer mournfully, “the voice stopped before the
-place was named where the gold lay; for at that instant a terrific
-screech was heard, and the ghost of Sheela appeared gigantic and
-terrible; her hands dripping with blood, and her eyes flaming fire;
-and she rushed to attack me, brandishing a short, sharp sword round
-her head, the very same, perhaps, with which she had committed the
-murder. At sight of this awful apparition I fled homeward, Sheela still
-pursuing me with leaps and yells till I reached the boundary of the
-castle grounds, when she sank into the earth and disappeared. But,”
-continued the farmer, “I am certain, from the voice, that the bag of
-gold lies hid under the third stone in——”
-
-He could say no more, for at that instant the door of the bedroom was
-violently flung open, as if by a strong storm wind, the candle was
-blown out, and the unfortunate man was lifted from his bed by invisible
-hands, and dashed upon the floor with a terrible crash. In the darkness
-the young men could hear the groans, but they saw no one.
-
-When the candle was relit they went over to help their father, but
-found he was already dead, with a black mark round his throat as if
-from strangulation by a powerful hand. So the secret of the gold
-remained still undiscovered.
-
-After the funeral was over, and all affairs settled, the brothers
-agreed that they would still search for the gold in the old ruins of
-the castle, undeterred by the apparition of the terrible Sheela. So
-on a certain midnight they set forth with spades and big sticks for
-defence, and proceeded to examine every third stone in the huge walls,
-to the height of a man from the ground, seeking some secret mark or
-sign by which, perhaps, the true stone might be discovered. But as they
-worked, a thin blue light suddenly appeared at some distance in the
-inner court of the castle, and by it stood the ghost of their father,
-pointing with his outstretched hand to a certain stone in the wall.
-Now, they thought, that must certainly be the spot where the gold is
-hid; and they rushed on; but before they could reach the place, the
-terrible form of Sheela appeared, more awful than words could describe,
-clothed in white, and with a circle of flame round her head. And
-she seized the ghost with her gory hands, and dragged him away with
-horrible yells and imprecations. And far off in the darkness they could
-hear the fight going on, and the yells of Sheela as she pursued the
-ghost.
-
-“Now,” said the young men, “let us work while they are fighting;”
-and they worked away at the third stone from the end, where the blue
-light had rested—a large flat stone, but easily lifted; and when they
-had rolled it away from the place, there underneath lay a huge bag
-of bright golden guineas. And as they raised it up from the earth, a
-terrific unearthly din was heard in the distance, and a shrill scream
-rang on the air. Then a rush of the wind came by them and the blue
-light vanished, but they heeded nothing, only lifted the bag from the
-clay, and carried it away with them through the darkness and storm.
-And the yells seemed to pursue them till they reached the boundary of
-the castle grounds, then all was still; and they traversed the rest of
-the way in peace, and reached home safely.
-
-From that time the ghost of _Sheela-na-Skean_ ceased to haunt the
-castle, but lamenting and cries used sometimes to be heard at night
-in and around the old farmhouse; so the brothers pulled it down and
-left it a ruin, and built a handsome residence with some of their
-treasure; for now they had plenty of gold, and they lived happily and
-prospered ever after, with all their family and possessions. And on
-the spot where the gold was found they erected a cross, in memory of
-their father, to whom they owed all their wealth, and through whom this
-prosperity had come; for by him the evil spirit of _Sheela-na-Skean_
-was conquered at last, and the gold restored to the family of the
-murdered farmer.
-
-
-CAPTAIN WEBB, THE ROBBER CHIEF.
-
-
-About a hundred years ago a most notorious robber, called Captain Webb,
-used to make the County Mayo his headquarters; and dreadful tales are
-still current amongst the people of his deeds of violence and cruelty.
-
-Many beautiful young girls he carried off by force or fraud; and when
-he grew tired of them it was his practice to strip the unhappy victims
-naked, and plunge them down a deep hole near Lough Corrib, which is
-still known throughout the county as “Captain Webb’s Hole.”
-
-One day, however, fate worked out a revenge on the audacious highwayman
-by the hands of a woman.
-
-He had committed a daring robbery on the highroad—plundered a carriage,
-shot the horses, and carried off a noble and lovely girl, who was
-returning home with her mother from an entertainment, which had been
-given by a great lord in the vicinity. Consequently, as the robber
-knew, the ladies were dressed magnificently, and wore the most costly
-jewels. After stripping the mother of all her ornaments, he left her
-half dead upon the highway; but wrapping a cloak round the young lady,
-Captain Webb flung her on the horse before him and galloped off to one
-of the many hiding-places he had through the country.
-
-For some time he gave up all his other favourites for the sake of
-the beautiful girl, and carried her about with him on all his wild
-expeditions, so great was the madness of his love for her.
-
-But at length he grew tired even of her beauty, and resolved to get
-rid of her, in the same way as he had got rid of the others, by a cruel
-and sudden death.
-
-So one day, when she was out riding beside him, as he always forced her
-to do, he brought her to the fatal hole where so many of his victims
-had perished, intending to cast her down headlong as he had done to so
-many others; but first he told her to dismount and to take off all her
-rich garments of silk and gold and her jewels, for she would need them
-no longer.
-
-“For pity, then,” she said, “do not look on me while I undress, for it
-is not seemly or right to look on a woman undressing; but turn your
-back and I shall unclasp my robe and fling it off.”
-
-So the captain turned his back as she desired him, for he could not
-refuse her last request; but still he kept close to the edge of the
-hole ready to throw her in; when suddenly she sprang upon him, and
-placing both hands on his shoulders, pushed him over the edge down into
-the fathomless gulf, from which no mortal ever rose alive, and in this
-manner the country was freed for evermore from the terrible robber
-fiend, by the courage of a brave and beautiful girl.
-
-
-THE MAYO ROBBER AND FEENISH THE MARE.
-
-
-Another desperate character that made an evil reputation in the same
-county was Captain Macnamara. Though a man of family and good means
-and of splendid appearance, he led a life of the wildest excess, and
-stopped at no crime so as he could gratify the passion or the caprice
-of the moment, or find money to spend on his pleasures, with the
-reckless, senseless, foolish extravagance of an evil, dissolute nature;
-for he had early squandered away all his own patrimony, and now only
-lived by fraud, lying, and insolent contempt of the rights and claims
-of others.
-
-Just at the time when his finances were at the lowest, he was summoned
-to attend his trial at the county assizes for some malpractices
-concerning land and stock belonging to a wealthy widow lady, who had a
-fine place in the neighbourhood, though she seldom lived there, being
-constantly abroad, in Paris or Rome, with her only son, a young lad,
-the heir of the property. It happened, however, that she returned home
-just in time for the trial, which interested her, as it concerned an
-audacious appropriation of some of her best land from which the stock
-had been drawn off and sold by Macnamara. Highly indignant at the
-insult offered to her, the wealthy widow appeared in court resolved
-on vengeance; and was received by all the officials with the utmost
-distinction and deference. The defendant was put through a most
-torturing examination, in which all his evil practices were laid bare
-with ruthless severity. But the widow heeded nothing of the record of
-wicked deeds; she only saw before her a splendid stalwart man in the
-prime of life, with a magnificent presence, flashing eyes, and raven
-hair. At once she was subjugated, as if by magic, by the handsome
-prisoner in the dock, and calling over her counsel, she gave orders
-that the suit should be stopped and no damages claimed. After this, as
-was natural, a warm intimacy sprang up between plaintiff and defendant,
-which ended in a short time by the marriage of the rich widow and
-the spendthrift captain; the widow’s only son and heir to the estate
-being brought home from school to live with them, for, as the captain
-observed, it was necessary that the boy should be early instructed in
-the management of the property.
-
-One evening, however, Macnamara set a rope across a lonely part of the
-road where he knew the lad must pass when riding home. In consequence
-the horse stumbled, and threw the rider; and at night when the servants
-and people went out with torches to look for the young heir, he was
-found lying quite dead by the roadside.
-
-The whole property now devolved to the widow, who gave up the
-management entirely to Macnamara; and he lost no time in making
-good use of the large sums of money that came under his control, by
-constantly plunging into renewed courses of dissolute extravagance.
-How the home life went on no one knew, for little was seen of the wife
-while the husband carried on his orgies; but after a year had passed
-by, the country heard with surprise of the death of the rich widow,
-as she was still called—suddenly, it was said, by a fit, a stroke.
-She was found lying dead in her bed one morning, and her husband was
-in the greatest grief—this was the orthodox narrative. But strange
-whispers at the same time went through the neighbourhood, that round
-the neck of the poor dear lady was found a black mark, and many had
-grave suspicions of foul play, though they feared to take any measures
-against the captain, so great was the terror he inspired.
-
-Meantime, he consoled himself with another wife, a young girl who had
-been a favourite of his long before his first wife’s death. And they
-led a reckless life together till all the widow’s money was gambled
-away or spent in dissolute frolics. Then he joined a wild band of
-sharpers and desperadoes who fought and cheated every one at the fairs
-and races, and were the terror of the whole country. But, especially
-they warred upon the Big Joyces of Connemara, who thereupon swore to be
-revenged.
-
-Now the captain had a famous mare called _Feenish_, who could fly like
-the wind and live for days without food. And he taught her all sorts
-of strange tricks—to stand on her hind legs, to go in at a window and
-to walk upstairs; and the way the robber chief got the secret of power
-over men and animals was in this wise.
-
-There was an old raven lived near him up in a big tree, and one day
-Macnamara stole the eggs, took them home, boiled them and then set them
-back again in the nest, to see what the old bird would do. Now he saw
-the wisdom of the raven, for she flew off at once to a neighbouring
-mountain, and having found a certain stone of magic virtue carried it
-back in her beak to the nest. With this stone she rubbed the eggs all
-over, till the life came back into them; and in due time the young
-ravens were flying about as strong and joyous as the rest.
-
-Macnamara having observed this process, watched his opportunity, and
-one day when the raven was absent, he stole the magic stone from the
-nest. His first trial of the power was to rub himself all over, as he
-had seen the raven do with the eggs; and with a very remarkable result,
-for he at once became possessed of marvellous gifts. He could foresee
-events, and force people to do his will: he knew when danger was near,
-and what path to take to avoid his enemies when they were on his track.
-Then he rubbed Feenish, the mare, all over, and instantly she became as
-wise as a Christian, and knew every word that was said to her.
-
-So Macnamara, armed with all these new powers, went on with his wild
-wicked life, and robbed and plundered worse than ever; and the blood of
-many a man, besides, was on his hands.
-
-At last the Joyce faction resolved to make an end of the audacious
-robber, and all the Big Joyces of Connemara gathered in force and
-pursued him from place to place and over bog and mountain through half
-the country. At one time Macnamara plunged into a bog; where Feenish
-lost her four shoes; then he made her swim the river at Cong after a
-hard day’s ride through mountain passes; but when the poor mare got to
-the other side she fell down dead, to the great grief of the robber
-chief, who had her buried on an island in Lough Corrib that still bears
-her name—Innis-Feenish. However, when he had laid his faithful friend
-in the clay, all energy forsook him, and all his good luck departed—his
-riches melted away, his children squandered his property, and his two
-sons met a violent death; finally, broken in spirit, beggared, and
-alone in the world, the last of his race, he found himself with nothing
-left of his ill-gotten gains except an old grey pony. On this animal
-he rode to Cork, where he took his passage in an emigrant ship to
-America, and sailed away from the old country, laden with the curses
-of all who had ever known him; and from that hour he was heard of no
-more. So ended the wicked career of the spendthrift and gambler and the
-suspected murderer of many victims.
-
-
-
-
- SKETCHES OF THE IRISH PAST.
-
-
-THE BARDIC RACE.
-
-
-The magi, the Sephoe, the gymnosophists, and the Irish adepts, held
-much the same creed and the same dogmas with regard to the conduct of
-life necessary to heighten the spiritual power. They all abstained from
-animal food at such times as the rush of inspiration was on them and
-the madness of prophetic rage; and at all times they favoured solitude,
-living apart in the House of Learning or Bardic College, where they
-admitted no obtrusive intimacies with lower intellects to disturb
-their lofty and exalted moods of thought. The means, also, by which
-they obtained mastery over diseases and the minds of men, with the
-strange and subtle use they made of herbs, were all kept secret amongst
-themselves; for they held that the prying eyes of shallow unbelievers
-should never be suffered to intrude upon the sacred mysteries. And it
-is certain that the bards possessed strange and mystic powers of wisdom
-beyond and above all other men. It was therefore very dangerous to
-offend a poet. If any one refused him a request he would take the lobe
-of the person’s ear and grind it between his fingers, and the man would
-die. Yet the bards were capable of much human emotion, and were the
-sweet singers of sympathy when sorrow touched a household.
-
-The following elegy from the Irish, written about two hundred years ago
-by the Ard-Filé, or chief poet of the tribe, has many natural, pathetic
-touches, and when chanted in Irish to the harp had power to melt the
-hearts of all the hearers to tears.
-
-AN ELEGY.
-
- O Boyne, once famed for battles, sports, and conflicts,
- And great heroes of the race of Conn,
- Art thou grey after all thy blooms?
- O aged old woman of grey-green pools,
- O wretched Boyne of many tears.
-
- Where is the glory of thy sires?
- The glory of Art with the swift arrow;
- Of Meiltan, with the swift-darting spears
- Of the lordly race of the O’Neil?
- To thee belonged red victory,
- When the Fenian wrath was kindled,
- And the heroes in thousands rode to war,
- And the bridles clanked on the steeds.
-
- O river of kings and the sons of kings,
- Of the swift bark and the silver fish,
- I lay my blessing on thee with my tears,
- For thou art the watcher by a grave—
- My treasures lie in the earth at thy side—
- O Boyne of many tears.
-
- My sons lie there in their strength,
- My little daughter in her beauty—
- Rory, and Brian, and Rose—
- These have I given against my will,
- My blood, my heart, my bone and kin,
- My love and my life, to the grave.
-
- The blessing of men was on them,
- The blessings of thousands that loved them,
- From Kells of the Crosses to Drogheda—
- Eight thousand blessings to Dowth of the Trees.
- Peace be on the earth where they lie!
- By the royal stream of the kings,
- In the land of the great O’Neil.
-
-The Bardic song amongst all nations was the first expression of the
-human soul, with all its strong, passionate emotions and heroic
-impulses. It is remarkable that, although several invasions of Ireland
-are on record, yet but one language seems to have existed there from
-the earliest times down to the coming of the Anglo-Normans in the
-twelfth century. The Bards held it as their peculiar duty to raise
-this language to the highest perfection, and the laws of Celtic
-poetry, especially, were most elaborate and the structure of the verse
-exceedingly difficult. Ten years of study were allowed the students at
-the Druids’ College to gain perfection in the art, and also to practise
-the memory; for at the royal festivals the Ard-Filé was expected to
-recite fully and perfectly whatever heroic tale might be called for by
-the king at the banquet. On great occasions also, when the meeting was
-held in the open air, the chiefs sat round in a circle on mounds of
-turf, to the accompaniment of the harp, the chorus joining in the while
-the bards, standing in the centre, recited the heroic narrative lyrical
-portions at intervals, and a circle of harpists at the outermost
-ring of the assemblage introduced occasional symphonies of pure
-instrumental music to give the bards time for rest between the parts of
-the recitation.
-
-There were three chief measures in music in use amongst the poets—“the
-Sorrowful,” or the chant for the dead; “the Delightful,” reserved
-for dances and festivities; and “the Reposing,” devoted entirely to
-love sonnets and the plaintive softness of lyrical expression. But
-the _Ross-Catha_, or battle-hymn, was the great war-song to which the
-warriors marched to battle, and which inspired them with the heroic
-madness that braved death for victory.
-
-Everything connected with the bards is interesting. They were so
-gifted, so learned, and so beautiful. For even genius was not
-considered enough, without beauty, to warrant a young man being
-enrolled in the ranks of the poets. A noble, stately presence was
-indispensable, and the poet was required not only to be gifted, but
-to be handsome. Then he was promoted through all the grades until he
-reached the last and highest, called “The Wisdom of the Gods,” but
-the knowledge then acquired by the initiated was kept sacred from the
-crowd, and the adept swore by the sun, the stars, and the hosts of
-heaven never to reveal the mysteries acquired by his initiation, to the
-profane.
-
-The high-born maidens amongst the noble families were also trained by
-the Druids in poetry and music, and in the exercise of the chase, such
-as archery and throwing the lance, to give their bodies health, vigour
-and beauty, while those endowed with peculiar intellect were admitted
-into the bardic orders, and became the priestess, prophetess, or
-poetess of the tribe; who inspired men by her eloquence and had power
-by her incantations over the deep mysteries of life. Such was Eodain,
-the chief poetess of Erin, the guide and inspirer of Eugene, the king
-of the South, the prophetess of her nation, who saved him and his
-kingdom from ruin by her wisdom, and redeemed him by her counsels from
-his dissolute and evil life.
-
-
-THE ANCIENT RACE.
-
-
-But thousands of years ago, long before kings, bards, and Druids, with
-all their learning and comparative civilization, flourished in Ireland,
-and before the traditions of a beautiful fairy race were brought from
-the far East by a people accustomed to the sight of beauty, grace and
-splendour, an ancient race existed in the world—a mysterious, primitive
-wave of human life that spread over all Europe, perhaps over all the
-earth, and even surged upon the shores of our own Western island;
-possibly a pre-Adamic race, inferior in all points, physical as well
-as mental, to the Adamic race that succeeded them.
-
-They have left no name or history, yet evidences of their nature,
-habits, intellect, and modes of life can be scientifically deduced from
-the abundant strange and curious antiquarian remains to be seen in
-the Museum of the Royal Irish Academy, of which Sir William Wilde in
-his illustrated catalogue has given such a perfect and comprehensive
-description. Records of a period so remote that the use of metals even
-was unknown; yet these ancient records reveal the story of the rude
-half-developed, early humanity of the world in as clear a symbol to the
-expert and the archæologist, as if written in alphabetical letters on
-monoliths, like those of Babylon.
-
-Without, therefore, being forced into shadowy theory or nebular
-hypothesis, we may readily construct the whole life of the primitive
-man, his mode of being and doing, of dressing and of eating, of living,
-dying and sepulture, simply from the rude implements fashioned by his
-hand that cover the walls of the Academy, and are the letters in which
-an eternal page of human history is written.
-
-But, this first pre-Adamic rudimental humanity was not wholly
-extirpated by the subsequent Adamic race. Representatives of them still
-remained throughout the world, and are yet existing, though these
-half-souled specimens of an early, inferior humanity, are gradually
-dying out and disappearing before the advance of the higher Adamic
-race, the destined lords and rulers of earth.
-
-In Ireland the inferior primitive tribes became the bond-slaves for
-the higher humanity—the Tuatha-de-Dananns and Milesians that succeeded
-them; and specimens of this slave people can still be seen in remote
-districts in Ireland along the coast-line of the West, and in the
-secluded mountain passes. They are held in much contempt by the
-descendants of the nobler race, and are stigmatized even now as “the
-slave people,” and the bondsmen of their forefathers.
-
-It seems, then, an incontrovertible truth that the early inhabitants
-of Ireland, as of all Europe—in fact, the whole pre-Adamite humanity
-of the world—lived and died throughout how many ages we know not in a
-state little higher than the animal creation, without the knowledge of
-even the simplest elements of civilization, which all the Adamic races
-possess, from their higher organization and intellect, and which they
-seem to have had from the date of their earliest appearance on earth.
-
-The clothing of the primitive man was of the skins of animals fastened
-with thongs, or tunics made of rushes, such as were found some years
-ago in Spain, on the skeleton forms of pre-historic date buried in a
-cave of the Sierra Nevada. Their only weapons and tools were of stone,
-manufactured by another stone. Their ornaments were of shells and
-fish-bones; and their dwellings such only as instinct has suggested to
-all animals.
-
-There are abundant evidences in our National Museum to prove the
-existence of this primary stratum of barbarism underlying all the
-culture of modern Europe; and we might almost hesitate to link so low
-a type of humanity with our own if we did not recognize in it also the
-characteristic instinct of man, entirely wanting in the animals—an
-irrepressible tendency towards progression and improvement, and, above
-all, to ornamentation, which is a distinctive human quality.
-
-
-THE ANTIQUITIES OF IRELAND.
-
-
-We commence the study of this early race with the first rude stone
-implement with which a savage man killed an animal scarcely more
-savage. Then, simple designs of ornamentation are discernible—the first
-twilight dawning of soul through matter. The rude stone implement
-becomes decorated, more symmetrical in form, more adapted to its
-uses. There is evidence of a growing sense of beauty, and heightened
-reasoning powers. After the introduction of metals, we trace the
-original stone forms reproduced first in simple unalloyed copper,
-afterwards in that perfect and beautiful bronze of a ruddy yellow,
-like gold, which no modern bronze has ever equalled. There is no
-violent disruption of ideas, as if the new incoming race had entirely
-vanquished and crushed the earlier and elder; but on the contrary, a
-gradual and continuous development of the original ideas of this elder
-race itself, always co-working with whatever new influences may have
-come to it from without.
-
-Many writers have held the belief that the first colonists of Ireland
-were a highly-civilized people, clothed with Tyrian silk, fine linen
-of Egypt, and adorned with costly ornaments of gold. But stern facts
-refute this theory. The same primitive race who used only stone weapons
-were unacquainted with the art of weaving, and knew of no other garment
-than the untanned skin of the animal they killed for food. Theorists
-might still, however, argue, doubt, and disbelieve, if one of the
-ancient race had not himself risen, as it were, from the grave, after
-a sleep of thousands of years, to give his testimony concerning his
-people. In 1821 this primitive Irishman, clad completely in skins laced
-with thongs, was found in a peat bog, ten feet below the surface. The
-teeth, long dark hair and beard, were perfect. Portions of this dress
-have been preserved in the Museum of the Royal Irish Academy. The
-material used in sewing was fine gut, and the regularity and closeness
-of the stitching are most remarkable. Specimens of the antique skin
-mocassins and skin caps have been also found at various times in the
-peat bogs, and secured for the Museum, so that we have the dress of the
-ancient Irishman complete.
-
-Long after this period of barbarism, but still at a time so distant
-that it is anterior to all historic record, we find that the Irish
-had attained some knowledge of metals and the art of weaving. The
-Museum contains numerous highly-finished illustrations of the
-beautifully-formed, slender, leaf-shaped swords and daggers of bronze,
-which began gradually to supersede the use of the primitive celt.
-Many of these swords are of the pure Grecian type, formed apparently
-on the model of the leaf of the aloe or the agave. One sword found
-on an ancient battle-field is curved like a Turkish yataghan; and in
-“The Book of Rights” “curved swords of battle” are frequently referred
-to. But the specimens of the broad scythe-shaped sword, “which is
-especially and peculiarly Irish,” are the most numerous, as many as
-forty-one of these heavy, thick, round-pointed battle-axe swords being
-in the Museum.
-
-The same progress of artistic development is observable in the ancient
-swords as was noticed in the primitive celt—as the art advanced, the
-manufacturer began to exercise his artistic faculties in fanciful and
-costly decoration. The blade was adorned with either cast or engraved
-ornamentation, and the hilt inlaid or studded with gold. Thus, Brian
-Boroimhe is described as carrying a gold-hilted sword in his right hand
-at the battle of Clontarf.
-
-It is very remarkable that, throughout the whole series, from the
-rudest to the most highly finished, a peculiar idea is traceable in
-the ornamentation, by which they can at once be recognized as Irish;
-and this idea seems to have travelled from Irish Paganism to Irish
-Christianism. The ornamentation on the sepulchral stones of New Grange
-is repeated on the stone celts; it is carried on into the age of
-Bronze; it decorated the swords and spears of the kings, as well as
-their costly diadems and ornaments of gold, and still continued to be
-traced, with a kind of loving fidelity to the ancient symbols, upon the
-manuscripts illuminated by priestly hands, so late as the tenth and
-eleventh centuries.
-
-For the illustration of the costume of the early Irish, after it passed
-from primitive helpless barbarism to comparative civilization, by the
-aid of the knowledge of metals and the art of weaving, fortunately
-we are not left to mere theories; for, by a singular chance, the
-representative of the advanced period, like him of the barbaric age,
-arises also from the grave of the Past to bear witness for himself.
-
-In 1824, a male body, completely clad in woollen antique garments, was
-found in a bog near Sligo, six feet below the surface; and so perfect
-was the body when first discovered, that a magistrate was called upon
-to hold an inquest on it. The garments also were in such complete
-preservation, that a photograph was made of a person clad in this
-antique suit, with the exception of the shoes, which were too small
-for an adult of our day, and a drawing from this photograph is one of
-the best and most beautifully executed illustrations of the Museum
-catalogue. The costume of this ancient Irish gentleman is exceedingly
-picturesque, consisting of trews of a plaid pattern, made wide above,
-like Turkish trousers, but fitting close to the leg and ankle; over
-them was a tunic of soft cloth, most elaborately gored and gussetted,
-showing high perfection in the tailoring art. The skirt of the tunic,
-which extends to the knee, is set on full, and measures eight feet in
-circumference at the bottom. The sleeves are tight, and open to the
-elbow, like an Albanian jacket; and over all was thrown the immemorial
-Irish mantle, so invariably worn, so indispensable a portion of Irish
-costume that it passed into a proverb among our neighbours, the Welsh,
-“like an Irishman for the cloak.”
-
-This graceful garment, as found upon the hero of the bog, and now
-visible in our Museum, is composed of brown, soft cloth, made straight
-on the upper edge, which is nine feet long, but cut nearly into the
-segment of a circle on the lower. The form resembles closely that worn
-by the Calabrian peasant at this day. These cloaks were often of great
-value; kings were paid tribute of them. They were made of various
-colours, each colour being a symbol to denote the rank of the wearer.
-The number of colours also in a dress had a significant value, and was
-regulated by law. Thus, one colour only was allowed to slaves; two for
-soldiers; three for goodly heroes, or young lords; six for the learned
-men; five for a poetess; and seven was the regal number for kings and
-queens.
-
-In the “Book of Rights,” the earliest accessible authority on the
-subject of costume prior to the Norman Invasion, we read of cloaks of
-various colours presented in tribute to the kings—cloaks of purple,
-red cloaks, green, white, black; in fact, cloaks of all colours. Some
-are mentioned as bordered with gold. The tunic is also described
-frequently, “with golden borders—with gold ornaments—with golden hems.”
-Another form of cloak was fashioned with a hood like the Arab bornous,
-and was bordered with a deep fringe of goat’s hairs.
-
-Irish costume seems, in fact, to have been half-Oriental,
-half-Northern, like the compound race that peopled the island. The
-trews were the same as the Germanic _braccœ_; while the tunic was
-Albanian, and the mantle Eastern; as well as the high, conical
-head-dress, which is identical in form with the Persian cap of the
-present day. On this subject Sir William Wilde remarks—
-
-“Every day’s observation and research bring to light new affinities
-with early Irish costume. In the great French work, ‘Herculaneum et
-Pompeii,’ there is a battle scene, copied from a mosaic at Pompeii, in
-which the arms and dress of the combatants are almost identical with
-those of ancient Ireland. The vanquished wear tight-fitting trousers,
-close tunics, several of which are plaided, and cloaks with the hood
-coming over the head precisely like the Irish cochall. The chief
-figures wear torques round the neck, and bracelets on the wrists, and
-the hood is retained in its place by a narrow frontlet, apparently
-of gold. The colours of the garments are also peculiarly Irish. In
-some, the cloak is yellow; the mantle, dark red; and the tunic, purple
-bordered with white; the latter spangled with triple stars of gold,
-precisely after the fashion figured in the ‘Book of Kells.’ The chariot
-in which the principal figure stands resembles some figured on our
-ancient crosses, and the charioteer wears a pointed cap, green tunic,
-and tartan vest. All the vanquished wear beards, and their hoods
-envelop their chins.”
-
-The study of ancient costume has especial interest for the historian,
-as the culture, civilization, and commercial relations of a people
-can be readily deduced from it; and in the numerous and curious
-illustrations of the catalogue, taken from ancient records, illuminated
-manuscripts, and the ancient crosses and sepulchral monuments of the
-country, everything has been brought together that could throw light on
-this obscure subject. One most remarkable illustration is a full-length
-portrait of Dermot M’Morrough, king of Leinster, taken from an
-illuminated copy of Giraldus Cambrensis in the possession of Sir Thomas
-Philips, which portrait was very probably drawn from the life.
-
-From all that is known on the subject, it would appear that linen and
-cloth of every degree of fineness, according to the rank of the wearer,
-were the principal materials used in ancient Irish dress. No remains
-of silk garments have been discovered; nor do the historical records,
-as far as we are aware, make any mention of silk being employed in
-personal wear. It is remarkable also, that while a traditional belief
-exists that linen has been known from time immemorial to Ireland,
-yet the Academy does not possess a single specimen of ancient linen.
-The linen shirts worn at the time of the Norman Invasion are said to
-have been of immense size, and dyed a saffron colour. But there is
-undeniable proof, that the tartan, or cloth of divers colours, which we
-are accustomed to associate only with Scotland, was worn universally
-in Ireland in ancient times. Portions of tartans are preserved in
-the Museum, and probably each grade of rank and clan possessed a
-characteristic plaid as well as a special dress. A love of variegated
-and glowing colours, and a tendency to gorgeous decoration, seem to
-have been always instinctive to the Irish nature.
-
-The female dress of Ireland at a period subsequent to the barbaric age
-is also illustrated not from conjecture, but from actual observation;
-for in 1843 a complete female antique dress was discovered many
-feet below the surface in a bog (these museums of Nature, where she
-stores up and preserves her specimens of antique life with a care and
-perfection that no mortal curator can ever hope to equal), and is now
-to be seen in the Academy’s museum.
-
-It consists of a boddice with a long waist, open in front, and attached
-to a full plaited skirt; which, like the Albanian fustanell, consists
-of several narrow gored breadths, gathered into small plaits at top,
-and spreading into a broad quilling at the bottom; each plait being
-stitched on the inside to preserve the form.
-
-The bottom of the skirt measures twenty-two and a half feet in
-circumference, and there are ninety-two plaits, most elaborately
-arranged, so that the joining of each of the narrow breadths should
-fall within a plait. The material is of a brown woollen cloth.
-
-No pictorial representations exist of female costume earlier than the
-fourteenth or fifteenth centuries but from the sculptured effigies
-on tombs, we find it consisted of either a flowing robe and veil, or
-of the plaited skirt and tight boddice already described, while the
-head-dress varied according to the fashion of the day.
-
-The subject of personal decoration is perfectly illustrated in
-the Museum; the Academy possessing one of the largest collections
-in Europe, beginning at the first rude effort at adornment of the
-barbaric age, up to the rich golden ornaments of a later, though still
-pre-historic period.
-
-It is not pleasant to national pride, after feeding on the gorgeous
-fables of our earliest annalists, to contemplate the primitive Irishman
-fastening his mantle of untanned deerskin with a fish-bone or a thorn,
-as we know the Germans did in the time of Tacitus; yet, unhappily,
-antiquarian research will not allow us to doubt the fact of the simple
-savageness of the first colonists. But when the intellect of the rude
-man stirred within him, he began to carve the bones of the animals he
-killed into articles of ornament and use. Thus the slender bones of
-fowls were fashioned into cloak pins, especially the leg bone, where
-the natural enlargement at one end suggested the form, and afforded
-surface for artistic display. From this first rude essay of the
-child-man can be traced the continuous development of his ideas in
-decorative art, from the carving of bones to the casting of metal, up
-to the most elaborate working in enamel, gold, and precious stones.
-Our Museum is rich in these objects, containing more than five hundred
-specimens. Pins, fibulæ,[10] and brooches having been discovered
-in Ireland in immense quantities and variety, some of which are
-unsurpassed for beauty of design and workmanship.
-
- [10] This word “fibulæ” is a heathenish and imported term, quite
- foreign to the Irish tongue. There is no other word known in the Irish
- language to designate a brooch, be it of bone or be it of gold, than
- _Dealg_, which signifies a thorn.
-
-“In these articles,” Sir William remarks, “the process of development
-is displayed in a most remarkable manner; for, from the simple
-unadorned pin or spike of copper, bronze or brass (the metallic
-representation of the thorn), to the most elaborately wrought
-ring-brooch of precious metal, the patterns of which are now used by
-our modern jewellers—every stage of art, both in form and handicraft,
-is clearly defined, not one single link is wanting. In the first stage
-all the artist’s powers were lavished on the decoration of the pin
-itself, or in the development of the head, which was enlarged and
-decorated into every possible shape and conceivable pattern. When it
-was almost impossible to improve the head, a ring or loop was added,
-passed through a hole in the neck. In the next stage, the ring was
-doubled, or many rings added. Finally, the ring was enlarged, flattened
-out, decorated, enamelled, covered with filigree, and jewelled, until,
-in those magnificent specimens of silver and gold found in Ireland of
-late years, it reached a degree of perfection which modern art can with
-difficulty imitate.”
-
-The forms of many of the Irish brooches, pins, and fibulæ, are
-identical with numbers found in Scandinavia, but the peculiar
-ornamentation—a curiously involved spiral or serpent coil, which
-can be traced back through all ages of Irish art to the most remote
-antiquity—is met nowhere else; neither in Etruscan nor Teutonic art,
-though some assert its origin can be traced to Assyria and Egypt.
-However, this _Opus Hibernicum_, as it was termed by the learned
-Kemble, is one of the tests by which an antiquary can distinguish
-national from imported work. It is also remarkable that the ornaments
-of like form found so copiously in Scandinavia are all of bronze, while
-the Irish are of gold, a metal which, there is every reason to believe,
-existed in Ireland abundantly in former times, and is still found in
-small quantities. That it was used for ornament, even coeval with the
-stone celt, is also probable, as the rudest savage can make the ductile
-metal assume any form by simply flattening it between two stones.
-
-Many centuries before the Christian era, according to the annals, gold
-was smelted in Wicklow, to the east of the Liffey. Goblets and brooches
-were covered with it, and the artificer’s name was Ucadan; but no
-further mention of native gold occurs throughout our ancient histories.
-However, two thousand years after, the story of the old annalist was
-singularly confirmed; for, in the year 1796, in the same part of
-Wicklow, perhaps on the very site of the furnace of Ucadan, upwards
-of £10,000 worth of native gold was obtained in about two months, and
-small quantities have been gathered there from time to time ever since.
-
-The subject of the gold antiquities is one full of interest, and even
-of mystery. The quantity of antique manufactured gold ornaments dug
-up in Ireland, even in recent times, has been estimated as exceeding
-half a million of money. As much more may be lying beneath our feet,
-for, every year, as new cuttings are made for railroads, or bogs are
-drained, deposits of gold ornaments come to light. Two or three years
-ago a deposit of massive gold bracelets, in value nearly £5,000, as
-bright and beautiful as if just finished, was dug up in Carlow; and,
-still more recently, several antique golden frontlets were found by a
-labourer while working in a field, who, utterly unconscious of their
-value, threw them to his children, and the author of the Catalogue
-actually discovered, one day, the son of the man cutting them up into
-nose-rings for his pigs. They were happily rescued, and are now in the
-Academy. The form is beautiful and classic; it is a half-moon diadem,
-resembling accurately some seen in Etruscan sculpture.
-
-What inestimable treasures may have been thus lost! not merely from
-ignorance, but also from cupidity; for numbers of gold articles have
-disappeared in the smelting-pot of the jewellers, who bought them
-from the country people at perhaps a fractional part of their value.
-The very small annual sum allowed to the Academy by Government is
-another cause why the work of destruction still goes on. Valuable
-gold ornaments are frequently offered there for sale—too valuable,
-unhappily, for the Academy to purchase, and with an indignant regret
-that is almost like a sense of shame, the members are obliged to leave
-them to their fate. Of course legislation could remedy all this, as it
-has done in Denmark, where the State has secured the possession of all
-antiquities found in the country for the National Museum, without any
-wrong being done to the finder, who is paid the full value of all he
-brings. But in Denmark there is a strong national pride in the subject,
-and the peasant, who is early taught by the local authorities the value
-of such things, would as soon think of destroying an antiquity as of
-burning his Bible.
-
-It is still a question among the learned whether this enormous amount
-of manufactured gold, far exceeding all yet discovered in England and
-Scandinavia, was altogether native, or to some extent imported. An
-analysis of some of the gold has been made, to test the identity of its
-constituents with the gold of Wicklow, and in the instance selected
-the gold was found similar. This fact and the ornamentation are proofs
-to uphold the native theory: while opponents state that they came in
-the way of commerce from the Carthaginians who traded here. Ornaments
-identical with the Irish in form—the twisted torques, the bracelets,
-the diadems, and frontlets, having been found in the interior of
-Africa, and along the Gold Coast; in India, Barbary, Spain, and the
-islands of the Mediterranean.
-
-Several ancient Irish musical instruments, the chief of which were the
-harp and trumpet, and numerous fragments of harps have been found also
-in the oldest crannoges, proving how ancient was the knowledge and the
-practice of music in Ireland—a fact confirmed by the Welsh Annals,
-which state that the Irish surpassed all nations in their proficiency
-on the harp.
-
-The Museum possesses sixteen antique bronze trumpets, one of which—the
-finest specimen yet found in Europe—measures about eight feet in
-length, and the joining is curiously riveted with metal studs, a
-fact proving its antiquity, as it must have been formed in an age
-unacquainted with the art of soldering. With regard to coins, Sir
-William Wilde utterly denies that bronze ring-money was ever used in
-Ireland, as stated by Sir William Betham, who borrowed his idea from
-Vallancy: for all the articles hitherto described as ring-money, are
-now proved undeniably to belong to chain-dress or armour. The ancient
-medium of barter seems to have been so many head of cattle, or so
-many ounces of gold. A native coinage was utterly unknown. The amount
-of bronze discovered in Ireland is enormous, and proves the long
-duration of a period when it was in general use, before iron was known.
-Specimens of every object necessary to a people’s life have been found
-fabricated of it—weapons, tools, armour, swords, and spears; culinary
-vessels, caldrons, spoons, and other minor requisites; hair-pins for
-the flowing locks of the women; brooches for the graceful mantles of
-the chiefs, but not of the dark, dingy, modern compound that bears
-the name. Irish antique bronze was a metal of bright, glowing, golden
-beauty, and the effect of an army marching with spears of this metal in
-the flashing sunlight, we can imagine to have been truly magnificent.
-
-The people of this remote age must have attained considerable skill
-in the manufacturing arts—must have had laws, religion, and social
-culture—yet how little would have been known of them if these mute
-witnesses of a past humanity had not been interpreted by science.
-Archæology and philology are the only solvents of the past; and no
-theory can henceforth be tolerated that will not stand the test of
-being assayed by them. The philologist traces the origin and affinities
-of our people in the roots of the Irish language; while their habits,
-modes of life, their position in the scale of civilization throughout
-the long duration of the unwritten age, can only be read in the letters
-of stone, bronze, and gold upon the walls of our Academy.
-
-Irish manuscripts, though the oldest in North-western Europe, date
-back scarcely further than the fifth or sixth century. Beyond that
-period we enter a region of darkness, through which no literature
-or letters radiate their light; yet, unassisted by either, the
-archæologist can reconstruct the primitive world and the primitive
-man with greater truth and certainty than if he possessed both; for
-the facts of a museum are changeless and enduring, and can suffer no
-mutation from prejudice or ignorance, yet we must remember that it
-is science alone that gives value to these facts. Without its aid a
-museum would be only an aggregate of curious lumber. The archæologist
-must combine, in a synthetic and comprehensive view—must arrange in
-their proper sequence—must elucidate by a world-wide learning, these
-sibyline fragments of the past; or this writing on the wall, though
-it express the most irrefragable truths of history, will remain an
-undeciphered hieroglyphic, as useless and unprofitable to the student
-as the alphabet of an unknown language, which he is unable to form
-into intelligible words. All this Sir William Wilde accomplished for
-the Museum of the Academy, and in his clear and well-arranged volumes
-we can read the stone pages of our history by the light of all the
-learning and antiquarian research of the past and present age gathered
-to one focus.
-
-The conclusion to be drawn from the facts laid before us is, that in
-an age of remote antiquity (M. Boucher de Perthes, the well-known
-French author and antiquarian, has written a book to prove that it
-was prior to the Deluge) the entire face of the earth was covered
-by a nomad people, speaking the one language, and living after the
-same rude fashion, with no other weapons than sharpened stone. This
-race passed away, and no research has ever yet discovered their name,
-their language, their religion, or the era of their existence. Not an
-inscription, not a word, not a letter graven on any stone have they
-left to allay the torturing curiosity of the inquirer. Yet traces of
-them have been found from Mexico to Japan; from the steppes of Tartary
-to the Pampas; round the shores of every European sea, and along the
-coasts of the two oceans. Wherever man’s foot has trodden within
-historic times, they trod before all history. Even in this outlying
-isle of ours vestiges of this people are strewn so thickly that the
-very soil seems made of their remains. Then another race swept across
-Europe—a comparatively cultured race, bearing with them the chief
-element of civilization—a knowledge of metals. They spread over both
-sides of the Danube; left their footprints in Italy and on the shores
-of the Baltic; overran Switzerland, France, and Belgium, giving names
-to the rivers they passed, the mountains they crossed, and the towns
-they founded, which names cling to them even to this day. From Belgium
-they spread to Britain, and from thence, or by the seacoast of Spain,
-they reached Ireland, where they founded the existing Irish race,
-and brought with them the knowledge of metals, the art of music and
-poetry, and the still existing Irish language. Historians name these
-people the Celts. On the Continent they were gradually crushed down
-beneath the Roman and Gothic races, and in Britain also by successive
-conquests. But Ireland suffered no conquest. Here the old Celtic race
-lived and flourished, and here alone their language, which everywhere
-else melted into a compound with the Gothic and Latin, maintained
-its distinct existence. The English language is the gradually formed
-product and result of the successive conquests of England. But
-no invading people ever gained sufficient strength in Ireland to
-influence the original language. It exists still amongst us, living
-and spoken the same as when thousands of years ago the Celtic people
-first crossed the Danube and gave it the name it now bears. For this
-reason all the archæologists of Europe turn their eyes to our sacred
-isle, as to the one great museum of the Celtic race. Thus, Professor
-Keller, of Zurich, anxiously studies the formation of Irish crannoges,
-to compare them with the Swiss; and the learned Pictet, of Geneva,
-demands the long-deferred completion of the Irish Dictionary, with an
-ardour that puts to shame our own apathy, as without it comparative
-philology wants its chief corner-stone. The great facts of our Museum,
-illustrated, described, and laid before the learned of Europe in a
-comprehensive form, will go far to correct the crude, imperfect notions
-of Continental writers concerning Irish antiquities. For instance,
-Professor Lindenschmidt, of Mayence, asserted in one of his earlier
-published works, that all the ancient bronze articles found on this
-side of the Alps were imported from Etruria, as a people so barbarous
-as the Irish could never have produced them. The fact being, that the
-largest, most varied, most highly decorated collection of bronze celts
-existing is to be found in our Museum, along with numerous specimens
-of the moulds in which they were cast, discovered on the very spot
-where the ancient workman had lit his furnace. This universal interest
-and demand for information are enough to stimulate our learned men to
-exertion, seeing that they are, in a measure, answerable to Europe for
-the proper preservation of our antiquities, the very rudest of which
-can tell some tale of the past, as the mere furrows along the streets
-of the dead Pompeii show that life once passed there.
-
-
-EARLY IRISH ART.
-
-
-Early Irish art illustrates in a very remarkable manner those
-distinctive qualities of Irish nature, which we know from the legendary
-traditions have characterized our people from the earliest times. The
-earnest religious faith, the love of gorgeous colouring, the tendency
-to express ideas by symbol, and the vivid imagination that delights in
-the strange and unusual, often fantastic and grotesque, in place of the
-absolute and real, combined with the patient and minute elaboration
-of details, so truly Oriental in its spirit, specially mark Irish
-ornamentation. All these reverential, artistic, fanciful, and subtle
-evidences of the peculiar Celtic spirit find a full and significant
-expression in the wonderful splendours of early Irish art, as seen
-chiefly in the ancient illuminated manuscripts.
-
-The reputation of Irish artists for excellence in these costly
-productions became so extended throughout Christian Europe in the early
-ages, that at the request of many nations Ireland sent forth numbers of
-her most cultured artists as teachers and scribes to the great foreign
-schools and colleges; and numerous examples of skilled Irish work are
-still existing in Continental Libraries, where they are held as amongst
-the most sacred of the national treasures. For a full and comprehensive
-illustration of this subject it would be impossible to over-estimate
-the artistic and historic value of Mr. Westwood’s magnificent book on
-Anglo-Saxon and Irish Manuscripts. The volume contains _facsimiles_
-from all the principal illuminated Celtic manuscripts of Europe,
-executed with the most scrupulous care, chiefly by Mr. Westwood
-himself, the majority of them with the aid of a magnifying glass, so
-minute and delicate are the lines of ornamentation to be represented.
-In fact, for accuracy of information and richness of illustration,
-the volume surpasses anything yet published on Celtic art in the
-United Kingdom, and may claim equality with the grand, but enormously
-expensive work of Count Bastard, on early French Manuscripts. Mr.
-Westwood, in a learned preliminary dissertation, gives his views on
-the origin and development of Hiberno-Saxon art during the first
-thousand years of the Christian era, and finds in the ornamentation,
-as observed by Kemble and others, a distinct _Opus Hibernicum_ and an
-_Opus Anglicum_, but the Irish the more perfect of the two, and wholly
-different from Continental art of the same era.
-
-The earliest manuscripts of Greece and Rome show nothing like this
-distinctive Celtic art; nor the Italian mosaics, nor the wall paintings
-of Herculaneum or Pompeii—beautiful as are the representations of the
-human figure found there; nor does Byzantine art afford any similar
-types. From whence, then, did the Irish, the acknowledged founders of
-Celtic art in Europe, derive their ideas of ornamentation? This is
-one of the historical mysteries which, like the origin of the Round
-Towers, still awaits solution. One must travel a long way, even to
-the far East, before finding in the decorations of the ancient Hindoo
-temples anything approaching to the typical idea that runs through
-all Irish ornamentation. It is, however, an incontrovertible fact,
-and one proved to demonstration by Mr. Westwood’s learning, labour,
-and researches, that a time when the pictorial art was almost extinct
-in Italy and Greece, and indeed scarcely existed in other parts of
-Europe—namely, from the fifth to the end of the eighth century—a
-style of art had been originated, cultivated, and brought into a most
-marvellous state of perfection in Ireland absolutely distinct from
-that of any other part of the civilized world; and which being carried
-abroad by Irish and Saxon missionaries was adopted and imitated in
-the schools of Charlemagne, and in all the other great schools and
-monasteries founded by them upon the Continent.
-
-In the middle of the ninth century the influence of the artists of
-Germany reacted on the productions of England, and in consequence of
-the more frequent communications of learned men with Rome, classical
-models began to be adopted, floral decorations were introduced, and
-figures in the Byzantine style. With these the Irish ornamentation was
-combined, principally in the framework of the design. Then it gradually
-disappeared from England, where it was replaced by Franco-Saxon and
-Teutonic art; so that after the tenth century Mr. Westwood has not
-found any Anglo-Saxon manuscript executed in the Lindisfarne or Irish
-style. But it remained for several centuries longer in use in Ireland,
-though the ornamental details exhibit little of the extreme delicacy
-of the earlier productions. With reference to these, Mr. Digby Wyatt
-observes that, in delicacy of handling and minute but faultless
-execution, the whole range of palæography offers nothing comparable to
-the early Irish manuscripts, especially “The Book of Kells,” the most
-marvellous of them all. One cannot wonder, therefore, that Giraldus
-Cambrensis, when over in Ireland in the reign of Henry II., on being
-shown an illuminated Irish manuscript, exclaimed, “This is more like
-the work of angels than of men!”
-
-The peculiarities which characterize true Celtic art, whether in stone,
-metal work, or manuscript illumination, consist in the excessive and
-minute elaborations of intricate ornamental details, such as the
-spirals, the interlaced ribands, and the entwined serpents and other
-animal forms, so familiar to the students of our national art treasures
-in the museum of the Royal Irish Academy. These forms are invariably
-found in all Irish decoration. The initial letters and ornamentations
-of the ancient manuscripts are reproduced in the gigantic stone crosses
-and the more delicate metal work of the shrines and reliquaries;
-and from this identity of ornamentation the age can be determined
-of all art monuments or remains, and objects readily classified as
-cotemporaneous. The Irish adhered with wonderful fidelity to their
-peculiar art ideas for at least eight hundred years; and while the
-Saxons coquetted with Frankish art, and finally gave themselves up
-wholly to Norman influence, the Irish continued their exclusive
-devotion to the ancient and national Celtic type. Intensely national,
-indeed, were those early artists; they gave ideas to the world, but
-received none in exchange. In their pictures Goliath appears as an
-Irish warrior, and David bears an Irish harp in his hands while
-our Lord Himself, in one of the Irish sculptures, is represented
-wearing the Irish dress. When the nation fell under Norman sway in
-the twelfth century, Norman ideas naturally became triumphant; but
-everything that is most beautiful and interesting in antique Irish
-art belongs to the pre-Norman period—the gold ornaments, the gorgeous
-manuscripts, such as the Gospels of Durrow and of Kells; the grandest
-of the sculptured crosses, Cormac’s Chapel, that architectural gem
-of Western Europe; the richly decorated shrines, such as that of
-St. Monchan, “the most important ancient shrine now in existence in
-these islands,” Mr. Westwood states; and specially interesting to us
-Irish, from the recorded fact that it was covered with pure gold by
-Roderick O’Connor, the last king of Ireland, and was, as the Annals
-state, the most beautiful piece of art ever made in Erin. All these
-evidences of high cultivation and artistic skill were in existence
-long before the Norman adventurers set foot on our shores. Irish art,
-however, died out with Irish Nationality; and in two centuries or so,
-after the Norman Conquest, it ceased to exist, and was replaced by
-the pseudo-Roman or Irish Romanesque style. Irish art can be easily
-traced throughout the Continent by the peculiar ornamentation which
-characterized it; and wherever, amongst the early manuscripts in
-foreign libraries, one is found surpassing all the rest in the singular
-beauty and firmness of the writing, and the exquisite delicacy of
-the minute and elaborate illuminations, there at once an Irish hand
-is recognized as worker, or an Irish intellect as teacher. The same
-symbols and ideas run through all of them—there are the same strange,
-elongated, contorted, intertwined figures; the same rich mosaics of
-interlaced lines—so minute, so delicate, so rich in brilliant colours,
-that the border of the page seems powdered with crushed jewels. There
-is something almost melancholy in this devotion to a species of art
-in which there was nothing to stimulate the feelings or to warm the
-heart. No representation of nature’s glories in tree or flower, or the
-splendour of human beauty; the artist’s aim being rather, it would
-seem, to kill the human in him, by forcing his genius to work only on
-the cold abstractions of spirals and curves, and endless geometrical
-involutions, and the infinite monotony of those interlaced lines,
-still coiling on, for ever and ever, through the centuries, like the
-windings of the serpent of evil, which they were meant to symbolize,
-through the successive generations of our fated humanity. Truly, these
-artists offered up the sacrifice of love. Their lives and the labour
-of their lives were given humbly, silently, reverently to God, and
-the glory of God’s Word. They had no other aim in life, and when the
-work was done, a work so beautiful that even now the world cannot equal
-it, there was no vainglorious boast of himself came from the lips of
-the artist worker, but the manuscript ends with some simple devotional
-words, his name, and the desire to be remembered as the writer, like
-the _orate pro me_ on the ancient tombstones; this was all he asked or
-hoped for in return for the years of youth and life he had incarnated
-in the illuminated pages of the Gospels. For in those early ages art
-had no existence save in union with religion. Humanity brought together
-all its most precious ointments to pour upon the feet of Jesus. In
-Ireland especially—the Island of Saints—whatever genius could devise or
-the hand of the artist could execute was lavished upon some work that
-would recall the presence of God to the people, stimulate His worship,
-or make known His word; upon the Psalters, the Gospels, the crosses,
-the costly shrines, the jewelled cases for a saint’s relics, the
-golden covers for the holy books. But nothing of that period has come
-down to us that shows a luxury in domestic life. The Word of God was
-shrined in gold, made rich with gems and enamels, but the people lived
-their old simple life in their old rude huts; and even the kings gave
-their wealth, not to erect palaces, but to build churches, to endow
-abbeys, to help the cause of God, and speed the holy men who were His
-ministers, in their crusade against evil, ignorance and darkness.
-
-It is no idle boast to say that the Irish were the teachers of Europe
-from the seventh to the tenth century in art and religion. Mr. Westwood
-has visited all the great libraries of England and the Continent
-and found abundant evidence that Irish art, or Hiberno-Saxon art,
-was diffused over Europe during that period. The Greek and Latin
-manuscripts are not illuminated, but are adorned with intercalated
-pictures; Irish art differs from them in many respects—amongst others,
-in having the figures and rich ornamentations printed on the leaves
-and borders of the book itself. He has given _facsimiles_ from Irish
-manuscripts now existing in the libraries of Oxford, Cambridge, Durham,
-Lichfield, Salisbury, Lambeth, the British Museum, and other places;
-and, passing to the Continent, has laid under contribution the great
-libraries of Paris, Rouen, Boulogne, St. Gall, Milan, Rome, Munich,
-Darmstadt, Stockholm, Copenhagen, and even St. Petersburg, and thus
-proved the excellence to which Irish artists, or Saxon artists educated
-in Irish schools, attained more than a thousand years ago. Nor is it
-strange that Ireland should have been the teacher, considering its
-early Christianity, which had made some progress amongst the people
-even in St. Jerome’s time; a little later amongst the Britons; but
-at the end of the sixth century Augustine and his monks found the
-stolid Anglo-Saxons still in the bonds of their ancient paganism
-and Wodenism. The Celtic race received the Christian faith gladly as
-early as the fourth century, but it was a difficult matter to bring
-light to the Saxon soul. It has at all times proved itself rather
-opaque in nature. The Saxon tribes of Germany did not renounce their
-idols till forced to it by the strong coercive power and keen sword of
-Charlemagne, in the latter half of the eighth century.
-
-With Christianity came to Ireland the knowledge of letters; at least
-no older inscription has been found than that on the pillar stone
-of Lugnadon, St. Patrick’s nephew, which may still be seen beside
-the ruin of St. Patrick’s oratory in one of the beautiful islands of
-Lough Corrib;[11] and the oldest manuscript existing in Ireland is the
-Book of Armagh, a copy of St. Jerome’s Latin version of the Gospels
-written in the old Roman letters, and very valuable for the beauty
-of the writing and the various drawings it contains. Learning was at
-once consecrated to the service of God in those early days, and to
-multiply copies of the Gospels was the praiseworthy and devout task
-of the first great teachers and missionaries. The Book of Durrow and
-the Book of Kells, both of the early part of the sixth century, are
-believed to be the work of St. Columba himself. The latter, the Book of
-Kells, has filled all critics with wonder and admiration. It is more
-decorated than any existing copy of the Gospels, and is pronounced by
-learned authorities to be “the most beautiful manuscript in existence
-of so early a date, and the most magnificent specimen of penmanship
-and illumination in the Western World.” They are both written in the
-Latin uncial character, common to Europe at the time; and here it may
-be noticed, in passing, that the so-called Irish alphabet is simply the
-Latin alphabet modified by the first missionaries to suit the Irish
-sounds, as Ulphila, the apostle of the Goths, invented an alphabet of
-mingled Greek and Latin characters, in order to enable him to make his
-translation of the Gospels into Gothic; and as the Greek missionaries
-invented the Russian alphabet, which is a modified form of the Greek,
-for a like purpose. That the Irish should retain the old form of the
-Latin letters, while most of the other nations of Europe have discarded
-it, is to be regretted, as nothing would facilitate the study of Irish
-so much at the present day, when one has so little leisure to spell out
-with much painful endeavour the barbarous symbols of a bygone age, as
-the adoption of the modern English alphabet. The first Irish book that
-was ever printed appeared in 1571, and is now in the Bodleian Library.
-It is a catechism of Irish grammar, and the Irish alphabet has suffered
-no modification or improvement since. It was about the end of the
-sixth century that the fame of Irish learning and the skill of Irish
-artists began to extend to England, and from thence to the Continent;
-and Irish scribes were employed to make copies of the Gospels and teach
-the splendid art of illumination in the English monasteries. From
-that period till the end of the ninth century the Irish were a power
-in Europe from their learning and piety—eminent in Greek as well as
-Latin, and the great teachers of scholastic theology to the Christian
-world. The Gospels of Lindisfarne, executed by monks of Iona in the
-seventh century, and now “the glory of the British Museum,” form a most
-important element in the early history of Celtic art, as this book
-seems to have been the principal model for succeeding artists.
-
- [11] See Sir William Wilde’s work, “Lough Corrib: its Shores and
- Islands,” where a drawing of this inscription is given.
-
-In the splendid folio copy of the Gospels at Copenhagen of the tenth
-century, supposed to have been brought to Denmark by King Canute, the
-figure of St. Matthew seated, while another saint draws back a curtain,
-is copied from the Gospels of Lindisfarne, while the border is in
-the tenth century style. The Gospels of St. Chad, now in Lichfield
-Library, are in the Irish style of the eighth century, and are very
-noticeable as having marginal notes in Latin, Anglo-Saxon, and ancient
-British, the latter being the oldest specimen of the ancient British
-language now in existence. The illuminations also are copied from the
-Lindisfarne book. St. Chad, it is known, was educated in Ireland,
-in the school of St. Finian. There are Irish Gospels at Durham of
-the eighth century. The Gospels of Mac-Regal are at Oxford, and the
-Gospels of Mac-Duran, the smallest and most beautiful known, are in
-the Archbishop’s palace at Lambeth. As Saxon art progressed and became
-influenced by Roman models, the Irish scribes were chiefly employed
-wherever elegance, harmony of colour, and extreme delicacy of touch
-were particularly requisite, as in the borders and initial letters.
-Thus, the Psalter of St. Augustine, said to be from Rome, and which
-resembles in style the manuscript Virgil of the fifth century, in the
-Vatican, is framed in pure Celtic art. On the Continent, also, the
-borders of the great manuscripts were generally confined to Irish
-hands. A Latin copy of the Gospels at Treves, evidently produced by
-one of the establishments founded by the Irish upon the Rhine, is
-remarkable for a combination of Celtic, Teutonic, and Franco-Byzantine
-art. The borders are Irish while the figures are Byzantine. These
-illuminated borders have the glitter and radiance of a setting of
-jewels, and are thus admirably suited to fulfil the true object of all
-ornamentation, which Mr. Ruskin defines as being “beautiful in its
-place, and perfect in its adaptation to the purpose for which it was
-employed.”
-
-In the sixth century St. Gall, born in Ireland, accompanied St.
-Columbanus to the Continent, and founded the monastery in Switzerland
-that bears his name. Here many interesting manuscripts and fragments
-are still preserved, remarkable for the old Irish marginal notes to the
-Latin text. Those are considered by philologists of such importance
-that thirteen quarto plates and _facsimiles_ from them are given
-by Dr. Ferdinand Keller in the Zurich Society’s Transactions. An
-interesting relic of an Irish saint is also preserved in the Cathedral
-of Wurtzburg—a copy of the Gospels of St. Kilian, martyred in 689, and
-which was found stained with his blood on opening his tomb about fifty
-years after.
-
-Thus, the Irish can be tracked, as it were, across Europe by their
-illuminated footsteps. They were emphatically the witnesses of God,
-the light-bearers through the dark ages, and above all, the faithful
-guardians and preservers of God’s sacred Word. A hundred years before
-Alfred came to Ireland to be educated, and went back to civilize his
-native country by the knowledge he had acquired there, the Christian
-schools of Germany, under the direction of Irishmen, had been founded
-by Charlemagne. Through France, along the Rhine, through Switzerland,
-Italy, and Spain, the Irish missionaries taught and worked, founding
-schools and monasteries, and illuminating by their learning the darkest
-pages of European history. One of the great treasures of the Imperial
-Library of Paris is a beautiful Irish copy of the Latin Gospels. The
-College of St. Isidore, at Rome, possesses many Irish manuscripts—one
-of them is a Psalter, folio size, written throughout in letters a
-quarter of an inch long, and which is considered to be the finest of
-the later works of the Irish school. The celebrated Golden Gospels of
-Stockholm are of Hiberno-Saxon art of the ninth century. This book has
-a singular history. It was stolen from England, and disappeared for
-ages, but finally was discovered at Mantua in the seventeenth century,
-and purchased for the Royal Library at Stockholm. St. Petersburg
-also possesses a highly illuminated copy of the Gospels, which was
-taken from France at the time of the great Revolution, and found its
-way to the far North. It is a perfect and beautiful specimen of the
-Irish style of the eight century, and the initial letters can only be
-compared to those of the Book of Kells. All these Irish manuscript
-Gospels are, without exception, copies of St. Jerome’s Latin version.
-No Irish translation of the Gospels has ever been found. Learning was
-evidently considered a sacred thing, indispensable for the priesthood,
-but not necessary for the masses; yet it seems strange that while the
-learned and pious Irish saints and missionaries were devoting their
-lives to multiplying copies of the Gospels for other nations, and
-disseminating them over Europe, they never thought of giving the people
-of their own land the Word of God to read in their own native tongue.
-The leading Teutonic races, on the contrary, with their free spirit,
-were not satisfied with accepting the doctrines of the faith, simply
-as an act of obedience to their teachers. They demanded the right of
-private judgment, the exercise of individual reason, and the Gospels
-were translated into Gothic as early as the fourth century by Bishop
-Ulphila for the use of the Gothic nation.
-
-This remarkable book, called the “Codex Argenteus,” is now in the Royal
-Library of Upsala, having, after many dangers and vicissitudes, at last
-found its way to the people who hold themselves the true descendants of
-the Goths, and whose king still bears the proud title of “King of the
-Swedes, Goths, and Vandals;” and an edition of it, with annotations,
-has been published by the learned Professor Andreas Uppstrom, of Upsala.
-
-Towards the close of the tenth century the Frankish style of
-ornamentation, a blending of the classical and the Byzantine, had
-almost entirely superseded the beautiful and delicate Celtic art both
-in England and on the Continent, and about the fifteenth century it
-disappeared even from our own Ireland, the country of its origin.
-The gorgeous missals and illuminated Gospels, instinct with life,
-genius, holy reverence, and patient love, were destined to be replaced
-soon after by the dull mechanism of print; while Protestantism used
-all its new-found strength to destroy that innate tendency of our
-nature which seeks to manifest religious fervour, faith, and zeal by
-costly offerings and sacrifices. The golden-bordered holy books, the
-sculptured crosses, the jewelled shrines were crushed under the heel of
-Cromwell’s troopers; the majestic and beautiful abbeys were desecrated
-and cast down to ruin, while beside them rose the mean and ugly
-structures of the Reformed faith, as if the annihilation of all beauty
-were then considered to be the most acceptable homage which man could
-offer to the God who created all beauty, and fitted the human soul to
-enjoy and manifest the spiritual, mystic, and eternal loveliness of
-form, and colour, and symmetry.
-
-Since that mournful period when the conquering iconoclasts cast down
-the temples and crushed the spirit of our people, there has been no
-revival of art in Ireland. It is not wonderful, therefore, that we
-cling with so much of fond, though sad, admiration to the beautiful
-memorials of the past, and welcome with warm appreciation the efforts
-of able, learned and distinguished men to illustrate and preserve them,
-as in this splendid and costly book which Mr. Westwood has contributed
-to Celtic art.
-
-
-OUR ANCIENT CAPITAL.
-
-
-The history of Dublin, so admirably narrated by Mr. Gilbert in his
-learned and instructive volumes,[12] begins the modern period of
-Irish history when Ireland became indissolubly united with the British
-Empire—the greatest empire of the world—and legendary lore, like all
-the ancient usages and superstitions, began to fade and perish before
-advancing civilization, as the luxurious undergrowth of a primeval
-forest before advancing culture.
-
- [12] “The History of Dublin.” 3 vols. By J. T. Gilbert, M.R.I.A.
- Dublin.
-
-A sketch of the rise of the capital of Ireland, with all the changes
-produced in Irish life by the new modes of thought and action
-introduced by Norman influence, forms therefore a fitting close to the
-legendary and early-historic period, so full of poetry and charm for
-the imagination, with its splendour of kings and bards, its shadowy
-romance and mist-woven dreams, and its ideal fairy world of beauty
-and grace, of music and song; when the people lived the free, joyous
-life of the childhood of humanity under their native princes, and the
-terrible struggle of a crushed and oppressed nation against a foreign
-master had not yet begun; the struggle that has lasted for seven
-centuries, and still goes on with exhaustless force and fervour.
-
-The history of cities is the history of nations—the most perfect index
-of the social altitude, mental development, physical perfection,
-and political freedom, which at any given period a people may have
-attained. Every stone within a city is a hieroglyphic of the century
-that saw it raised. By it we trace human progression through all its
-phases; from the first rude fisher’s hut, the altar of the primitive
-priest, the mound of the first nomad warrior, the stone fortalice
-or simple fane of the early Christian race, up to the stately and
-beautiful temples and palaces which evidence the luxury and refinement
-of a people in its proudest excess, or human genius in its climax of
-manifestation.
-
-Thus Babylon, Thebes, Rome, Jerusalem, are words that express nations.
-The ever-during interest of the world circles round them, for their
-ruins are true and eternal pages of human history. Every fallen column
-is a fragment of a past ritual, or a symbol of a dynasty. The very dust
-is vital with great memories, and a philosopher, like the comparative
-anatomist, might construct the entire life of a people—its religion,
-literature, and laws—from these fragments of extinct generations—these
-fossil paleographs of man.
-
-Statue and column, mausoleum and shrine, are trophies of a nation’s
-triumphs or its tragedies. The young children, as they gaze on them,
-learn the story of the native heroes, poets, saints, and martyrs,
-leaders and lawgivers, who have flung their own glory as a regal mantle
-over their country. Spirits of the past, from the phantom-land, dwell
-in the midst of them. We feel their presence, and hear their words
-of inspiration or warning, alike in the grandeur or decadence of an
-ancient city.
-
-Modern capitals represent also, not only the history of the past, but
-the living concentrated will of the entire nation. Thus is it with
-London, Berlin, and Vienna, while Paris, the _cité verbe_, as Victor
-Hugo calls her, represents not only the tendencies of France, but of
-Europe.
-
-Dublin, however, differs from all other capitals, past or present, in
-this wise—that by its history we trace, not the progress of the native
-race, but the triumphs of its enemies; and that the concentrated will
-of Dublin has always been in antagonism to the feelings of a large
-portion of the nation.
-
-The truth is, that though our chief city of Ireland has an historical
-existence older than Christianity, yet this fair _Ath-Cliath_ has no
-pretension to be called our ancient mother. From first to last, from a
-thousand years ago till now, Dublin has held the position of a foreign
-fortress within the kingdom; and its history has no other emblazonment
-beyond that of unceasing hostility or indifference to the native race.
-
-“The inhabitants are mere English, though of Irish birth,” wrote
-Hooker, three hundred years ago. “The citizens,” says Holingshed,
-“have from time to time so galled the Irish, that even to this day the
-Irish fear a ragged and jagged black standard that the citizens have,
-though almost worn to the stumps.” Up to Henry the Seventh’s reign,
-an Englishman of Dublin was not punished for killing an Irishman, nor
-were Irishmen admitted to any office within the city that concerned the
-government either of the souls or bodies of the citizens. The Viceroys,
-the Archbishops, the Judges, the Mayors, the Corporations, were all and
-always English, down to the very guild of tailors, of whom it stands
-on record that they would allow no Irishman to be of their fraternity.
-As the American colonists treated the red man, as the Spaniards of
-Cortez treated the Mexicans, as the English colony of India treated
-the ancient Indian princes, tribes, and people, so the English race
-of Dublin treated the Irish nation. They were a people to be crushed,
-ruined, persecuted, tormented, extirpated; and the Irish race, it
-must be confessed, retorted the hatred with as bitter an animosity.
-The rising of 1641 was like all Irish attempts—a wild, helpless,
-disorganized effort at revenge; and seven years later we read that Owen
-Roe O’Neil burned the country about Dublin, so that from one steeple
-there two hundred fires could be seen at once.
-
-This being the position of a country and its capital, it is evident
-that no effort for national independence could gain nourishment in
-Dublin. Our metropolis is associated with no glorious moment of a
-nation’s career, while in all the dark tragedies of our gloomy history
-its name and influence predominate. Dublin is connected with Irish
-patriotism only by the scaffold and the gallows. Statue and column
-do indeed rise there, but not to honour the sons of the soil. The
-public idols are foreign potentates and foreign heroes. Macaulay
-says eloquently on this subject, “The Irish people are doomed
-to see in every place the monuments of their subjugation; before
-the senate-house, the statue of their conqueror—within, the walls
-tapestried with the defeats of their fathers.”
-
-No public statue of an illustrious Irishman until recently ever graced
-the Irish capital. No monument exists to which the gaze of the young
-Irish children can be directed, while their fathers tell them, “This
-was to the glory of your countrymen.” Even the lustre Dublin borrowed
-from her great Norman colonists has passed away. Her nobility are
-remembered only as we note the desecration of their palaces; the most
-beautiful of all our metropolitan buildings but reminds us that there
-the last remnant of political independence was sold; the stately
-Custom-house, that Dublin has no trade; the regal pile of Dublin
-Castle, that it was reared by foreign hands to “curb and awe the city.”
-
-It is in truth a gloomy task to awaken the memories of Dublin, even of
-this century. There, in that obscure house of Thomas Street, visions
-rise of a ghastly night-scene, where the young, passionate-hearted
-Geraldine was struggling vainly in death-agony with his betrayers and
-captors. Pass on through the same street, and close by St. Catherine’s
-Church you can trace the spot where the gallows was erected for
-Robert Emmet. Before that sombre prison pile two young brothers,
-handsome, educated, and well-born, and many a fair young form after
-them, expiated by death their fatal aspirations for Irish freedom.
-Look at that magnificent portal, leading now to the tables of the
-money-changers; through it, not a century ago, men, entrusted with the
-nation’s rights, entered to sell them, and came forth, not branded
-traitors, but decorated, enriched, and rewarded with titles, pensions,
-and honours.
-
-Yet the anomalous relation between our country and its capital springs
-naturally from the antecedents of both. Dublin was neither built by
-the Irish nor peopled by the Irish; it is a Scandinavian settlement in
-the midst of a southern nation. Long even before the Norman invasion
-two races existed in Ireland, as different as the lines of migration
-by which each had reached it; and though ages have rolled away since
-Scythian and Southern first met in this distant land, yet the elemental
-distinctions have never been lost: the races have never blended
-into one homogeneous nationality. Other nations, like the English,
-have blended with their conquerors, and progression and a higher
-civilization have been the result. Roman, Saxon, Dane, and Norman, each
-left their impress on the primitive Briton; and from Roman courage,
-Saxon thrift, and Norman pride has been evolved the strong, wise, proud
-island-nation that rules the world—the Ocean-Rome. A similar blending
-of opposite elements, but in different proportions, has produced Scotch
-national character—grave, wise, learned, provident, industrious, and
-unconquerably independent. But the Irish race remains distinct from
-all others, as Jew or Zincali. It has no elective affinities, enters
-into no new combinations, forms no new results, attracts to itself no
-Scythian qualities of stern self-reliance and the indomitable pride of
-independence, but still retains all the old virtues and vices of their
-semi-oriental nature, which make the history of Ireland so sad a record
-of mere passionate impulses ending mostly in failure and despair. The
-English, slow in speech and repellent in manner, are yet able not only
-to rule themselves well and ably, but to rule the world; while the
-Irish, so fascinating, eloquent, brave, and gifted, have never yet
-achieved a distinctive place in the political system of Europe. We
-had even the advantage of an earlier education; we taught England her
-letters, Christianized her people, sheltered her saints, educated her
-princes; we give her the best generals, the best statesmen, the best
-armies; yet, withal, we have never yet found the strength to govern our
-own kingdom. Ethnologists will tell you this comes of race. It may be
-so. Let us then sail up the stream of time to Ararat, and try to find
-our ancestry amongst the children of the eight primal gods, as the
-ancients termed them, who there stepped forth from their ocean prison
-to people the newly baptized world.
-
-A very clever German advises all reviewers to begin from the Deluge, so
-that by no possibility can a single fact, direct or collateral, escape
-notice connected with the matter in hand. When treating of Ireland this
-rule becomes a necessity. Our nation dates from the dispersion, and our
-faults and failings, our features and our speech, have an authentic
-hereditary descent of four thousand years. Other primitive nations have
-been lost by migration, annihilated by war, swallowed up in empires,
-overwhelmed by barbarians: thus it was that the old kingdoms of Europe
-changed masters, and that the old nations and tongues passed away.
-Here only, in this island prison of the Atlantic, can the old race of
-primitive Europe be still found existing as a nation, speaking the same
-tongue as the early tribes that first wandered westward, when Europe
-itself was an unpeopled wilderness.
-
-We learn from sacred record that the first migrations of the human
-family, with “one language and one speech,” were _from_ the East; and
-every successive wave of population has still flowed from the rising
-towards the setting sun. The progression of intellect and science is
-ever westward. The march of humanity is opposed to the path of the
-planet. Life moves contrary to matter. A metaphor, it may be, of our
-spirit exile—this travelling “daily further from the East;” yet, when
-at the farthest limit, we are but approaching the glory of the East
-again.
-
-Gradually, along the waters of the Mediterranean, the beautiful islands
-on its bosom serving as resting-places for the wanderers, or bridges
-for the tribes to pass over, the primal families of the Japhetian race
-reached in succession the three great Peninsulas of the Great Sea, in
-each leaving the germ of a mighty nation. Still onward, led by the
-providence of God, they passed the portals of the Atlantic, coasted the
-shores of the vine-clad France, and so reached at length the “Isles of
-the Setting Sun,” upon the very verge of Western Europe.
-
-But many centuries may have elapsed during the slow progression of
-these maritime colonies, who have left their names indelibly stamped on
-the earth’s surface, from Ionia to the Tartessus of Spain; and Miriam
-may have chanted the death-song of Pharaoh, and Moses led forth the
-people of God, before the descendants of the first navigators landed
-amidst the verdant solitudes of Ireland.
-
-The earliest tribes that reached our island, though removed so far from
-the centre of light and wisdom, must still have been familiar with all
-science necessary to preserve existence, and to organize a new country
-into a human habitation. They cleared the forests, worked the mines,
-built chambers for the dead, after the manner of their kindred left in
-Tyre and Greece, wrought arms, defensive and offensive, such as the
-heroes of Marathon used against the long-haired Persians; they raised
-altars and pillar-stones, still standing amongst us, mysterious and
-eternal symbols of a simple primitive creed; they had bards, priests,
-and lawgivers, the old tongue of Shinar, the dress of Nineveh, and the
-ancient faith whose ritual was prayer and sacrifice.
-
-The kindred races who remained stationary, built cities and temples,
-still a world’s wonder, and arts flourished amongst them impossible to
-the nomads of the plains, or the wanderers by the ocean islands; but
-the destiny of dispersion was still on the race, and from these central
-points of civilization, tribes and families constantly went forth to
-achieve new conquests over the yet untamed earth.
-
-Whatever wisdom the early island colonizers had brought with them,
-would have died out for want of nourishment, had not these new tribes,
-from countries where civilization had become developed and permanent,
-constantly given fresh impulses to progress. With stronger and more
-powerful arts and arms, they, in succession, gained dominion over their
-weaker predecessors, and by commerce, laws, arts, and learning, they
-organized families into nations, enlightening while they subjugated.
-
-The conquest of Canaan gave the second great impetus to the human
-tides ever flowing westward. Irish tradition has even, in a confused
-manner, preserved the names of two amongst the leaders of the Sidonian
-fugitives who landed in Ireland. Partholan, with his wife Elga, and
-Gadelius, with his wife Scota.
-
-“This Gadelius,” say the legends, “was a noble gentleman, right wise,
-valiant, and well spoken, who, after Pharaoh was drowned, sailed
-for Spain, and from thence to Ireland, with a colony of Greeks and
-Egyptians, and his wife Scota, a daughter of Pharaoh’s; and he taught
-letters to the Irish, and warlike feats after the Greek and Egyptian
-manner.”
-
-These later tribes brought with them the Syrian arts and civilization,
-such as dyeing and weaving, working in gold, silver, and brass, besides
-the written characters, the same that Cadmus afterwards gave to Greece,
-and which remained in use amongst the Irish, it is said, until modified
-by Saint Patrick into their present form, to assimilate them to the
-Latin.
-
-Continued intercourse with their Syrian kindred soon filled Ireland
-with the refinement of a luxurious civilization. From various sources,
-we learn that in those ancient times, the native dress was costly and
-picturesque, and the habits and modes of living of the chiefs and kings
-splendid and Oriental. The high-born and the wealthy wore tunics of
-fine linen of immense width, girdled with gold and with flowing sleeves
-after the Eastern fashion. The fringed cloak, or _cuchula_, with a
-hood, after the Arab mode, was clasped on the shoulders with a golden
-brooch. Golden circlets, of beautiful and classic form, confined their
-long, flowing hair, and, crowned with their diadems, the chiefs sat at
-the banquet, or went forth to war. Sandals upon the feet, and bracelets
-and signet rings, of rich and curious workmanship, completed the
-costume. The ladies wore the silken robes and flowing veils of Persia,
-or rolls of linen wound round the head like the Egyptian Isis, the
-hair curiously plaited down the back and fastened with gold or silver
-bodkins, while the neck and arms were profusely covered with jewels.[13]
-
- [13] These relics of a civilization three thousand years old, may
- still be gazed upon by modern eyes in the splendid and unrivalled
- antiquarian collection of the Royal Irish Academy. The golden
- circlets, the fibulas, torques, bracelets, rings, &c., worn by the
- ancient race, are not only costly in value, but often so singularly
- beautiful in the working out of minute artistic details, that modern
- art is not merely unable to equal them, but unable even to comprehend
- how the ancient workers in metals could accomplish works of such
- delicate, almost microscopic minuteness of finish.
-
-For successive centuries, this race, half Tyrian and half Greek, held
-undisputed possession of Ireland, maintaining, it is said, constant
-intercourse with the parent state, and, when Tyre fell, commercial
-relations were continued with Carthage. Communication between such
-distant lands was nothing to Phœnician enterprise. Phœnicians in the
-service of an Egyptian king had sailed round Africa and doubled the
-Cape of Good Hope two thousand years before the Portuguese. The same
-people built the navy of King Solomon a thousand years before Christ;
-and led the fleet to India for the gold necessary for the Temple. They
-cast the brazen vessels for the altar, employing for the purpose the
-tin which their merchants must have brought from the British Isles.
-Thus, to use the words of Humboldt, there can be no doubt that three
-thousand years ago “the Tyrian flag waved from Britain to the Indian
-Ocean.”
-
-A king of the race, long before Romulus founded Rome, erected a college
-at Tara, where the Druids taught the wisdom of Egypt, the mysteries
-of Samothrace, and the religion of Tyre. Then it was that Ireland
-was known as _Innis-Alga_—the Holy Island—held sacred by the Tyrian
-mariners as the “Temple of the Setting Sun:” the last limit of Europe,
-from whence they could watch his descent into the mysterious western
-ocean.
-
-But onward still came the waves of human life, unceasing, unresting.
-Driven forth from Carthage, Spain, and Gaul, the ancient race fled
-to the limits of the coast, then surged back, fought and refought
-the battle, conquering and yielding by turns, till at length the
-Syrian and the Latin elements blended into a new compound, which laid
-the foundation of modern Europe. But some tribes, disdaining such a
-union, fled from Spain to Ireland, and thus a new race, but of the old
-kindred, was flung on our shores by destiny.
-
-The leaders, brave, warlike, and of royal blood, speedily assumed
-kingly sway, and all the subsequent monarchs of Ireland, the O’Briens,
-the O’Connors, the O’Neils, the O’Donnels, and other noble races, claim
-descent from them; and very proud, even to this day, are the families
-amongst the Irish who can trace back their pedigree to these princely
-Spaniards.
-
-We have spoken hitherto but of the maritime colonists—that portion
-of the primal race who launched their ships on the Mediterranean to
-found colonies and kingdoms along its shores; then passing out through
-the ocean straits, the human tides surged upon the western limits
-of Europe, till the last wave found a rest on the green sward of
-ancient Erin. The habits of these first colonists were agricultural,
-commercial, and unwarlike; and ancient historians have left us a record
-of their temperament; volatile and fickle; passionate in joy and
-grief, with quick vivid natures prone to sudden excesses; religious
-and superstitious; a small, dark-eyed race, lithe of limb and light of
-heart; the eternal children of humanity.
-
-For illustrations we need not here refer to the Royal Irish Academy,
-for as they looked and lived three thousand years ago, they may be seen
-to this day in the mountains of Connemara and Kerry.
-
-While this race travelled westward to the ocean by the great southern
-sea, other families of the Japhetian tribes were pressing westward
-also, but by the great northern plains. From Western India, by the
-Caspian and the Caucasus, past the shores of the Euxine, and still
-westward along the great rivers of Central Europe, up to the rude
-coasts of the Baltic, could be tracked “the westward marches of the
-unknown crowded nations,” carrying with them fragments of the early
-Japhetian wisdom, and memories of the ancient primal tongue brought
-from the far East; but, as they removed further from the great lines
-of human intercourse, and were subjected to the influence of rigorous
-climates and nomadic habits, gradually becoming a rude, fierce people
-of warriors and hunters, predatory and cruel, living by the chase,
-warring with the wild wolves for their prey, and with each other for
-the best pasture-grounds. Driven by the severity of the seasons to
-perpetual migration, they built no cities and raised no monuments, save
-the sepulchral mound, which can be traced from Tartary to the German
-Ocean.
-
-Without the civilizing aids of commerce or literature, their language
-degenerated into barbarous dialects; their clothing was the skin
-of wild beasts; their religion, confused relics of ancient creeds,
-contributed by the wandering colonies of Egypt, Media, Greece, and
-Tyre, which occasionally blended with the Scythian hordes, wherein
-Isis, Mercury, and Hercules, the symbols of wisdom, eloquence, and
-courage, were the objects worshipped, though deteriorated by savage and
-sanguinary rites, whose sacrifices were human victims, and whose best
-votary was he who had slain most men.
-
-From long wandering through the gloomy regions where the sun is
-darkened by perpetual clouds, they called themselves the “Children of
-the Night,” and looked on her as the primal mother of all things.
-
-Their pastimes symbolized the fierce daring of their lives. At their
-banquets they quaffed mead from the skulls of the slain, and chanted
-war-songs to the music of their clashing bucklers, while their dances
-were amid the points of their unsheathed swords.
-
-From the influence of climate, and from constant intermarriage amongst
-themselves, certain physical and mental types became permanently fixed,
-and the gigantic frame, the fair hair and “stern blue eyes”[14] of the
-Scythian tribes, along with their bold, free, warlike, independent
-spirit, are still the marked characteristic of their descendants. For
-amidst these rude races of lion-hearted men, who cleared the forests of
-Central Europe for future empires, there were great and noble virtues
-born of their peculiar mode of life: a love of freedom, a lofty sense
-of individual dignity, bold defiance of tyranny, a fortitude and
-courage that rose to heroism—the spirit that brooks no fetter either on
-the mind or frame. We see that such men were destined for world-rulers.
-To them Europe is indebted for her free political systems; the
-chivalry that ennobled warfare and elevated women, and the religious
-reformation that freed Christianity from superstition. Every charter of
-human freedom dates from the Scythian forests.
-
- [14] The expression of Tacitus.
-
-The great northern concourse of fierce, wild tribes, comprehended
-originally under the name of Scythians, or Wanderers, having spread
-themselves over the north to the very kingdom of the Frost-Giants,
-amidst frozen seas and drifting glaciers, turned southward, tempted by
-softer climes and richer lands, and under the names of Goth, Vandal,
-Frank, and Norman, devastating tribes of the Scythian warriors poured
-their rude masses upon the early and refined civilization of the
-Mediterranean nations, conquering wherever they appeared and holding
-bravely whatever they conquered.
-
-The Roman empire trembled and vanished before the terrible might of
-the long-haired Goths. They sacked Rome and threatened Constantinople:
-Africa, Italy, Spain, France, and Germany yielded to the barbaric
-power. Before the fifth century the Scythians had conquered the world,
-and every kingdom in Europe is ruled by them to this hour.
-
-How strangely contrasted the destinies of the two great Japhetian
-races! What vicissitudes of fortune! The refined, lettered, oriental
-light-bringers to Europe—the founders of all kingdoms, the first
-teachers of all knowledge, the race that peopled Tyre, Carthage,
-Greece, Italy, Spain, and Gaul, degraded, humbled, and almost
-annihilated; the last poor remnant of them crushed up in the remote
-fastnesses of the hills along the coast-line of Europe; step by step
-driven backwards to the Atlantic, as the red man of America had been
-driven to the Pacific, till, over the whole earth they can be found
-nowhere as a nation, save only in Ireland, while the rude, fierce
-Scandinavian hordes have risen up to be the mightiest of the earth.
-Greece subdued Asia, and Rome subdued Greece, but Scythia conquered
-Rome! The children of night and of the dark forests rule the kingdoms
-that rule the world.
-
-They have given language and laws to modern empires, and at the present
-day are at the head of all that is most powerful, most thoughtful, most
-enterprising, and most learned throughout the entire globe.
-
-The story of how the Scythian first came to the British Islands, has
-been preserved in the Welsh annals, which date back three thousand
-years. The legend runs that their ancestors, the nation of the Cimbri,
-wandered long over Europe, forgetting God’s name, and the early wisdom.
-At length they crossed “the hazy sea” (the German Ocean) from the
-country of the pools (Belgium) and came to Britain, the sea-girt land,
-called by them Cambria,[15] or, first mother; and they were the first
-who trod the soil of Britain. There their poets and bards recovered
-the lost name of God, the sacred I.A.O., and the primal letters their
-forefathers had known, called the ten signs. And ever since they
-have possessed religion and literature, though the bards kept the
-signs secret for many ages, so that all learning might be limited to
-themselves.
-
- [15] This is the Latinized form of the original word.
-
-The paramount monarch of the Cimbri nation reigned at London, and
-a state of poetry and peace long continued, till the Dragon-Aliens
-appeared on their coasts. The ancient Cimbri retreated into Wales,
-where they have ever since remained. The Picts seized on Caledonia, and
-the Saxons on England, until, in their turn, they were conquered by the
-Danes.
-
-Ireland at that period was the most learned and powerful island of
-the West. Through all changes of European dynasties she retained her
-independence. From the Milesian to the Norman, no conqueror had trod
-her soil.[16]
-
- [16] The Danes were never more than a colony in Ireland.
-
-Meanwhile England, who never yet successfully resisted an invading
-enemy, passed under many a foreign yoke. For five hundred years the
-Romans held her as a province to supply their legions with recruits,
-and the abject submission of the natives called forth the bitter
-sarcasm, that “the good of his country was the only cause in which a
-Briton had forgot to die.”
-
-The acquisition of Ireland was eagerly coveted by the imperial race,
-but though Agricola boasted he would conquer it with a single legion,
-and even went so far towards the completion of his design as to line
-all the opposite coasts of Wales with his troops, yet no Roman soldier
-ever set foot on Irish soil.
-
-Rome had enough of work on hand just then, for Alaric the Goth is at
-her gates, and Attila, the scourge of God, is ravaging her fairest
-provinces. The imperial mother of Colonies can no longer hold her own
-or aid her children; England is abandoned to her fate, and the Irish
-from the west, the Scythian from the north, the Saxon from the east,
-assault, and desolate, and despoil her.
-
-The Scythian Picts pour down on her cities, “killing, burning, and
-destroying.” The Irish land in swarms from their _corrahs_, and “with
-fiery outrage and cruelty, carry, harry, and make havoc of all.” Thus
-bandied between two insolent enemies, the English sent ambassadors to
-Rome “with their garments rent, and sand upon their heads,” bearing
-that most mournful appeal of an humbled people—“to Ætius, thrice
-Consul: the groans of the Britons. The barbarians drive us to the sea,
-the sea drives us back to the barbarians; thus, between two kinds of
-death, we are either slaughtered or drowned.”
-
-But no help comes, for Rome herself is devastated by Hun and Vandal,
-and the empire is falling like a shattered world.
-
-Thus England passed helplessly under the Saxon yoke, and so rested some
-hundred years; Ireland the while remaining as free from Saxon thrall as
-she had been from Roman rule.
-
-Through all these centuries the current of human life still flowed
-westward from the unknown mysterious regions of Central Asia.
-
-It was about the close of the eighth century, when the Scythian
-Charlemagne was crowned Emperor of Rome in the city of the Cæsars,
-that the fierce children of Thor and Odin, after having swept across
-Northern Europe to the limit of the land, flung their fortunes to the
-stormy seas, and began to earn that terrible yet romantic renown with
-which history and saga have invested the deeds of the Scandinavian sea
-kings. The raven on their black banner was the dreaded symbol of havoc
-and devastation all along the sea coasts and islands of the Atlantic.
-In England, Saxon rule fell helplessly before the power of the new
-invaders, as wave after wave of the ruthless sea-ravagers dashed upon
-the sluggish masses of the heptarchy.
-
-After two hundred years of protracted agony and strife, Saxon sway was
-annihilated for ever, and Canute the Dane reigned in England.
-
-Meanwhile, the well-appointed fleets of Norsemen and Danes were
-prowling about the cost of Ireland, trying to obtain a footing on her
-yet unconquered soil.
-
-When these pagan pirates first appeared on our shores, Ireland had
-enjoyed a Christian civilization of four centuries. The light of the
-true faith had been there long before it shone upon rude Saxon England.
-The Irish of that early era excelled in music, poetry, and many arts.
-They had a literature, colleges for the learned, an organized and
-independent hierarchy, churches and abbeys, whose ruins still attest
-the sense of the beautiful, as well as the piety which must have
-existed in the founders. Their manuscripts, dating from this period,
-are older than those of any other nation of Northern Europe; their
-music was distinguished by its pathetic beauty, and the ballads of
-their bards emulated in force of expression those of ancient Homer.
-At the time that the Scots were totally ignorant of letters, and that
-the princes of the heptarchy had to resort to Irish colleges for
-instruction in the liberal sciences, Ireland held the proud title of
-the “Island of Saints and Scholars;” and learned men went forth from
-her shores to evangelize Europe.
-
-One Irish priest founded an abbey at Iona; another was the friend
-and counsellor of Charlemagne; a third, of equal celebrity, founded
-monasteries both in France and England. The Irish of eleven centuries
-ago were the apostles of Europe!
-
-The Norsemen, or “white strangers,” as the Irish called them who swept
-like a hurricane over this early civilization, were fierce pagans, who
-respected neither God nor man. Not till three centuries after their
-arrival in Ireland were they converted to the Christian faith. They
-pillaged towns, burned churches, destroyed manuscripts of the past
-which no future can restore, plundered abbeys of all that learning,
-sanctity and civilization had accumulated of the sacred, the costly,
-and the beautiful, and gave the Irish nothing in return but lessons of
-their own barbarous ferocity. Then it was we hear how Irish mothers
-gave their infants food on the point of their father’s sword, and at
-the baptism left the right arms of their babes unchristened that they
-might strike the more relentlessly. The Syrian and the Scythian, the
-children of the one Japhetian race, met at last in this _ultima thule_
-of Europe, after a three thousand years’ divergence; and even then,
-though they met with fierce animosity and inextinguishable hatred,
-yet lingerings of a far-off ancient identity in the language, the
-traditions, and the superstitions of each, could still be traced in
-these children of the one mighty father.
-
-Great consternation must have been in Ireland when the report spread
-that a fleet of sixty strange sail was in the Boyne, and that another
-of equal number was sailing up the Liffey. The foreigners leaped from
-their ships to conquest. Daring brought success; they sacked, burned,
-pillaged, murdered; put a captive king to death in his own gyves at
-their ships; drove the Irish before them from the ocean to the Shannon;
-till, with roused spirit and gathered force, the confederate kings of
-Ireland in return drove back the white foreigners from the Shannon to
-the ocean. But they had gained a footing, and inroads, with plunder
-and devastation, never ceased from that time till the whole eastern
-sea-border of Ireland was their own. There they established themselves
-for four centuries, holding their first conquests, but never gaining
-more, until they were finally expelled by the Normans.
-
-To these red-haired pirates and marauders Dublin owes its existence
-as a city. The _Ath-Cliath_ of the Irish, though of ancient fame, was
-but an aggregate of huts by the side of the Liffey, which was crossed
-by a bridge of hurdles. The kings of Ireland never made it a royal
-residence, even after Tara was cursed by St. Rodan. Their palaces were
-in the interior of the island; but no doubt exists that _Ath-Cliath_,
-the Eblana of Ptolemy, was a well-known port, the resort of merchantmen
-from the most ancient times. There were received the Spanish wines, the
-Syrian silks, the Indian gold, destined for the princes and nobles; and
-from thence the costly merchandize was transported to the interior.
-
-But Dublin, with its fine plain watered by the Liffey, its noble bay,
-guarded by the sentinel hills, at once attracted the special notice of
-the bold Vikings. Their chiefs fixed their residence there, and assumed
-the title of Kings of Dublin, or Kings of the Dark Water, as the word
-may be translated. They erected a fortress on the very spot where
-the Norman Castle now rules the city, and, after their conversion, a
-cathedral, still standing amongst us, venerable with the memories of
-eight hundred years.
-
-Their descendants are with us to this day, and many families might
-trace back their lineage to the Danish leaders, whose names have been
-preserved in Irish history. Amongst sundry of “these great and valiant
-captains” are named Swanchean, Griffin, Albert Roe, Torbert Duff,
-Goslyn, Walter English, Awley, King of Denmark, from whom descend the
-Macaulays, made more illustrious by the modern historian of their race
-than by the ancient pirate king. There are also named Randal O’Himer,
-Algot, Ottarduff Earl, Fyn Crossagh, Torkill, Fox Wasbagg, Trevan,
-Baron Robert, and others; names interesting, no doubt, to those who can
-claim them for their ancestry.
-
-The Norsemen having walled and fortified Dublin, though including
-but a mile within its circumference—whereas now the city includes
-ten—proceeded to fortify Dunleary, now Kingstown, in order to secure
-free passage to their ships. Then, from their stronghold of Dublin,
-they made incessant inroads upon the broad rich plains of the interior.
-They spread all along Meath, which received its name from them, of
-“Fingall” (the land of the white stranger); they devastated as far
-north as Armagh, as far west as the Shannon; Wexford, Waterford, and
-Limerick became half Danish cities. Everywhere their course was marked
-by barbaric spoliation. At one time it is noticed that they carried
-off a “great prey of women”—thus the Romans woo’d their Sabine brides;
-indeed the accounts in the Irish annals of the shrines they burned,
-the royal graves they plundered, the treasures they pillaged, the
-ferocities they perpetrated, are as interminable as they are revolting.
-
-When beaten back by the Irish princes they crouched within their walled
-city of Dublin, till an opportunity offered for some fresh exercise of
-murderous cunning, some act of audacious rapine. Thus the contest was
-carried on for four centuries between the colonists and the nation;
-mutual hatred ever increasing; the Irish kings of Leinster still
-claiming the rights of feudal lords over the Danes; the Danes resisting
-every effort made to dislodge them, though they were not unfrequently
-forced to pay tribute.
-
-Sometimes the Irish kings hired them as mercenaries to assist in the
-civil wars which raged perennially amongst them. Sometimes there were
-intermarriages between the warring foes—the daughter of Brian Boro’
-wedded Sitric, King of the Danes of Dublin. Occasionally the Irish
-kings got possession of Dublin, and ravaged and pillaged in return.
-Once the Danes were driven forth completely from the city, and forced
-to take refuge upon “Ireland’s Eye,” the lone sea rock, since made
-memorable by a tragic history. Malachy, King of Meath, besieged Dublin
-for three days and three nights, burned the fortress, and carried off
-the Danish regalia; hence the allusion in Moore’s song to “The Collar
-of Gold which he won from the proud invader.” But the most terrible
-defeat the Danes ever sustained was at Clontarf, when ten thousand men
-in coats of mail were opposed to King Brian; but “the ten thousand in
-armour were cut in pieces, and three thousand warriors slain besides.”
-Even the Irish children fought against the invader. The grandchild of
-King Brian, a youth of fifteen, was found dead with his hand fast bound
-in the hair of a Dane’s head, whom the child had dragged to the sea.[17]
-
- [17] Hogan, the great historical sculptor of Ireland, has illustrated
- this era of Irish history by a fine group, heroic and poetical
- in idea, as well as beautiful in execution, like every work that
- proceeded from the gifted mind of this distinguished artist.
-
-Still the Danish colony was not uprooted, though after this defeat they
-grew more humble, kept within their city of Dublin, and paid tribute to
-the kings of Leinster, and to the paramount monarch of Ireland.
-
-Up to this period, therefore, we see that the Irish race had no
-relationship whatever with their capital city; they never saw the
-inside of their metropolis unless they were carried there as prisoners,
-or that they entered with fire and sword; and, stranger still, during
-the many centuries of the existence of Dublin as a city, up to the
-present time, the Irish race have never ruled there, or held possession
-of the fortress of their capital.
-
-But the time of judgment upon the Danes was approaching, though it
-did not come by Irish hands. As the Saxons in England fell before
-the Danes, so the Danes had fallen before the Normans. The Normans,
-a Scythian race likewise, but more beautiful, more brave, more
-chivalrous, courtly, and polished, than any race that had preceded
-them, came triumphant from Italy and France to achieve the conquest of
-England, which yielded almost without a struggle. One great battle, and
-then no more. William the Norman, or rather the Scythian Frenchman,
-ascends the throne of Alfred. Dane and Saxon fall helplessly beneath
-his feet, and his tyrannies, his robberies, his confiscations, are
-submitted to by the subjugated nation without an effort at resistance.
-
-His handful of Norman nobles seized upon the lands, the wealth, the
-honours, the estates of the kingdom, and retain them to this hour. And
-justly; so noble a race as the Norman knights were made for masters.
-The Saxons sank at once to the level of serfs, of traders and menials,
-from which they have never risen, leaving England divided into a Norman
-aristocracy who have all the land, and a Saxon people who have all the
-toil; crushed by the final conquerors, they sank to be the sediment of
-the kingdom.
-
-The Irish had a different destiny; for five hundred years they fought
-the battle for independence with the Normans, nor did their chiefs sink
-to be the pariahs of the kingdom, as the Saxons of England, but retain
-their princely pretensions to this day. The O’Connors, the O’Briens,
-O’Neils, Kavanaghs, O’Donnels, yield to no family in Europe in pride of
-blood and ancestral honours; while, by intermarriage with the Norman
-lords, a race was founded of Norman Irish—perhaps the finest specimens
-of aristocracy that Europe produced—the Geraldines at their head,
-loving Ireland, and of whom Ireland may be proud.
-
-A hundred years passed by after the Norman conquest of England. Three
-kings of the Norman race had reigned and died, and still the conquest
-of Ireland was unattempted; no Norman knight had set foot on Irish soil.
-
-The story of their coming begins with just such a domestic drama as
-Homer had turned into an epic two thousand years before. A fair and
-faithless woman, a king’s daughter, fled from her husband to the arms
-of a lover. All Ireland is outraged at the act. The kings assemble in
-conclave and denounce vengeance upon the crowned seducer, Dermot, King
-of Leinster.
-
-He leagues with the Danes of Dublin, the abhorred of his countrymen,
-but the only allies he can find in his great need. A battle is fought
-in which Dermot is defeated, his castle of Ferns is burned, his
-kingdom is taken from him, and he himself is solemnly deposed by the
-confederate kings, and banished beyond the seas. Roderick, King of all
-Ireland, is the inexorable and supreme judge. He restores the guilty
-wife to her husband; but the husband disdains to receive her, and she
-retires to a convent, where she expiates her crime and the ruin of her
-country by forty years of penance. The only records of her afterwards
-are of her good deeds. She built a nunnery at Clonmacnoise; she gave a
-chalice of gold to the altar of Mary, and cloth for nine altars of the
-Church; and then Dervorgil, the Helen of our Iliad, is heard of no more.
-
-Dermot, her lover, went to England, seeking aid to recover his kingdom
-of Leinster. In a year he returns with a band of Welsh mercenaries,
-and marches to Dublin; but is again defeated by the confederate kings,
-and obliged to pay a hundred ounces of gold to O’Rourke of Breffny,
-“for the wrong he had done him respecting his wife,” and to give up
-as hostage to King Roderick his only son. But while parleying with
-the Irish kings, Dermot was secretly soliciting English aid, and not
-unsuccessfully.
-
-Memorable was the year 1170, when the renowned Strongbow, Gilbert de
-Clare, Earl of Pembroke, and his Norman knights, landed at Wexford to
-aid the banished king; and when Dermot welcomed his illustrious allies,
-little he thought that by his hand
-
- “The emerald gem of the Western world,
- Was set in the crown of a stranger.”
-
-The compact with the foreigners was sealed with his son’s blood. No
-sooner did King Roderick hear of the Norman landing, than he ordered
-the royal Kavanagh, the hostage of King Dermot, to be put to death; and
-henceforth a doom seemed to be on the male heirs of the line of Dermot,
-as fatal as that which rested upon the house of Atrides.
-
-Dermot had an only daughter remaining. He offered her in marriage to
-the Earl of Pembroke, with the whole kingdom of Leinster for her dowry,
-so as he would help him to his revenge. After a great battle against
-the Danes, in which the Normans were victorious, the marriage was
-celebrated at Waterford.
-
- “Sad Eva gazed
- All round that bridal field of blood, amazed;
- Spoused to new fortunes.”[18]
-
- [18] The Irish Celt to the Irish Norman, from “Poems,” by Aubrey de
- Vere.
-
-No record remains to us of the beauty of the bride, or in what language
-the Norman knight wooed her to his arms; this only we know, that
-Eva, Queen of Leinster in her own right, and Countess of Pembroke by
-marriage, can number amongst her descendants the present Queen of
-England. Of the bridegroom, Cambrensis tells us that he was “ruddy,
-freckle-faced, grey-eyed, his face feminine, his voice small, his
-neck little, yet of a high stature, ready with good words and gentle
-speeches.”
-
-The same authority describes Dermot from personal observation—“A tall
-man of stature, of a large and great body, a valiant and bold warrior,
-and by reason of his continued hallooing his voice was hoarse. He
-rather chose to be feared than loved. Rough and generous, hateful unto
-strangers, he would be against all men and all men against him.”
-
-From Waterford to Dublin was a progress of victory to Dermot and his
-allies, for they marched only through the Danish settlements of which
-Dermot was feudal lord. At Dublin King Roderick opposed them with an
-army. Three days the battle raged; then the Danes of Dublin, fearing
-Dermot’s wrath, opened their gates, and offered him gold and silver
-in abundance if he would spare their lives; but, heedless of treaties,
-the Norman knights rushed in, slew the Danes in their own fortress,
-drove the rest to the sea; and thus ended the Danish dynasty of four
-centuries. Never more did they own a foot of ground throughout the
-length or breadth of the land. An Irish army, aided by Norman skill,
-had effected their complete extinction. The Kingdom of Leinster was
-regained for Dermot, and he and his allies placed a garrison in
-Dublin. This was the last triumph of the ancient race. The kingdom was
-lost even at the moment it seemed regained. That handful of Scythian
-warriors, scarcely visible amid Dermot’s great Irish army, are destined
-to place the yoke upon the neck of ancient Ireland.
-
-The brave Roderick gathered together another army, and, with sixty
-thousand men, laid siege to Dublin, O’Rourke of Breffny aiding him.
-They were repulsed. O’Rourke was taken prisoner, and hanged with his
-head downwards, then beheaded and the head stuck on one of the centre
-gates of the castle, “a spectacle of intense pity to the Irish;” and
-Roderick retired into Connaught to recruit more forces.
-
-There is something heroic and self-devoted in the efforts which, for
-eighteen years, were made by Roderick against the Norman power. Brave,
-learned, just, and enlightened beyond his age, he alone of all the
-Irish princes saw the direful tendency of the Norman inroad. All the
-records of his reign prove that he was a wise and powerful monarch.
-He had a fleet on the Shannon, the like of which had never been seen
-before. He built a royal residence in Connaught, the ruins of which
-are still existing to attest its former magnificence, so far beyond
-all structures of the period, that it was known in Ireland as the
-beautiful house. He founded a chair of literature at Armagh, and left
-an endowment in perpetuity, to maintain it for the instruction of the
-youth of Ireland and Scotland. A great warrior, and a fervent patriot,
-his first effort, when he obtained the crown, was to humble the Danish
-power. Dublin was forced to pay him tribute, and he was inaugurated
-there with a grandeur and luxury unknown before. When Dermot outraged
-morality, he deposed and banished him. When Dermot further sinned, and
-traitorously brought over the foreigner, Roderick, with stern justice,
-avenged the father’s treason by the son’s life. His own son, the heir
-of his kingdom, leagued with the Normans, and was found fighting in
-their ranks. Roderick, like a second Brutus, unpitying, yet heroically
-just, when the youth was brought a prisoner before him, himself ordered
-his eyes to be put out. His second son also turned traitor, and
-covenanted with the Normans to deprive his father of the kingdom. Then
-Roderick, surrounded by foreign foes and domestic treachery, quitted
-Connaught, and went through the provinces of Ireland, seeking to stir
-up a spirit as heroic as his own in the hearts of his countrymen. Soon
-after his unworthy son was killed in some broil, and Roderick resumed
-the kingly functions; but while all the other Irish princes took the
-oath of fealty to King Henry, he kept aloof beyond the Shannon, equally
-disdaining treachery or submission. His last son, the only one worthy
-of him, being defeated in a battle by the Normans, slew himself in
-despair.
-
-The male line of his house was now extinct; the independence of his
-country was threatened; Norman power was growing strong in the land,
-and his continued efforts for eighteen years to arouse the Irish
-princes to a sense of their danger was unavailing. Wearied, disgusted,
-heartbroken, it may be, he voluntarily laid down the sceptre and the
-crown, and retired to the monastery of Cong, where he became a monk,
-and thus, in penance and seclusion, passed ten years—the weary ending
-of a fated life.
-
-He died there, twenty-eight years after the Norman invasion, “after
-exemplary penance, victorious over the world and the devil;” and the
-chroniclers record his title upon his grave where he is laid—
-
- “Roderick O’Connor,
- King of all Ireland, both of the Irish and English.”
-
-Seven centuries have passed since then, yet even now, which of us could
-enter the beautiful ruins of that ancient abbey, wander through the
-arched aisles tapestried by ivy, or tread the lonely silent chapel,
-once vocal with prayer and praise, without sad thoughts of sympathy
-for the fate of the last monarch of Ireland, and perchance grave
-thoughts likewise over the destiny of a people who, on that grave of
-native monarchy, independence, and nationality, have as yet written no
-RESURGAM.
-
-Exactly ten months after the Normans took possession of Dublin,
-King Dermot, “by whom a trembling sod was made of all Ireland, died
-of an insufferable and unknown disease—for he became putrid while
-living—without a will, without penance, without the body of Christ,
-without unction, as his evil deeds deserved.”
-
-Immediately the Earl of Pembroke assumed the title of King of Leinster
-in right of his wife Eva. Whereupon Henry of England grew alarmed at
-the independence of his nobility, and hastened over to assert his
-claims as lord paramount. To his remonstrances Strongbow answered,
-“What I won was with the sword; what was given me I give you.” An
-agreement was then made by which Strongbow retained Dublin, while Henry
-appointed what nobles he chose over the other provinces of Leinster.
-
-When the first Norman monarch landed amongst us, the memorable 18th day
-of October, 1172, no resistance was offered by any party; no battle
-was fought. The Irish chiefs were so elated at the Danish overthrow,
-that they even volunteered oaths of fealty to the foreign prince who
-had been in some sort their deliverer. Calmly, as in a state pageant,
-Henry proceeded from Wexford to Dublin; his route lay only through the
-conquered Danish possessions, now the property of the Countess Eva;
-there was no fear therefore of opposition. On reaching the city, “he
-caused a royal palace to be built, very curiously contrived of smooth
-wattels, after the manner of the country, and there, with the kings and
-princes of Ireland, did keep Christmas with great solemnity,” on the
-very spot where now stands St. Andrew’s Church.
-
-King Henry remained six months in Ireland, the longest period which
-a foreign monarch has ever passed amongst us, and during that time
-he never thought of fighting a battle with the Irish. As yet, the
-whole result of Norman victories was the downfall of the Danes, in
-which object the Irish had gladly assisted. Strongbow and Eva reigned
-peacefully in our capital. Henry placed governors over the other
-Danish cities, and in order that Dublin, from which the Danes had been
-expelled, might be repeopled, he made a present of our fair city to the
-good people of Bristol.
-
-Accordingly a colony from that town, famed for deficiency in personal
-attractions, came over and settled here; but thirty years after, the
-Irish, whose instincts of beauty were no doubt offended by the rising
-generation of Bristolians, poured down from the Wicklow hills upon
-the ill-favoured colony, and made a quick ending of them by a general
-massacre.
-
-In a fit of penitence, also, for the murdered À Becket, Henry founded
-the Abbey of Thomas Court, from which Thomas Street derives its name,
-and then the excommunicated king quitted Ireland, leaving it unchanged,
-save that Henry the Norman held the possessions of Torkil the Dane, and
-Dublin, from a Danish, had become a Norman city. Five hundred years
-more had to elapse before English jurisdiction extended beyond the
-ancient Danish pale, and a Cromwell or a William of Nassau was needed
-for the final conquest of Ireland, as well as for the redemption of
-England.
-
-Nothing can be more absurd than to talk of a Saxon conquest of Ireland.
-The Saxons, an ignorant, rude, inferior race, could not even maintain
-their ascendency in England. They fell before the superior power,
-intelligence, and ability of the Norman, and the provinces of Ireland
-that fell to the first Norman nobles were in reality not gained by
-battles, but by the intermarriage of Norman lords with the daughters
-of Irish kings. Hence it was that in right of their wives the Norman
-nobles early set up claims independent of the English crown, and the
-hereditary rights, being transmitted through each generation, were
-perpetually tempting the Norman aristocracy into rebellion. English
-supremacy was as uneasily borne by the De Lacys, the Geraldines, the
-Butlers, and others of the Norman stock, as by the O’Connors, the
-Kavanaghs, the O’Neils, or the O’Briens. The great Richard de Burgho
-married Odierna, grand-daughter of Cathal Crovdearg, king of Connaught.
-Hence the De Burghos assumed the title of Lords of Connaught.
-
-King Roderick, as we have said, left no male issue. His kingdom
-descended to his daughter, who married the Norman knight, Hugo de Lacy.
-Immediately De Lacy set up a claim as independent prince in right of
-his wife, assumed legal state, took the title of King of Meath, and
-appeared in public with a golden crown upon his head, and so early as
-twenty-five years after the invasion, John de Courcy and the son of
-this De Lacy marched _against_ the English of Leinster and Munster.
-Many a romance could be woven of the destiny and vicissitudes of this
-great race, half Irish, half Norman; independent princes by the one
-side, and English subjects by the other.
-
-The great Earl of Pembroke lived but a few years after his capture of
-Dublin. The Irish legends say that St. Bridget killed him. However, he
-and Eva had no male heir, and only one daughter, named Isabel, after
-the Earl’s mother, who was also aunt to the reigning king of Scotland.
-
-This young girl was sole heiress of Leinster and of her father’s Welsh
-estates. Richard Cœur de Lion took her to his court at London, and she
-became his ward. In due time she married William Marshall, called the
-great Earl, hereditary Earl Marshal of England, and Earl of Pembroke
-and Leinster, in right of his wife. High in office and favour with the
-king, we read that he carried the sword of state before Richard at his
-coronation, and as a monument of his piety, he left Tintern Abbey, in
-the County Wexford, erected by him on his wife’s property.
-
-Isabel and Earl William had five sons and five daughters. The five
-sons, William, Walter, Gilbert, Anselm, and Richard (Isabel called no
-son of hers after the royal traitor Dermot, her grandfather) inherited
-the title in succession, and all died childless. We have said there was
-a doom upon Dermot’s male posterity.
-
-The inheritance was then divided between the five daughters, each of
-whom received a province for a dower. Carlow, Kilkenny, the Queen’s
-County, Wexford, and Kildare were the five portions. Maud, the eldest,
-married the Earl of Norfolk, who became Earl Marshal of England in
-right of his wife.
-
-Isabel, the second, married the Earl of Gloucester, and her
-granddaughter, Isabel also, was mother to the great Robert Bruce, who
-was therefore great-great-great-grandson of Eva and Strongbow. Eva,
-the third daughter, married the Lord de Breos, and from a daughter of
-hers, named Eva likewise, descended Edward the Fourth, King of England,
-through whose granddaughter Margaret Queen of Scotland, daughter of
-Henry the Seventh, the present reigning family of England claim their
-right to the throne. Through two lines, therefore, our Most Gracious
-Majesty can trace back her pedigree to Eva the Irish princess.
-
-Joan, whose portions were Wexford, married Lord Valentia, half-brother
-to King Henry the Third, and the male line failing, the inheritance was
-divided between two daughters, from one of whom the Talbots, Earls of
-Shrewsbury, inherit their Wexford estates.
-
-From Sybil, the youngest, who married the Earl of Ferrars and Derby,
-descended the Earls of Winchester, the Lords Mortimer, and other noble
-races. She had seven daughters, who all married Norman lords, so that
-scarcely a family could be named of the high and ancient English
-nobility, whose wealth has not been increased by the estates of Eva,
-the daughter of King Dermot; and thus it came to pass that Leinster
-fell by marriage and inheritance, not by conquest, into the possession
-of the great Norman families, who, of course, acknowledged the King
-of England as their sovereign; and the English monarchs assumed
-thenceforth the title of Lords of Ireland—a claim which they afterwards
-enforced over the whole country.
-
-The destiny of the descendants of De Lacy and King Roderick’s daughter
-was equally remarkable. They had two sons, Hugh and Walter, who,
-before they were twenty-one, threw off English allegiance, and set up
-as independent princes. To avoid the wrath of King John they fled to
-France, and took refuge in an abbey, where, disguised as menials, the
-two young noblemen found employment in garden-digging, preparing mud
-and bricks, and similar work. By some chance the abbot suspected the
-disguise, and finally detected the princes in the supposed peasants.
-He used his knowledge of their secret to obtain their pardon from King
-John, and Hugh De Lacy was created Earl of Ulster. He left an only
-daughter, his sole heir. She married a De Burgho, who, in right of
-his wife, became Earl of Ulster, and from them descended Ellen, wife
-of Robert Bruce, King of Scotland. It is singular that the mother
-of Robert Bruce should have been descended from Eva, and his wife
-from King Roderick’s daughter. The granddaughter of Robert Bruce,
-the Princess Margery, married the Lord High Steward of Scotland, and
-through her the Stuarts claimed the crown. From thence it is easy to
-trace how the royal blood of the three kingdoms meet in the reigning
-family of England. Another descendant of the Earls of Ulster (an only
-daughter likewise) married Lionel, Duke of Clarence, son of Edward the
-Third, who, in the right of his wife, became Earl of Ulster and Lord of
-Connaught, and these titles finally merged in the English crown in the
-person of Edward the Fourth. From all these genealogies one fact may
-be clearly deduced, that the present representative of the royal Irish
-races of Eva and Roderick, and the lineal heiress of their rights, is
-Her Majesty Queen Victoria.
-
-The proud and handsome race of Norman Irish, that claimed descent
-from these intermarriages, were the nobles, of whom it was said,
-“They were more Irish than the Irish themselves.” The disposition
-to become independent of England was constantly manifested in them.
-They publicly asserted their rights, renounced the English dress and
-language, and adopted Irish names. Thus Sir Ulick Burke, ancestor of
-Lord Clanricarde, became MacWilliam Oughter (or upper), and Sir Edmond
-Albanagh, progenitor of the Earl of Mayo, became MacWilliam Eighter
-(or lower). Richard, son of the Earl of Norfolk, and grandson of Eva,
-set up a claim to be independent King of Leinster, and was slain by
-the English. We have seen that Walter and Hugh De Lacy, grandsons of
-Roderick, were in open rebellion against King John. A hundred years
-later, two of the same race, named Walter and Hugh likewise, were
-proclaimed traitors for aiding the army of Robert Bruce, who claimed
-the crown of Ireland for his brother Edward, and the two De Lacys were
-found dead by the side of Edward Bruce at the great battle of Dundalk,
-where the Scotch forces were overthrown.
-
-Once, even the Geraldines and the Fitzmaurices took prisoner the
-Justiciary of Dublin, as the Lord-Lieutenant of that day was named.
-Meanwhile the Irish princes of the West retained their independence;
-sometimes at feud, sometimes in amity with the English of the Eastern
-coast. We read that “the English of Dublin invited Hugh, King of
-Connaught, to a conference, and began to deal treacherously with
-him; but William Mareschall, his friend, coming in with his forces,
-rescued him, in despite of the English, from the middle of the Court,
-and escorted him to Connaught.” Both races were equally averse to
-the domination of the English crown. The Geraldines and Butlers, the
-De Burghos and De Lacys, were as intractable as the O’Connors of
-Connaught, or the O’Neils of Tyrone; even more so. The Great O’Neil
-submitted to Elizabeth; but two hundred years later the Geraldines had
-still to add the name of another martyr for liberty to the roll of
-their illustrious ancestors.
-
-Frequently the Normans fought amongst themselves as fiercely as if
-opposed to the Irish. The Earl of Ulster, a De Burgho, the same who
-is recorded to have given the first entertainment at Dublin Castle,
-took his kinsman, Walter Burke, prisoner, and had him starved to death
-in his own castle; a tragedy which might have been made as memorable
-as that of Ugolino in the _Torre del Fame_, had there been a Dante in
-Ireland to record it. For this act the kinsmen of Walter Burke murdered
-the Earl of Ulster on the Lord’s Day, as he was kneeling at his
-prayers, and cleft his head in two with a sword.
-
-It was unfortunate for Ireland that her Irish princes were so
-unconquerable, and that her Norman lords should have caught the
-infection of resistance to the crown. Eight hundred years ago the
-Saxons of England peaceably settled down with the Normans to form one
-nation, with interests and objects identical.
-
-The Norman conquerors, better fitted, perhaps, for rulers than any
-other existing in Europe, established at once a strong, vigorous
-government in England. The Kings, as individuals, may have been weak
-or tyrannous, but there was a unity of purpose, a sense of justice,
-and a vigour of will existing in the ruling class that brought the
-ruled speedily under the order and discipline of laws. Not a century
-and a half had elapsed from the Conquest before Magna Charta and
-representation by Parliament secured the liberty of the people against
-the caprices of kings; and the Norman temperament which united in a
-singular degree the instincts of loyalty with the love of freedom,
-became the hereditary national characteristic of Englishmen. But
-Ireland never, at any time, comprehended the word nationality. From of
-old it was broken up into fragments, ruled by chiefs whose principal
-aim was mutual destruction. There was no unity, therefore no strength.
-
-If, at the time of the Norman invasion, a king of the race had settled
-here as in England, the Irish would gradually have become a nation
-under one ruler, in place of being an aggregate of warring tribes; but
-for want of this chief corner-stone the Norman nobles themselves became
-but isolated chiefs—new petty kings added to the old—each for himself,
-none for the country. It was contrary to all natural laws that the
-proud Irish princes, with the traditions of their race going back two
-thousand years, should at once serve with love and loyalty a foreign
-king whose face they never saw and from whom they derived no benefits.
-And thus it was that five hundred years elapsed, from Henry Plantagenet
-to William of Nassau, before Ireland was finally adjusted in her
-subordinate position to the English crown.
-
-Meanwhile the Danish Dublin was fast rising into importance as the
-Norman city, the capital of the English pale. Within that circle
-the English laws, language, manners and religion were implicitly
-adopted; without, there was a fierce, warlike, powerful people, the
-ancient lords of the soil, but with them the citizens of Dublin had
-no affinity; and the object of the English rulers was to keep the two
-races as distinct as possible. Amongst other enactments tending to
-obliterate any feeling of kindred which might exist, the inhabitants
-of the pale were ordered to adopt English surnames, derived from
-everything which by the second commandment we are forbidden to worship.
-Hence arose the tribes of fishes—cod, haddock, plaice, salmon, gurnet,
-gudgeon, &c.; and of birds—crow, sparrow, swan, pigeon; and of trades,
-as carpenter, smith, baker, mason; and of colours—the blacks, whites,
-browns, and greens, which in Dublin so copiously replace the grand old
-historic names of the provinces. Determined also on annihilating the
-picturesque, at least in the individual, lest the outward symbol might
-be taken for an inward affinity, the long flowing hair and graceful
-mantle, after the Irish fashion, were forbidden to be worn within the
-pale.
-
-Neither was the Irish language tolerated within the English
-jurisdiction, for which Holingshed gives good reason, after this
-fashion—“And here,” he says, “some snappish carpers will snuffingly
-snib me for debasing the Irish language, but my short discourse tendeth
-only to this drift, that it is not expedient that the Irish tongue
-should be so universally gagled in the English pale; for where the
-country is subdued, there the inhabitants should be ruled by the same
-laws that the conqueror is governed, wear the same fashion of attire
-with which the victor is vested, and speak the same language which
-the victor parleth; and if any of these lack, doubtless the conquest
-limpeth.” The English tongue, however, seems to have been held in
-utter contempt and scorn by the Irish allies of the pale. After the
-submission of the Great O’Neil, the last who held the title of king in
-Ireland, which he exchanged for that of Earl of Tyrone, as a mark and
-seal of his allegiance to Queen Elizabeth, “One demanded merrilie,”
-says Holingshed, “why O’Neil would not frame himself to speak English?
-‘What,’ quoth the other in a rage, ‘thinkest thou it standeth with
-O’Neil his honour to writhe his mouth in clattering English.’”
-
-As regarded religion, the English commanded the most implicit obedience
-to the Pope, under as strict and severe penalties as, five hundred
-years later, they enacted against those who acknowledged his authority.
-One provision of the ancient oath imposed upon the subjugated Irish
-was—“You acknowledge yourself to be of the Mother Church of Rome, now
-professed by all Christians.” But, that the Irish of that era little
-heeded papal or priestly ordinances may be inferred from the fact that,
-during the wars of Edward Bruce, the English complained that their
-Irish auxiliaries were more exhausting than the Scots, as they ate
-meat all the time of Lent; and it is recorded, that in 1133, when the
-Leinster Irish rose against the English, “they set fire to everything,
-even the churches, and burned the church of Dunleary, with eighty
-persons in it, and even when the priest in his sacred vestments, and
-carrying the Host in his hands, tried to get out, they drove him back
-with their spears and burned him. For this they were excommunicated
-by a Papal Bull, and the country was put under an interdict. But they
-despised these things, and again wasted the county of Wexford.”[19]
-
- [19] Grace’s Annals. Rev. R. Butler’s translation.
-
-The energetic and organizing spirit of the Normans was, however,
-evidenced by better deeds than those we have named. Courts of law
-were established in Dublin, a mayor and corporation instituted, and
-Parliaments were convened after the English fashion. Within fifty years
-after the Norman settlement, the lordly pile of Dublin Castle rose upon
-the site of the old Danish fortress, built, indeed, to overawe the
-Irish, as William the Conqueror built the Tower of London to overawe
-the English; yet, by Norman hands, the first regal residence was given
-to our metropolis. St. Patrick’s Cathedral was next elected by the
-colonists, and gradually our fair city rose into beauty and importance
-through Norman wealth and Norman skill. From henceforth, the whole
-interest of Irish history centres in the chief city of the pale, and
-the history of Dublin becomes the history of English rule in Ireland.
-For centuries its position was that of a besieged city in the midst
-of a hostile country; for centuries it resisted the whole force of
-the native race; and finally triumphantly crushed, annihilated, and
-revenged every effort made for Irish independence.
-
-In truth, Dublin is a right royal city, and never fails in reverential
-respect towards her English mother.
-
-Many great names are associated with the attempt to write a history
-of Dublin. The work in all ages was laborious; there were no printed
-books to consult, and the records of Ireland, as Hooker complains
-three hundred years ago, “were verie slenderlie and disorderlie kept.”
-Whitelaw’s work, though it employed two editors ten hours a day for
-ten years, yet goes no farther than a description of the public
-buildings; but the object of Mr. Gilbert’s history is distinct from
-all that precedes it. It is from the decaying streets and houses
-that he disentombs great memories, great fragments of past life. It
-is not a mere record of Ionic pillars, Corinthian capitals, or Doric
-pediments he gives us. Whitelaw has supplied whole catalogues of these;
-but records of the human life, that has throbbed through the ancient
-dwellings of our city century after century; of the vicissitudes of
-families, to be read in their ruined mansions; of the vast political
-events which in some room, in some house, on some particular night,
-branded the stigmata deeper on the country; or the tragedies of great
-hopes crushed, young blood shed, victims hopelessly sacrificed, which
-have made some street, some house, some chamber, for ever sacred.
-
-The labours of such an undertaking are manifest; yet none can
-appreciate them fully who has not known what it is to spend days,
-weeks, months buried in decaying parchments, endless pipe-rolls,
-worm-eaten records, dusty deeds and leases, excavating some fact, or
-searching for some link necessary for the completion of a tale, or the
-elucidation of a truth.
-
-Mr. Gilbert tells us that twelve hundred statutes and enactments of
-the Anglo-Irish Parliament still remain unpublished. From these and
-such-like decayed and decaying manuscripts, ancient records which
-have become almost hieroglyphics to the present age, he has gathered
-the life-history of an ancient city; he has made the stones to speak,
-and evoked the shadows of the past to fill up the outline of a great
-historical picture.
-
-Fifty, even twenty years hence, the production of such a work would
-be impossible; the ancient records will probably have perished; the
-ancient houses, round which the curious may yet gather, will have
-fallen to the ground; and the ancient race, who cherished in their
-hearts the legends of the past with the fidelity of priests, and the
-fervour of bards, will have almost passed away.
-
-Dublin is fortunate, therefore, in finding a historian endowed with
-the ability, the energetic literary industry, the untiring spirit of
-research, and the vast amount of antiquarian knowledge necessary for
-the production of so valuable a work, before records perish, mansions
-fall, or races vanish.
-
-In a history illustrated by human lives and deeds, and localized in
-the weird old streets, once the proudest, now the meanest of our city,
-many a family will find an ancestral shadow starting suddenly to light,
-trailing long memories with it of departed fashion, grandeur, and
-magnificence.
-
-Few amongst us who tread the Dublin of the present in all its beauty,
-think of the Dublin of the past in all its contrasted insignificance.
-True, the eternal features are the same; the landscape setting of the
-city is coeval with creation. Tyrian, Dane, and Norman have looked as
-we look, and with hearts as responsive to Nature’s loveliness, upon the
-emerald plains, the winding rivers, the hills draperied in violet and
-gold, the mountain gorges, thunder-riven, half veiled by the foam of
-the waterfall, and the eternal ocean encircling all; scenes where God
-said a city should arise, and the mountain and the ocean are still, as
-of old, the magnificent heritage of beauty conferred on our metropolis.
-
-But the early races, whether from southern sea or northern plain,
-did little to aid the beauty of nature with the products of human
-intellect. Dublin, under the Danish rule, consisted only of a fortress,
-a church, and one rude street. Under the rule of the Normans,
-those great civilizers of the western world, those grand energetic
-organizers, temple and tower builders, it rose gradually into a
-beautiful capital, the chief city of Ireland, the second city of the
-empire. At first the rudimental metropolis gathered round the castle,
-as nebulæ round a central sun, and from this point it radiated westward
-and southward; the O’Briens on the south, the O’Connors on the west,
-the O’Neils on the north, perpetually hovering on the borders, but
-never able to regain the city, never able to dislodge the brave Norman
-garrison who had planted their banners on the castle walls. In that
-castle, during the seven hundred years of its existence, no Irishman of
-the old race has ever held rule for a single hour.
-
-And what a history it has of tragedies and splendours; crowned and
-discrowned monarchs flit across the scene, and tragic destinies,
-likewise, may be recorded of many a viceroy! Piers Gravestone,
-Lord-Lieutenant of King Edward, murdered; Roger Mortimer—“The Gentle
-Mortimer”—hanged at Tyburn; the Lord Deputy of King Richard II.
-murdered by the O’Briens; whereupon the King came over to avenge his
-death, just a year before he himself was so ruthlessly murdered at
-Pomfret Castle. Two viceroys died of the plague; how many more were
-plagued to death, history leaves unrecorded; one was beheaded at
-Drogheda; three were beheaded on Tower Hill. Amongst the names of
-illustrious Dublin rulers may be found those of Prince John, the boy
-Deputy of thirteen; Prince Lionel, son of Edward III., who claimed
-Clare in right of his wife, and assumed the title of Clarence from
-having conquered it from the O’Briens.
-
-The great Oliver Cromwell was the Lord-Lieutenant of the Parliament,
-and he in turn appointed his son Henry to succeed him. Dire are the
-memories connected with Cromwell’s reign here, both to his own party
-and to Ireland. Ireton died of the plague after the siege of Limerick;
-General Jones died of the plague after the surrender of Dungarvon; a
-thousand of Cromwell’s men died of the plague before Waterford. The
-climate, in its effect upon English constitutions, seems to be the
-great Nemesis of Ireland’s wrongs.
-
-Strange scenes, dark, secret, and cruel, have been enacted in that
-gloomy pile. No one has told the full story yet. It will be a Ratcliffe
-romance of dungeons and treacheries, of swift death or slow murder.
-God and St. Mary were invoked in vain for the luckless Irish prince
-or chieftain that was caught in that Norman stronghold; but that was
-in the old time—long, long ago. Now the castle courts are crowded
-only with loyal and courtly crowds, gathered to pay homage to the
-illustrious successor of a hundred viceroys.
-
-The strangest scene, perhaps, in the annals of vice-royalty, was when
-Lord Thomas Fitzgerald (Silken Thomas), son of the Earl of Kildare,
-and Lord-Lieutenant in his father’s absence, took up arms for Irish
-independence. He rode through the city with seven score horsemen, in
-shirts of mail and silken fringes on their head-pieces (hence the name
-Silken Thomas), to St. Mary’s Abbey, and there entering the council
-chamber, he flung down the sword of state upon the table, and bade
-defiance to the king and his ministers; then hastening to raise an
-army, he laid siege to Dublin Castle, but with no success. Silken
-Thomas and his five uncles were sent to London, and there executed; and
-sixteen Fitzgeralds were hanged and quartered at Dublin. By a singular
-fatality, no plot laid against Dublin Castle ever succeeded; though to
-obtain possession of this foreign fortress was the paramount wish of
-all Irish rebel leaders. This was the object with Lord Maguire and his
-Catholics, with Lord Edward Fitzgerald and his republicans, with Emmet
-and his enthusiasts, with Smith O’Brien and his nationalists—yet they
-all failed. Once only, during seven centuries, the green flag waved
-over Dublin Castle, with the motto—“NOW OR NEVER! NOW AND FOR EVER!” It
-was when Tyrconnel held it for King James.
-
-In the ancient stormy times of Norman rule, the nobility naturally
-gathered round the Castle. Skinner’s Row was the “May Fair” of mediæval
-Dublin. Hoey’s Court, Castle Street, Cook Street, Fishamble Street,
-Bridge Street, Werburgh Street, High Street, Golden Lane, Back Lane,
-&c., were the fashionable localities inhabited by lords and bishops,
-chancellors and judges; and Thomas Street was the grand prado where
-viceregal pomp and Norman pride were oftenest exhibited. A hundred
-years ago the Lord-Lieutenant was entertained at a ball by Lord
-Mountjoy in Back Lane. Skinner’s Row was distinguished by the residence
-of the great race of the Geraldines, called “Carbrie House,” which from
-them passed to the Dukes of Ormond, and after many vicissitudes, the
-palace from which Silken Thomas went forth to give his young life for
-Irish independence, fell into decay, “and on its site now stand the
-houses known as 6, 7, and 8 Christ Church Place, in the lower stories
-of which still exist some of the old oak beams of the Carbrie House.”
-
-In Skinner’s Row also, two hundred years ago, dwelt Sir Robert Dixon,
-Mayor of Dublin, who was knighted at his own house there by the
-Lord-Lieutenant, the afterwards unfortunate Strafford. The house has
-fallen to ruins, but the vast property conferred on him by Charles
-I. for his good services, has descended to the family of Sir Kildare
-Burrowes, of Kildare. In those brilliant days of Skinner’s Row, it was
-but seventeen feet wide, and the pathways but one foot broad. All its
-glories have vanished now; even the name no longer exists; yet the
-remains of residences once inhabited by the magnificent Geraldines and
-Butlers can still be traced.
-
-Every stone throughout this ancient quarter of Dublin has a history. In
-Cook Street Lord Maguire was arrested at midnight, under circumstances
-very similar to the capture of Lord Edward Fitzgerald; and “to
-commemorate this capture in the parish it was the annual custom, down
-to the year 1829, to toll the bells of St. Andrew’s Church at twelve
-o’clock on the night of the 22nd of October.”
-
-In Bridge Street great lords and peers of the realm resided. The
-Marquis of Antrim, the Duke of Marlborough’s father; Westenra, the
-Dutch merchant who founded the family afterwards ennobled, and others.
-It was the Merrion Square of the day. In Bridge Street the rebellion
-of ’98 was organized at the house of Oliver Bond; and one night Major
-Swan, led by Reynolds the informer, seized twelve gentlemen there, all
-of whom were summarily hanged as rebels. Castle Street was the focus of
-the rebellion of 1641; Sir Phelim O’Neill and Lord Maguire had their
-residences there, and concocted together how to seize the Castle,
-destroy all the lords and council, and re-establish Popery in Ireland.
-But a more useful man than either lived there also—Sir James Ware,
-whose indefatigable ardour in the cause of Irish literature caused him
-to collect, with great trouble and expense, a vast number of Irish
-manuscripts, which, after passing through many vicissitudes, are now
-deposited in the British Museum. The French family of Latouche came to
-Castle Street about one hundred years ago, and one of them, in 1778,
-upheld the shattered credit of the Government by a loan of £20,000
-to the Lord-Lieutenant. Fishamble Street has historical and classic
-memories, and traditions of Handel consecrate this now obscure locality.
-
-Handel spent a year in Dublin. His “Messiah” was composed there, and
-first performed for the benefit of Mercer’s Hospital. How content
-he was with his reception is expressed in a letter to a friend. “I
-cannot,” he says, “sufficiently express the kind treatment I receive
-here, but the politeness of this generous nation cannot be unknown to
-you.”
-
-Dublin Quays are likewise illustrated by great names. On Usher’s
-Quay may still be seen the once magnificent Moira House, the
-princely residence of Lord Moira, afterwards Marquis of Hastings,
-Governor-General of India. A hundred years ago it was the Holland House
-of Dublin, sparkling with all the wit, splendour, rank, and influence
-of the metropolis. The decorations were unsurpassed in the kingdom for
-beauty and grandeur. The very windows were inlaid with mother-o’-pearl.
-
-After the Union, the family in disgust quitted Ireland; Moira house
-was left tenantless for some years, and then finally was sold for the
-use of the pauper poor of Dublin. The decorations were removed, the
-beautiful gardens turned into offices, the upper story of the edifice
-was taken off, and the entire building pauperized as much as possible
-to suit its inmates and its title—“The Mendicity.”
-
-In the good old times the Lord Mayor treated the Lord-Lieutenant to a
-new play every Christmas, when the Corporation acted Mysteries upon
-the stage in Hoggin Green, where the College now stands. The Mysteries
-were on various subjects. In one, the tailors had orders to find Pilate
-and his wife clothed accordingly; the butchers were to supply the
-tormentors; the mariners and vintners represented Noah. At that period
-the Lord-Lieutenants held their court at Kilmainham, or Thomas Court,
-for Dublin Castle was not made a viceregal residence until the reign
-of Elizabeth. The parliaments, too, were ambulatory. Sometimes they
-met in the great aisle of Christ Church, that venerable edifice whose
-echoes have been destined to give back such conflicting sounds. What
-changes in its ritual and its worshippers! What scenes have passed
-before its high altar since first erected by the Danish bishop, whose
-body, in pallium and mitre, lay exposed to view but a few years since,
-after a sleep of eight hundred years. Irish kings and Norman conquerors
-have trod the aisles. There Roderick was inaugurated, the last king
-of Ireland; there Strongbow sleeps, first of the Norman conquerors,
-and, until the middle of the last century, all payments were made at
-his tomb, as if in him alone, living or dead, the citizens had their
-strength; there Lambert Simnel was crowned with a crown taken from the
-head of the Virgin Mary; there Cromwell worshipped before he went forth
-to devastate; there the last Stuart knelt in prayer before he threw
-the last stake at the Boyne for an empire; and there William of Nassau
-knelt in gratitude for the victory, with the crown upon his head,
-forgotten by James in his ignominious flight.
-
-And how many rituals have risen up to heaven from that ancient altar,
-each _anathema maranatha_ to the other—the solemn chants of the early
-church; the gorgeous ritual of the mass; in Elizabeth’s time, the
-simple liturgy of the English Church in the English tongue; this, too,
-was prohibited in its turn, and for ten years the Puritans wailed and
-howled against kings and liturgies in the ancient edifice; there the
-funeral oration for the death of Cromwell was pronounced, entitled,
-“_Threni Hibernici_, or Ireland sympathizing with England for the loss
-of their Josiah (Oliver Cromwell).” Once again rose the incense of the
-mass while King James was amongst us; but William quenched the lights
-on the altar, and established once more the English Liturgy in its
-simplicity and beauty. But so little, during all these changes, had
-the Irish to do with the cathedral of their capital, that by an Act
-passed in 1380 no Irishman was permitted to hold in it any situation or
-office; and so strictly was the law enforced, that Sir John Stevenson
-was the first Irishman admitted, as even vicar-choral.
-
-Many are the themes of interest to be found in Mr. Gilbert’s “History
-of Dublin,” concerning those ancient times when Sackville Street was a
-marsh, Merrion Square an exhausted quarry, the undulations so beautiful
-in its present verdant state being but the accident of excavation; when
-St. Stephen’s Green, with its ten fine Irish acres, was a compound
-of meadow, quagmire, and ditch; when Mountjoy Square was a howling
-wilderness, and North Georges Street and Summer Hill were far away
-in the country, and when the Danes, rudely expelled by Norman swords
-from the south of the Liffey, were stealing over the river to found a
-settlement on the north side.
-
-Our fathers have told us of Dublin in later times, before the Union,
-when a hundred lords and two hundred commoners enriched and enlivened
-our city with their wealth and magnificence. Dublin was then at the
-summit of its glory; but when the colonists sold their parliament
-to England, and the Lords and Commons vanished, and their mansions
-became hospitals and poorhouses, and all wealth, power, influence,
-and magnificence were transferred to the loved mother country, then
-the “City of the Dark Water” sank into very pitiable insignificance.
-The proud Norman spirit of independence was broken at last, and there
-was no great principle to replace it. Having no large sympathies with
-the Irish nation, no idea of country, nationality, or any other grand
-word by which is expressed the resolve of self-reliant men to be
-self-governed, the colonists became petty, paltry, and selfish in aim;
-imitative in manners and feelings; apathetic, even antagonistic to all
-national advance; bound to England by helpless fear and servile hope;
-content so as they could rest under her great shadow, secure from the
-mysterious horrors of Popery, preserved in the blessing of a church
-establishment, and allowed to worship even the shadow of transcendent
-Majesty. Then Dublin ambition was satisfied and happy; for there is
-no word so instinctively abhorrent, so invincibly opposed to all the
-prejudices of Dublin society, as patriotism.
-
-From this cursory glance over the antecedents of our metropolis, the
-cause of her anti-Irishism is plainly deducible from the fact, that
-at no epoch was Dublin an Irish city. The inhabitants are a blended
-race, descended of Danes, Normans, Saxon settlers, and mongrel Irish.
-The country of their affections is England. They have known no other
-mother. With the proud old princes and chiefs of the ancient Irish race
-they have no more affinity than (to use Mr. Macaulay’s illustration)
-the English of Calcutta with the nation of Hindustan, and from this
-colonial position a certain Dublin idiosyncrasy of character has
-resulted, which makes the capital distinct in feeling from the rest of
-Ireland.
-
-Meanwhile the destiny of the ancient race is working out, not in
-happiness or prosperity, but in stern, severe discipline. Unchanged
-and unchangeable they remain, so far as change is effected by impulses
-arising from within. “Two thousand years,” says Moore, “have passed
-over the hovel of the Irish peasant in vain.” Such as they were when
-the first light of history rested on them, they are now; indolent
-and dreamy, patient and resigned as fatalists, fanatical as Bonzees,
-implacable as Arabs, cunning as Greeks, courteous as Spaniards,
-superstitious as savages, loving as children, clinging to the old home
-and the old sod and the old families with a tenderness that is always
-beautiful, sometimes heroic; loving to be ruled, with veneration in
-excess; ready to die like martyrs for a creed, a party, or the idol
-of the hour, but incapable of extending their sympathies beyond the
-family or the clan; content with the lowest place in Europe; stationary
-amid progression; isolated from the European family; without power or
-influence; lazily resting in the past while the nations are wrestling
-in the present for the future. Children of the ocean, yet without
-commerce; idle by thousands, yet without manufactures; gifted with
-quick intellect and passionate hearts, yet literature and art die
-out amongst them for want of aid or sympathy; without definite aims,
-without energy or the earnestness which is the vital life of heroic
-deeds; dark and blind through prejudice and ignorance, they can neither
-resist nobly nor endure wisely; chafing in bondage, yet their epileptic
-fits of liberty are marked only by wild excesses, and end only in
-sullen despair.
-
-Yet it was not in the providence of God that the fine elements of
-humanity in such a people should still continue to waste and stagnate
-during centuries of inaction, while noble countries and fruitful lands,
-lying silent since creation, were waiting the destined toilers and
-workers, who, by the sweat of the brow, shall change them to living
-empires.
-
-Two terrible calamities fell upon Ireland—famine and pestilence; and
-by these two dread ministers of God’s great purposes, the Irish race
-were uprooted and driven forth to fulfil their appointed destiny. A
-million of our people emigrated; a million of our people died under
-these judgments of God. Seventeen millions worth of property passed
-from time-honoured names into the hands of strangers. The echoes of
-the old tongue—call it Pelasgian, Phœnician, Celtic, Irish, what you
-will, still the oldest in Europe, is dying out at last along the stony
-plains of Mayo and the wild sea-cliffs of the storm-rent western shore.
-Scarcely a million and a half are left of people too old to emigrate,
-amidst roofless cabins and ruined villages, who speak that language
-now. Exile, confiscation, or death, was the final fate written on the
-page of history for the much-enduring children of Ireland. One day they
-may reassert themselves in the new world, or in other lands. Australia,
-with its skies of beauty and its pavement of gold, may be given to
-them as America to the Saxon, but how low must a nation have fallen at
-home when even famine and plague come to be welcomed as the levers of
-progression and social elevation. Some wise purpose of God’s providence
-lies, no doubt, at the reverse side, but we have not yet turned the
-leaf.
-
-The ancient race who, thousands of years ago, left the cradle of the
-sun to track him to the ocean, are now flung on the coast of another
-hemisphere to begin once more their destined westward march; and like
-the Israelites of old, they, too, might tell in that new country: “A
-Syrian ready to perish was our father!”
-
-They fled across the Atlantic like a drift of autumn
-leaves—“pestilence-stricken multitudes”—and the sea was furrowed by the
-dead as the plague-ships passed along.
-
-One would say a doom had been laid upon our people—the wandering Io of
-humanity—a destiny of weeping and unrest.
-
-Of old the kings at Tara sat throned with their faces to the west: was
-it a symbol or a prophecy of the future of their nation? when from
-every hill in Ireland could be seen—
-
- “The remnant of our people
- Sweeping westward, wild and woful,
- Like the cloud-rack of a tempest,
- Like the withered leaves of autumn.”
-
-From the Atlantic to the Pacific, where the Rocky Mountains bar like a
-portal the land of gold—through the islands of the Southern Ocean to
-the great desolate world of Australia, seeking as it were the lost home
-of their fathers, and doomed to make the circuit of the earth—still
-onward flows the tide of human life—that inexhaustible race which
-has cleared the forests of Canada, built the cities and made all the
-railroads of the States, given thousands to the red plains of the
-Crimea, overran California and peopled Australia—the race whose destiny
-has made them the instruments of all civilization, though they have
-never reaped its benefits.
-
-Yet we cannot believe that the Irish race is doomed for ever to work
-and suffer without the glory of success; for the Celtic element is
-necessary to humanity as a great factor in human progress. It is the
-subtle, spiritual fire that warms and permeates the ruder clay of other
-races, giving them new, vivid, and magnetic impulses to growth and
-expansion.
-
-The children of the early wanderers from the Isles of the Sea
-will still continue to fulfil their mission as world-workers and
-world-movers. Across the breadth of earth they will found new nations,
-each a greater and a stronger Ireland, where they will have the
-certainty of power, station, and reward denied them at home. But
-neither change nor progress nor the severing ocean will destroy the
-electric chain that binds them lovingly to their ancient mother in that
-true sympathy with country and kinship that ever burns in the Irish
-heart.
-
-The new Ireland across the seas, whether in America or in Australia,
-will still cherish with sacred devotion the beautiful legends, the
-pathetic songs, the poetry and history and the heroic traditions of the
-old, well-loved country as eternal verses of the Bible of humanity,
-with all the light and music of the fanciful fairy period, such as I
-have tried to gather into a focus in these volumes, along with the
-holy memories of those martyrs of our race whose names are for ever
-associated with the words Liberty and Nationhood, but whose tragic fate
-has illustrated so many mournful pages in the history of the Irish
-past.
-
-
-
-
- ON THE ANCIENT RACES OF IRELAND.[20]
-
-
-That there was a time—after “the Spirit of God moved on the face
-of the waters, and separated the dry land from the sea”—when the
-present British Isles formed a continuous and integral portion of the
-European Continent is the received opinion of the scientific. With
-that continuity of surface (whether before or after the glacial period
-matters not in the present inquiry) there was, we know, a uniform
-dispersion of vegetable and animal life over this portion of the globe;
-and so long as this country enjoyed the temperature and climate it now
-possesses, it must have been an emerald land—humid, green, and fertile,
-affording pasturage and provender for the largest herbivoræ—the
-mammoth, elephant, and musk ox, the reindeer, the wild boar, and
-perhaps even the woolly rhinoceros. The primitive races of horned
-cattle, possibly the red deer, and undoubtedly the largest and noblest
-of cervine creatures, the gigantic Irish deer, or _Cervus megaceros_,
-besides the wild pig, and smaller mammals, as well as birds and fishes
-innumerable, must then have existed here.
-
- [20] Extracts from the Address to the Anthropological Section of
- the British Association. Belfast, 1874. By Sir WILLIAM WILDE, M.D.,
- M.R.I.A., Chevalier of the Swedish Order of the North Star.
-
-How long that condition of the land known now as Ireland existed,
-what geological revolutions occurred, or what time elapsed during its
-continuance, is but matter of speculation; but a “repeal of the union”
-took place, and Great Britain and Ireland became as they now are, and
-as they are likely to remain, geographically separated, although united
-in interest as well as government. In all probability the great pine
-forests, with some of the yews, the oaks, and the birch, had at this
-time been submerged beneath the lowest strata of our bogs.
-
-It was after this epoch, I believe, that man first set foot upon the
-shores of Erin—a country well wooded, abundantly stocked with animals,
-and abounding in all nature’s blessings suited to the well-being of
-the human race; with fowls in its woods and on its shores; fish in its
-seas, lakes and rivers; deer and other game in its forest glades, oxen
-on its pastures, fuel in its bogs; and a climate, although moist and
-variable, on the whole mild and temperate.
-
-Let us now go back for a moment and take a glance at the map of
-the world. The sacred writings tell us, and the investigations of
-historians, antiquarians, and philologists confirm the statement, that
-the cradle of mankind was somewhere between the Caspian Sea and the
-great River Euphrates. Without entering too minutely into the subject,
-I may state briefly that the human family separated in process of
-time into three great divisions—the African, the Asiatic, and the
-Indo-European. With the latter only we have to deal. As population
-increased, it threw off its outshoots; and emigration, the great
-safeguard of society, and the ordained means of peopling as well as
-cultivating and civilizing the earth, began to impel the races and
-tribes still farther and farther from the birthplace of humanity. But
-in those days the process was somewhat slower and more gradual than
-that which now sends an Irish family across 3,500 miles of ocean in a
-week.
-
-With but the rudest means of transit, hordes of the primitive races
-passed up the banks of the great rivers, the Euphrates, the Nile, the
-Volga, the Danube, and the Rhone; while other tribes, in all likelihood
-more advanced and cultivated, wandered along the coasts, peopling as
-they went the northern shores of the Mediterranean and the Black Sea.
-
-That an early and uncultivated people passed up the Danube in their
-immigration, and settled for centuries on its banks, when Europe was
-a tangled wilderness, inhabited by the auroch and the gigantic deer,
-there can be no manner of doubt; for they have left memorials of their
-existence in the unerring and enduring remains of their sepulchres,
-their tools, and weapons, from the Black Sea to Switzerland and Savoy.
-In Switzerland this primitive people rested for a considerable period,
-perhaps for many centuries, forming for themselves those peculiar piled
-lacustrine habitations on the shores of its picturesque inland waters,
-known as “Pfaulbauten”—the analogues, and in all probability the types,
-of the crannoges recently discovered in Ireland and Scotland, to which
-countries the scattered fragments of that race finally carried this
-special form of domestic architecture. The lowest strata of implements
-were deposited beneath the sites of these pfaulbauten; and in some of
-the more ancient ones the only remains are those of stone, flint, and
-pottery—the former resembling in a remarkable manner the stone tools
-and weapons of the primitive Irish.
-
-What the language of this early Helvetian people was, we have no
-means of ascertaining; but that their exodus was one of haste and
-compulsion, and probably the result of invasion by a superior and more
-cultivated race, is almost certain. Driven from their mountain homes,
-they passed down the banks of the Rhine and the Elbe, and helped to
-people North-western Europe, forming with those who arrived coastwise
-the great nation of the Gauls and Belgæ. It is not unlikely that this
-littoral wave of population carried with them the metallurgic arts; for
-we find in their tombs and barrows on the coasts of Spain, France, and
-Brittany, bronze celts identical in shape with some of those discovered
-in our own country.
-
-Still passing westwards towards the setting sun, some members of
-this early people stood at length face to face with the white cliffs
-of Kent. Impelled by curiosity and the thirst for knowledge, man’s
-undeviating enterprise soon sent these hardy people across the narrow
-strait that divides Britain from the continent of Europe, centuries
-before the ships of Tarshish voyaged from Tyre and Sidon to trade with
-Britain for the tin of Cornwall, to alloy, harden, and beautify into
-bronze the copper with which Solomon decorated the temple of Jerusalem.
-
-To the restless Celt the breadth of this new possession was but a
-slight impediment to his western progress, and once more he looked upon
-the blue waters of the salt sea, and beyond them, to the green hills of
-Erin. A plank—a single-piece canoe—formed out of an oak-tree by fire
-and a sharp stone, or a wicker curragh covered with hides, would soon
-waft him from Portpatrick to Donaghadee, or even from Anglesea to Howth.
-
-Here, then, the story of our race begins, and the immediate object of
-this inquiry commences. That man, as he first stood on this island,
-was in a rude, uncultivated state, without a knowledge of letters or
-manufactures—skilled in those arts only by which, as a nomad hunter and
-fisher, he supported life and ministered to his simple wants—there can
-be no manner of doubt. Clad in the skins of animals he slew, which were
-sewn together with their sinews or intestines—his weapons and tools
-formed of flint, stone, bone, wood or horn—his personal decoration,
-shells, amber, attractive pebbles collected on the beach, or the
-teeth of animals strung together in a rude necklace, or bound round
-the wrists and arms; and his religion, if any, Pagan, Sun-worship, or
-Druidism, man first stood, in all probability, on the north-eastern
-shores of Erin. It may be unpalatable to our national vanity to
-learn that the early colonists of Ireland did not come here clad in
-purple and gold direct from Phœnicia, in brazen-prowed triremes, with
-the mariner’s compass and the quadrant; or stood for the first time
-upon the shores of Hibernia armed _cap-à-pied_ in glittering armour,
-as Minerva sprang from the front of Jove; but it is, nevertheless,
-indisputably true, that the first people were such as I have described
-them.
-
-No date can be assigned to the period of the first inhabitation, but
-as evidence of the primitive condition of the race it is sufficient
-to state that human bodies clad in deer-skin have been discovered in
-our bogs; that flint weapons in abundance have been found all over
-Ireland, but especially in the North, where that peculiar lithological
-condition chiefly exists; and that stone tools have been dug up in
-thousands all over the country, but more particularly from the beds of
-our rivers, marking the sites of contested fords, which were the scenes
-of sanguinary conflicts, as on the Shannon and the Bann; and that all
-these are referrible to a period when the Irish had no knowledge of
-metals, and could neither spin nor weave.
-
-To Northern archæologists belongs the credit of that theory which
-divides the ages of man according to the material evidences of the arts
-of bygone times, as into those of stone, of copper, gold, and bronze,
-and of iron and silver. While I have no doubt that, generally speaking,
-such was the usual progress of development in those particulars, I
-deny that this division can, as a rule, be applied to Ireland, where
-undoubtedly each period overlapped the succeeding, so as to mix the
-one class of implement with another, even as I myself have seen on the
-great cultivated plain of Tyre harrow-pins formed of flints and sharp
-stones stuck into the under surface of a broad board; and on that
-battle field—
-
- “Where Persia’s victim hordes
- First bowed beneath the brunt of Hella’s sword,”
-
-I have picked up flint and obsidian arrow-heads, although we know that
-the Athenians, whose remains still lie beneath the tumulus of Marathon,
-gave way before the long-handled metallic spears of Asia; and the stone
-missile, in one of its most formidable shapes, is not yet abandoned in
-this country.
-
-I hold it as susceptible of demonstration, that man in similar stages
-of his career all over the world acts alike, so far as is compatible
-with climate, his wants, and the materials that offer to his hand,
-even from the banks of the Niger or Zambesi to the islands of the
-South Sea, or the regions inhabited by the Laps and Esquimaux. Thus,
-whenever man acquires or discovers a new art, he first applies it to
-continue the fashion of its predecessor, until accident, necessity, or
-ingenuity induces him to modify the reproduction. The first arrow-head
-and spear is almost the same all over the world, and is the type of
-that in metal; and the stone celt or hatchet formed, as I have proved
-elsewhere, the model for the copper or bronze implement for a like use
-in both ancient Etruria and ancient Ireland.
-
-Discussions may arise as to whether our knowledge of metals was a
-separate, independent discovery of our own, or was acquired by
-intercourse with other nations more advanced than ourselves. In answer
-thereto I can only say that we have no evidence or authority for the
-latter supposition; and that, as we possessed abundant materials on
-the one hand, and had sufficient native ingenuity on the other, it is
-most likely that our discovery of metals—at least of gold, copper, and
-tin—was independent of extrinsic influence. So far removed from the
-centres of civilization, unconquered by the Roman legion, uninfluenced
-by Saxon or Frankish art, and with undoubted evidences of development
-and styles of art peculiar to ourselves, both in form and decoration,
-it is but fair, until some stronger arguments have been brought
-against it, to believe that we were the discoverers and smelters of
-our minerals, and the fabricators of our metallic weapons, tools,
-and ornaments. That some Grecian influence pervaded the early Irish
-metallurgic art, as exhibited by some of our leaf-shaped sword blades,
-is true; but it is an exceptional instance, and the form is common to
-almost all countries in which bronze sword blades have been found.
-
-With regard to the dwellings of the early race we are not left to
-mere conjecture, for not long ago a log hut was discovered fourteen
-feet below the surface of a bog in the county of Donegal. This very
-antique dwelling was twelve feet square, and nine high; and consisted
-of an upper and lower chamber, which were probably mere sleeping
-apartments. The oaken logs of which it was constructed are believed
-to have been hewn with stone hatchets, some of which were found on
-the premises, thus identifying it with the pre-metallic period of our
-history. Man soon becomes gregarious, and passes from the hunter and
-the fisher to the shepherd, and thence to the agriculturist. The land
-is cleared of wood; the wild animals either die out, or are rendered
-subservient to his will. The domestication of animals in most instances
-precedes, and always accompanies, the pastoral state of existence; and
-to that condition the patriarchal stage ensues, and afterwards that
-of the monarchical. To such phases of development, from the age of
-escape from the rudest barbarism, to the most cultivated condition in
-government, polite literature, art and science, Ireland was, I believe,
-no exception. Of the shepherd state we still possess the most abundant
-proofs, in the numerous earthen raths, lisses, and forts scattered
-all over the country, and from which so many of our townlands and
-other localities take their names; but especially marking the sites
-of the primitive inhabitation on our goodly pastures, although now
-mere grassy, annular elevations, varying in area from a few perches to
-several acres, and in many instances alone preserved by the hallowed
-traditions or popular superstitions of the people.
-
-Such of those landmarks of the past as still remain, out of thousands
-that have been obliterated, show us that in those parts of Ireland, at
-least, where they exist, there was once a dense population, even during
-the shepherd stage of its inhabitation. And if in the progress of
-events, uncontrolled by human agency, and brought about by influences
-that we have so recently mourned over and still deplore, but could
-not prevent, we are now again becoming a pastoral people, we are
-only returning to that state of existence for which this country is
-peculiarly adapted, and was, I believe, originally intended—that of
-being the greatest grass and green-crop soil and climate in the world.
-
-The pastoral was undoubtedly the normal, one of the oldest, and beyond
-all question, the longest continued state in Ireland; and, although
-changed by internal dissensions, invasion, confiscation, and foreign
-rule, is still remembered by the people among whom its influence,
-slumbering, but not dead, now and then crops out in questions of
-“tenant right.” Years ago I showed, from the animal remains found in
-our forts, bogs, and crannoges, that centuries upon centuries before
-short-horned improved breeds of cattle and sheep commanded at our
-agricultural shows the admiration of Europe, we had here breeds of oxen
-which are not now surpassed by the best races of Holland and Great
-Britain; and which are unequalled in the present day even by those on
-the fertile plains of Meath, Limerick, or Roscommon, or throughout the
-golden vale of Tipperary. We were then a cattle-rearing, flesh-eating
-people; our wealth was our cattle; our wars were for our cattle; the
-ransom of our chieftains was in cattle; our taxes were paid in cattle;
-the price paid for our most valuable manuscripts was so many cows.
-Even in comparatively modern times our battle cloaks were made of
-leather; our traffic and barter were the Pecuaniæ of our country; and
-the “Tain-bo-Cuailne,” the most famous metrical romance of Europe,
-after the “Niebelungenlied,” is but the recital of a cattle raid from
-Connaught into Louth during the reign of Mave, Queen of Connaught—a
-personage transmitted to us by Shakspeare, as the Queen Mab of the
-“Midsummer Night’s Dream.” And, although the Anglo-Norman invasion is
-usually attributed to the love of an old, one-eyed, hoarse-voiced King
-of Leinster, sixty years of age, for Dervorgil (attractive, we must
-presume, though but little his junior in years), and who became the
-Helen of the Irish Iliad, when “the valley lay smiling before her,” she
-was but an insignificant item in the stock abduction from the plains of
-Breffny along the boggy slopes of Shemore.
-
-The Boromean, or cattle tribute, which the King of Tara demanded from
-the Leinstermen, was perhaps the cause of the greatest intestinal feud
-which ever convulsed so small a space of European ground for so great
-a length of time. This triennial cattle tax, besides 5,000 ounces of
-silver, 5,000 cloaks, and 5,000 brazen vessels, consisted of 15,000
-head of cattle of different descriptions, the value of which, at the
-present price of stock, would amount to about £130,000. The cattle
-tribute also paid to the Prince or petty King of Cashel upwards of a
-thousand years ago was 6,500 cows, 4,500 oxen, 4,500 swine, and 1,200
-sheep; in all, 16,700, or, at the present value of stock, between
-£80,000 and £100,000. In addition to which we read of horses and
-valuables of various descriptions.
-
-Brian O’Kennedy, who drove the Norsemen from the shores of Clontarf,
-derived his cognomen of Borrome from his reimposition of this cattle
-tax. And in the _Leabhar-na-Garth_, or ancient Book of Rights and
-Privileges of the Kings of Erin, the cattle statistics, as they are
-there set forth, show that the Irish were solely a pastoral people; and
-the whole text and tenor of the Irish annals and histories, and the
-notices of the wars of the Desmonds and of O’Neil, confirm this view.
-
-The great raths of Ireland, where the people enclosed their cattle
-by night, have been erroneously termed “Danish forts,” but when the
-shannaghees are pressed for further information as to the date of their
-erection they say, “They were made by them ould Danes that came over
-with Julius Cæsar.” If, however, inquiry be made of the old illiterate
-Irish-speaking population, they will tell you that they were made
-by “the good people,” and are inhabited by the fairies. Hence the
-veneration that has in a great measure tended to their preservation;
-and I have no doubt that the ancient indigenous and venerated thorns
-that still decorate their slopes or summits are the veritable
-descendants of the quickset hedges that helped to form the breastworks,
-or staked defences, on their summits.
-
-These forts are almost invariably to be found in the fattest pastures;
-so that if any of my friends were in the present day to ask me
-where they could best invest in land, I would fearlessly answer,
-“Wherever you find most ancient raths remaining;” and I know that
-many of our cattle prizes have been carried off by sheep and oxen fed
-upon the grass lands cleared and fertilized by the early Celts more
-than a thousand years ago, and a sod of which has not been turned
-for centuries. They were not originally the gentle slopes that now
-diversify the surface, but consisted in steep ramparts or earthworks,
-with an external ditch, on which a stout paling was erected against
-man or beast, a form of structure still seen in the kraal of the New
-Zealander. The Irish rath-maker was an artificer of skill, and held
-in high esteem, and occupied a dignified position at the great feasts
-of Tara—second only to the ollamh and the physician. That the soil of
-which they were constructed had been not only originally rich, but had
-been subjected to man’s industry, is proved by the fact that it is
-now frequently turned out upon the neighbouring sward as one of the
-best of manures. Within these raths, some of which had double, and
-even treble entrenchments, were erected the dwellings of the people
-and their chiefs, the latter of whom were often interred within the
-mounds, or beneath the cromlechs that still exist in their interior,
-as, for example, in the “Giant’s Ring,” near Belfast. In some instances
-they also contained in their sides and centres stone caves, that were
-probably used as store-houses, granaries, or places of security.
-
-The earliest historic race of Ireland was a pastoral people called
-Firbolgs, said to be of Greek or Eastern origin; probably a branch of
-that great Celtic race which, having passed through Europe and round
-its shores, found a resting-place at last in Ireland. Of the Fomorians,
-Nemedians, and other minor invaders, we need not speak, as they have
-left nothing by which to track their footsteps. The old annalists
-bring them direct from the Ark, and in a straight line from Japhet.
-The coming of Pharaoh’s daughter from Egypt with her ships may be also
-considered apocryphal. But the Firbolgs begin our authentic history.
-They had laws and social institutions, and established a monarchical
-government at the far-famed Hill of Tara, about which our early centres
-of civilization sprung, and where we have now most of those great
-pasturelands—those plains of Meath that can beat the world for their
-fattening qualities, and which supply neighbouring countries with their
-most admired meats.
-
-I cannot say that the Firbolg was a cultivated man, but I think he was
-a shepherd and an agriculturist. I doubt if he knew anything, certainly
-not much, of metallurgy; but it does not follow that he was a mere
-savage, no more than the Maories of New Zealand were when we first came
-in contact with them.
-
-The Firbolgs were a small, straight-haired, swarthy race, who have
-left a portion of their descendants with us to this very day. A
-genealogist (their own countryman resident in Galway about two hundred
-years ago) described them as dark-haired, talkative, guileful,
-strolling, unsteady, “disturbers of every Council and Assembly,” and
-“promoters of discord.” I believe they, together with the next two
-races about to be described, formed the bulk of our so-called Celtic
-population—combative, nomadic on opportunity, enduring, litigious,
-but feudal and faithful to their chiefs; hard-working for a spurt (as
-in their annual English emigration); not thrifty, but, when their
-immediate wants are supplied, lazy, especially during the winter.
-
-To these physical and mental characters described by MacFirbis let me
-add those of the unusual combination of blue or blue-grey eyes and
-dark eyelashes with a swarthy complexion. This peculiarity I have
-only remarked elsewhere in Greece; the mouth and upper gum is not
-good, but the nose is usually straight. In many of this and the next
-following race there was a peculiarity that has not been alluded to by
-writers—the larynx, or, as it used to be called, the _pomum Adami_,
-was remarkably prominent, and became more apparent from the uncovered
-state of the neck. The sediment of this early people still exists in
-Ireland, along with the fair-complexioned Dananns, and forms the bulk
-of the farm-labourers, called in popular phraseology _Spalpeens_, that
-yearly emigrate to England. In Connaught they now chiefly occupy a
-circle which includes the junction of the counties of Mayo, Galway,
-Roscommon, and Sligo. They, with their fair-faced brothers (at present
-the most numerous), are also to be found in Kerry and Donegal; and they
-nearly all speak Irish.
-
-By statistics procured from our Great Midland Western Railway alone
-I learn that on an average 30,000 of these people, chiefly the
-descendants of the dark Firbolgs and the fair Dananns, emigrate
-annually to England for harvest work, to the great advantage of the
-English farmer and the Irish landlord. The acreage of arable land for
-these people runs from two to six acres.
-
-Connecting this race with the remains of the past, I am of opinion
-that they were the first rath or earthen-mound and enclosure makers;
-that they mostly buried their dead without cremation, and, in cases of
-distinguished personages, beneath the cromlech or the tumulus. Their
-heads were oval or long in the anteroposterior diameter, and rather
-flattened at the sides: examples of these I have given and descanted
-upon when I first published my Ethnological Researches, which have
-been fully confirmed by the late Andreas Retzius. It is, however,
-unnecessary, even if space or advisability permitted, for me to allude
-to such matters, as that great work the “Crania Britannica” has
-lithographed typical specimens of this long-headed race.
-
-The next immigration we hear of in the “Annals” is that of the
-_Tuatha-de-Dananns_, a large, fair-complexioned, and very remarkable
-race; warlike, energetic, progressive, skilled in metal work, musical,
-poetical, acquainted with the healing art, skilled in Druidism, and
-believed to be adepts in necromancy and magic, no doubt the result of
-the popular idea respecting their superior knowledge, especially in
-smelting and in the fabrication of tools, weapons, and ornaments. From
-these two races sprang the Fairy Mythology of Ireland.
-
-It is strange that, considering the amount of annals and legends
-transmitted to us, we have so little knowledge of Druidism or Paganism
-in ancient Ireland. However, it may be accounted for in this wise:
-That those who took down the legends from the mouths of the bards and
-annalists, or those who subsequently transcribed them, were Christian
-missionaries whose object was to obliterate every vestige of the
-ancient forms of faith.
-
-The Dananns spoke the same language as their predecessors, the
-Firbolgs. They met and fought for the sovereignty. The “man of metal”
-conquered and drove a great part of the others into the islands on
-the coast, where it is said the Firbolg race took their last stand.
-Eventually, however, under the influence of a power hostile to them
-both, these two people coalesced, and have to a large extent done so
-up to the present day. They are the true old Irish peasant and small
-farming class.
-
-The Firbolg was a bagman, so called, according to Irish authorities,
-because he had to carry up clay in earthen bags to those terraces
-in Greece now vine-clad. As regards the other race there is more
-difficulty in the name. Tuath or Tuatha means a tribe or tribe-district
-in Irish. Danann certainly sounds very Grecian; and if we consider
-their remains, we find the long, bronze, leaf-shaped sword, so abundant
-in Ireland, identical with weapons of the same class found in Attica
-and other parts of Greece.
-
-Then, on the other hand, their physiognomy, their fair or reddish hair,
-their size, and other circumstances, incline one to believe that they
-came down from Scandinavian regions after they had passed up as far
-as they thought advisable into North-western Europe. If the word Dane
-was known at the time of their arrival here, it would account for the
-designation of many of our Irish monuments as applied by Molyneux and
-others. Undoubtedly the Danann tribes presented Scandinavian features,
-but did not bring anything but Grecian art. After the “Stone period,”
-so called, of which Denmark and the south of Sweden offer such rich
-remains, I look upon the great bulk of the metal work of the North,
-especially in the swords in the Copenhagen and Stockholm Museums, as
-Asiatic; while Ireland possesses not only the largest native collection
-of metal weapon-tools, usually denominated “celts,” of any country in
-the world, but the second largest amount of swords and battle-axes. And
-moreover these, and all our other metal articles, show a well-defined
-rise and development from the simplest and rudest form in size and use
-to that of the most elaborately constructed and the most beautifully
-adorned.
-
-I believe that these Tuatha-de-Dananns, no matter from whence they
-came, were, in addition to their other acquirements, great masons,
-although not acquainted with the value of cementing materials. I think
-they were the builders of the great stone Cahirs, Duns, Cashels, and
-Caves in Ireland; while their predecessors constructed the earthen
-works, the raths, circles, and forts that diversify the fields of Erin.
-The Dananns anticipated Shakespeare’s grave-digger, for they certainly
-made the most lasting sepulchral monuments that exist in Ireland, such,
-for example, as New Grange, Douth, Knowth, and Slieve-na-Calleagh and
-other great cemeteries. Within the interior and around these tombs were
-carved, on unhewn stones, certain archaic markings, spires, volutes,
-convolutes, lozenge-shaped devices, straight, zigzag, and curved
-lines, and incised indentations, and a variety of other insignia,
-which, although not expressing language, were symbolical, and had an
-occult meaning known only to the initiated. These markings, as well as
-those upon the urns, were copied in the decorations of the gold and
-bronze work of a somewhat subsequent period. The Dananns conquered
-the inferior tribes in two celebrated pitched battles, those of the
-Northern and Southern Moytura. On these fields we still find the caves,
-the stone circles, the monoliths, and dolmans or cromlechs that marked
-particular events, and the immense cairns that were raised in honour of
-the fallen chieftains.
-
-Although many of the warriors of the Firbolgs fled to their island
-fastnesses on the coasts of Galway and Donegal, no doubt a large
-portion of them remained in the inland parts of the country, and in
-that very locality to which I have adverted, which is almost midway
-between the sites of the two battles, in a line stretching between Mayo
-and Sligo, where in time the two races appear to have coalesced by that
-natural law which brings the dark and the fair together.
-
-Moreover it has been recorded that the conquering race sent their
-small dark opponents into Connaught, while they themselves took
-possession of the rich lands further east, and not only established
-themselves at Tara but spread into the south. It is remarkable that
-in time large numbers of the Dananns themselves were banished to the
-West, and likewise that the last forcible deportation of the native
-Irish race (so late as the seventeenth century) was when the people of
-this province got the choice of going “to Connaught or Hell,” in the
-former of which, possibly, they joined some of the original stock. The
-natural beauty of the lakes and mountains of Connaught remains as it
-was thousands of years ago; but no doubt if some of the legislators of
-the period to which I have already referred could now behold its fat
-pasture-plains, they might prefer them to the flax lands of Ulster.
-
-These Dananns had a globular form of head, of which I have already
-published examples. For the most part I believe they burned their dead
-or sacrificed to their manes, and placed an urn with its incinerated
-contents—human or animal—in the grave, where the hero was either
-stretched at length or crouched in an attitude similar to that adopted
-by the ancient Peruvians, as I have elsewhere explained. These Irish
-urns, which are the earliest relics of our ceramic art that have come
-down to the present time, are very graceful in form, and some of them
-most beautifully decorated, as may be seen in our various museums.
-
-Specimens of this Danann race still exist, but have gradually mixed
-with their forerunners to the present day. Here is what old MacFirbis
-wrote of them two hundred years ago: “Every one who is fair-haired,
-vengeful, large, and every plunderer, professors of musical and
-entertaining performances, who are adepts of Druidical and magical
-arts, they are the descendants of the Tuatha-de-Dananns.” They were not
-only fair but sandy in many instances, and consequently extensively
-freckled.
-
-It is affirmed that the Dananns ruled in Ireland for a long time, until
-another inroad was made into the island by the Milesians—said to be
-brave, chivalrous, skilled in war, good navigators, proud, boastful,
-and much superior in outward adornment as well as mental culture,
-but probably not better armed than their opponents. They deposed the
-three last Danann kings and their wives, and rose to be, it is said,
-the dominant race—assuming the sovereignty, becoming the aristocracy
-and landed proprietors of the country, and giving origin to those
-chieftains that afterwards rose to the title of petty kings, and from
-whom some of the best families in the land with anything like Irish
-names claim descent, and particularly those with the prefix of the “O”
-or the “Mac.” When this race arrived in Ireland I cannot tell, but it
-was some time prior to the Christian era. It is said they came from
-the coast of Spain, where they had long remained after their Eastern
-emigration.
-
-Upon the site of what is believed to be the ancient Brigantium, now the
-entrance to the united harbours of Corunna and Ferrol, stands the great
-lighthouse known to all ships passing through the Bay of Biscay. Within
-this modern structure still exists the celebrated “Pharos of Hercules,”
-which I investigated and described many years ago. That tower, it
-was said in metaphorical language, commanded a view of Ireland, and
-as such became the theme of Irish poems and legends. Certain it is
-that sailing north or north-westward from it the ships of the sons of
-Milesius and their followers could have reached Ireland without much
-coasting. If the story of Breogan’s Tower is true, then it must have
-been erected in the time of lime-and-mortar building, and that is
-during the Roman occupation of Iberia and Gaul. How many thousands,
-rank and file, of these Spanish Milesians came here in their six or
-eight galleys and tried the fortunes of war from “the summit of the
-ninth wave from the shore” and conquered the entire Danann, Firbolg,
-and Fomorian population, I am unable to give the slightest inkling of,
-no more than I can of the so-called Phœnician intercourse with this
-country. Perhaps without going into the fanciful descriptions of the
-“Battle of Ventry Harbour,” or the southern conquest of Ireland by the
-Iberian Milesians, we may find some more trustworthy illustrations
-of Spanish dwellings in the architecture of the town of Galway, and
-some picturesque representatives in the lithe upright figures and
-raven-haired, but blue-eyed maidens of the City of the Tribes. Here is
-what old MacFirbis, who, I suppose, claimed descent from the sons of
-Milesius, wrote about them: “Every one who is white of skin, brown of
-hair, bold, honourable, daring, prosperous, bountiful in the bestowal
-of property, and who is not afraid of battle or combat, they are the
-descendants of the sons of Milesius in Erin.”
-
-This high panegyric is only equalled by the prose and verse
-compositions of the ancient bards and rhymers and the modern
-historians, who have recorded the deeds of the great warriors, Ith,
-Heber, and Heremon, whose descendants boast to have been the rulers
-of the land. Even Moore, although he wrote such beautiful lyrics
-concerning this race in his early days, yet when he came to study
-history, he felt the same difficulty I do now. I do not dispute their
-origin or supremacy; but I fail to distinguish their early customs,
-their remains, or race from those of the Firbolgs or Dananns whom they
-conquered, and who left undoubted monuments peculiar to their time.
-
-Now all these people—the piratical navigator along our coasts, the
-mid-Europe primitive shepherd and cultivator, the Northern warrior, and
-the Iberian ruler—were, according to my view, all derived from the one
-Celtic stock. They spoke the same language, and their descendants do
-so still. When they acquired a knowledge of letters they transmitted
-their history through the Irish language. No doubt they fused; but
-somehow a quick fusion of races has not been the general characteristic
-of the people of this country. Unlike the Anglo-Norman in later times,
-the Milesian was a long way from home; the rough sea of the Bay of
-Biscay rolled between him and his previous habitat; and if he became
-an absentee he was not likely to find much of his possessions on his
-return. It is to be regretted that while we have here such a quantity
-of poetical and traditional material respecting the Milesian invasion
-of Ireland, the Spanish annals or traditions have given us but very
-little information on that subject.
-
-It would be most desirable if the Government or some Irish authority
-would send a properly instructed commissioner to investigate the
-Spanish annals, and see whether there is anything relating to the
-Spanish migrations to Ireland remaining in that country.
-
-Besides the sparse introduction of Latin by Christian missionaries in
-the fifth century, some occasional Saxon words springing from peaceful
-settlers along our coasts and in commercial emporiums, and whatever
-Danish had crept into our tongue around those centres where the
-Scandinavians chiefly located themselves, and which were principally
-proper names of persons and places that became fixed in our vernacular,
-we find but one language among the Irish people until the arrival of
-the Anglo-Normans at the end of the twelfth century.
-
-The linguistic or philological evidence on this subject is clearly
-decisive. The residue of the early races already described spoke one
-language, called Gaelic; so did the Scotch, the Welsh, and probably, in
-early times, the Britons and the Bretons. It was not only the popular
-conversational tongue used in the ordinary intercourse of life, but
-it was also employed in genealogies, annals, and other records in a
-special character, not quite peculiar to this country, but then common
-in Europe. Much has been said about the necessity for a glossary of our
-ancient MSS., such as those at Saint Gall, in Trinity College, in the
-Royal Irish Academy, and in Belgian and English libraries; but there
-are very few ancient languages that do not require to be glossed in the
-present day, even as the words of Chaucer do.
-
-The Government are now, under the auspices of our Master of the Rolls,
-and the special direction and supervision of Mr. J. T. Gilbert, giving
-coloured photographs of some of our ancient writings, and have promised
-that some of our remaining manuscripts will be translated. I see no
-occasion now for waiting for more elaborated philological dictionaries
-or glossaries while there are still some few Irish scholars in this
-country capable of giving a free but tolerably literal translation
-of these records that do not require any great acumen in rendering
-them into English. Is history to wait upon the final decision of
-philologists respecting a word or two in a manuscript, and to decide as
-to whether it may be of Sanscrit or any other origin?
-
-No doubt some of my hearers may ask, What about the Oghams (or Ohams)?
-do they not show a very early knowledge of an alphabet? As yet this
-is a moot question. A rude pillar-stone, having upon it a tolerably
-straight edge, was in early times notched along its angle which served
-as a stem-line by nicks formed on it, and straight or oblique lines,
-singly or in clusters, proceeding from the stem. The decipherers of
-these inscriptions have, one and all, agreed upon the fact that these
-lines represented letters, syllables, or words, and that the language
-is either Irish or Latin. Therefore the persons who made them must have
-been aware of alphabetic writing and grammar. These carved monoliths
-are chiefly found in Kerry and Cork. Upon some of them Christian
-emblems are figured. The incising of the stone has evidently been
-performed by some rude instrument, either a flint or metallic pick;
-and it is remarkable that these pillars present scarcely any amount of
-dressing.
-
-In Connaught, in my youth, the exception in remote districts was where
-the person spoke _both_ English and Irish. In 1851, when we first took
-a census of the Irish-speaking population, after the country had lost
-three-quarters of a million of people, chiefly of the Irish race,
-we had then (to speak in round numbers) one and a half millions of
-Irish-speaking population. In 1861 they had fallen off by nearly half
-a million; and upon the taking of the last census in 1871 the entire
-Irish-speaking population was only 817,865. The percentages, according
-to the total population in our different provinces, were these: in
-Leinster 1.2, in Munster 27.7, in Ulster 4.6, and in Connaught 39.0;
-for the total of Ireland 15.1. Kilkenny and Louth are the counties
-of Leinster where the language is most spoken. In Munster they are
-Kerry, Clare, and Waterford; in Ulster, Donegal, where 28 per cent. of
-the population speak Irish; but in Connaught, to which I have already
-alluded as containing the remnant of the early Irish races, we have no
-less than 56 per cent. of Irish-speaking population in the counties of
-Mayo and Galway respectively. Of my own knowledge I can attest that a
-great many of these people cannot speak English. We thus see that of
-the population of Ireland, which in the present day might be computed
-at about five and a half millions, there were, at the time of taking
-the census in April, 1871, only 817,865; and I think I may prophesy
-that that is the very largest number that in future we will ever have
-to record. On the causes of this decadence it is not my province to
-descant. These Celts have been the great pioneers of civilization, and
-are now a power in the world. Are they not now numerically the dominant
-race in America? and have they not largely peopled Australia and New
-Zealand?
-
-We have now arrived at a period when you might naturally expect the
-native annalist to make some allusion to conquest or colonization by
-the then mistress of the world. Without offering any reason for it,
-I have here only to remark that neither as warriors nor colonizers
-did the Romans ever set foot in Ireland; and hence the paucity of any
-admixture of Roman art amongst us.
-
-To fill up a hiatus which might here occur in our migrations, I will
-mention a remarkable circumstance. A Christian youth of Romano-Saxon
-parentage, and probably of patrician origin, was carried off in a raid
-of Irish marauders, and employed as a swineherd in this very Ulster,
-the country of the Dalaradians, and lived here for several years,
-learning our customs and speaking our language. He escaped, however,
-to Munster, and thence to his native land of Britain or Normandy, from
-whence he returned in A.D. 432 with friends, allies, and missionaries,
-and passing in his galley into the mouth of the Boyne, walked up the
-banks of that famed stream, raised the paschal fire at Slane, and
-speedily introduced Christianity throughout Ireland.
-
-In thus briefly alluding to the labours of St. Patrick, I wish to be
-understood to say that about the time of his mission there was much
-Saxon intercourse with this country, and the great missionary had not
-only many friends but several relatives residing here, and some of
-them on the very banks of the Boyne; and I believe that a considerable
-amount of civilization and some knowledge of Christianity had been
-introduced long previously; so that, although old King Laoghaire
-or Loury and his Druids did not bow the knee to the Most High God,
-nor accept the teaching of the beautiful hymn that Patrick and his
-attendants chanted as they passed up the grassy slopes of Tara, still
-there were many hundred people in Ireland ready to receive the glad
-tidings of the gospel of salvation.
-
-Having finished with the Milesians, we now come to the Danes
-(so-called), the Scandinavians or Norsemen—the pagan Sea-Kings who
-made inroads on our coasts, despoiled our churches and monasteries,
-but at the same time, it must be confessed, helped to establish the
-commercial prosperity of some of our cities and towns from 795 to the
-time of the battle of Clontarf, A.D. 1014, when the belligerent portion
-of the Scandinavians were finally expelled the country. During the time
-I have specified, Dublin, Limerick, and Waterford belonged to these
-Northern people. They not only coasted round the island and never lost
-an opportunity of pillage and plunder, but they passed through the
-interior and carried their arms into the very centre of the land. The
-Danes left us very little ornamental work beyond what they lavished
-upon their swords and helmets; but, on the other hand, it should be
-borne in mind that there are no Irish antiquities, either social,
-warlike, or ecclesiastical, in the Scandinavian Museums.
-
-Concerning their ethnological characters, I must again refer to the
-“Crania Britannica.” In the records they were designated strangers,
-foreigners, pagans, gentiles, and also white and black foreigners, so
-that there were undoubtedly two races—the dark, and the fair or red,
-like as in the case of the Firbolgs or Dananns. They were also styled
-“Azure Danes,” probably on account of the shining hue of their armour.
-
-I believe the fair section of that people to have been of Norwegian
-origin, while the dark race came from Jutland and the coast of Sweden;
-and both by the Orkneys, the coasts of Scotland, and the Isle of Man.
-Their skulls were large and well formed; they had a thorough knowledge
-of metal work, and especially iron; and, as I have shown elsewhere,
-their swords and spears were of great size and power, the former
-wielded as a slashing weapon, while those of their early opponents were
-of bronze, weak, and intended for stabbing. In nowhere else in Europe
-(that I am aware of) have these rounded, pointed, or bevelled heavy
-iron swords been found except in Ireland and Norway.
-
-Large quantities of Danish remains have been discovered in deep
-sinkings made in Dublin; and several weapons, tools, and ornaments,
-believed to be of Scandinavian origin, have been found within a
-few inches of the surface on one of the battle-fields on the south
-side of the Liffey, within the last few years. Upon most of these
-I have already reported and given illustrations. I may mention one
-circumstance connected with this race. I never examined a battle-field
-of the Danes, nor a collection of Danish weapons or implements, that I
-did not find the well-adjusted scales and weights which the Viking had
-in his pocket for valuing the precious metals he procured either by
-conquest or otherwise.
-
-Although considered hostile, these Scandinavian Vikings must have
-fraternized with the Irish. We know that they intermarried; for, among
-many other instances that might be adduced, I may mention that during
-the battle of Clontarf, when Sitric, the Danish king of Dublin, looked
-on the fight from the walls of the city, he was accompanied by his
-wife, the daughter of the aged king known as “Brian the Brave.”
-
-When, however, the Irish chieftains were not fighting with one another,
-they were often engaged in petty wars with the Scandinavians, who, in
-turn, were attacked by their own countrymen, the “Black Gentiles,”
-especially on the plain of Fingall, stretching from Dublin to the
-Boyne, and which the white race chiefly occupied. It must not be
-supposed that the battle of Clontarf ended the Danish occupation of
-Ireland; they still held the cities of Dublin, Limerick, and Waterford
-at least, and largely promoted the commercial prosperity in these
-localities—a prosperity which has not quite yet departed. I should
-like to present you with some remains of the Scandinavian language in
-Ireland, but the materials are very scanty.
-
-We are now coming to a later period. The Romans had occupied Britain,
-the Saxons followed; the Danes had partial possession for a time; the
-Heptarchy prevailed until Harold, the last of the Saxon kings, fell at
-Hastings, and England bowed beneath that mixture of Norman, Gaulish,
-Scandinavian, and general Celtic blood that William brought with him
-from the shores of France. The Saxon dynasty was at an end, but the
-Britons of the day accepted their fate; and not only the soldiers, but
-the Norman barons fused with the people of that kingdom, and largely
-contributed to make it what it now is. This fusion of races, this
-assimilation of sentiments, this interchange of thought, this kindly
-culture, the higher elevating the lower, among whom they permanently
-reside, must always tend to great and good ends in raising a people to
-a nobler intellectual state.
-
-The Anglo-Normans came here in 1172, a very mixed race, but their
-leaders were chiefly of French or Norman extraction. Why they came, or
-what they did, it is not for me to expatiate upon. I wish, however,
-to correct an assertion commonly made, to the effect that the Norman
-barons of Henry II. _then_ conquered Ireland. They occupied some towns,
-formed a “Pale,” levied taxes, sent in soldiery, distributed lands,
-and introduced a new language; but the “King’s writ did not run;” the
-subjugation of Ireland did not extend over the country at large, and
-it remained till 1846 and the five or six following years to complete
-the conquest of the Irish race, by the loss of a tuberous esculent
-and the Governmental alteration in the value of a grain of corn. Then
-there went to the workhouse or exile upwards of two millions of the
-Irish race, besides those who died of pestilence. Having carefully
-investigated and reported upon this last great European famine, I have
-come to the conclusion just stated, without taking into consideration
-its political, religious, or national aspects.
-
-It appears to me that one of our great difficulties in Ireland has been
-the want of fusion—not only of races, but of opinions and sentiments,
-in what may be called a “give and take” system. As regards the
-intermixture, I think there cannot be a better one than the Saxon with
-the Celt. The Anglo-Normans, however, partially fused with the native
-Irish; for Strongbow married Eva the daughter of King Dermot; and from
-this marriage it has been clearly shown that Her Most Gracious Majesty
-the present Queen of Ireland and Great Britain is lineally descended.
-Several of the noble warriors who came over about that period have
-established great and widespread names in Ireland, among whom I may
-mention the Geraldines in Leinster, the De Burgos in Connaught, and the
-Butlers in Munster; and they and their descendants became, according to
-the old Latin adage, “more Irish than the Irish themselves.”
-
-Look what the intermixture of races has done for us in Ireland; the
-Firbolg brought us agriculture; the Danann the chemistry and mechanics
-of metal work; the Milesians beauty and governing power; the Danes
-commerce and navigation; the Anglo-Normans chivalry and organized
-government; and, in later times, the French emigrants taught us an
-improved art of weaving.
-
-It would be more political than ethnological were I to enter upon the
-discussion of that subsequent period which would conduct us to the days
-of Cromwell or the Boyne, or, perhaps, to later periods, involving
-questions not pertinent to the present subject.
-
-But I must here say a word or two respecting Irish art. In
-architecture, in decorative tone-work, from archaic markings that gave
-a tone and character to all subsequent art, in our beauteous crosses,
-in our early metal work, in gold and bronze, carried on from the pagan
-to the Christian period, and in our gorgeously illuminated MS. books,
-we have got a style of art that is specially and peculiarly Irish, and
-that has no exact parallel elsewhere, and was only slightly modified by
-Norman or Frankish design.
-
-Time passed, and events accumulated; political affairs intermingle,
-but the anthropologist should try and keep clear of them. At the end
-of the reign of Elizabeth a considerable immigration of English took
-place into the South of Ireland. Subsequently the historic episode
-of the “Flight of the Earls,” O’Neil and O’Donnell, brought matters
-to a climax; and the early part of the reign of the first James is
-memorable for the “Plantation of Ulster,” when a number of Celtic
-Scots with some Saxons returned to their brethren across the water;
-and about the same time the London companies occupied large portions
-of this fertile province, and the early Irish race were transplanted
-by the Protector to the West, as I have already stated. It must not be
-imagined that this was the first immigration. The Picts passed through
-Ireland, and no doubt left a remnant behind them. And in consequence
-of contiguity, the Scottish people must early have settled upon our
-northern coasts. When the adventurous Edward Bruce made that marvellous
-inroad into Ireland at the end of the fourteenth century and advanced
-into the bowels of the land, he carried with him a Gaelic population
-cognate with our own people, and in all probability left a residue in
-Ulster, thus leavening the original Firbolgs, Tuatha-de-Danann, and
-Milesians, with the exception of the county of Donegal, which still
-holds a large Celtic population speaking the old Irish tongue, and
-retaining the special characters of that people as I have already
-described them. This Scotic race, as it now exists in Ulster, and
-of which we have specimens before us, I would sum up with three
-characteristics. That they were courageous is proved by their shutting
-the gates and defending the walls of Derry; that they were independent
-and lovers of justice has been shown by their establishment of tenant
-right; and that they were industrious and energetic is manifest by the
-manufacturers of Belfast. Do not, I entreat my brethren of Ulster,
-allow these manufactures to be jeopardized, either by masters or men,
-by any disagreements, which must lead to the decay of the fairest and
-wealthiest province and one of the most beautiful cities in this our
-native land.
-
-
- _Printed in Great Britain by_ Butler & Tanner _Frome and London_.
-
-
-
-
-
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-Superstitions of Ireland, by Jane Francesca Agnes Wilde
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-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Ancient legends, Mystic Charms &
-Superstitions of Ireland, by Jane Francesca Agnes Wilde
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Ancient legends, Mystic Charms & Superstitions of Ireland
- With sketches of the Irish past
-
-Author: Jane Francesca Agnes Wilde
-
-Release Date: February 18, 2020 [EBook #61436]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ANCIENT LEGENDS, CHARMS, OF IRELAND ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by MWS, Les Galloway and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This book was
-produced from images made available by the HathiTrust
-Digital Library.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<h3>Transcriber’s Notes</h3>
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors have been silently corrected. Variations
-in hyphenation and accents have been standardised but all other
-spelling and punctuation remains unchanged.
-</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-
-<p class="half-title">ANCIENT LEGENDS OF IRELAND</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<h1>
-Ancient Legends<br />
-Mystic Charms &amp; Superstitions<br />
-of Ireland</h1>
-
-<p class="center">WITH SKETCHES OF THE IRISH PAST</p>
-
-<p class="center"><small>BY</small><br />
-
-<big>LADY WILDE</big></p>
-
-<p class="center spaced">A NEW EDITION</p>
-
-<p class="center">LONDON<br />
-CHATTO &amp; WINDUS<br />
-1919</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p class="center">OPINIONS OF THE PRESS<br />
-
-<small>ON</small><br />
-
-<big>ANCIENT LEGENDS OF IRELAND.</big></p>
-
-<div class= "small">
-<p>‘A work to be welcomed as a valuable addition to the literature of
-folk-lore and mythology; taken down, for the most part, from oral
-communications with the peasantry.’—<span class="smcap">Scotsman.</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Few nations have a folk-lore so rich and imaginative as that of
-the Irish. Lady Wilde has studied it conscientiously, and is so well
-acquainted with the origins of her subject, that the perusal of her book
-is no less instructive than pleasing.’—<span class="smcap">Morning Post.</span></p>
-
-<p>‘An important contribution to the literature of Ireland and the
-world’s stock of folk-lore.’—<span class="smcap">Evening Mail.</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Lady Wilde’s book will be welcome either to the professed student
-of Irish antiquity or to the more general reader who finds delight in
-fascinating folk-tales delightfully recorded.’—<span class="smcap">Westminster Review.</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Told with power as well as with simplicity ... a very interesting
-and readable collection of folk-lore.’—<span class="smcap">Graphic.</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Lady Wilde’s book is delightful.... Amongst those best
-acquainted with Irish folk-lore, legends, and mysteries, we believe
-few will be found capable of adding many words to pages which could
-only have been filled by an Irish woman lovingly treating such a
-subject.’—<span class="smcap">Vanity Fair.</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Those who care for legendary reading will find in this volume a
-source of much enjoyment.’—<span class="smcap">Northern Whig.</span></p>
-
-<p>‘The myths and legends are all of deep interest and value.’—<span class="smcap">Knowledge.</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr />
-
-<p class="center">COMPANION TO THE PRESENT VOLUME.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><big>POPULAR ROMANCES OF THE WEST OF
-ENGLAND:</big></p>
-
-<div class="small">
-<p class="center">or, The Drolls, Traditions, and Superstitions of Old Cornwall.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Collected and Edited by <span class="smcap">Robert Hunt</span>, F.R.S.</p>
-
-<p class="center">With Illustrations by <span class="smcap">George Cruikshank</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="center">London: CHATTO &amp; WINDUS, 97 &amp; 99 St. Martin’s Lane, W.C.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_v">v</span></p>
-
-
-<h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS.</a></h2>
-
-
-<div class="center small">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr>
- <td class="tdr" colspan="2"><span class="small">PAGE</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Introduction</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Horned Women</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_10">10</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Legend of Ballytowtas Castle</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_12">12</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Wolf Story</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_17">17</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Evil Eye</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_20">20</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Stolen Bride</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_27">27</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fairy Music</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_29">29</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Fairy Dance</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_30">30</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fairy Justice</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_32">32</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Priest’s Soul</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_33">33</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Fairy Race</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_37">37</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Trial by Fire</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_39">39</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Lady Witch</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_41">41</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Ethna the Bride</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_42">42</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Fairies’ Revenge</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_46">46</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fairy Help—the Phouka</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_48">48</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Farmer Punished</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_49">49</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Farmer’s Wife</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_52">52</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Midnight Ride</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_53">53</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Leprehaun</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_56">56</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Legends of the Western Islands</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_59">59</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Bride’s Death-Song</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_60">60</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Child’s Dream</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_62">62</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Fairy Child</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_64">64</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Doom</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_67">67</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Clearing from Guilt</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_69">69</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Holy Well and the Murderer</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_70">70</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Legends of Innis-Sark—a Woman’s Curse</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_71">71</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Legends of the Dead in the Western Islands</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_75">75</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">The Death Sign</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_75">75</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">Kathleen</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_76">76</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">November Eve</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_78">78</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">The Dance of the Dead</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_80">80</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Superstitions concerning the Dead</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_81">81</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Fatal Love-Charm</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_83">83</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_vi">vi</span><span class="smcap">The Fenian Knights</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_84">84</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Rathlin Island</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_86">86</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Strange Guests</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_86">86</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Dead Soldier</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_87">87</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Three Gifts</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_88">88</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Fairies as Fallen Angels</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_89">89</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Fairy Changeling</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_89">89</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fairy Wiles</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_91">91</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Shaun-Mor</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_91">91</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Cave Fairies</span>—</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">The Tuatha-de-Danann</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_93">93</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">Edain the Queen</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_94">94</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">The Royal Steed</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_96">96</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Evil Spells</span>—</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">Cathal the King</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_97">97</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">The Poet’s Malediction</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_99">99</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">Drimial Agus Thorial</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_100">100</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">An Irish Adept of the Islands</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_100">100</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The May Festival</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_101">101</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">May-Day Superstitions</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_106">106</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Festivals</span>—</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">Candlemas</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_107">107</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">Whitsuntide</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_108">108</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">Whitsuntide Legend of the Fairy Horses</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_108">108</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">November Spells</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_109">109</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">November Eve</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_110">110</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Terrible Revenge</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_112">112</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Midsummer</span>—</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">The Baal Fires and Dances</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_113">113</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">The Fairy Doctress</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_114">114</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Marriage Rites</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_115">115</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Dead</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_117">117</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Wake Orgies</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_119">119</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Ancient Mysteries</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_123">123</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Power of The Word</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_129">129</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Poet and the King</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_130">130</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Sidhe Race</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_132">132</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Music</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_133">133</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Poet Inspiration—Eodain the Poetess</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_134">134</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Banshee</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_135">135</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Queen Maeve</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_137">137</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Death Signs</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_138">138</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">The Hartpole Doom</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_139">139</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Superstitions</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_140">140</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Fairy Rath</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_142">142</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Fairy Nature</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_142">142</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii">vii</span><span class="smcap">Irish Nature</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_144">144</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2">LEGENDS OF ANIMALS.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Concerning Dogs</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_146">146</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Concerning Cats</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_151">151</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">The King of the Cats</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_153">153</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">The Demon Cat</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_154">154</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">Cat Nature</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_156">156</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Seanchan the Bard and the King of the Cats</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_159">159</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Bards</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_163">163</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">King Arthur and the Cat</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_166">166</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Concerning Cows</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_168">168</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">Fairy Wiles</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_170">170</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Dead Hand</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_172">172</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Wicked Widow</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_173">173</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Butter Mystery</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_175">175</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Concerning Birds</span>—</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">The Magpie</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_177">177</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">The Wren</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_177">177</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">The Raven and Water Wagtail</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_177">177</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">The Cuckoo and Robin Redbreast</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_177">177</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Concerning Living Creatures</span>—</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">The Cricket</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_178">178</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">The Beetle</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_178">178</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">The Hare</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_179">179</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">The Weasel</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_179">179</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Properties of Herbs and their Use in Medicine</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_181">181</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">A Love Potion</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_185">185</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">Love Dreams</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_185">185</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">To Cause Love</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_185">185</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Medical Superstitions and Ancient Charms</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_186">186</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">Against Sorrow</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_188">188</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">To Win Love</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_189">189</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For the Night Fire (the Fever)</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_189">189</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For a Pain in the Side</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_189">189</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For the Measles</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_190">190</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For the Mad Fever</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_190">190</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">Against Enemies</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_190">190</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">To Extract a Thorn</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_190">190</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">To Cause Hatred between Lovers</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_191">191</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For Love</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_191">191</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">How to have Money Always</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_191">191</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For the Great Worm</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_191">191</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_viii">viii</span>For Sore Eyes</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_191">191</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For Pains in the Body</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_192">192</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">Against Drowning</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_192">192</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">In Time of Battle</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_192">192</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For the Red Rash</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_193">193</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">To Tame a Horse</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_193">193</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">A very Ancient Charm against Wounds or Poisons</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_193">193</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For a Sore Breast</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_193">193</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For a Wound</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_194">194</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For the Evil Eye</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_194">194</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For St. Anthony’s Fire</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_194">194</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">How to go Invisible</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_194">194</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For Pains</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_194">194</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For a Sprain</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_195">195</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">To Cause Love</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_195">195</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For the Bite of a Mad Dog</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_195">195</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For Toothache</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_196">196</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For Freckles</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_196">196</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For a Burn</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_197">197</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For the Memory</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_197">197</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For the Falling Sickness</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_197">197</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For Chin-Cough</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_197">197</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For Rheumatism</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_198">198</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For a Stye on the Eyelid</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_198">198</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">To Cure Warts</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_198">198</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For a Stitch in the Side</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_198">198</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For Weak Eyes</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_198">198</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For Water on the Brain</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_199">199</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For Hip Disease</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_199">199</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For the Mumps</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_199">199</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For Epilepsy</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_199">199</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For Depression of Heart</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_200">200</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For the Fairy Dart</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_200">200</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Various Superstitions and Cures</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_200">200</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">To find Stolen Goods</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_207">207</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">A Prayer against the Plague</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_207">207</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">A Blessing</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_207">207</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">A Cure for Cattle</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_207">207</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">A Charm for Safety</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_208">208</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">An Elixir of Potency</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_208">208</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">For the Bite of a Mad Dog</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_208">208</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">Dreams</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_208">208</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">Fairy Doctors</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_209">209</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">Charms by Crystals</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_209">209</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">Alectromantia</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_210">210</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">Fairy Power</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_210">210</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Omens and Superstitions</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_211">211</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">That Forbode Evil</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_211">211</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_ix">ix</span>To Attract Bees</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_213">213</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Superstitions of the Islands</span>—</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">Concerning the Dead</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_213">213</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">The Coastguard’s Fate</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_214">214</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">Relics</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_214">214</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2">LEGENDS OF THE SAINTS.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">St. Patrick</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_215">215</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">The Well of the Book</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_216">216</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">St. Patrick and the Serpent</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_216">216</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">St. Patrick and the Princesses</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_217">217</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">The Poison Cup</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_217">217</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">Divination</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_217">217</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">The Blind Poet</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_218">218</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">The Story of Breccan</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_218">218</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">Bardic Privileges</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_219">219</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">St. Ciaron</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_220">220</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">St. Martin</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_220">220</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">St. Bridget</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_222">222</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">St. Kieran</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_223">223</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">St. Kevin</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_223">223</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Christian Legends</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_224">224</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Swearing Stones and Relics</span>—</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">The Cremave</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_225">225</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">Relics for clearing from Guilt</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_226">226</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">Innis-Murry</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_227">227</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2">MYSTERIES OF FAIRY POWER.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Evil Stroke</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_228">228</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Changeling</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_229">229</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Fairy Doctor</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_231">231</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Poet’s Spell</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_233">233</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Charm for the Fairy Stroke</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_233">233</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Farmer’s Fate</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_234">234</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Fairy Rath</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_235">235</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2">THE HOLY WELLS.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Holy Wells</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_236">236</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">The White Stones</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_237">237</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm">The Sacred Trout</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_237">237</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">St. Augustine’s Well</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_238">238</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Grilled Trout</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_238">238</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Legend of Neal-mor</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_239">239</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">St. John’s Well</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_240">240</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Well of Fionn Ma-Coul</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_240">240</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">St. Seenan’s Well</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_241">241</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Kid-na-Greina</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_241">241</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdlm"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_x">x</span><span class="smcap">The Well of Worship</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_243">243</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Bride’s Well</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_243">243</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Irish Fakir</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_244">244</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Sacred Trees</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_246">246</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Tober-na-Dara</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_247">247</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Lough Neagh</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_247">247</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Doctor and the Fairy Princess</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_248">248</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Holy Well</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_250">250</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Sacred Island</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_251">251</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Lake of Revenge</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_251">251</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Scenes at a Holy Well</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_252">252</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Lough Foyle</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_252">252</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Hen’s Castle</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_253">253</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Sliabh-Mish, County Kerry</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_254">254</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Skelligs of Kerry</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_254">254</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2">POPULAR NOTIONS CONCERNING THE SIDHE RACE.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Sidhe Race</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_256">256</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Hurling Match</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_259">259</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Ride with the Fairies</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_260">260</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Fairy Spy</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_263">263</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Dark Horseman</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_264">264</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Sheela-na-Skean</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_267">267</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Captain Webb, the Robber Chief</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_270">270</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Mayo Captain and Feenish the Mare</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_271">271</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2">SKETCHES OF THE IRISH PAST.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Bardic Race</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_274">274</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Ancient Race</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_276">276</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Antiquities of Ireland</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_278">278</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Early Irish Art</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_287">287</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Our Ancient Capital</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_295">295</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdh">SIR WILLIAM WILDE ON “THE ANCIENT
-RACES OF IRELAND”</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_329">329</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table></div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xi">xi</span></p>
-
-
-<h2 id="PREFACE">PREFACE.</h2>
-
-
-<p>The three great sources of knowledge respecting the shrouded part
-of humanity are the language, the mythology, and the ancient
-monuments of a country.</p>
-
-<p>From the language one learns the mental and social height to
-which a nation had reached at any given period in arts, habits,
-and civilization, with the relation of man to man, and to the
-material and visible world.</p>
-
-<p>The mythology of a people reveals their relation to a spiritual
-and invisible world; while the early monuments are solemn and
-eternal symbols of religious faith—rituals of stone in cromlech,
-pillar, shrine and tower, temples and tombs.</p>
-
-<p>The written word, or literature, comes last, the fullest and
-highest expression of the intellect and culture, and scientific
-progress of a nation.</p>
-
-<p>The Irish race were never much indebted to the written word.
-The learned class, the ollamhs, dwelt apart and kept their knowledge
-sacred. The people therefore lived entirely upon the traditions
-of their forefathers, blended with the new doctrines taught by
-Christianity; so that the popular belief became, in time, an amalgam
-of the pagan myths and the Christian legend, and these two
-elements remain indissolubly united to this day. The world, in
-fact, is a volume, a serial rather, going on for six thousand years,
-but of which the Irish peasant has scarcely yet turned the first
-page.</p>
-
-<p>The present work deals only with the mythology, or the fantastic
-creed of the Irish respecting the invisible world—strange and
-mystical superstitions, brought thousands of years ago from their
-Aryan home, but which still, even in the present time, affect all
-the modes of thinking and acting in the daily life of the people.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xii">xii</span></p>
-
-<p>Amongst the educated classes in all nations, the belief in the
-supernatural, acting directly on life and constantly interfering
-with the natural course of human action, is soon dissipated and
-gradually disappears, for the knowledge of natural laws solves many
-mysteries that were once inexplicable; yet much remains unsolved,
-even to the philosopher, of the mystic relation between the material
-and the spiritual world. Whilst to the masses—the uneducated—who
-know nothing of the fixed eternal laws of nature, every
-phenomenon seems to result from the direct action of some nonhuman
-power, invisible though ever present; able to confer all
-benefits, yet implacable if offended, and therefore to be propitiated.</p>
-
-<p>The superstition, then, of the Irish peasant is the instinctive
-belief in the existence of certain unseen agencies that influence
-all human life; and with the highly sensitive organization of
-their race, it is not wonderful that the people live habitually
-under the shadow and dread of invisible powers which, whether
-working for good or evil, are awful and mysterious to the uncultured
-mind that sees only the strange results produced by certain
-forces, but knows nothing of approximate causes.</p>
-
-<p>Many of the Irish legends, superstitions, and ancient charms
-now collected were obtained chiefly from oral communications
-made by the peasantry themselves, either in Irish or in the Irish-English
-which preserves so much of the expressive idiom of the
-antique tongue.</p>
-
-<p>These narrations were taken down by competent persons skilled in
-both languages, and as far as possible in the very words of the
-narrator; so that much of the primitive simplicity of the style
-has been retained, while the legends have a peculiar and special
-value as coming direct from the national heart.</p>
-
-<p>In a few years such a collection would be impossible, for the
-old race is rapidly passing away to other lands, and in the vast
-working-world of America, with all the new influences of light
-and progress, the young generation, though still loving the land
-of their fathers, will scarcely find leisure to dream over the fairy-haunted
-hills and lakes and raths of ancient Ireland.</p>
-
-<p>I must disclaim, however, all desire to be considered a melancholy
-<i>Laudatrix temporis acti</i>. These studies of the Irish past
-are simply the expression of my love for the beautiful island that
-gave me my first inspiration, my quickest intellectual impulses,
-and the strongest and best sympathies with genius and country
-possible to a woman’s nature.</p>
-
-<p class="psig">
-FRANCESCA SPERANZA WILDE.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">1</span></p>
-
-<h2>ANCIENT LEGENDS.</h2>
-
-
-<h3 id="INTRODUCTION">INTRODUCTION.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The ancient legends of all nations of the world, on which from
-age to age the generations of man have been nurtured, bear so
-striking a resemblance to each other that we are led to believe
-there was once a period when the whole human family was of
-one creed and one language. But with increasing numbers came
-the necessity of dispersion; and that ceaseless migration was
-commenced of the tribes of the earth from the Eastern cradle of
-their race which has now continued for thousands of years with
-undiminished activity.</p>
-
-<p>From the beautiful Eden-land at the head of the Persian Gulf,
-where creeds and culture rose to life, the first migrations emanated,
-and were naturally directed along the line of the great rivers, by
-the Euphrates and the Tigris and southward by the Nile; and
-there the first mighty cities of the world were built, and the first
-mighty kingdoms of the East began to send out colonies to take
-possession of the unknown silent world around them. From
-Persia, Assyria, and Egypt, to Greece and the Isles of the Sea,
-went forth the wandering tribes, carrying with them, as signs of
-their origin, broken fragments of the primal creed, and broken
-idioms of the primal tongue—those early pages in the history of
-the human race, eternal and indestructible, which hundreds of
-centuries have not been able to obliterate from the mind of man.</p>
-
-<p>But as the early tribes diverged from the central parent stock,
-the creed and the language began to assume new forms, according
-as new habits of life and modes of thought were developed
-amongst the wandering people, by the influence of climate and
-the contemplation of new and striking natural phenomena in the
-lands where they found a resting-place or a home. Still, amongst
-all nations a basis remained of the primal creed and language,
-easily to be traced through all the mutations caused by circumstances
-in human thought, either by higher culture or by the
-debasement to which both language and symbols are subjected
-amongst rude and illiterate tribes.</p>
-
-<p>To reconstruct the primal creed and language of humanity<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">2</span>
-from these scattered and broken fragments, is the task which is
-now exciting so keenly the energies of the ardent and learned
-ethnographers of Europe; as yet, indeed, with but small success
-as regards language, for not more, perhaps, than twenty words
-which the philologists consider may have belonged to the original
-tongue have been discovered; that is, certain objects or ideas
-are found represented in all languages by the same words, and
-therefore the philologist concludes that these words must have
-been associated with the ideas from the earliest dawn of language;
-and as the words express chiefly the relations of the human family
-to each other, they remained fixed in the minds of the wandering
-tribes, untouched and unchanged by all the diversities of their
-subsequent experience of life.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, in Europe there is diligent study of the ancient
-myths, legends, and traditions of the world, in order to extract
-from them that information respecting the early modes of thought
-prevalent amongst the primitive race, and also the lines of the
-first migrations, which no other monuments of antiquity are so
-well able to give. Traditions, like rays of light, take their colour
-from the medium through which they pass; but the scientific
-mythographic student knows how to eliminate the accidental
-addition from the true primal basis, which remains fixed and
-unchangeable; and from the numerous myths and legends of the
-nations of the earth, which bear so striking a conformity to each
-other that they point to a common origin, he will be able to
-reconstruct the first articles of belief in the creed of humanity,
-and to pronounce almost with certainty upon the primal source of
-the lines of human life that now traverse the globe in all
-directions. This source of all life, creed, and culture now on earth,
-there is no reason to doubt, will be found in <i>Iran</i>, or Persia as we
-call it, and in the ancient legends and language of the great
-Iranian people, the head and noblest type of the Aryan races.
-Endowed with splendid physical beauty, noble intellect, and a
-rich musical language, the Iranians had also a lofty sense of the
-relation between man and the spiritual world. They admitted no
-idols into their temples; their God was the One Supreme Creator
-and Upholder of all things, whose symbol was the sun and the
-pure, elemental fire. But as the world grew older and more
-wicked the pure primal doctrines were obscured by human fancies,
-the symbol came to be worshipped in place of the God, and the
-debased idolatries of Babylon, Assyria, and the Canaanite nations
-were the result. Egypt—grave, wise, learned, mournful Egypt—retained
-most of the primal truth; but truth was held by the
-priests as too precious for the crowd, and so they preserved it
-carefully for themselves and their own caste. They alone knew
-the ancient and cryptic meaning of the symbols; the people were
-allowed only to see the outward and visible sign.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">3</span></p>
-
-<p>From Egypt, philosophy, culture, art, and religion came to
-Greece, but the Greeks moulded these splendid elements after
-their own fashion, and poured the radiance of beauty over the
-grave and gloomy mysticism of Egypt. Everything hideous,
-terrible, and revolting was banished from the Greek Mythology.
-The Greeks constructed no theory of a devil, and believed in no
-hell, as a distinct and eternal abode for the lost souls of men.
-The Greek gods were divinely beautiful, and each divinity in turn
-was ready to help the mortal that invoked him. The dead in
-Hades mourned their fate because they could no longer enjoy the
-glorious beauty of life, but no hard and chilling dogmas doomed
-them there to the tortures of eternal punishment. Earth, air, the
-heavens and the sea, the storms and sunshine, the forests and
-flowers and the purple grapes with which they crowned a god,
-were all to the Greek poet-mind the manifestations of an all-pervading
-spiritual power and life. A sublime Pantheism was
-their creed, that sees gods in everything, yet with one Supreme
-God over all. Freedom, beauty, art, light, and joy, were the
-elements of the Greek religion, while the Eternal Wisdom, the
-Great Athené of the Parthenon, was the peculiar and selected
-divinity of their own half divine race.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile other branches of the primal Iranian stock were
-spreading over the savage central forests of Europe, where they
-laid the foundation of the great Teuton and Gothic races, the
-destined world-rulers; but Nature to them was a gloomy and
-awful mother, and life seemed an endless warfare against the
-fierce and powerful elemental demons of frost and snow and darkness,
-by whom the beautiful Sun-god was slain, and who reigned
-triumphant in that fearful season when the earth was iron and the
-air was ice, and no beneficent God seemed near to help. Hideous
-idols imaged these unseen powers, who were propitiated by
-sanguinary rites; and the men and the god they fashioned were
-alike as fierce and cruel as the wild beasts of the forest, and the
-aspects of the savage nature around them.</p>
-
-<p>Still the waves of human life kept rolling westward until they
-surged over all the lands and islands of the Great Sea, and the
-wandering mariners, seeking new homes, passed through the
-Pillars of Hercules out into the Western Ocean, and coasting
-along by the shores of Spain and France, founded nations that
-still bear the impress of their Eastern origin, and are known in
-history as the Celtic race; while the customs, usages, and
-traditions which their forefathers had learnt in Egypt or Greece
-were carefully preserved by them, and transmitted as heirlooms
-to the colonies they founded. From Spain the early mariners
-easily reached the verdant island of the West in which we Irish
-are more particularly interested. And here in our beautiful
-Ireland the last wave of the great Iranian migration finally<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">4</span>
-settled. Further progress was impossible—the unknown ocean
-seemed to them the limits of the world. And thus the wanderers
-of the primal race, with their fragments of the ancient creed and
-mythic poet-lore, and their peculiar dialect of the ancient tongue,
-formed, as it were, a sediment here which still retains its peculiar
-affinity with the parent land—though the changes and chances of
-three thousand years have swept over the people, the legends, and
-the language. It is, therefore, in Ireland, above all, that the
-nature and origin of the primitive races of Europe should be
-studied. Even the form of the Celtic head shows a decided
-conformity to that of the Greek races, while it differs essentially
-from the Saxon and Gothic types. This is one of the many proofs
-in support of the theory that the Celtic people in their westward
-course to the Atlantic travelled by the coasts of the Mediterranean,
-as all along that line the same cranial formation is found. Philologists
-also affirm that the Irish language is nearer to Sanskrit
-than any other of the living and spoken languages of Europe;
-while the legends and myths of Ireland can be readily traced to
-the far East, but have nothing in common with the fierce and
-weird superstitions of Northern mythology.</p>
-
-<p>This study of legendary lore, as a foundation for the history of
-humanity, is now recognized as such an important branch of ethnology
-that a journal entirely devoted to comparative mythology
-has been recently started in Paris, to which all nations are invited
-to contribute—Sclaves, Teutons, and Celts, Irish legends being
-considered specially important, as containing more of the primitive
-elements than those of other Western nations. All other countries
-have been repeatedly overwhelmed by alien tribes and
-peoples and races, but the Irish have remained unchanged, and in
-place of adopting readily the usages of invaders they have shown
-such remarkable powers of fascination that the invaders themselves
-became <i>Hibernicis ipsis Hiberniores</i>. The Danes held the
-east coast of Ireland for three hundred years, yet there is no trace
-of Thor or Odin or the Frost Giants, or of the Great World-serpent
-in Irish legend; but if we go back in the history of the
-world to the beginning of things, when the Iranian people were
-the only teachers of humanity, we come upon the true ancient
-source of Irish legend, and find that the original materials have
-been but very slightly altered, while amongst other nations the
-ground-work has been overlaid with a dense palimpsest of their
-own devising, suggested by their peculiar local surroundings.</p>
-
-<p>Amongst the earliest religious symbols of the world are the
-Tree, the Woman, and the Serpent—memories, no doubt, of the
-legend of Paradise; and the reverence for certain sacred trees has
-prevailed in Persia from the most ancient times, and become
-diffused among all the Iranian nations. It was the custom in Iran
-to hang costly garments on the branches as votive offerings; and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">5</span>
-it is recorded that Xerxes before going to battle invoked victory by
-the Sacred Tree, and hung jewels and rich robes on the boughs.
-And the poet Saadi narrates an anecdote concerning trees which
-has the true Oriental touch of mournful suggestion:—He was
-once, he says, the guest of a very rich old man who had a son
-remarkable for his beauty. One night the old man said to him,
-“During my whole life I never had but this son. Near this place
-is a Sacred Tree to which men resort to offer up their petitions.
-Many nights at the foot of this tree I besought God until He
-bestowed on me this son.” Not long after Saadi overheard this
-young man say in a low voice to his friend, “How happy should
-I be to know where that Sacred Tree grows, in order that I might
-implore God for the death of my father.”</p>
-
-<p>The poorer class in Persia, not being able to make offerings of
-costly garments, are in the habit of tying bits of coloured stuffs on
-the boughs, and these rags are considered to have a special virtue
-in curing diseases. The trees are often near a well or by a saint’s
-grave, and are then looked upon as peculiarly sacred.</p>
-
-<p>This account might have been written for Ireland, for the belief
-and the ceremonial are precisely similar, and are still found existing
-to this day both in <i>Iran</i> and in <i>Erin</i>. But all trees were
-not held sacred—only those that bore no eatable fruit that could
-nourish men; a lingering memory of the tree of evil fruit may
-have caused this prejudice, while the Tree of Life was eagerly
-sought for, with its promised gift of immortality. In Persia the
-plane-tree was specially reverenced; in Egypt, the palm; in
-Greece, the wild olive; and the oak amongst the Celtic nations.
-Sometimes small tapers were lit amongst the branches, to simulate
-by fire the presence of divinity. It is worthy of note, while on
-the subject of Irish and Iranian affinities, that the old Persian
-word for tree is <i>dar</i>, and the Irish call their sacred tree, the oak,
-<i>darragh</i>.<a id="FNanchor_1_1" href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">1</a></p>
-
-<p>The belief in a race of supernatural beings, midway between
-man and the Supreme God, beautiful and beneficent, a race that
-had never known the weight of human life, was also part of the
-creed of the Iranian people. They called them <i>Peris</i>, or <i>Feroüers</i>
-(fairies); and they have some pretty legends concerning the
-beautiful <i>Dukhtari Shah Periân</i>, the “Daughter of the King of the
-Fairies,” for a sight of whose beauty men pine away in vain desire,
-but if it is granted to them once to behold her, they die. Every
-nation believes in the existence of these mysterious spirits, with
-mystic and powerful influence over human life and actions, but each
-nation represents them differently, according to national habits and
-national surroundings. Thus, the Russians believe in the phantom<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">6</span>
-of the Ukraine, a beautiful young girl robed in white, who meets
-the wanderer on the lonely snow steppes, and lulls him by her
-kisses into that fatal sleep from which he never more awakens.
-The legends of the Scandinavians, also, are all set in the framework
-of their own experiences; the rending and crash of the ice is
-the stroke of the god Thor’s hammer; the rime is the beard of the
-Frost Giant; and when Balder, their Sun-god, is beginning to die
-at Midsummer, they kindle pine-branches to light him on his
-downward path to hell; and when he is returning to the upper
-world, after the winter solstice, they burn the Yule-log, and hang
-lights on the fir-trees to illuminate his upward path. These
-traditions are a remnant of the ancient sun worship, but the
-peasants who kindle the Baal fires at Midsummer, and the upper
-classes who light up the brilliant Christmas-tree, have forgotten
-the origin of the custom, though the world-old symbol and usage
-is preserved.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sidhe</i>, or Fairies, of Ireland, still preserve all the gentle
-attributes of their ancient Persian race, for in the soft and equable
-climate of Erin there were no terrible manifestations of nature to
-be symbolized by new images; and the genial, laughter-loving
-elves were in themselves the best and truest expression of Irish
-nature that could have been invented. The fairies loved music
-and dancing and frolic; and, above all things, to be let alone,
-and not to be interfered with as regarded their peculiar fairy
-habits, customs, and pastimes. They had also, like the Irish, a
-fine sense of the right and just, and a warm love for the liberal
-hand and kindly word. All the solitudes of the island were
-peopled by these bright, happy, beautiful beings, and to the Irish
-nature, with its need of the spiritual, its love of the vague, mystic,
-dreamy, and supernatural, there was something irresistibly fascinating
-in the belief that gentle spirits were around, filled with
-sympathy for the mortal who suffered wrong or needed help. But
-the fairies were sometimes wilful and capricious as children, and
-took dire revenge if any one built over their fairy circles, or
-looked at them when combing their long yellow hair in the sunshine,
-or dancing in the woods, or floating on the lakes. Death
-was the penalty to all who approached too near, or pried too
-curiously into the mysteries of nature.</p>
-
-<p>To the Irish peasant earth and air were filled with these mysterious
-beings, half-loved, half-feared by them; and therefore they
-were propitiated by flattery, and called “the good people,” as the
-Greeks call the dread goddesses “the Eumenides.” Their voices
-were heard in the mountain echo, and their forms seen in the
-purple and golden mountain mist; they whispered amidst the
-perfumed hawthorn branches; the rush of the autumn leaves was
-the scamper of little elves—red, yellow, and brown—wind-delven,
-and dancing in their glee; and the bending of the waving<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">7</span>
-barley was caused by the flight of the Elf King and his Court
-across the fields. They danced with soundless feet, and their step
-was so light that the drops of dew they danced on only trembled,
-but did not break. The fairy music was low and sweet, “blinding
-sweet,” like that of the great god Pan by the river; they lived
-only on the nectar in the cups of the flowers, though in their fairy
-palaces sumptuous banquets were offered to the mortals they
-carried off—but woe to the mortal who tasted of fairy food; to
-eat was fatal. All the evil in the world has come by eating; if
-Eve had only resisted that apple our race might still be in Paradise.
-The Sidhe look with envy on the beautiful young human children,
-and steal them when they can; and the children of a Sidhe and a
-mortal mother are reputed to grow up strong and powerful, but
-with evil and dangerous natures. There is also a belief that every
-seven years the fairies are obliged to deliver up a victim to the
-Evil One, and to save their own people they try to abduct some
-beautiful young mortal girl, and her they hand over to the Prince
-of Darkness.</p>
-
-<p>Dogmatic religion and science have long since killed the mythopoetic
-faculty in cultured Europe. It only exists now, naturally
-and instinctively, in children, poets, and the childlike races, like
-the Irish—simple, joyous, reverent, and unlettered, and who have
-remained unchanged for centuries, walled round by their language
-from the rest of Europe, through which separating veil science,
-culture, and the cold mockery of the sceptic have never yet
-penetrated.</p>
-
-<p>Christianity was readily accepted by the Irish. The pathetic
-tale of the beautiful young Virgin-Mother and the Child-God, for
-central objects, touched all the deepest chords of feeling in the
-tender, loving, and sympathetic Irish heart. The legends of
-ancient times were not overthrown by it, however, but taken up
-and incorporated with the new Christian faith. The holy wells
-and the sacred trees remained, and were even made holier by
-association with a saint’s name. And to this day the old
-mythology holds its ground with a force and vitality untouched
-by any symptoms of weakness or decay. The Greeks, who are of
-the same original race as our people, rose through the influence of
-the highest culture to the fulness and perfectness of eternal youth;
-but the Irish, without culture, are eternal children, with all the
-childlike instincts of superstition still strong in them, and capable
-of believing all things, because to doubt requires knowledge.
-They never, like the Greeks, attained to the conception of a
-race of beings nobler than themselves—men stronger and more
-gifted, with the immortal fire of a god in their veins; women
-divinely beautiful, or divinely inspired; but, also, the Irish never
-defaced the image of God in their hearts by infidelity or irreligion.
-One of the most beautiful and sublimely touching records in all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">8</span>
-human history is that of the unswerving devotion of the Irish
-people to their ancient faith, through persecutions and penal
-enactments more insulting and degrading than were ever inflicted
-in any other land by one Christian sect upon another.</p>
-
-<p>With this peculiarly reverential nature it would be impossible
-to make the Irish a nation of sceptics, even if a whole legion of
-German Rationalists came amongst them to preach a crusade
-against all belief in the spiritual and the unseen. And the old
-traditions of their race have likewise taken firm hold in their
-hearts, because they are an artistic people, and require objects for
-their adoration and love, not mere abstractions to be accepted by
-their reason. And they are also a nation of poets; the presence
-of God is ever near them, and the saints and angels, and the
-shadowy beings of earth and air are perpetually drawing their
-minds, through mingled love and fear, to the infinite and invisible
-world. Probably not one tradition or custom that had its origin
-in a religious belief has been lost in Ireland during the long course
-of ages since the first people from Eastern lands arrived and
-settled on our shores. The Baal fires are still lit at Midsummer,
-though no longer in honour of the sun, but of St. John; and the
-peasants still make their cattle pass between two fires—not,
-indeed, as of old, in the name of Moloch, but of some patron saint.
-That all Irish legends point to the East for their origin, not to the
-North, is certain; to a warm land, not one of icebergs, and thunder
-crashes of the rending of ice-bound rivers, but to a region where
-the shadow of trees, and a cool draught from the sparkling well
-were life-giving blessings. Well-worship could not have originated
-in a humid country like Ireland, where wells can be found at every
-step, and sky and land are ever heavy and saturated with moisture.
-It must have come from an Eastern people, wanderers in a dry and
-thirsty land, where the discovery of a well seemed like the interposition
-of an angel in man’s behalf.</p>
-
-<p>We are told also by the ancient chroniclers that serpent-worship
-once prevailed in Ireland, and that St. Patrick hewed down the
-serpent idol <i>Crom-Cruadh</i> (the great worm) and cast it into the
-Boyne (from whence arose the legend that St. Patrick banished all
-venomous things from the island). Now as the Irish never could
-have seen a serpent, none existing in Ireland, this worship must
-have come from the far East, where this beautiful and deadly
-creature is looked upon as the symbol of the Evil One, and
-worshipped and propitiated by votive offerings, as all evil things
-were in the early world, in the hope of turning away their evil
-hatred from man, and to induce them to show mercy and pity; just
-as the Egyptians propitiated the sacred crocodile by subtle
-flatteries and hung costly jewels in its ears. The Irish, indeed,
-do not seem to have originated any peculiar or national cultus.
-Their funeral ceremonies recall those of Egypt and Greece and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">9</span>
-other ancient Eastern climes, from whence they brought their
-customs of the Wake, the death chant, the mourning women, and
-the funeral games. In Sparta, on the death of a king or great
-chief, they had a wake and “keen” not common to the rest of
-Greece, but which they said they learned from the Phœnicians;
-and this peculiar usage bears a striking resemblance to the Irish
-practice. All the virtues of the dead were recited, and the Greek
-“Eleleu,” the same cry as the “Ul-lu-lu” of the Irish, was keened
-over the corpse by the chorus of hired mourning women. The
-custom of selecting women in place of men for the chorus of
-lamentation prevailed throughout all the ancient world, as if an
-open display of grief was thought beneath the dignity of man. It
-was Cassandra gave the keynote for the wail over Hector, and
-Helen took the lead in reciting praises to his honour. The death
-chants in Egypt, Arabia, and Abyssinia all bear a marked resemblance
-to the Irish; indeed the mourning cry is the same in all,
-and the Egyptian lamentation “Hi-loo-loo! Hi-loo-loo!” cried over
-the dead, was probably the original form of the Irish wail.</p>
-
-<p>The Greeks always endeavoured to lessen the terrors of death,
-and for this reason they established funeral games, and the funeral
-ceremonies took the form of a festival, where they ate and drank
-and poured libations of wine in honour of the dead. The Irish had
-also their funeral games and peculiar dances, when they threw off
-their upper garments, and holding hands in a circle, moved in a
-slow measure round a woman crouched in the centre, with her
-hands covering her face. Another singular part of the ceremony
-was the entrance of a woman wearing a cow’s head and horns, as
-Io appears upon the scene in the Prometheus of Æschylus. This
-woman was probably meant to represent the horned or crescented
-moon, the antique Diana, the Goddess of Death. The custom of
-throwing off the garments no doubt originally signified the casting
-off the garment of the flesh. We brought nothing into this world,
-and it is certain we carry nothing out. The soul must stand
-unveiled before God.</p>
-
-<p>In the islands off the West Coast of Ireland, where the most
-ancient superstitions still exist, they have a strange custom. No
-funeral wail is allowed to be raised until three hours have elapsed
-from the moment of death, because, they say, the sound of the
-cries would hinder the soul from speaking to God when it stands
-before Him, and waken up the two great dogs that are watching
-for the souls of the dead in order that they may devour them—and
-the Lord of Heaven Himself cannot hinder them if once they
-waken. This tradition of watching by the dead in silence, while
-the soul stands before God, is a fine and solemn superstition, which
-must have had its origin amongst a people of intense faith in the
-invisible world, and is probably of great antiquity.</p>
-
-<p>The sound of the Irish keen is wonderfully pathetic. No one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">10</span>
-could listen to the long-sustained minor wail of the “Ul-lu-lu”
-without strong emotion and even tears; and once heard it can
-never be forgotten. Nor is there anything derogatory to grief in
-the idea of hired mourners; on the contrary, it is a splendid
-tribute to the dead to order their praises to be recited publicly
-before the assembled friends; while there is something indescribably
-impressive in the aspect of the mourning women crouched
-around the bier with shrouded heads, as they rock themselves to
-and fro and intone the solemn, ancient death-song with a
-measured cadence, sometimes rising to a piercing wail. They
-seem like weird and shadowy outlines of an old-world vision, and
-at once the imagination is carried back to the far-distant East,
-and the time when all these funeral symbols had a mysterious and
-awful meaning. Sometimes a wail of genuine and bitter grief
-interrupts the chant of the hired mourners. An Irish keen which
-was taken down from the lips of a bereaved mother some years
-ago, runs thus in the literal English version—</p>
-
-<p>“O women, look on me! Look on me, women! Have you
-ever seen any sorrow like mine? Have you ever seen the like of
-me in my sorrow? Arrah, then, my darling, my darling, ’tis your
-mother that calls you. How long you are sleeping. Do you see
-all the people round you, my darling, and I sorely weeping?
-Arrah, what is this paleness on your face? Sure there was no
-equal to it in Erin for beauty and fairness, and your hair was
-heavy as the wing of a raven, and your skin was whiter than the
-hand of a lady. Is it the stranger must carry me to my grave, and
-my son lying here?”</p>
-
-<p>This touching lament is so thoroughly Greek in form and sentiment
-that it might be taken for part of a chorus from the Hecuba
-of Euripides. Even the “Arrah” reminds one of a Greek word
-used frequently by the Greeks when commencing a sentence or
-asking a question, although the resemblance may be only
-superficial.</p>
-
-<p>The tales and legends told by the peasants in the Irish vernacular
-are much more weird and strange, and have much more of
-the old-world colouring than the ordinary fairy tales narrated in
-English by the people, as may be seen by the following mythical
-story, translated from the Irish, and which is said to be a
-thousand years old:—</p>
-
-
-<h3><a id="THE_HORNED_WOMEN"></a>THE HORNED WOMEN.</h3>
-
-
-<p>A rich woman sat up late one night carding and preparing wool,
-while all the family and servants were asleep. Suddenly a knock
-was given at the door, and a voice called—“Open! open!”</p>
-
-<p>“Who is there?” said the woman of the house.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">11</span></p>
-
-<p>“I am the Witch of the One Horn,” was answered.</p>
-
-<p>The mistress, supposing that one of her neighbours had called
-and required assistance, opened the door, and a woman entered,
-having in her hand a pair of wool carders, and bearing a horn on
-her forehead, as if growing there. She sat down by the fire in
-silence, and began to card the wool with violent haste. Suddenly
-she paused and said aloud: “Where are the women? They
-delay too long.”</p>
-
-<p>Then a second knock came to the door, and a voice called as
-before—“Open! open!”</p>
-
-<p>The mistress felt herself constrained to rise and open to the call,
-and immediately a second witch entered, having two horns on her
-forehead, and in her hand a wheel for spinning the wool.</p>
-
-<p>“Give me place,” she said; “I am the Witch of the Two
-Horns,” and she began to spin as quick as lightning.</p>
-
-<p>And so the knocks went on, and the call was heard, and the
-witches entered, until at last twelve women sat round the fire—the
-first with one horn, the last with twelve horns. And they
-carded the thread, and turned their spinning wheels, and wound
-and wove, all singing together an ancient rhyme, but no word did
-they speak to the mistress of the house. Strange to hear, and
-frightful to look upon were these twelve women, with their horns
-and their wheels; and the mistress felt near to death, and she
-tried to rise that she might call for help, but she could not move,
-nor could she utter a word or a cry, for the spell of the witches
-was upon her.</p>
-
-<p>Then one of them called to her in Irish and said—</p>
-
-<p>“Rise, woman, and make us a cake.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the mistress searched for a vessel to bring water from the
-well that she might mix the meal and make the cake, but she
-could find none. And they said to her—</p>
-
-<p>“Take a sieve and bring water in it.”</p>
-
-<p>And she took the sieve and went to the well; but the water
-poured from it, and she could fetch none for the cake, and she sat
-down by the well and wept. Then a voice came by her and said—</p>
-
-<p>“Take yellow clay and moss and bind them together and plaster
-the sieve so that it will hold.”</p>
-
-<p>This she did, and the sieve held the water for the cake. And
-the voice said again—</p>
-
-<p>“Return, and when thou comest to the north angle of the
-house, cry aloud three times and say, ‘The mountain of the
-Fenian women and the sky over it is all on fire.’”</p>
-
-<p>And she did so.</p>
-
-<p>When the witches inside heard the call, a great and terrible cry
-broke from their lips and they rushed forth with wild lamentations
-and shrieks, and fled away to Slieve-namon, where was their
-chief abode. But the Spirit of the Well bade the mistress of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">12</span>
-house to enter and prepare her home against the enchantments of
-the witches if they returned again.</p>
-
-<p>And first, to break their spells, she sprinkled the water in
-which she had washed her child’s feet (the feet-water) outside the
-door on the threshold; secondly, she took the cake which the witches
-had made in her absence, of meal mixed with the blood drawn
-from the sleeping family. And she broke the cake in bits, and
-placed a bit in the mouth of each sleeper, and they were restored;
-and she took the cloth they had woven and placed it half in and
-half out of the chest with the padlock; and lastly, she secured
-the door with a great cross-beam fastened in the jambs, so that
-they could not enter. And having done these things she waited.</p>
-
-<p>Not long were the witches in coming back, and they raged and
-called for vengeance.</p>
-
-<p>“Open! Open!” they screamed. “Open, feet-water!”</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot,” said the feet-water, “I am scattered on the ground
-and my path is down to the Lough.”</p>
-
-<p>“Open, open, wood and tree and beam!” they cried to the
-door.</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot,” said the door; “for the beam is fixed in the jambs
-and I have no power to move.”</p>
-
-<p>“Open, open, cake that we have made and mingled with blood,”
-they cried again.</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot,” said the cake, “for I am broken and bruised, and
-my blood is on the lips of the sleeping children.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the witches rushed through the air with great cries, and
-fled back to Slieve-namon, uttering strange curses on the Spirit of
-the Well, who had wished their ruin; but the woman and the
-house were left in peace, and a mantle dropped by one of the
-witches in her flight was kept hung up by the mistress as a sign of
-the night’s awful contest; and this mantle was in possession of
-the same family from generation to generation for five hundred
-years after.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_LEGEND_OF_BALLYTOWTAS_CASTLE">THE LEGEND OF BALLYTOWTAS CASTLE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The next tale I shall select is composed in a lighter and more
-modern spirit. All the usual elements of a fairy tale are to be
-found in it, but the story is new to the nursery folk, and, if well
-illustrated, would make a pleasant and novel addition to the
-rather worn-out legends on which the children of many generations
-have been hitherto subsisting.</p>
-
-<p>In old times there lived where Ballytowtas Castle now stands a
-poor man named Towtas. It was in the time when manna fell to
-the earth with the dew of evening, and Towtas lived by gathering<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">13</span>
-the manna, and thus supported himself, for he was a poor man,
-and had nothing else.</p>
-
-<p>One day a pedlar came by that way with a fair young daughter.</p>
-
-<p>“Give us a night’s lodging,” he said to Towtas, “for we are
-weary.”</p>
-
-<p>And Towtas did so.</p>
-
-<p>Next morning, when they were going away, his heart longed
-for the young girl, and he said to the pedlar, “Give me your
-daughter for my wife.”</p>
-
-<p>“How will you support her?” asked the pedlar.</p>
-
-<p>“Better than you can,” answered Towtas, “for she can never
-want.”</p>
-
-<p>Then he told him all about the manna; how he went out every
-morning when it was lying on the ground with the dew, and
-gathered it, as his father and forefathers had done before him, and
-lived on it all their lives, so that he had never known want nor
-any of his people.</p>
-
-<p>Then the girl showed she would like to stay with the young
-man, and the pedlar consented, and they were married, Towtas
-and the fair young maiden; and the pedlar left them and went
-his way. So years went on, and they were very happy and never
-wanted; and they had one son, a bright, handsome youth, and as
-clever as he was comely.</p>
-
-<p>But in due time old Towtas died, and after her husband was
-buried, the woman went out to gather the manna as she had seen
-him do, when the dew lay on the ground; but she soon grew tired
-and said to herself, “Why should I do this thing every day?
-I’ll just gather now enough to do the week and then I can have
-rest.”</p>
-
-<p>So she gathered up great heaps of it greedily, and went her
-way into the house. But the sin of greediness lay on her evermore;
-and not a bit of manna fell with the dew that evening, nor
-ever again. And she was poor, and faint with hunger, and had to
-go out and work in the fields to earn the morsel that kept her and
-her son alive; and she begged pence from the people as they went
-into chapel, and this paid for her son’s schooling; so he went on
-with his learning, and no one in the county was like him for
-beauty and knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>One day he heard the people talking of a great lord that lived
-up in Dublin, who had a daughter so handsome that her like was
-never seen; and all the fine young gentlemen were dying about
-her, but she would take none of them. And he came home to his
-mother and said, “I shall go see this great lord’s daughter.
-Maybe the luck will be mine above all the fine young gentlemen
-that love her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Go along, poor fool,” said the mother,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">14</span> “how can the poor
-stand before the rich?”</p>
-
-<p>But he persisted. “If I die on the road,” he said, “I’ll try it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wait, then,” she answered, “till Sunday, and whatever I
-get I’ll give you half of it.” So she gave him half of the
-pence she gathered at the chapel door, and bid him go in the
-name of God.</p>
-
-<p>He hadn’t gone far when he met a poor man who asked him for
-a trifle for God’s sake. So he gave him something out of his
-mother’s money and went on. Again, another met him, and begged
-for a trifle to buy food, for the sake of God, and he gave him something
-also, and then went on.</p>
-
-<p>“Give me a trifle for God’s sake,” cried a voice, and he saw a
-third poor man before him.</p>
-
-<p>“I have nothing left,” said Towtas, “but a few pence; if I give
-them, I shall have nothing for food and must die of hunger. But
-come with me, and whatever I can buy for this I shall share with
-you.” And as they were going on to the inn he told all his story
-to the beggar man, and how he wanted to go to Dublin, but had
-now no money. So they came to the inn, and he called for a loaf
-and a drink of milk. “Cut the loaf,” he said to the beggar.
-“You are the oldest.”</p>
-
-<p>“I won’t,” said the other, for he was ashamed, but Towtas made
-him.</p>
-
-<p>And so the beggar cut the loaf, but though they ate, it never
-grew smaller, and though they drank as they liked of the milk, it
-never grew less. Then Towtas rose up to pay, but when the landlady
-came and looked, “How is this?” she said. “You have
-eaten nothing. I’ll not take your money, poor boy,” but he made
-her take some; and they left the place, and went on their way
-together.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said the beggar man, “you have been three times good
-to me to-day, for thrice I have met you, and you gave me help for
-the sake of God each time. See, now, I can help also,” and he
-reached a gold ring to the handsome youth. “Wherever you
-place that ring, and wish for it, gold will come—bright gold, so
-that you can never want while you have it.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Towtas put the ring first in one pocket and then in
-another, until all his pockets were so heavy with gold that he could
-scarcely walk; but when he turned to thank the friendly beggar
-man, he had disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>So, wondering to himself at all his adventures, he went on,
-until he came at last in sight of the lord’s palace, which was
-beautiful to see; but he would not enter in until he went and
-bought fine clothes, and made himself as grand as any prince;
-and then he went boldly up, and they invited him in, for they
-said, “Surely he is a king’s son.” And when dinner-hour came the
-lord’s daughter linked her arm with Towtas, and smiled on him.
-And he drank of the rich wine, and was mad with love; but at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">15</span>
-last the wine overcame him, and the servants had to carry him to
-his bed; and in going into his room he dropped the ring from his
-finger, but knew it not.</p>
-
-<p>Now, in the morning, the lord’s daughter came by, and cast her
-eyes upon the door of his chamber, and there close by it was the
-ring she had seen him wear.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah,” she said, “I’ll tease him now about his ring.” And she
-put it in her box, and wished that she were as rich as a king’s
-daughter, that so the king’s son might marry her; and, behold, the
-box filled up with gold, so that she could not shut it; and she
-put it from her into another box, and that filled also; and then
-she was frightened at the ring, and put it at last in her pocket as
-the safest place.</p>
-
-<p>But when Towtas awoke and missed the ring, his heart was
-grieved.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, indeed,” he said, “my luck is gone.”</p>
-
-<p>And he inquired of all the servants, and then of the lord’s
-daughter, and she laughed, by which he knew she had it; but no
-coaxing would get it from her, so when all was useless he went
-away, and set out again to reach his old home.</p>
-
-<p>And he was very mournful and threw himself down on the
-ferns near an old fort, waiting till night came on, for he feared to
-go home in the daylight lest the people should laugh at him for
-his folly. And about dusk three cats came out of the fort talking
-to each other.</p>
-
-<p>“How long our cook is away,” said one.</p>
-
-<p>“What can have happened to him?” said another.</p>
-
-<p>And as they were grumbling a fourth cat came up.</p>
-
-<p>“What delayed you?” they all asked angrily.</p>
-
-<p>Then he told his story—how he had met Towtas and given him
-the ring. “And I just went,” he said, “to the lord’s palace to see
-how the young man behaved; and I was leaping over the dinner-table
-when the lord’s knife struck my tail and three drops of blood
-fell upon his plate, but he never saw it and swallowed them with
-his meat. So now he has three kittens inside him and is dying of
-agony, and can never be cured until he drinks three draughts of
-the water of the well of Ballytowtas.”</p>
-
-<p>So when young Towtas heard the cats talk he sprang up and
-went and told his mother to give him three bottles full of the
-water of the Towtas well, and he would go to the lord disguised
-as a doctor and cure him.</p>
-
-<p>So off he went to Dublin. And all the doctors in Ireland were
-round the lord, but none of them could tell what ailed him, or
-how to cure him. Then Towtas came in and said, “I will cure
-him.” So they gave him entertainment and lodging, and when he
-was refreshed he gave of the well water three draughts to his
-lordship, when out jumped the three kittens. And there was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">16</span>
-great rejoicing, and they treated Towtas like a prince. But all
-the same he could not get the ring from the lord’s daughter, so he
-set off home again quite disheartened, and thought to himself,
-“If I could only meet the man again that gave me the ring
-who knows what luck I might have?” And he sat down to rest
-in a wood, and saw there not far off three boys fighting under an
-oak-tree.</p>
-
-<p>“Shame on ye to fight so,” he said to them. “What is the fight
-about?”</p>
-
-<p>Then they told him. “Our father,” they said, “before he
-died, buried under this oak-tree a ring by which you can
-be in any place in two minutes if you only wish it; a goblet
-that is always full when standing, and empty only when on its
-side; and a harp that plays any tune of itself that you name or
-wish for.”</p>
-
-<p>“I want to divide the things,” said the youngest boy, “and let
-us all go and seek our fortunes as we can.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I have a right to the whole,” said the eldest.</p>
-
-<p>And they went on fighting, till at length Towtas said—</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tell you how to settle the matter. All of you be here to-morrow,
-and I’ll think over the matter to-night, and I engage you
-will have nothing more to quarrel about when you come in the
-morning.”</p>
-
-<p>So the boys promised to keep good friends till they met in the
-morning, and went away.</p>
-
-<p>When Towtas saw them clear off, he dug up the ring, the goblet,
-and the harp, and now said he, “I’m all right, and they won’t
-have anything to fight about in the morning.”</p>
-
-<p>Off he set back again to the lord’s castle with the ring, the
-goblet, and the harp; but he soon bethought himself of the
-powers of the ring, and in two minutes he was in the great hall
-where all the lords and ladies were just sitting down to dinner;
-and the harp played the sweetest music, and they all listened in
-delight; and he drank out of the goblet which was never empty,
-and then, when his head began to grow a little light, “It is
-enough,” he said; and putting his arm round the waist of the
-lord’s daughter, he took his harp and goblet in the other hand,
-and murmuring—“I wish we were at the old fort by the side of
-the wood”—in two minutes they were both at the desired spot.
-But his head was heavy with the wine, and he laid down the
-harp beside him and fell asleep. And when she saw him asleep
-she took the ring off his finger, and the harp and the goblet from
-the ground and was back home in her father’s castle before two
-minutes had passed by.</p>
-
-<p>When Towtas awoke and found his prize gone, and all his treasures
-beside, he was like one mad; and roamed about the country
-till he came by an orchard, where he saw a tree covered with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">17</span>
-bright, rosy apples. Being hungry and thirsty, he plucked one
-and ate it, but no sooner had he done so than horns began to
-sprout from his forehead, and grew larger and longer till he knew
-he looked like a goat, and all he could do, they would not come
-off. Now, indeed, he was driven out of his mind, and thought
-how all the neighbours would laugh at him; and as he raged and
-roared with shame, he spied another tree with apples, still brighter,
-of ruddy gold.</p>
-
-<p>“If I were to have fifty pairs of horns I must have one of those,”
-he said; and seizing one, he had no sooner tasted it than the horns
-fell off, and he felt that he was looking stronger and handsomer
-than ever.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, I have her at last,” he exclaimed. “I’ll put horns on
-them all, and will never take them off until they give her to me
-as my bride before the whole Court.”</p>
-
-<p>Without further delay he set off to the lord’s palace, carrying
-with him as many of the apples as he could bring off the two trees.
-And when they saw the beauty of the fruit they longed for it; and
-he gave to them all, so that at last there was not a head to be seen
-without horns in the whole dining-hall. Then they cried out and
-prayed to have the horns taken off, but Towtas said—</p>
-
-<p>“No; there they shall be till I have the lord’s daughter given
-to me for my bride, and my two rings, my goblet, and my harp
-all restored to me.”</p>
-
-<p>And this was done before the face of all the lords and ladies;
-and his treasures were restored to him; and the lord placed his
-daughter’s hand in the hand of Towtas, saying—</p>
-
-<p>“Take her; she is your wife; only free me from the horns.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Towtas brought forth the golden apples; and they all ate,
-and the horns fell off; and he took his bride and his treasures, and
-carried them off home, where he built the Castle of Ballytowtas,
-in the place where stood his father’s hut, and enclosed the well
-within the walls. And when he had filled his treasure-room with
-gold, so that no man could count his riches, he buried his fairy
-treasures deep in the ground, where no man knew, and no man
-has ever yet been able to find them until this day.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="A_WOLF_STORY">A WOLF STORY.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Transformation into wolves is a favourite subject of Irish
-legend, and many a wild tale is told by the peasants round the
-turf fire in the winter nights of strange adventures with wolves.
-Stories that had come down to them from their forefathers in the
-old times long ago; for there are no wolves existing now in
-Ireland.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">18</span></p>
-
-<p>A young farmer, named Connor, once missed two fine cows
-from his herd, and no tale or tidings could be heard of them anywhere.
-So he thought he would set out on a search throughout
-the country; and he took a stout blackthorn stick in his hand, and
-went his way. All day he travelled miles and miles, but never a
-sign of the cattle. And the evening began to grow very dark,
-and he was wearied and hungry, and no place near to rest in; for
-he was in the midst of a bleak, desolate heath, with never a
-habitation at all in sight, except a long, low, rude shieling, like
-the den of a robber or a wild beast. But a gleam of light came
-from a chink between the boards, and Connor took heart and went
-up and knocked at the door. It was opened at once by a tall,
-thin, grey-haired old man, with keen, dark eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Come in,” he said, “you are welcome. We have been waiting
-for you. This is my wife,” and he brought him over to the
-hearth, where was seated an old, thin, grey woman, with long,
-sharp teeth and terrible glittering eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“You are welcome,” she said. “We have been waiting for
-you—it is time for supper. Sit down and eat with us.”</p>
-
-<p>Now Connor was a brave fellow, but he was a little dazed at
-first at the sight of this strange creature. However, as he had his
-stout stick with him, he thought he could make a fight for his life
-any way, and, meantime, he would rest and eat, for he was both
-hungry and weary, and it was now black night, and he would
-never find his way home even if he tried. So he sat down by the
-hearth, while the old grey woman stirred the pot on the fire.
-But Connor felt that she was watching him all the time with her
-keen, sharp eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Then a knock came to the door. And the old man rose up and
-opened it. When in walked a slender, young black wolf, who
-immediately went straight across the floor to an inner room, from
-which in a few moments came forth a dark, slender, handsome
-youth, who took his place at the table and looked hard at Connor
-with his glittering eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“You are welcome,” he said, “we have waited for you.”</p>
-
-<p>Before Connor could answer another knock was heard, and in
-came a second wolf, who passed on to the inner room like the first,
-and soon after, another dark, handsome youth came out and sat
-down to supper with them, glaring at Connor with his keen eyes,
-but said no word.</p>
-
-<p>“These are our sons,” said the old man, “tell them what you
-want, and what brought you here amongst us, for we live alone
-and don’t care to have spies and strangers coming to our place.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Connor told his story, how he had lost his two fine cows,
-and had searched all day and found no trace of them; and he
-knew nothing of the place he was in, nor of the kindly gentleman
-who asked him to supper; but if they just told him where to find<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">19</span>
-his cows he would thank them, and make the best of his way
-home at once.</p>
-
-<p>Then they all laughed and looked at each other, and the old
-hag looked more frightful than ever when she showed her long,
-sharp teeth.</p>
-
-<p>On this, Connor grew angry, for he was hot tempered; and he
-grasped his blackthorn stick firmly in his hand and stood up, and
-bade them open the door for him; for he would go his way, since
-they would give no heed and only mocked him.</p>
-
-<p>Then the eldest of the young men stood up. “Wait,” he said,
-“we are fierce and evil, but we never forget a kindness. Do you
-remember, one day down in the glen you found a poor little wolf
-in great agony and like to die, because a sharp thorn had pierced
-his side? And you gently extracted the thorn and gave him a
-drink, and went your way leaving him in peace and rest?”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, well do I remember it,” said Connor, “and how the poor
-little beast licked my hand in gratitude.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said the young man, “I am that wolf, and I shall help
-you if I can, but stay with us to-night and have no fear.”</p>
-
-<p>So they sat down again to supper and feasted merrily, and then
-all fell fast asleep, and Connor knew nothing more till he awoke
-in the morning and found himself by a large hay-rick in his own
-field.</p>
-
-<p>“Now surely,” thought he, “the adventure of last night was
-not all a dream, and I shall certainly find my cows when I go
-home; for that excellent, good young wolf promised his help, and
-I feel certain he would not deceive me.”</p>
-
-<p>But when he arrived home and looked over the yard and the
-stable and the field, there was no sign nor sight of the cows. So
-he grew very sad and dispirited. But just then he espied in the
-field close by three of the most beautiful strange cows he had
-ever set eyes on. “These must have strayed in,” he said, “from
-some neighbour’s ground;” and he took his big stick to drive
-them out of the gate off the field. But when he reached the gate,
-there stood a young black wolf watching; and when the cows
-tried to pass out at the gate he bit at them, and drove them back.
-Then Connor knew that his friend the wolf had kept his word.
-So he let the cows go quietly back to the field; and there they
-remained, and grew to be the finest in the whole country, and
-their descendants are flourishing to this day, and Connor grew
-rich and prospered; for a kind deed is never lost, but brings good
-luck to the doer for evermore, as the old proverb says:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Blessings are won,</div>
- <div class="verse">By a good deed done.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>But never again did Connor find that desolate heath or that lone<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">20</span>
-shieling, though he sought far and wide, to return his thanks, as
-was due to the friendly wolves; nor did he ever again meet any
-of the family, though he mourned much whenever a slaughtered
-wolf was brought into the town for the sake of the reward, fearing
-his excellent friend might be the victim. At that time the
-wolves in Ireland had increased to such an extent, owing to the
-desolation of the country by constant wars, that a reward was
-offered and a high price paid for every wolf’s skin brought into
-the court of the justiciary; and this was in the time of Queen
-Elizabeth, when the English troops made ceaseless war against
-the Irish people, and there were more wolves in Ireland than men;
-and the dead lay unburied in hundreds on the highways, for there
-were no hands left to dig them graves.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_EVIL_EYE">THE EVIL EYE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>There is nothing more dreaded by the people, nor considered
-more deadly in its effects, than the Evil Eye.</p>
-
-<p>It may strike at any moment unless the greatest precautions are
-taken, and even then there is no true help possible unless the fairy
-doctor is at once summoned to pronounce the mystic charm that
-can alone destroy the evil and fatal influence.</p>
-
-<p>There are several modes in which the Evil Eye can act, some
-much more deadly than others. If certain persons are met the
-first thing in the morning, you will be unlucky for the whole of
-that day in all you do. If the evil-eyed comes in to rest, and
-looks fixedly on anything, on cattle or on a child, there is doom in
-the glance; a fatality which cannot be evaded except by a powerful
-counter-charm. But if the evil-eyed mutters a verse over a
-sleeping child, that child will assuredly die, for the incantation is
-of the devil, and no charm has power to resist it or turn away the
-evil. Sometimes the process of bewitching is effected by looking
-fixedly at the object, through nine fingers; especially is the magic
-fatal if the victim is seated by the fire in the evening when the
-moon is full. Therefore, to avoid being suspected of having the
-Evil Eye, it is necessary at once, when looking at a child, to say
-“God bless it.” And when passing a farmyard where the cows
-are collected for milking, to say, “The blessing of God be on you
-and on all your labours.” If this form is omitted, the worst
-results may be apprehended, and the people would be filled with
-terror and alarm, unless a counter-charm were not instantly
-employed.</p>
-
-<p>The singular malific influence of a glance has been felt by most
-persons in life; an influence that seems to paralyze intellect and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">21</span>
-speech, simply by the mere presence in the room of some one who
-is mystically antipathetic to our nature. For the soul is like a
-fine-toned harp that vibrates to the slightest external force or
-movement, and the presence and glance of some persons can
-radiate around us a divine joy, while others may kill the soul with
-a sneer or a frown. We call these subtle influences mysteries,
-but the early races believed them to be produced by spirits, good
-or evil, as they acted on the nerves or the intellect.</p>
-
-<p>Some years ago an old woman was living in Kerry, and it was
-thought so unlucky to meet her in the morning, that all the girls
-used to go out after sunset to bring in water for the following day,
-that so they might avoid her evil glance; for whatever she looked
-on came to loss and grief.</p>
-
-<p>There was a man, also, equally dreaded on account of the
-strange, fatal power of his glance; and so many accidents and
-misfortunes were traced to his presence that finally the neighbours
-insisted that he should wear a black patch over the Evil Eye, not
-to be removed unless by request; for learned gentlemen, curious
-in such things, sometimes came to him to ask for a proof of his
-power, and he would try it for a wager while drinking with his
-friends.</p>
-
-<p>One day, near an old ruin of a castle, he met a boy weeping in
-great grief for his pet pigeon, which had got up to the very top of
-the ruin, and could not be coaxed down.</p>
-
-<p>“What will you give me,” asked the man, “if I bring it down
-for you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have nothing to give,” said the boy, “but I will pray to God
-for you. Only get me back my pigeon, and I shall be happy.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the man took off the black patch and looked up steadfastly
-at the bird; when all of a sudden it fell to the ground and lay
-motionless, as if stunned; but there was no harm done to it, and
-the boy took it up and went his way, rejoicing.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A woman in the County Galway had a beautiful child, so
-handsome, that all the neighbours were very careful to say “God
-bless it” when they saw him, for they knew the fairies would
-desire to steal the child, and carry it off to the hills.</p>
-
-<p>But one day it chanced that an old woman, a stranger, came in.
-“Let me rest,” she said, “for I am weary.” And she sat down
-and looked at the child, but never said “God bless it.” And when
-she had rested, she rose up, looked again at the child fixedly, in
-silence, and then went her way.</p>
-
-<p>All that night the child cried and would not sleep. And all
-next day it moaned as if in pain. So the mother told the priest,
-but he would do nothing for fear of the fairies. And just as the
-poor mother was in despair, she saw a strange woman going by the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">22</span>
-door. “Who knows,” she said to her husband, “but this woman
-would help us.” So they asked her to come in and rest. And
-when she looked at the child she said “God bless it,” instantly,
-and spat three times at it, and then sat down.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, what will you give me,” she said, “if I tell you what
-ails the child?”</p>
-
-<p>“I will cross your hand with silver,” said the mother, “as
-much as you want, only speak,” and she laid the money on the
-woman’s hand. “Now tell me the truth, for the sake and in the
-name of Mary, and the good Angels.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said the stranger, “the fairies have had your child these
-two days in the hills, and this is a changeling they have left in its
-place. But so many blessings were said on your child that the
-fairies can do it no harm. For there was only one blessing
-wanting, and only one person gave the Evil Eye. Now, you must
-watch for this woman, carry her into the house and secretly cut
-off a piece of her cloak. Then burn the piece close to the child,
-till the smoke as it rises makes him sneeze; and when this happens
-the spell is broken, and your own child will come back to you
-safe and sound, in place of the changeling.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the stranger rose up and went her way.</p>
-
-<p>All that evening the mother watched for the old woman, and at
-last she spied her on the road.</p>
-
-<p>“Come in,” she cried, “come in, good woman, and rest, for the
-cakes are hot on the griddle, and supper is ready.”</p>
-
-<p>So the woman came in, but never said “God bless you kindly,”
-to man or mortal, only scowled at the child, who cried worse
-than ever.</p>
-
-<p>Now the mother had told her eldest girl to cut off a piece of the
-old woman’s cloak, secretly, when she sat down to eat. And the
-girl did as she was desired, and handed the piece to her mother,
-unknown to any one. But, to their surprise, this was no sooner
-done than the woman rose up and went out without uttering a
-word; and they saw her no more.</p>
-
-<p>Then the father carried the child outside, and burned the piece
-of cloth before the door, and held the boy over the smoke till he
-sneezed three times violently: after which he gave the child back
-to the mother, who laid him in his bed, where he slept peacefully,
-with a smile on his face, and cried no more with the cry of pain.
-And when he woke up the mother knew that she had got her
-own darling child back from the fairies, and no evil thing happened
-to him any more.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The influence of the mysterious and malign power of the Evil
-Eye has at all times been as much dreaded in Ireland as it is in
-Egypt, Greece, or Italy at the present day. Everything young,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">23</span>
-beautiful, or perfect after its kind, and which naturally attracts
-attention and admiration, is peculiarly liable to the fatal blight
-that follows the glance of the Evil Eye. It is therefore an invariable
-habit amongst the peasantry never to praise anything without
-instantly adding, “God bless it;” for were this formula
-omitted, the worst consequences would befall the object praised.</p>
-
-<p>The superstition must be of great antiquity in Ireland, for
-Balor, the Fomorian giant and hero, is spoken of in an ancient
-manuscript as able to petrify his enemies by a glance; and how he
-became possessed of the power is thus narrated:—</p>
-
-<p>One day as the Druids were busy at their incantations, while
-boiling a magical spell or charm, young Balor passed by, and
-curious to see their work, looked in at an open window. At that
-moment the Druids happened to raise the lid of the caldron, and
-the vapour, escaping, passed under one of Balor’s eyes, carrying
-with it all the venom of the incantation. This caused his brow
-to grow to such a size that it required four men to raise it whenever
-he wanted to exert the power of his venomed glance over his
-enemies. He was slain at last in single combat, according to the
-ancient legend, at the great battle of Magh-Tura<a id="FNanchor_2_2" href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">2</a> (the plain of the
-towers), fought between the Firbolgs and the Tuatha-de-Dananns
-for the possession of Ireland several centuries before the Christian
-era; for before Balor’s brow could be lifted so that he could
-transfix his enemy and strike him dead with the terrible power of
-his glance, his adversary flung a stone with such violence that it
-went right through the Evil Eye, and pierced the skull, and the
-mighty magician fell to rise no more.</p>
-
-<p>An interesting account of this battle, with a remarkable confirmation
-of the legends respecting it still current in the district,
-is given by Sir William Wilde, in his work, “Lough Corrib; its
-Shores and Islands.” In the ancient manuscript, it is recorded
-that a young hero having been slain while bravely defending his
-king, the Firbolg army erected a mound over him, each man
-carrying a stone, and the monument was henceforth known as the
-<i>Carn-in-en-Fhir</i> (the cairn of the one man). Having examined
-the locality with a transcript of this manuscript in his hand, Sir
-William fixed on the particular mound, amongst the many stone
-tumuli scattered over the plain, which seemed to agree best with
-the description, and had it opened carefully under his own
-superintendence.</p>
-
-<p>A large flag-stone was first discovered, laid horizontally; then
-another beneath it, covering a small square chamber formed of
-stones, within which was <i>a single urn</i> of baked clay, graceful and
-delicate in form and ornamentation, containing incinerated human
-bones, the remains, there can be no reason to doubt, of the Firbolg<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">24</span>
-youth who was honoured for his loyalty by the erection over him
-of the <i>Carn-in-en-Fhir</i> on the historic plains of Mayo.</p>
-
-<p>After Balor, the only other ancient instance of the fatal effects
-of the malific Eye is narrated of St. Silan, who had a poisonous
-hair in his eyebrow that killed whoever looked first on him in the
-morning. All persons, therefore, who from long sickness, or
-sorrow, or the weariness that comes with years, were tired of life,
-used to try and come in the saint’s way, that so their sufferings
-might be ended by a quick and easy death. But another saint, the
-holy Molaise, hearing that St. Silan was coming to visit his church,
-resolved that no more deaths should happen by means of the
-poisoned hair. So he arose early in the morning, before any one
-was up, and went forth alone to meet St. Silan, and when he saw
-him coming along the path, he went boldly up and plucked out
-the fatal hair from his eyebrow, but in doing so he himself was
-struck by the venom, and immediately after fell down dead.</p>
-
-<p>The power of the Evil Eye was recognized by the Brehon laws,
-and severe measures were ordained against the users of the malign
-influence. “If a person is in the habit of injuring things through
-neglect, or of will, whether he has blessed, or whether he has not
-blessed, full penalty be upon him, or restitution in kind.” So ran
-the ancient law.</p>
-
-<p>The gift comes by nature and is born with one, though it may
-not be called into exercise unless circumstances arise to excite the
-power. Then it seems to act like a spirit of bitter and malicious
-envy that radiates a poisonous atmosphere which chills and
-blights everything within its reach. Without being superstitious
-every one has felt that there is such a power and succumbed to its
-influence in a helpless, passive way, as if all self-trust and self-reliant
-energy were utterly paralyzed by its influence.</p>
-
-<p>Suspected persons are held in great dread by the peasantry,
-and they recognize them at once by certain signs. Men and
-women with dark lowering eyebrows are especially feared, and
-the handsome children are kept out of their path lest they might
-be overlooked by them.</p>
-
-<p>Red hair is supposed to have a most malign influence, and it has
-even passed into a proverb: “Let not the eye of a red-haired
-woman rest on you.”</p>
-
-<p>Many persons are quite unconscious that their glance or frown
-has this evil power until some calamity results, and then they
-strive not to look at any one full in the face, but to avert their
-eyes when speaking, lest misfortune might fall upon the person
-addressed.<a id="FNanchor_3_3" href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">3</a></p>
-
-<p>The saving invocation, “God bless it!” is universally used when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">25</span>
-praise is bestowed, to prevent danger, and should a child fall sick
-some one is immediately suspected of having omitted the usual
-phrase out of malice and ill-will. Nothing is more dreaded by the
-peasantry than the full, fixed, direct glance of one suspected of
-the Evil Eye, and should it fall upon them, or on any of their
-household, a terrible fear and trembling of heart takes possession
-of them, which often ends in sickness or sometimes even in
-death.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Some years ago a woman living in Kerry declared that she was
-“overlooked” by the Evil Eye. She had no pleasure in her life
-and no comfort, and she wasted away because of the fear that was
-on her, caused by the following singular circumstance:—</p>
-
-<p>Every time that she happened to leave home alone, and that
-no one was within call, she was met by a woman totally unknown
-to her, who, fixing her eyes on her in silence, with a terrible expression,
-cast her to the ground and proceeded to beat and pinch
-her till she was nearly senseless; after which her tormentor disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>Having experienced this treatment several times, the poor
-woman finally abstained altogether from leaving the house, unless
-protected by a servant or companion; and this precaution she
-observed for several years, during which time she never was
-molested. So at last she began to believe that the spell was
-broken, and that her strange enemy had departed for ever.</p>
-
-<p>In consequence she grew less careful about the usual precaution,
-and one day stepped down alone to a little stream that ran by the
-house to wash some clothes.</p>
-
-<p>Stooping down over her work, she never thought of any danger,
-and began to sing as she used to do in the light-hearted days
-before the spell was on her, when suddenly a dark shadow fell
-across the water, and looking up, she beheld to her horror the
-strange woman on the opposite side of the little stream, with her
-terrible eyes intently fixed on her, as hard and still as if she were
-of stone.</p>
-
-<p>Springing up with a scream of terror, she flung down her work,
-and ran towards the house; but soon she heard footsteps behind
-her, and in an instant she was seized, thrown down to the ground,
-and her tormentor began to beat her even worse than before, till
-she lost all consciousness; and in this state she was found by her
-husband, lying on her face and speechless. She was at once
-carried to the house, and all the care that affection and rural skill
-could bestow were lavished on her, but in vain. She, however,
-regained sufficient consciousness to tell them of the terrible encounter
-she had gone through, but died before the night had
-passed away.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">26</span></p>
-
-<p>It was believed that the power of fascination by the glance,
-which is not necessarily an evil power like the Evil Eye, was
-possessed in a remarkable degree by learned and wise people,
-especially poets, so that they could make themselves loved and
-followed by any girl they liked, simply by the influence of the
-glance. About the year 1790, a young man resided in the County
-Limerick, who had this power in a singular and unusual degree.
-He was a clever, witty rhymer in the Irish language; and, probably,
-had the deep poet eyes that characterize warm and passionate
-poet-natures—eyes that even without necromancy have been known
-to exercise a powerful magnetic influence over female minds.</p>
-
-<p>One day, while travelling far from home, he came upon a
-bright, pleasant-looking farmhouse, and feeling weary, he stopped
-and requested a drink of milk and leave to rest. The farmer’s
-daughter, a young, handsome girl, not liking to admit a stranger,
-as all the maids were churning, and she was alone in the house,
-refused him admittance.</p>
-
-<p>The young poet fixed his eyes earnestly on her face for some
-time in silence, then slowly turning round left the house, and
-walked towards a small grove of trees just opposite. There he
-stood for a few moments resting against a tree, and facing the
-house as if to take one last vengeful or admiring glance, then
-went his way without once turning round.</p>
-
-<p>The young girl had been watching him from the windows, and
-the moment he moved she passed out of the door like one in
-a dream, and followed him slowly, step by step, down the avenue.
-The maids grew alarmed, and called to her father, who ran out
-and shouted loudly for her to stop, but she never turned or
-seemed to heed. The young man, however, looked round, and
-seeing the whole family in pursuit, quickened his pace, first
-glancing fixedly at the girl for a moment. Immediately she
-sprang towards him, and they were both almost out of sight,
-when one of the maids espied a piece of paper tied to a branch
-of the tree where the poet had rested. From curiosity she took
-it down, and the moment the knot was untied, the farmer’s
-daughter suddenly stopped, became quite still, and when her
-father came up she allowed him to lead her back to the house
-without resistance.</p>
-
-<p>When questioned, she said that she felt herself drawn by an
-invisible force to follow the young stranger wherever he might
-lead, and that she would have followed him through the world,
-for her life seemed to be bound up in his; she had no will to resist,
-and was conscious of nothing else but his presence. Suddenly,
-however, the spell was broken, and then she heard her father’s
-voice, and knew how strangely she had acted. At the same time
-the power of the young man over her vanished, and the impulse
-to follow him was no longer in her heart.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">27</span></p>
-
-<p>The paper, on being opened, was found to contain five mysterious
-words written in blood, and in this order—</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>Sator.</li>
-<li>Arepo.</li>
-<li>Tenet.</li>
-<li>Opera.</li>
-<li>Rotas.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>These letters are so arranged that read in any way, right to left,
-left to right, up or down, the same words are produced; and when
-written in blood with a pen made of an eagle’s feather, they form
-a charm which no woman (it is said) can resist; but the incredulous
-reader can easily test the truth of this assertion for himself.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>These popular stories are provokingly incomplete, and one cannot
-help regretting that the romance of “The Poet and the
-Farmer’s Daughter” was not brought to a happy termination; but
-the Irish tales are in general rather incoherent, more like remembered
-fragments of ancient stories than a complete, well-organized
-dramatic composition, with lights well placed, and a striking
-catastrophe. The opening is usually attractive, with the exciting
-formula, “Once upon a time,” from which one always expects so
-much; and there is sure to be an old woman, weird and witch-like,
-capable of the most demoniacal actions, and a mysterious
-man who promises to be the unredeemed evil spirit of the tale;
-but in the end they both turn out childishly harmless, and their
-evil actions seldom go beyond stealing their neighbours’ butter, or
-abducting a pretty girl, which sins mere mortals would be quite
-equal to, even without the aid of “the gods of the earth” and
-their renowned leader, Finvarra, the King of the Fairies. The
-following tale, however, of a case of abduction by fairy power, is
-well constructed. The hero of the narrative has our sympathy
-and interest, and it ends happily, which is considered a great
-merit by the Irish, as they dislike a tale to which they cannot
-append, as an epilogue, the hearty and outspoken “Thank God.”</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_STOLEN_BRIDE">THE STOLEN BRIDE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>About the year 1670 there was a fine young fellow living at
-a place called Querin, in the County Clare. He was brave
-and strong and rich, for he had his own land and his own house,
-and not one to lord it over him. He was called the Kern
-of Querin. And many a time he would go out alone to shoot the
-wild fowl at night along the lonely strand and sometimes cross<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">28</span>
-over northward to the broad east strand, about two miles away,
-to find the wild geese.</p>
-
-<p>One cold frosty November Eve he was watching for them,
-crouched down behind the ruins of an old hut, when a loud
-splashing noise attracted his attention. “It is the wild geese,”
-he thought, and raising his gun, waited in death-like silence the
-approach of his victim.</p>
-
-<p>But presently he saw a dark mass moving along the edge of
-the strand. And he knew there were no wild geese near him. So
-he watched and waited till the black mass came closer, and then
-he distinctly perceived four stout men carrying a bier on their
-shoulders, on which lay a corpse covered with a white cloth.
-For a few moments they laid it down, apparently to rest themselves,
-and the Kern instantly fired; on which the four men ran
-away shrieking, and the corpse was left alone on the bier. Kern
-of Querin immediately sprang to the place, and lifting the cloth
-from the face of the corpse, beheld by the freezing starlight, the
-form of a beautiful young girl, apparently not dead but in a deep
-sleep.</p>
-
-<p>Gently he passed his hand over her face and raised her up, when
-she opened her eyes and looked around with wild wonder, but
-spake never a word, though he tried to soothe and encourage her.
-Then, thinking it was dangerous for them to remain in that place,
-he raised her from the bier, and taking her hand led her away to
-his own house. They arrived safely, but in silence. And for
-twelve months did she remain with the Kern, never tasting food
-or speaking word for all that time.</p>
-
-<p>When the next November Eve came round, he resolved to visit
-the east strand again, and watch from the same place, in the hope
-of meeting with some adventure that might throw light on the
-history of the beautiful girl. His way lay beside the old ruined
-fort called <i>Lios-na-fallainge</i> (the Fort of the Mantle), and as he
-passed, the sound of music and mirth fell on his ear. He stopped
-to catch the words of the voices, and had not waited long when
-he heard a man say in a low whisper—</p>
-
-<p>“Where shall we go to-night to carry off a bride?”</p>
-
-<p>And a second voice answered—</p>
-
-<p>“Wherever we go I hope better luck will be ours than we had
-this day twelvemonths.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said a third; “on that night we carried off a rich prize,
-the fair daughter of O’Connor; but that clown, the Kern of
-Querin, broke our spell and took her from us. Yet little pleasure
-has he had of his bride, for she has neither eaten nor drank nor
-uttered a word since she entered his house.”</p>
-
-<p>“And so she will remain,” said a fourth,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">29</span> “until he makes her eat
-off her father’s table-cloth, which covered her as she lay on the
-bier, and which is now thrown up over the top of her bed.”</p>
-
-<p>On hearing all this, the Kern rushed home, and without waiting
-even for the morning, entered the young girl’s room, took
-down the table-cloth, spread it on the table, laid meat and drink
-thereon, and led her to it. “Drink,” he said, “that speech may
-come to you.” And she drank, and ate of the food, and then
-speech came. And she told the Kern her story—how she was to
-have been married to a young lord of her own country, and the
-wedding guests had all assembled, when she felt herself suddenly
-ill and swooned away, and never knew more of what had happened
-to her until the Kern had passed his hand over her face, by which
-she recovered consciousness, but could neither eat nor speak, for a
-spell was on her, and she was helpless.</p>
-
-<p>Then the Kern prepared a chariot, and carried home the young
-girl to her father, who was like to die for joy when he beheld
-her. And the Kern grew mightily in O’Connor’s favour, so that
-at last he gave him his fair young daughter to wife; and the
-wedded pair lived together happily for many long years after, and
-no evil befell them, but good followed all the work of their hands.</p>
-
-<p>This story of Kern of Querin still lingers in the faithful, vivid
-Irish memory, and is often told by the peasants of Clare when
-they gather round the fire on the awful festival of <i>Samhain</i>, or
-November Eve, when the dead walk, and the spirits of earth and
-air have power over mortals, whether for good or evil.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="FAIRY_MUSIC">FAIRY MUSIC.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The evil influence of the fairy glance does not kill, but it throws
-the object into a death-like trance, in which the real body is
-carried off to some fairy mansion, while a log of wood, or some
-ugly, deformed creature is left in its place, clothed with the
-shadow of the stolen form. Young women, remarkable for
-beauty, young men, and handsome children, are the chief victims
-of the fairy stroke. The girls are wedded to fairy chiefs, and the
-young men to fairy queens; and if the mortal children do not turn
-out well, they are sent back, and others carried off in their place.
-It is sometimes possible, by the spells of a powerful fairy-man, to
-bring back a living being from Fairy-land. But they are never
-quite the same after. They have always a spirit-look, especially
-if they have listened to the fairy music. For the fairy music is
-soft and low and plaintive, with a fatal charm for mortal
-ears.</p>
-
-<p>One day a gentleman entered a cabin in the County Clare, and
-saw a young girl about twenty seated by the fire, chanting a
-melancholy song, without settled words or music. On inquiry he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">30</span>
-was told she had once heard the fairy harp, and those who hear it
-lose all memory of love or hate, and forget all things, and never
-more have any other sound in their ears save the soft music of the
-fairy harp, and when the spell is broken, they die.</p>
-
-<p>It is remarkable that the Irish national airs—plaintive, beautiful,
-and unutterably pathetic—should so perfectly express the spirit of
-the Céol-Sidhe (the fairy music), as it haunts the fancy of the
-people and mingles with all their traditions of the spirit world.
-Wild and capricious as the fairy nature, these delicate harmonies,
-with their mystic, mournful rhythm, seem to touch the deepest
-chords of feeling, or to fill the sunshine with laughter, according
-to the mood of the players; but, above all things, Irish music is the
-utterance of a Divine sorrow; not stormy or passionate, but like
-that of an exiled spirit, yearning and wistful, vague and unresting;
-ever seeking the unattainable, ever shadowed, as it were, with
-memories of some lost good, or some dim foreboding of a coming
-fate—emotions that seem to find their truest expression in the
-sweet, sad, lingering wail of the pathetic minor in a genuine Irish
-air. There is a beautiful phrase in one of the ancient manuscripts
-descriptive of the wonderful power of Irish music over the sensitive
-human organization: “Wounded men were soothed when they
-heard it, and slept; and women in travail forgot their pains.”
-There are legends concerning the subtle charm of the fairy music
-and dance, when the mortal under their influence seems to move
-through the air with “the naked, fleshless feet of the spirit,” and
-is lulled by the ecstasy of the cadence into forgetfulness of all
-things, and sometimes into the sleep of death.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_FAIRY_DANCE">THE FAIRY DANCE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The following story is from the Irish, as told by a native of one
-of the Western Isles, where the primitive superstitions have still
-all the freshness of young life.</p>
-
-<p>One evening late in November, which is the month when spirits
-have most power over all things, as the prettiest girl in all the
-island was going to the well for water, her foot slipped and she
-fell. It was an unlucky omen, and when she got up and looked
-round it seemed to her as if she were in a strange place, and all
-around her was changed as if by enchantment. But at some
-distance she saw a great crowd gathered round a blazing fire, and
-she was drawn slowly on towards them, till at last she stood in the
-very midst of the people; but they kept silence, looking fixedly at
-her; and she was afraid, and tried to turn and leave them, but
-she could not. Then a beautiful youth, like a prince, with a red<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">31</span>
-sash, and a golden band on his long yellow hair, came up and
-asked her to dance.</p>
-
-<p>“It is a foolish thing of you, sir, to ask me to dance,” she said,
-“when there is no music.”</p>
-
-<p>Then he lifted his hand and made a sign to the people, and
-instantly the sweetest music sounded near her and around her, and
-the young man took her hand, and they danced and danced till the
-moon and the stars went down, but she seemed like one floating on
-the air, and she forgot everything in the world except the dancing,
-and the sweet low music, and her beautiful partner.</p>
-
-<p>At last the dancing ceased, and her partner thanked her, and
-invited her to supper with the company. Then she saw an opening
-in the ground, and a flight of steps, and the young man, who
-seemed to be the king amongst them all, led her down, followed
-by the whole company. At the end of the stairs they came upon
-a large hall, all bright and beautiful with gold and silver and
-lights; and the table was covered with everything good to eat,
-and wine was poured out in golden cups for them to drink. When
-she sat down they all pressed her to eat the food and to drink the
-wine; and as she was weary after the dancing, she took the golden
-cup the prince handed to her, and raised it to her lips to drink.
-Just then, a man passed close to her, and whispered—</p>
-
-<p>“Eat no food, and drink no wine, or you will never reach your
-home again.”</p>
-
-<p>So she laid down the cup, and refused to drink. On this they
-were angry, and a great noise arose, and a fierce, dark man stood
-up, and said—</p>
-
-<p>“Whoever comes to us must drink with us.”</p>
-
-<p>And he seized her arm, and held the wine to her lips, so that
-she almost died of fright. But at that moment a red-haired man
-came up, and he took her by the hand and led her out.</p>
-
-<p>“You are safe for this time,” he said. “Take this herb, and
-hold it in your hand till you reach home, and no one can harm
-you.” And he gave her a branch of a plant called the <i>Athair-Luss</i>
-(the ground ivy).<a id="FNanchor_4_4" href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">4</a></p>
-
-<p>This she took, and fled away along the sward in the dark night;
-but all the time she heard footsteps behind her in pursuit. At
-last she reached home and barred the door, and went to bed,
-when a great clamour arose outside, and voices were heard crying
-to her—</p>
-
-<p>“The power we had over you is gone through the magic of the
-herb; but wait—when you dance again to the music on the hill,
-you will stay with us for evermore, and none shall hinder.”</p>
-
-<p>However, she kept the magic branch safely, and the fairies
-never troubled her more; but it was long and long before the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">32</span>
-sound of the fairy music left her ears which she had danced to
-that November night on the hillside with her fairy lover.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="FAIRY_JUSTICE">FAIRY JUSTICE.</h3>
-
-<h4><a id="A_LEGEND_OF_SHARK_ISLAND"></a>A LEGEND OF SHARK ISLAND.</h4>
-
-
-<p>The “Red-haired Man,” although he is considered very unlucky
-in actual life, yet generally acts in the fairy world as the benevolent
-<i>Deus ex machina</i>, that saves and helps and rescues the unhappy
-mortal, who himself is quite helpless under the fairy spells.</p>
-
-<p>There was a man in Shark Island who used to cross over to
-Boffin<a id="FNanchor_5_5" href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">5</a> to buy tobacco, but when the weather was too rough for
-the boat his ill-temper was as bad as the weather, and he used to
-beat his wife, and fling all the things about, so that no one could
-stand before him. One day a man came to him.</p>
-
-<p>“What will you give me if I go over to Boffin,” said he, “and
-bring you the tobacco?”</p>
-
-<p>“I will give you nothing,” said the other. “Whatever way
-you go I can go also.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then come with me to the shore,” said the first man, “and
-I’ll show you how to get across; but as only one can go, you must
-go alone.”</p>
-
-<p>And as they went down to the sea, they saw a great company
-of horsemen and ladies galloping along, with music and laughter.</p>
-
-<p>“Spring up now on a horse and you will get across,” said the
-first man.</p>
-
-<p>So the other sprang up as he was told, and in an instant they
-all jumped right across the sea and landed at Boffin. Then he
-ran to buy the tobacco and was back again in a minute, and found
-all the same company by the sea-shore. He sprang again upon a
-horse and they all jumped right into the sea, but suddenly stopped
-midway between the two islands, where there was a great rock,
-and beyond this they could not force the horses to move. Then
-there was great disquietude amongst them, and they called a
-council.</p>
-
-<p>“There is a mortal amongst us,” they said. “Let us drown him.”</p>
-
-<p>And they carried the man up to the top of the rock and cast
-him down; and when he rose to the surface again they caught
-him by the hair, and cried—</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">33</span></p>
-<p>“Drown him! Drown him! We have the power over life and
-death; he must be drowned.”</p>
-
-<p>And they were going to cast him down a second time, when a
-red-haired man pleaded for him, and carried him off with a strong
-hand safe to shore.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said he, “you are safe, but mind, the spirits are watching
-you, and if ever again you beat your poor good wife, and knock
-about the things at home just to torment her out of her life, you
-will die upon that rock as sure as fate.” And he vanished.</p>
-
-<p>So from that time forth the man was as meek as a mouse, for he
-was afraid; and whenever he went by the rock in his boat he
-always stopped a minute, and said a little prayer for his wife with
-a “God bless her.” And this kept away the evil, and they both
-lived together happily ever after to a great old age.</p>
-
-<p>This is but a rude tale. Yet the moral is good, and the threat
-of retributive justice shows a laudable spirit of indignation on the
-part of the fairy race against the tyranny of man over the weaker
-vessel.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_PRIESTS_SOUL">THE PRIEST’S SOUL.</h3>
-
-
-<p>An ethical purpose is not often to be detected in the Irish legends;
-but the following tale combines an inner meaning with the incidents
-in a profound and remarkable manner. The idea that underlies
-the story is very subtle and tragic; Calderon or Goethe might
-have founded a drama on it; and Browning’s genius would find a
-fitting subject in this contrast between the pride of the audacious,
-self-relying sceptic in the hour of his triumph and the moral agony
-that precedes his punishment and death.</p>
-
-<p>In former days there were great schools in Ireland where every
-sort of learning was taught to the people, and even the poorest
-had more knowledge at that time than many a gentleman has now.
-But as to the priests, their learning was above all, so that the
-fame of Ireland went over the whole world, and many kings from
-foreign lands used to send their sons all the way to Ireland to be
-brought up in the Irish schools.</p>
-
-<p>Now at this time there was a little boy learning at one of them
-who was a wonder to every one for his cleverness. His parents
-were only labouring people, and of course very poor; but young
-as he was, and poor as he was, no king’s or lord’s son could come
-up to him in learning. Even the masters were put to shame, for
-when they were trying to teach him he would tell them something
-they never heard of before, and show them their ignorance. One
-of his great triumphs was in argument; and he would go on till
-he proved to you that black was white, and then when you gave
-in, for no one could beat him in talk, he would turn round and
-show you that white was black, or may be that there was no colour<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">34</span>
-at all in the world. When he grew up his poor father and mother
-were so proud of him that they resolved to make him a priest,
-which they did at last, though they nearly starved themselves to
-get the money. Well, such another learned man was not in
-Ireland, and he was as great in argument as ever, so that no one
-could stand before him. Even the Bishops tried to talk to him,
-but he showed them at once they knew nothing at all.</p>
-
-<p>Now there were no schoolmasters in those times but it was the
-priests taught the people; and as this man was the cleverest in
-Ireland all the foreign kings sent their sons to him as long as
-he had house-room to give them. So he grew very proud, and
-began to forget how low he had been, and worst of all, even to
-forget God, who had made him what he was. And the pride of
-arguing got hold of him, so that from one thing to another he went
-on to prove that there was no Purgatory, and then no Hell, and
-then no Heaven, and then no God; and at last that men had no
-souls, but were no more than a dog or a cow, and when they died
-there was an end of them. “Who ever saw a soul?” he would
-say. “If you can show me one, I will believe.” No one could
-make any answer to this; and at last they all came to believe
-that as there was no other world, every one might do what they
-liked in this; the priest setting the example, for he took a beautiful
-young girl to wife. But as no priest or bishop in the whole
-land could be got to marry them, he was obliged to read the
-service over for himself. It was a great scandal, yet no one dared
-to say a word, for all the kings’ sons were on his side, and would
-have slaughtered any one who tried to prevent his wicked goings-on.
-Poor boys! they all believed in him, and thought every word
-he said was the truth. In this way his notions began to spread
-about, and the whole world was going to the bad, when one night
-an angel came down from Heaven, and told the priest he had but
-twenty-four hours to live. He began to tremble, and asked for a
-little more time.</p>
-
-<p>But the angel was stiff, and told him that could not be.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you want time for, you sinner?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, sir, have pity on my poor soul!” urged the priest.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, ho! You have a soul, then,” said the angel. “Pray, how
-did you find that out?”</p>
-
-<p>“It has been fluttering in me ever since you appeared,”
-answered the priest. “What a fool I was not to think of it
-before.”</p>
-
-<p>“A fool indeed,” said the angel. “What good was all your
-learning, when it could not tell you that you had a soul?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, my lord,” said the priest, “if I am to die, tell me how
-soon I may be in Heaven?”</p>
-
-<p>“Never,” replied the angel. “You denied there was a Heaven.”</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">35</span></p>
-<p>“Then, my lord, may I go to Purgatory?”</p>
-
-<p>“You denied Purgatory also; you must go straight to Hell,”
-said the angel.</p>
-
-<p>“But, my lord, I denied Hell also,” answered the priest, “so
-you can’t send me there either.”</p>
-
-<p>The angel was a little puzzled.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said he, “I’ll tell you what I can do for you. You
-may either live now on earth for a hundred years enjoying every
-pleasure, and then be cast into Hell for ever; or you may die in
-twenty-four hours in the most horrible torments, and pass through
-Purgatory, there to remain till the Day of Judgment, if only you
-can find some one person that believes, and through his belief
-mercy will be vouchsafed to you and your soul will be saved.”</p>
-
-<p>The priest did not take five minutes to make up his mind.</p>
-
-<p>“I will have death in the twenty-four hours,” he said, “so that
-my soul may be saved at last.”</p>
-
-<p>On this the angel gave him directions as to what he was to do,
-and left him.</p>
-
-<p>Then, immediately, the priest entered the large room where all
-his scholars and the kings’ sons were seated, and called out to
-them—</p>
-
-<p>“Now, tell me the truth, and let none fear to contradict me.
-Tell me what is your belief. Have men souls?”</p>
-
-<p>“Master,” they answered, “once we believed that men had souls;
-but, thanks to your teaching, we believe so no longer. There is
-no Hell, and no Heaven, and no God. This is our belief, for it is
-thus you taught us.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the priest grew pale with fear and cried out—“Listen! I
-taught you a lie. There is a God, and man has an immortal soul.
-I believe now all I denied before.”</p>
-
-<p>But the shouts of laughter that rose up drowned the priest’s
-voice, for they thought he was only trying them for argument.</p>
-
-<p>“Prove it, master,” they cried, “prove it. Who has ever seen
-God? Who has ever seen the soul?”</p>
-
-<p>And the room was stirred with their laughter.</p>
-
-<p>The priest stood up to answer them, but no word could he
-utter; all his eloquence, all his powers of argument had gone from
-him, and he could do nothing but wring his hands and cry out—</p>
-
-<p>“There is a God! there is a God! Lord have mercy on my
-soul!”</p>
-
-<p>And they all began to mock him, and repeat his own words
-that he had taught them—</p>
-
-<p>“Show him to us; show us your God.”</p>
-
-<p>And he fled from them groaning with agony, for he saw that
-none believed, and how then could his soul be saved?</p>
-
-<p>But he thought next of his wife.</p>
-
-<p>“She will believe,” he said to himself.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">36</span> “Women never give up
-God.”</p>
-
-<p>And he went to her; but she told him that she believed only
-what he taught her, and that a good wife should believe in her
-husband first, and before and above all things in heaven or
-earth.</p>
-
-<p>Then despair came on him, and he rushed from the house and
-began to ask every one he met if they believed. But the same
-answer came from one and all—“We believe only what you have
-taught us,” for his doctrines had spread far and wide through the
-county.</p>
-
-<p>Then he grew half mad with fear, for the hours were passing.
-And he flung himself down on the ground in a lonesome spot,
-and wept and groaned in terror, for the time was coming fast
-when he must die.</p>
-
-<p>Just then a little child came by.</p>
-
-<p>“God save you kindly,” said the child to him.</p>
-
-<p>The priest started up.</p>
-
-<p>“Child, do you believe in God?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“I have come from a far country to learn about Him,” said the
-child. “Will your honour direct me to the best school that they
-have in these parts?”</p>
-
-<p>“The best school and the best teacher is close by,” said the
-priest, and he named himself.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, not to that man,” answered the child, “for I am told he
-denies God, and Heaven, and Hell, and even that man has a soul,
-because we can’t see it; but I would soon put him down.”</p>
-
-<p>The priest looked at him earnestly. “How?” he inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” said the child, “I would ask him if he believed he had
-life to show me his life.”</p>
-
-<p>“But he could not do that, my child,” said the priest. “Life
-cannot be seen; we have it, but it is invisible.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then if we have life, though we cannot see it, we may also
-have a soul, though it is invisible,” answered the child.</p>
-
-<p>When the priest heard him speak these words he fell down on
-his knees before him, weeping for joy, for now he knew his soul
-was safe; he had met at last one that believed. And he told the
-child his whole story: all his wickedness, and pride, and blasphemy
-against the great God; and how the angel had come to
-him and told him of the only way in which he could be saved,
-through the faith and prayers of some one that believed.</p>
-
-<p>“Now then,” he said to the child, “take this penknife and
-strike it into my breast, and go on stabbing the flesh until you
-see the paleness of death on my face. Then watch—for a living
-thing will soar up from my body as I die, and you will then know
-that my soul has ascended to the presence of God. And when you
-see this thing, make haste and run to my school and call on all my
-scholars to come and see that the soul of their master has left the
-body, and that all he taught them was a lie, for that there is a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">37</span>
-God who punishes sin, and a Heaven and a Hell, and that man
-has an immortal soul, destined for eternal happiness or misery.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will pray,” said the child, “to have courage to do this work.”</p>
-
-<p>And he kneeled down and prayed. Then when he rose up he
-took the penknife and struck it into the priest’s heart, and struck
-and struck again till all the flesh was lacerated; but still the
-priest lived though the agony was horrible, for he could not die
-until the twenty-four hours had expired. At last the agony
-seemed to cease, and the stillness of death settled on his face.
-Then the child, who was watching, saw a beautiful living
-creature, with four snow white wings, mount from the dead
-man’s body into the air and go fluttering round his head.</p>
-
-<p>So he ran to bring the scholars; and when they saw it they all
-knew it was the soul of their master, and they watched with
-wonder and awe until it passed from sight into the clouds.</p>
-
-<p>And this was the first butterfly that was ever seen in Ireland;
-and now all men know that the butterflies are the souls of the
-dead waiting for the moment when they may enter Purgatory,
-and so pass through torture to purification and peace.</p>
-
-<p>But the schools of Ireland were quite deserted after that time,
-for people said, What is the use of going so far to learn when the
-wisest man in all Ireland did not know if he had a soul till he was
-near losing it; and was only saved at last through the simple
-belief of a little child?</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The allusion in this clever tale to the ancient Irish schools is
-based on historical fact. From the seventh to the tenth century
-Ireland was the centre of learning. The great Alfred of England
-was a student at one of the famous Irish seminaries, along with
-other royal and noble youths, and there formed a life-long friendship
-with the learned Adamnanl who often afterwards was a
-welcome guest at the Court of King Alfred. Other eminent
-Irishmen are known to history as the teachers and evangelizers
-of Europe. Alcuin, the Irish monk, became the friend and secretary
-of Charlemagne, and founded, at Aix-la-Chapelle, the first
-Grammar School in the imperial dominions. And the celebrated
-Clemens and Albinus, two Irishmen of distinguished ability and
-learning, aided the emperor not only in educating the people, but
-also to found a school for the nobles within his own palace.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_FAIRY_RACE">THE FAIRY RACE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The <i>Sidhe</i>, or spirit race, called also the <i>Feadh-Ree</i> or fairies,
-are supposed to have been once angels in heaven, who were cast<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">38</span>
-out by Divine command as a punishment for their inordinate
-pride.</p>
-
-<p>Some fell to earth, and dwelt there, long before man was created,
-as the first gods of the earth. Others fell into the sea, and they
-built themselves beautiful fairy palaces of crystal and pearl underneath
-the waves; but on moonlight nights they often come up on
-the land, riding their white horses, and they hold revels with their
-fairy kindred of the earth, who live in the clefts of the hills, and
-they dance together on the greensward under the ancient trees,
-and drink nectar from the cups of the flowers, which is the fairy
-wine.</p>
-
-<p>Other fairies, however, are demoniacal, and given to evil and
-malicious deeds; for when cast out of heaven they fell into hell,
-and there the devil holds them under his rule, and sends them
-forth as he wills upon missions of evil to tempt the souls of men
-downward by the false glitter of sin and pleasure. These spirits
-dwell under the earth and impart their knowledge only to certain
-evil persons chosen of the devil, who gives them power to make
-incantations, and brew love potions, and to work wicked spells,
-and they can assume different forms by their knowledge and use
-of certain magical herbs.</p>
-
-<p>The witch women who have been taught by them, and have
-thus become tools of the Evil One, are the terror of the neighbourhood;
-for they have all the power of the fairies and all the
-malice of the devil, who reveals to them secrets of times and days,
-and secrets of herbs, and secrets of evil spells; and by the power
-of magic they can effect all their purposes, whether for good
-or ill.</p>
-
-<p>The fairies of the earth are small and beautiful. They passionately
-love music and dancing, and live luxuriously in their palaces
-under the hills and in the deep mountain caves; and they can
-obtain all things lovely for their fairy homes, merely by the
-strength of their magic power. They can also assume all forms,
-and will never know death until the last day comes, when their
-doom is to vanish away—to be annihilated for ever. But they
-are very jealous of the human race who are so tall and strong, and
-to whom has been promised immortality. And they are often
-tempted by the beauty of a mortal woman and greatly desire to
-have her as a wife.</p>
-
-<p>The children of such marriages have a strange mystic nature,
-and generally become famous in music and song. But they are
-passionate, revengeful, and not easy to live with. Every one
-knows them to be of the Sidhe or spirit race, by their beautiful
-eyes and their bold, reckless temperament.</p>
-
-<p>The fairy king and princes dress in green, with red caps bound
-on the head with a golden fillet. The fairy queen and the great
-court ladies are robed in glittering silver gauze, spangled with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">39</span>
-diamonds, and their long golden hair sweeps the ground as they
-dance on the greensward.</p>
-
-<p>Their favourite camp and resting-place is under a hawthorn
-tree, and a peasant would die sooner than cut down one of the
-ancient hawthorns sacred to the fairies, and which generally
-stands in the centre of a fairy ring. But the people never offer
-worship to these fairy beings, for they look on the Sidhe as a race
-quite inferior to man. At the same time they have an immense
-dread and fear of the mystic fairy power, and never interfere
-with them nor offend them knowingly.</p>
-
-<p>The Sidhe often strive to carry off the handsome children, who
-are then reared in the beautiful fairy palaces under the earth,
-and wedded to fairy mates when they grow up.</p>
-
-<p>The people dread the idea of a fairy changeling being left in
-the cradle in place of their own lovely child; and if a wizened
-little thing is found there, it is sometimes taken out at night and
-laid in an open grave till morning, when they hope to find their
-own child restored, although more often nothing is found save the
-cold corpse of the poor outcast.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes it is said the fairies carry off the mortal child for a
-sacrifice, as they have to offer one every seven years to the devil
-in return for the power he gives them. And beautiful young girls
-are carried off, also, either for sacrifice or to be wedded to the
-fairy king.</p>
-
-<p>The fairies are pure and cleanly in their habits, and they like
-above all things a pail of water to be set for them at night, in
-case they may wish to bathe.</p>
-
-<p>They also delight in good wines, and are careful to repay the
-donor in blessings, for they are truly upright and honest. The
-great lords of Ireland, in ancient times, used to leave a keg of the
-finest Spanish wine frequently at night out on the window-sill for
-the fairies, and in the morning it was all gone.</p>
-
-<p>Fire is a great preventative against fairy magic, for fire is the
-most sacred of all created things, and man alone has power over
-it. No animal has ever yet attained the knowledge of how to
-draw out the spirit of fire from the stone or the wood, where it
-has found a dwelling-place. If a ring of fire is made round cattle
-or a child’s cradle, or if fire is placed under the churn, the fairies
-have no power to harm. And the spirit of the fire is certain to
-destroy all fairy magic, if it exist.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_TRIAL_BY_FIRE">THE TRIAL BY FIRE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The ordeal by fire is the great test adopted by the peasants to
-try if a child or any one is fairy-struck. There was a man in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">40</span>
-Mayo who was bedridden for months and months, and though he
-ate up all the food they brought him, he never grew a bit
-stronger, and on Sundays when they went to mass, they locked
-him up and left him alone in the place with plenty of food. Now
-there was a fine field close by, and one Sunday, coming home from
-mass earlier than usual, they saw a great company of people bowling
-in the field, and the sick man amongst them, but at that
-moment he vanished away; and when the family reached home,
-there was the sick man lying fast asleep in his bed.</p>
-
-<p>“Get up,” they said, “for we have seen you bowling with the
-fairies, and you sha’n’t eat or drink any more at our expense.”</p>
-
-<p>But he refused, and said he was too ill to move. Then they
-made down a large fire of turf and said, “Get up, or we’ll lay you
-on the fire and break the fairy spell.” And they took hold of him
-to burn him. Then he was frightened, and rose up and went out
-at the door, and they watched him till he stopped in the field
-where the hurlers played, and lay down there in the grass; but
-when they went up to him he was dead.</p>
-
-<p>A man going to his work one morning early saw two women
-going up to a house, and one said, “There is a beautiful boy in
-this house, go in and hand it out to me, and we’ll leave the dead
-child in its place.” And the other went in at the window as she
-was told, and handed out a sleeping child, and took the dead child
-and laid it in the bed within. Now the man saw it was fairy
-work, and he went over and made the sign of the cross on the
-sleeping child, whereupon the two women shrieked as if they had
-been struck, and fled away, dropping the child on the grass. Then
-the man took it up gently, and put it under his coat, and went
-away to his wife.</p>
-
-<p>“Here,” he said, “take care of this child till I come back, and
-burn a turf beside the cradle to keep off the fairies.”</p>
-
-<p>When he passed by the house again, where he had seen the
-two women, he heard a great crying and lamentation; and he
-entered in and asked what ailed them.</p>
-
-<p>“See here,” said the mother, “my child is dead in its cradle.
-It died in the night, and no one near.” And she wept bitterly.</p>
-
-<p>“Be comforted,” said the man; “this is a fairy changeling, your
-child is safe!” and he told her the story. “Now,” he said, “if
-you don’t believe me, just lay this dead child on the fire, and we’ll
-see what will happen.”</p>
-
-<p>So she made down a good fire, and took the dead child in her
-arms, and laid it on the hot turf, saying, “Burn, burn, burn—if
-of the devil, burn; but if of God and the Saints, be safe from
-harm.” And the child no sooner felt the fire than it sprang up
-the chimney with a cry and disappeared.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">41</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h3 id="THE_LADY_WITCH">THE LADY WITCH.</h3>
-
-
-<p>About a hundred years ago there lived a woman in Joyce County,
-of whom all the neighbours were afraid, for she had always plenty
-of money, though no one knew how she came by it; and the best
-of eating and drinking went on at her house, chiefly at night—meat
-and fowls and Spanish wines in plenty for all comers. And
-when people asked how it all came, she laughed and said, “I have
-paid for it,” but would tell them no more.</p>
-
-<p>So the word went through the county that she had sold herself
-to the Evil One, and could have everything she wanted by merely
-wishing and willing, and because of her riches they called her
-“The Lady Witch.”</p>
-
-<p>She never went out but at night, and then always with a bridle
-and whip in her hand; and the sound of a horse galloping was
-heard often far on in the night along the roads near her house.</p>
-
-<p>Then a strange story was whispered about, that if a young man
-drank of her Spanish wines at supper and afterwards fell asleep,
-she would throw the bridle over him and change him to a horse,
-and ride him all over the country, and whatever she touched with
-her whip became hers. Fowls, or butter, or wine, or the new-made
-cakes—she had but to wish and will and they were carried
-by spirit hands to her house, and laid in her larder. Then when
-the ride was done, and she had gathered enough through the
-country of all she wanted, she took the bridle off the young man,
-and he came back to his own shape and fell asleep; and when he
-awoke he had no knowledge of all that had happened, and the
-Lady Witch bade him come again and drink of her Spanish wines
-as often as it pleased him.</p>
-
-<p>Now there was a fine brave young fellow in the neighbourhood,
-and he determined to make out the truth of the story. So he
-often went back and forwards, and made friends with the Lady
-Witch, and sat down to talk to her, but always on the watch.
-And she took a great fancy to him and told him he must come to
-supper some night, and she would give him the best of everything,
-and he must taste her Spanish wine.</p>
-
-<p>So she named the night, and he went gladly, for he was filled
-with curiosity. And when he arrived there was a beautiful supper
-laid, and plenty of wine to drink; and he ate and drank, but was
-cautious about the wine, and spilled it on the ground from his
-glass when her head was turned away. Then he pretended to be
-very sleepy, and she said—</p>
-
-<p>“My son, you are weary. Lie down there on the bench and
-sleep, for the night is far spent, and you are far from your home.”</p>
-
-<p>So he lay down as if he were quite dead with sleep, and closed
-his eyes, but watched her all the time.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">42</span></p>
-
-<p>And she came over in a little while and looked at him steadily,
-but he never stirred, only breathed the more heavily.</p>
-
-<p>Then she went softly and took the bridle from the wall, and
-stole over to fling it over his head; but he started up, and, seizing
-the bridle, threw it over the woman, who was immediately changed
-into a spanking grey mare. And he led her out and jumped on
-her back and rode away as fast as the wind till he came to the
-forge.</p>
-
-<p>“Ho, smith,” he cried, “rise up and shoe my mare, for she is
-weary after the journey.”</p>
-
-<p>And the smith got up and did his work as he was bid, well and
-strong. Then the young man mounted again, and rode back like
-the wind to the house of the Witch; and there he took off the
-bridle, and she immediately regained her own form, and sank
-down in a deep sleep.</p>
-
-<p>But as the shoes had been put on at the forge without saying
-the proper form of words, they remained on her hands and feet,
-and no power on earth could remove them.</p>
-
-<p>So she never rose from her bed again, and died not long after
-of grief and shame. And not one in the whole country would
-follow the coffin of the Lady Witch to the grave; and the bridle
-was burned with fire, and of all her riches nothing was left but a
-handful of ashes, and this was flung to the four points of earth
-and the four winds of heaven; so the enchantment was broken
-and the power of the Evil One ended.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="ETHNA_THE_BRIDE">ETHNA THE BRIDE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The fairies, as we know, are greatly attracted by the beauty of
-mortal women, and Finvarra the king employs his numerous
-sprites to find out and carry off when possible the prettiest girls
-and brides in the country. These are spirited away by enchantment
-to his fairy palace at Knockma in Tuam, where they remain
-under a fairy spell, forgetting all about the earthly life and
-soothed to passive enjoyment, as in a sweet dream, by the soft low
-melody of the fairy music, which has the power to lull the hearer
-into a trance of ecstasy.</p>
-
-<p>There was once a great lord in that part of the country who had
-a beautiful wife called Ethna, the loveliest bride in all the land.
-And her husband was so proud of her that day after day he had
-festivals in her honour; and from morning till night his castle
-was filled with lords and ladies, and nothing but music and
-dancing and feasting and hunting and pleasure was thought of.</p>
-
-<p>One evening while the feast was merriest, and Ethna floated<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">43</span>
-through the dance in her robe of silver gossamer clasped with
-jewels, more bright and beautiful than the stars in heaven, she
-suddenly let go the hand of her partner and sank to the floor in a
-faint.</p>
-
-<p>They carried her to her room, where she lay long quite insensible;
-but towards the morning she woke up and declared that
-she had passed the night in a beautiful palace, and was so happy
-that she longed to sleep again and go there in her dreams. And
-they watched by her all day, but when the shades of evening fell
-dark on the castle, low music was heard at her window, and Ethna
-again fell into a deep trance from which nothing could rouse her.</p>
-
-<p>Then her old nurse was set to watch her; but the woman grew
-weary in the silence and fell asleep, and never awoke till the sun
-had risen. And when she looked towards the bed, she saw to her
-horror that the young bride had disappeared. The whole household
-was roused up at once, and search made everywhere, but no
-trace of her could be found in all the castle, nor in the gardens,
-nor in the park. Her husband sent messengers in every direction,
-but to no purpose—no one had seen her; no sign of her could be
-found, living or dead.</p>
-
-<p>Then the young lord mounted his swiftest steed and galloped
-right off to Knockma, to question Finvarra, the fairy king, if he
-could give any tidings of the bride, or direct him where to search
-for her; for he and Finvarra were friends, and many a good keg
-of Spanish wine had been left outside the window of the castle at
-night for the fairies to carry away, by order of the young lord.
-But he little dreamed now that Finvarra himself was the traitor;
-so he galloped on like mad till he reached Knockma, the hill of
-the fairies.</p>
-
-<p>And as he stopped to rest his horse by the fairy rath, he heard
-voices in the air above him, and one said—</p>
-
-<p>“Right glad is Finvarra now, for he has the beautiful bride in
-his palace at last; and never more will she see her husband’s
-face.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yet,” answered another, “if he dig down through the hill to
-the centre of the earth, he would find his bride; but the work is
-hard and the way is difficult, and Finvarra has more power than
-any mortal man.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is yet to be seen,” exclaimed the young lord. “Neither
-fairy, nor devil, nor Finvarra himself shall stand between me and
-my fair young wife;” and on the instant he sent word by his
-servants to gather together all the workmen and labourers of the
-country round with their spades and pickaxes, to dig through the
-hill till they came to the fairy palace.</p>
-
-<p>And the workmen came, a great crowd of them, and they dug
-through the hill all that day till a great deep trench was made
-down to the very centre. Then at sunset they left off for the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">44</span>
-night; but next morning when they assembled again to continue
-their work, behold, all the clay was put back again into the trench,
-and the hill looked as if never a spade had touched it—for so
-Finvarra had ordered; and he was powerful over earth and air
-and sea.</p>
-
-<p>But the young lord had a brave heart, and he made the men go
-on with the work; and the trench was dug again, wide and deep
-into the centre of the hill. And this went on for three days, but
-always with the same result, for the clay was put back again each
-night and the hill looked the same as before, and they were no
-nearer to the fairy palace.</p>
-
-<p>Then the young lord was ready to die for rage and grief, but
-suddenly he heard a voice near him like a whisper in the air, and
-the words it said were these—</p>
-
-<p>“Sprinkle the earth you have dug up with salt, and your work
-will be safe.”</p>
-
-<p>On this new life came into his heart, and he sent word through
-all the country to gather salt from the people; and the clay was
-sprinkled with it that night, when the men had left off their work
-at the hill.</p>
-
-<p>Next morning they all rose up early in great anxiety to see
-what had happened, and there to their great joy was the trench all
-safe, just as they had left it, and all the earth round it was
-untouched.</p>
-
-<p>Then the young lord knew he had power over Finvarra, and he
-bade the men work on with a good heart, for they would soon
-reach the fairy palace now in the centre of the hill. So by the
-next day a great glen was cut right through deep down to the
-middle of the earth, and they could hear the fairy music if they
-put their ear close to the ground, and voices were heard round
-them in the air.</p>
-
-<p>“See now,” said one, “Finvarra is sad, for if one of those mortal
-men strike a blow on the fairy palace with their spades, it will
-crumble to dust, and fade away like the mist.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then let Finvarra give up the bride,” said another, “and we
-shall be safe.”</p>
-
-<p>On which the voice of Finvarra himself was heard, clear like
-the note of a silver bugle through the hill.</p>
-
-<p>“Stop your work,” he said. “Oh, men of earth, lay down your
-spades, and at sunset the bride shall be given back to her husband.
-I, Finvarra, have spoken.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the young lord bade them stop the work, and lay down
-their spades till the sun went down. And at sunset he mounted
-his great chestnut steed and rode to the head of the glen, and
-watched and waited; and just as the red light flushed all the sky,
-he saw his wife coming along the path in her robe of silver
-gossamer, more beautiful than ever; and he sprang from the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">45</span>
-saddle and lifted her up before him, and rode away like the storm
-wind back to the castle. And there they laid Ethna on her bed;
-but she closed her eyes and spake no word. So day after day
-passed, and still she never spake or smiled, but seemed like one in
-a trance.</p>
-
-<p>And great sorrow fell upon every one, for they feared she had
-eaten of the fairy food, and that the enchantment would never be
-broken. So her husband was very miserable. But one evening
-as he was riding home late, he heard voices in the air, and one of
-them said—</p>
-
-<p>“It is now a year and a day since the young lord brought home
-his beautiful wife from Finvarra; but what good is she to him?
-She is speechless and like one dead; for her spirit is with the
-fairies though her form is there beside him.”</p>
-
-<p>Then another voice answered—</p>
-
-<p>“And so she will remain unless the spell is broken. He must
-unloose the girdle from her waist that is fastened with an enchanted
-pin, and burn the girdle with fire, and throw the ashes
-before the door, and bury the enchanted pin in the earth; then
-will her spirit come back from Fairy-land, and she will once more
-speak and have true life.”</p>
-
-<p>Hearing this the young lord at once set spurs to his horse, and
-on reaching the castle hastened to the room where Ethna lay on
-her couch silent and beautiful like a waxen figure. Then, being
-determined to test the truth of the spirit voices, he untied the
-girdle, and after much difficulty extracted the enchanted pin from
-the folds. But still Ethna spoke no word; then he took the girdle
-and burned it with fire, and strewed the ashes before the door,
-and he buried the enchanted pin in a deep hole in the earth, under
-a fairy thorn, that no hand might disturb the spot. After which
-he returned to his young wife, who smiled as she looked at him,
-and held forth her hand. Great was his joy to see the soul
-coming back to the beautiful form, and he raised her up and
-kissed her; and speech and memory came back to her at that
-moment, and all her former life, just as if it had never been broken
-or interrupted; but the year that her spirit had passed in Fairy-land
-seemed to her but as a dream of the night, from which she
-had just awoke.</p>
-
-<p>After this Finvarra made no further efforts to carry her off;
-but the deep cut in the hill remains to this day, and is called
-“The Fairy’s Glen.” So no one can doubt the truth of the story
-as here narrated.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">46</span></p>
-
-
-<h3 id="THE_FAIRIES_REVENGE">THE FAIRIES’ REVENGE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The fairies have a great objection to the fairy raths, where they
-meet at night, being built upon by mortal man. A farmer called
-Johnstone, having plenty of money, bought some land, and chose
-a beautiful green spot to build a house on, the very spot the
-fairies loved best.</p>
-
-<p>The neighbours warned him that it was a fairy rath; but he
-laughed and never minded (for he was from the north), and
-looked at such things as mere old-wives’ tales. So he built the
-house and made it beautiful to live in; and no people in the
-country were so well off as the Johnstones, so that the people said
-the farmer must have found a pot of gold in the fairy rath.</p>
-
-<p>But the fairies were all the time plotting how they could
-punish the farmer for taking away their dancing ground, and for
-cutting down the hawthorn bush where they held their revels
-when the moon was full. And one day when the cows were
-milking, a little old woman in a blue cloak came to Mrs. Johnstone
-and asked her for a porringer of milk.</p>
-
-<p>“Go away,” said the mistress of the house, “you shall have no
-milk from me. I’ll have no tramps coming about my place.” And
-she told the farm servants to chase her away.</p>
-
-<p>Some time after, the best and finest of the cows sickened and
-gave no milk, and lost her horns and teeth and finally died.</p>
-
-<p>Then one day as Mrs. Johnstone was sitting spinning flax in the
-parlour, the same little woman in the blue cloak suddenly stood
-before her.</p>
-
-<p>“Your maids are baking cakes in the kitchen,” she said; “give
-me some off the griddle to carry away with me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Go out of this,” cried the farmer’s wife, angrily; “you are a
-wicked old wretch, and have poisoned my best cow.” And she
-bade the farm servants drive her off with sticks.</p>
-
-<p>Now the Johnstones had one only child; a beautiful bright boy,
-as strong as a young colt, and as full of life and merriment. But
-soon after this he began to grow queer and strange, and was disturbed
-in his sleep; for he said the fairies came round him at
-night and pinched and beat him, and some sat on his chest and he
-could neither breathe nor move. And they told him they would
-never leave him in peace unless he promised to give them a supper
-every night of a griddle cake and a porringer of milk. So to
-soothe the child the mother had these things laid every night on
-a table beside his bed, and in the morning they were gone.</p>
-
-<p>But still the child pined away, and his eyes got a strange, wild
-look, as if he saw nothing near or around him, only something far,
-far away that troubled his spirit. And when they asked him
-what ailed him, he said the fairies carried him away to the hills<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">47</span>
-every night, where he danced and danced with them till the
-morning, when they brought him back and laid him again in his
-bed.</p>
-
-<p>At last the farmer and his wife were at their wits’ end from
-grief and despair, for the child was pining away before their eyes,
-and they could do nothing for him to help him. One night he
-cried out in great agony—</p>
-
-<p>“Mother! mother! send for the priest to take away the fairies,
-for they are killing me; they are here on my chest, crushing me
-to death,” and his eyes were wild with terror.</p>
-
-<p>Now the farmer and his wife believed in no fairies, and in no
-priest, but to soothe the child they did as he asked and sent for
-the priest, who prayed over him and sprinkled him with holy
-water.</p>
-
-<p>The poor little fellow seemed calmer as the priest prayed, and
-he said the fairies were leaving him and going away, and then he
-sank into a quiet sleep. But when he woke in the morning he
-told his parents that he had a beautiful dream and was walking
-in a lovely garden with the angels; and he knew it was heaven,
-and that he would be there before night, for the angels told him
-they would come for him.</p>
-
-<p>Then they watched by the sick child all through the night, for
-they saw the fever was still on him, but hoped a change would
-come before morning; for he now slept quite calmly with a smile
-on his lips.</p>
-
-<p>But just as the clock struck midnight he awoke and sat up, and
-when his mother put her arms round him weeping, he whispered
-to her—“The angels are here, mother,” and then he sank back,
-and so died.</p>
-
-<p>Now after this calamity the farmer never held up his head.
-He ceased to mind his farm, and the crops went to ruin and the
-cattle died, and finally before a year and a day were over he was
-laid in the grave by the side of his little son; and the land passed
-into other hands, and as no one would live in the house it was
-pulled down. No one, either, would plant on the rath; so the
-grass grew again all over it, green and beautiful, and the fairies
-danced there once more in the moonlight as they used to do in the
-old time, free and happy; and thus the evil spell was broken for
-evermore.</p>
-
-<p>But the people would have nothing to do with the childless
-mother, so she went away back to her own people, a broken-hearted,
-miserable woman—a warning to all who would arouse
-the vengeance of the fairies by interfering with their ancient
-rights and possessions and privileges.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">48</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h3 id="FAIRY_HELP">FAIRY HELP.<br />
-
-<small>THE PHOUKA.</small></h3>
-
-
-<p>The Phouka is a friendly being, and often helps the farmer at
-his work if he is treated well and kindly. One day a farmer’s
-son was minding cattle in the field when something rushed past
-him like the wind; but he was not frightened, for he knew it
-was the Phouka on his way to the old mill by the moat where
-the fairies met every night. So he called out, “Phouka, Phouka!
-show me what you are like, and I’ll give you my big coat to keep
-you warm.” Then a young bull came to him lashing his tail like
-mad; but Phadrig threw the coat over him, and in a moment he
-was quiet as a lamb, and told the boy to come to the mill that
-night when the moon was up, and he would have good luck.</p>
-
-<p>So Phadrig went, but saw nothing except sacks of corn all
-lying about on the ground, for the men had fallen asleep, and no
-work was done. Then he lay down also and slept, for he was
-very tired: and when he woke up early in the morning there was
-all the meal ground, though certainly the men had not done it,
-for they still slept. And this happened for three nights, after
-which Phadrig determined to keep awake and watch.</p>
-
-<p>Now there was an old chest in the mill, and he crept into this
-to hide, and just looked through the keyhole to see what would
-happen. And exactly at midnight six little fellows came in, each
-carrying a sack of corn upon his back; and after them came an
-old man in tattered rags of clothes, and he bade them turn the
-mill, and they turned and turned till all was ground.</p>
-
-<p>Then Phadrig ran to tell his father, and the miller determined
-to watch the next night with his son, and both together saw the
-same thing happen.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said the farmer, “I see it is the Phouka’s work, and
-let him work if it pleases him, for the men are idle and lazy and
-only sleep. So I’ll pack the whole set off to-morrow, and leave
-the grinding of the corn to this excellent old Phouka.”</p>
-
-<p>After this the farmer grew so rich that there was no end to his
-money, for he had no men to pay, and all his corn was ground
-without his spending a penny. Of course the people wondered
-much over his riches, but he never told them about the Phouka,
-or their curiosity would have spoiled the luck.</p>
-
-<p>Now Phadrig went often to the mill and hid in the chest that
-he might watch the fairies at work; but he had great pity for
-the poor old Phouka in his tattered clothes, who yet directed
-everything and had hard work of it sometimes keeping the little
-Phoukas in order. So Phadrig, out of love and gratitude, bought
-a fine suit of cloth and silk and laid it one night on the floor of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">49</span>
-the mill just where the old Phouka always stood to give his
-orders to the little men, and then he crept into the chest to watch.</p>
-
-<p>“How is this?” said the Phouka when he saw the clothes.
-“Are these for me? I shall be turned into a fine gentleman.”</p>
-
-<p>And he put them on, and then began to walk up and down
-admiring himself. But suddenly he remembered the corn and
-went to grind as usual, then stopped and cried out—</p>
-
-<p>“No, no. No more work for me. Fine gentlemen don’t grind
-corn. I’ll go out and see a little of the world and show my fine
-clothes.” And he kicked away the old rags into a corner, and
-went out.</p>
-
-<p>No corn was ground that night, nor the next, nor the next;
-all the little Phoukas ran away, and not a sound was heard in the
-mill. Then Phadrig grew very sorry for the loss of his old friend,
-and used to go out into the fields and call out, “Phouka, Phouka!
-come back to me. Let me see your face.” But the old Phouka
-never came back, and all his life long Phadrig never looked on
-the face of his friend again. However, the farmer had made so
-much money that he wanted no more help; and he sold the mill,
-and reared up Phadrig to be a great scholar and a gentleman, who
-had his own house and land and servants. And in time he
-married a beautiful lady, so beautiful that the people said she
-must be daughter to the king of the fairies.</p>
-
-<p>A strange thing happened at the wedding, for when they all
-stood up to drink the bride’s health, Phadrig saw beside him a
-golden cup filled with wine. And no one knew how the golden
-cup had come to his hand; but Phadrig guessed it was the
-Phouka’s gift, and he drank the wine without fear and made his
-bride drink also. And ever after their lives were happy and
-prosperous, and the golden cup was kept as a treasure in the
-family, and the descendants of Phadrig have it in their possession
-to this day.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_FARMER_PUNISHED">THE FARMER PUNISHED.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The fairies, with their free, joyous temperament and love of
-beauty and luxury, hold in great contempt the minor virtues of
-thrift and economy, and, above all things, abhor the close, hard,
-niggardly nature that spends grudgingly and never gives freely.
-Indeed, they seem to hold it as their peculiar mission to punish
-such people, and make them suffer for the sins of the hard heart
-and niggard hand, as may be seen by the following tale:—</p>
-
-<p>A farmer once lived near the Boyne, close to an old churchyard.
-He was very rich, and had crops and cattle, but was so hard and
-avaricious that the people hated him; for his habit was to get up<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">50</span>
-very early in the morning and go out to the fields to watch that
-no one took a cabbage or a turnip, or got a cup of milk when the
-cows were being milked, for the love of God and the saints.</p>
-
-<p>One morning, as he was out as usual by sunrise spying about
-the place, he heard a child crying bitterly—</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, mother, mother! I am hungry. Give me something, or
-I’ll die.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hush, darling,” said the mother, “though the hunger is on
-you, wait; for the farmer’s cow will be milked presently, and I’ll
-knock down the pail so the milk will be spilt upon the ground,
-and you can drink your fill.”<a id="FNanchor_6_6" href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">6</a></p>
-
-<p>When the farmer heard this he sent a stout man to watch the
-girl that milked, and to tie the cow’s feet that she should not
-kick. So that time no milk was spilled upon the ground.</p>
-
-<p>Next morning he went out again by sunrise, and he heard the
-child crying more bitterly even than before—</p>
-
-<p>“Mother, mother! I am hungry. Give me to eat.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wait, my child,” said the mother; “the farmer’s maid bakes
-cakes to-day, and I’ll make the dish to fall just as she is carrying
-them from the griddle. So we shall have plenty to eat this
-time.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the farmer went home and locked up the meal, and
-said—</p>
-
-<p>“No cakes shall be baked to-day, not till the night.”</p>
-
-<p>But the cry of the child was in his ears, and he could not rest.
-So early in the morning he was out again, and bitter was the cry
-of the child as he passed the copse—</p>
-
-<p>“Mother, mother!” it said, “I have had no milk, I have had
-no cake; let me lay down my head on your breast and die.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wait,” said the mother, “some one will die before you, my
-darling. Let the old man look to his son, for he will be killed in
-battle before many days are over; and then the curse will be
-lifted from the poor, and we shall have food in plenty.”</p>
-
-<p>But the farmer laughed. “There is no war in Ireland now,”
-he said to himself. “How then can my son be killed in battle?”
-And he went home to his own house, and there in the courtyard
-was his son cleaning his spear and sharpening his arrows. He
-was a comely youth, tall and slender as a young oak-tree, and his
-brown hair fell in long curls over his shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>“Father,” he said, “I am summoned by the king, for he is at
-war with the other kings. So give me the swiftest horse you have,
-for I must be off to-night to join the king’s men. And see, I
-have my spears and arrows ready.”</p>
-
-<p>Now at that time in Ireland there were four great kings, and
-each of them had two deputies. And the king of Leinster made<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">51</span>
-a great feast for the deputies, and to seven of them he gave a
-brooch of gold each, but to the eighth only a brooch of silver, for,
-he said, the man is not a prince like the others. Then the eighth
-deputy was angry, and he struck the king’s page full in the face
-for handing him the brooch. On this all the knights sprang up
-and drew their swords, and some took one part and some another,
-and there was a great fight in the hall. And afterwards the four
-kings quarrelled, and the king of Leinster sent out messengers to
-bid all his people come to help him. So the farmer’s son got the
-message as well as the others, and he made ready at once to join
-the battle with a proud heart for the sake of the king and a
-young man’s love of adventure.</p>
-
-<p>Then the farmer was filled with rage.</p>
-
-<p>“This is the wicked work of the witch woman,” he said; “but
-as I would not give her the milk to spill, nor the cakes when
-baked, so I will not give her the life of my only son.”</p>
-
-<p>And he took large stones and built up great walls the height of
-a man, round a hut, and set a great stone at the top to close it,
-only leaving places for a vessel of food to be handed down. And
-he placed the lad within the hut.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” he said, “the king shall not have him, nor the king’s
-men; he is safe from the battle and the spears of the warriors.”</p>
-
-<p>So the next morning he rose up quite content, and was out at
-sunrise as usual; and as he walked by the churchyard, he heard
-the child laughing. And the mother said—</p>
-
-<p>“Child, you laugh by a grave. For the farmer’s son will be
-laid in that ground before three days are over, and then the curse
-will be lifted from the poor. He would not let the milk be
-spilled, nor the cakes to be baked, but he cannot keep his son from
-death. The spell is on him for evil.”</p>
-
-<p>Then a voice said—</p>
-
-<p>“But his father has walled him round in a hut with strong
-walls, high as a man. How then can he die in battle?”</p>
-
-<p>And the woman answered—</p>
-
-<p>“I climbed the hut last night and gave him nine stones, and
-bade him throw them one by one over his left shoulder, and each
-time a stone of the wall would fall down, till free space was left
-him to escape, and this he did; and before sunrise this morning
-he fled away, and has joined the king’s army; but his grave
-is ready, and in three days he will be in this ground, for his doom
-is spoken.”</p>
-
-<p>When the farmer heard these words, he rushed like mad to the
-hut, and called his son by name; but no answer came. Then he
-climbed up and looked in through the hole at the top, but no sign
-of his son was there. And he wrung his hands in despair, and
-went home and spake no word, but sat moaning with his head
-buried in his hands.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">52</span></p>
-
-<p>And on the third day he heard the steps of men outside, and he
-rose up, for he knew they were bearing the body of his dead son
-to the door. And he went out to meet them, and there lay the
-corpse of the young man on the bier, pale and beautiful, struck
-through and through by a spear, even as he had died in battle.</p>
-
-<p>And they laid him in the churchyard, just as the witch-woman
-had foretold, while all the people wept, for the young man was
-noble to look upon, and of a good and upright spirit.</p>
-
-<p>But the father neither spoke nor wept. His mind was gone,
-and his heart was broken. And soon he lay down and died, unpitied
-by all; for he was hard and cruel in his life, and no man
-wept for him; and all the riches he had gathered by grinding
-down the poor melted away, and his race perished from the
-land, and his name was heard of no more, and no blessing rested
-on his memory.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_FARMERS_WIFE">THE FARMER’S WIFE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Down in the South there lived another rich farmer and his wife,
-who were both of them hated by the people for their stingy,
-hard-hearted ways. Never a word of kindness was on their lips,
-and never a blessing from the poor was invoked on their heads.</p>
-
-<p>One day an old woman came to the door to beg a little food—a
-cake from the griddle, or a few potatoes, or a handful of meal;
-but she was harshly refused by the farmer’s wife and turned
-away.</p>
-
-<p>Then she came back in a little while, and begged for a drink of
-milk, for she was faint and weary, she said, and had travelled far.
-This was also refused, and she was ordered to leave the place at
-once. But the woman still begged hard for leave to rest herself
-a little, and for even a drink of butter milk, for it was churning
-day and she knew there must be plenty in the house. Then the
-farmer’s wife grew very angry, and said she would turn the dogs
-on her if she didn’t go away, and that no tramp should get anything
-from her. On this the woman muttered some words, with
-her hand on the lintel of the door, and then went her way. Soon
-after, being much heated by the violence of her anger, the
-farmer’s wife went to the dairy for a drink; but as she poured
-out the draught she saw something black in the cup, and she tried
-to take it out with her finger, but it always escaped her. Then,
-being very thirsty, she drank off the milk, and still another and
-another cup, and in the drinking the black object disappeared.
-That night, however, she felt nigh to death, for her body began
-to swell, and turned black all over. Medical aid was sent for, but
-the doctor could make out nothing of the cause or nature of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">53</span>
-strange disease. Then the priest was summoned, and he at once,
-having heard the story, said there was witchcraft in it; and he
-proceeded to pray, and to exorcise the evil spirit in the woman.
-Besides this he made her be placed in a hot bath, into which he
-poured some holy water.</p>
-
-<p>At first the woman uttered fierce cries, and said her body
-seemed rent and torn; but gradually she became calmer, and the
-blackness slowly went down from head to feet, and finally disappeared,
-leaving the body fair and whole, all except one hand, and
-this remained still as black as ink. The holy water was poured on
-it, and the priest prayed, but nothing would remove the devil’s
-mark.</p>
-
-<p>So the priest told her at last that the blackness would remain as
-a sign and token of her sins against the poor; and from that day
-forth to her death the mark of the evil spell remained on her, but
-she grew kinder to the poor, for her heart was shaken by terror.
-And when she came to die there was no blackness on her hand,
-for the tears of the poor she had succoured and befriended had
-washed all the devil’s mark away, before the moment came when
-her soul was to appear before God.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_MIDNIGHT_RIDE">THE MIDNIGHT RIDE.<br />
-
-<small>A PEASANT’S TALE.</small></h3>
-
-
-<p>One evening a man called Shawn Ruadh was out looking for a red
-cow that had strayed away, when he heard voices round him, and
-one said “Get me a horse,” and another cried “Get me a horse.”</p>
-
-<p>“And get me a horse, too,” said Shawn, “since they seem so
-plenty, for I’d like a ride along with you,” and with that he found
-himself on the instant mounted on a fine grey horse beside another
-man who rode a black horse. And they rode away and away till
-they came to a great city.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, do you know where you are?” said the black horseman.
-“You are in London, and whatever you want you can have.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you kindly, my friend,” said the other, “so, with your
-leave, I’ll just have a good suit of clothes, for I’m much in want
-of that same. Can I have them?”</p>
-
-<p>“By all means,” said the black horseman; “there, go into that
-merchant’s shop and ask for what you like, and if he refuses just
-throw the stone I give you on the floor and the whole place will
-seem on fire. But don’t be frightened; only wait your good
-luck.”</p>
-
-<p>So Shawn went into the biggest shop there, and he spoke to the
-merchant quite stiff and proud.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">54</span></p>
-
-<p>“Show me the best suit of clothes you have,” said he. “Never
-mind the price, that’s of no consequence, only be very particular
-as to the fit.”</p>
-
-<p>But the shopman laughed aloud.</p>
-
-<p>“We don’t make clothes for beggars like you,” he said. “Be
-off out of this.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Shawn threw down the stone on the floor, and immediately
-the whole place seemed on fire, and the merchant ran out himself
-and all the shopmen after him to get pails of water, and Shawn
-laughed when he saw them all drenched.</p>
-
-<p>“Now what will you give me,” said he, “if I put out the fire
-for you?”</p>
-
-<p>“You shall have the price of the best suit of clothes in the
-shop,” answered the merchant, “all paid down in gold; only help
-me to put out the fire.”</p>
-
-<p>So Shawn stooped down and picked up the stone, and put it
-quietly into his pocket, and instantly all the flames disappeared:
-and the merchant was so grateful that he paid him down all the
-gold for the clothes and more. And Shawn bid him good-night,
-and mounted the grey steed again quite happy in himself.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said the black horseman, “is there anything else you
-desire? for it is near ten o’clock, and we must be back by
-midnight; so just say what you would like to do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Shawn Ruadh, “I would like of all things to see
-the Pope of Rome, for two of our priests are disputing as to who
-is to get the parish, and I want Father M’Grath to have it, for I
-have a great opinion of him, and if I ask his Holiness he’ll settle
-it all in no time and for ever.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come then,” said the black horseman; “it is a long way to
-Rome, certainly, but I think we’ll manage it in the two hours, and
-be back before twelve o’clock.”</p>
-
-<p>So away they rode like the wind, and in no time Shawn found
-himself before the great palace of the Pope; and all the grand
-servants with gold sticks in their hands stared at him, and asked
-him what he wanted.</p>
-
-<p>“Just go in,” said he, “and tell his Holiness that Shawn Ruadh,
-all the way from Ireland, is here and wants to see him very
-particularly.”</p>
-
-<p>But the servants laughed, and struck him with their gold sticks
-and hunted him away from the gate. Now the Pope hearing the
-rout looked out of the window, and seeing Shawn Ruadh he
-came down and asked him what he wanted.</p>
-
-<p>“Just this, your Holiness,” answered Shawn,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">55</span> “I want a letter
-on behalf of Father M’Grath bidding the Bishop give him the
-parish, and I’ll wait till your Holiness writes it; and meanwhile
-let me have a little supper, for it’s hungry I am after my long
-ride.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the Pope laughed, and told the servants to drive the
-fellow away, for he was evidently out of his wits.</p>
-
-<p>So Shawn grew angry, and flung down the stone on the floor,
-and instantly all the palace seemed on fire, and the Pope ordered
-the grand servants to go for water; and they had to run about
-like mad getting pails and jugs of water, whatever they could lay
-hands on; and all their fine clothes were spoiled, and the beautiful
-gold sticks were flung away in their fright, while they took the
-jugs and splashed and dashed the water over each other.</p>
-
-<p>Now it was Shawn’s turn to laugh till his sides ached, but his
-Holiness looked very grave.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Shawn, “if I put out the fire what will you do
-for me? Will you write that letter?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ay, I will,” said the Pope, “and you shall have your supper
-also; only help us to put out the fire, my fine fellow.”</p>
-
-<p>So Shawn quietly put the stone back in his pocket, and instantly
-all the flames disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said the Pope, “you shall have supper of the best in the
-palace; and I’ll write a letter to the Bishop ordering him to give
-Father M’Grath the parish. And here, besides, is a purse of gold
-for yourself, and take it with my blessing.”</p>
-
-<p>Then he ordered all the grand servants to get supper for the
-excellent young man from Ireland, and to make him comfortable.
-So Shawn was mightily pleased, and ate and drank like a prince.
-Then he mounted his grey steed again, and just as midnight struck
-he found himself at his own door, but all alone; for the grey steed
-and the black horseman had both vanished. But there stood his
-wife crying her eyes out and in great trouble.</p>
-
-<p>“O Shawn, Agra! I thought you were dead or that evil had
-fallen on you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a bit of it,” said Shawn, “I’ve been supping with the
-Pope of Rome, and look here at all the gold I’ve brought home
-for you, my darlint.”</p>
-
-<p>And he put his hand in his pocket to get the purse; but lo!
-there was nothing there except a rough, grey stone. And
-from that hour to this his wife believes that he dreamed the whole
-story as he lay under the hay-rick, on his way home from a carouse
-with the boys.</p>
-
-<p>However, Father M’Grath got the parish, and Shawn took good
-care to tell him how he had spoken up boldly for him to the
-Pope of Rome, and made his Holiness write the letter to
-the Bishop about him. And Father M’Grath was a nice gentleman,
-and he smiled and told Shawn he thanked him kindly for
-his good word.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">56</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h3 id="THE_LEPREHAUN">THE LEPREHAUN.<a id="FNanchor_7_7" href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">7</a></h3>
-
-
-<p>The Leprehauns are merry, industrious, tricksy little sprites,
-who do all the shoemaker’s work and the tailor’s and the cobbler’s
-for the fairy gentry, and are often seen at sunset under the hedge
-singing and stitching. They know all the secrets of hidden
-treasure, and if they take a fancy to a person will guide him to
-the spot in the fairy rath where the pot of gold lies buried. It is
-believed that a family now living near Castlerea came by their
-riches in a strange way, all through the good offices of a friendly
-Leprehaun. And the legend has been handed down through many
-generations as an established fact.</p>
-
-<p>There was a poor boy once, one of their forefathers, who used
-to drive his cart of turf daily back and forward, and make what
-money he could by the sale; but he was a strange boy, very silent
-and moody, and the people said he was a fairy changeling, for he
-joined in no sports and scarcely ever spoke to any one, but spent
-the nights reading all the old bits of books he picked up in his
-rambles. The one thing he longed for above all others was to get
-rich, and to be able to give up the old weary turf cart, and live in
-peace and quietness all alone, with nothing but books round him,
-in a beautiful house and garden all by himself.</p>
-
-<p>Now he had read in the old books how the Leprehauns knew all
-the secret places where gold lay hid, and day by day he watched
-for a sight of the little cobbler, and listened for the click, click of
-his hammer as he sat under the hedge mending the shoes.</p>
-
-<p>At last, one evening just as the sun set, he saw a little fellow
-under a dock leaf, working away, dressed all in green, with a cocked
-hat on his head. So the boy jumped down from the cart and
-seized him by the neck.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, you don’t stir from this,” he cried, “till you tell me
-where to find the hidden gold.”</p>
-
-<p>“Easy now,” said the Leprehaun, “don’t hurt me, and I will
-tell you all about it. But mind you, I could hurt you if I chose,
-for I have the power; but I won’t do it, for we are cousins once
-removed. So as we are near relations I’ll just be good, and show
-you the place of the secret gold that none can have or keep except
-those of fairy blood and race. Come along with me, then, to the
-old fort of Lipenshaw, for there it lies. But make haste, for when
-the last red glow of the sun vanishes the gold will disappear also,
-and you will never find it again.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come off, then,” said the boy, and he carried the Leprehaun
-into the turf cart, and drove off. And in a second they
-were at the old fort, and went in through a door made in the
-stone wall.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">57</span></p>
-
-<p>“Now, look round,” said the Leprehaun; and the boy saw the
-whole ground covered with gold pieces, and there were vessels of
-silver lying about in such plenty that all the riches of all the
-world seemed gathered there.</p>
-
-<p>“Now take what you want,” said the Leprehaun, “but
-hasten, for if that door shuts you will never leave this place as
-long as you live.”</p>
-
-<p>So the boy gathered up his arms full of gold and silver, and
-flung them into the cart; and was on his way back for more when
-the door shut with a clap like thunder, and all the place became
-dark as night. And he saw no more of the Leprehaun, and had
-not time even to thank him.</p>
-
-<p>So he thought it best to drive home at once with his treasure,
-and when he arrived and was all alone by himself he counted his
-riches, and all the bright yellow gold pieces, enough for a king’s
-ransom.</p>
-
-<p>And he was very wise and told no one; but went off next day
-to Dublin and put all his treasures into the bank, and found that
-he was now indeed as rich as a lord.</p>
-
-<p>So he ordered a fine house to be built with spacious gardens,
-and he had servants and carriages and books to his heart’s content.
-And he gathered all the wise men round him to give him
-the learning of a gentleman; and he became a great and powerful
-man in the country, where his memory is still held in high
-honour, and his descendants are living to this day rich and prosperous;
-for their wealth has never decreased though they have ever
-given largely to the poor, and are noted above all things for the
-friendly heart and the liberal hand.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>But the Leprehauns can be bitterly malicious if they are
-offended, and one should be very cautious in dealing with them,
-and always treat them with great civility, or they will take revenge
-and never reveal the secret of the hidden gold.</p>
-
-<p>One day a young lad was out in the fields at work when he saw
-a little fellow, not the height of his hand, mending shoes under a
-dock leaf. And he went over, never taking his eyes off him for
-fear he would vanish away; and when he got quite close he
-made a grab at the creature, and lifted him up and put him in
-his pocket.</p>
-
-<p>Then he ran away home as fast as he could, and when he had
-the Leprehaun safe in the house, he tied him by an iron chain to
-the hob.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, tell me,” he said, “where am I to find a pot of gold?
-Let me know the place or I’ll punish you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know of no pot of gold,” said the Leprehaun;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">58</span> “but let me go
-that I may finish mending the shoes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I’ll make you tell me,” said the lad.</p>
-
-<p>And with that he made down a great fire, and put the little
-fellow on it and scorched him.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, take me off, take me off!” cried the Leprehaun, “and I’ll
-tell you. Just there, under the dock leaf, where you found me,
-there is a pot of gold. Go; dig and find.”</p>
-
-<p>So the lad was delighted, and ran to the door; but it so happened
-that his mother was just then coming in with the pail of
-fresh milk, and in his haste he knocked the pail out of her hand,
-and all the milk was spilled on the floor.</p>
-
-<p>Then, when the mother saw the Leprehaun, she grew very angry
-and beat him. “Go away, you little wretch!” she cried. “You
-have overlooked the milk and brought ill-luck.” And she kicked
-him out of the house.</p>
-
-<p>But the lad ran off to find the dock leaf, though he came
-back very sorrowful in the evening, for he had dug and dug
-nearly down to the middle of the earth; but no pot of gold was
-to be seen.</p>
-
-<p>That same night the husband was coming home from his work,
-and as he passed the old fort he heard voices and laughter, and one
-said—</p>
-
-<p>“They are looking for a pot of gold; but they little know that
-a crock of gold is lying down in the bottom of the old quarry, hid
-under the stones close by the garden wall. But whoever gets it
-must go of a dark night at twelve o’clock, and beware of bringing
-his wife with him.”</p>
-
-<p>So the man hurried home and told his wife he would go that
-very night, for it was black dark, and she must stay at home and
-watch for him, and not stir from the house till he came back.
-Then he went out into the dark night alone.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” thought the wife, when he was gone, “if I could only
-get to the quarry before him I would have the pot of gold all to
-myself; while if he gets it I shall have nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>And with that she went out and ran like the wind until she
-reached the quarry, and than she began to creep down very
-quietly in the black dark. But a great stone was in her path, and
-she stumbled over it, and fell down and down till she reached
-the bottom, and there she lay groaning, for her leg was broken by
-the fall.</p>
-
-<p>Just then her husband came to the edge of the quarry and
-began to descend. But when he heard the groans he was
-frightened.</p>
-
-<p>“Cross of Christ about us!” he exclaimed; “what is that down
-below? Is it evil, or is it good?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, come down, come down and help me!” cried the woman.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">59</span>
-“It’s your wife is here, and my leg is broken, and I’ll die if you
-don’t help me.”</p>
-
-<p>“And is this my pot of gold?” exclaimed the poor man.
-“Only my wife with a broken leg lying at the bottom of the
-quarry.”</p>
-
-<p>And he was at his wits’ end to know what to do, for the night
-was so dark he could not see a hand before him. So he roused up
-a neighbour, and between them they dragged up the poor woman
-and carried her home, and laid her on the bed half dead from
-fright, and it was many a day before she was able to get about as
-usual; indeed she limped all her life long, so that the people said
-the curse of the Leprehaun was on her.</p>
-
-<p>But as to the pot of gold, from that day to this not one of
-the family, father or son, or any belonging to them, ever set
-eyes on it. However, the little Leprehaun still sits under the
-dock leaf of the hedge and laughs at them as he mends the
-shoes with his little hammer—tick tack, tick tack—but they
-are afraid to touch him, for now they know he can take his
-revenge.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="LEGENDS_OF_THE_WESTERN_ISLANDS">LEGENDS OF THE WESTERN ISLANDS.</h3>
-
-
-<p>In the islands off the West Coast of Ireland the inhabitants are
-still very primitive in their habits, and cling to their old superstitions
-with a fanatical fervour that makes it dangerous for any
-one to transgress or disregard the old customs, usages, and
-prejudices of the islanders.</p>
-
-<p>Curses heavy and deep would fall on the head of the unbelieving
-stranger who dared to laugh or mock at the old traditions of
-the ancient pagan creed, whose dogmas are still regarded with a
-mysterious awe and dread, and held sacred as a revelation from
-heaven.</p>
-
-<p>The chief islands are Aran and Innismore, the latter about
-nine miles long. The cattle live on the fine grass of the rocks,
-and turf is brought from the mainland. The views are magnificent
-of sea and mountain, and the islands contain a greater number of
-pagan and early Christian monuments than could be found in the
-same area in any other part of Europe.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the <i>Duns</i> or forts include several acres. The walls are
-cyclopean, about sixteen feet thick and from eighteen to twenty
-feet high, with steps inside leading to the top. Amongst the
-monuments are cromlechs, tumuli, and pillar stones, those earliest
-memorials set up by humanity. The Irish call these huge stones
-<i>Bothal</i>, or House of God, as the Hebrews called them Bethel, or
-God’s house.</p>
-
-<p>Dun Ængus, the greatest barbaric monument of the kind in
-existence, stands on a cliff three hundred feet above the sea. It<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">60</span>
-is a hundred and forty-two feet in diameter, and has two cyclopean
-walls fifteen feet thick and eighteen high. The sea front
-measures a thousand feet, and several acres are included within
-the outer wall. The roof of the dun is formed of large flag-stones,
-and the doorway slopes, after the Egyptian fashion, up to three
-feet in width at the top. A causeway of sharp, upright stones
-jammed into the ground leads to the entrance.</p>
-
-<p>This fort was the great and last stronghold of the Firbolg race,
-and they long held it as a refuge against the <i>Tuatha-de-Danann</i>
-invaders, who at that time conquered and took possession of
-Ireland.</p>
-
-<p>All the islands were originally peopled by the Firbolg race
-many centuries before the Christian era, and the Irish language,
-as still spoken by the people, is the purest and most ancient of
-all the dialects of Erin. Afterwards so many Christian saints
-took up their abode there that the largest of the islands was
-called <i>Ara-na-naomh</i> (Aran of the Saints), and numerous remains
-of churches, cells, crosses and stone-roofed oratories, with the
-ruins of a round tower, testify to the long habitation of the
-islands by these holy men.</p>
-
-<p>There is an old wooden idol on one of the Achil islands called
-Father Molosh—probably a corruption of Moloch. In former
-times offerings and sacrifices were made to it, and it was esteemed
-as the guardian or god of the sacred fire, and held in great reverence,
-though but a rude semblance of a human head. Many
-miracles also were performed by the tooth of St. Patrick, which
-fell from the saint’s mouth one day when he was teaching the
-alphabet to the new converts. And a shrine was afterwards
-made for the tooth that was held in the greatest honour by the
-kings, chiefs, and people of Ireland.</p>
-
-<p>The stupendous barbaric monuments of the islands, according
-to Irish antiquarians, offer the best exposition of early military
-architecture at present known, and are only equalled by some of
-those in Greece. There are also many sacred wells, and the
-whole region is haunted by strange, wild superstitions of fairies
-and demons and witches; legends filled with a weird and mystic
-poetry that thrill the soul like a strain of music from spirit voices
-coming to us from the far-off elder world. The following pathetic
-tale is a good specimen of these ancient island legends:—</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_BRIDES_DEATH-SONG">THE BRIDE’S DEATH-SONG.</h3>
-
-
-<p>On a lone island by the West Coast there dwelt an old fisherman
-and his daughter, and the man had power over the water spirits,
-and he taught his daughter the charms that bind them to obey.</p>
-
-<p>One day a boat was driven on the shore, and in it was a young<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">61</span>
-handsome gentleman, half dead from the cold and the wet. The
-old fisherman brought him home and revived him, and Eileen the
-daughter nursed and watched him. Naturally the two young
-people soon fell in love, and the gentleman told the girl he had a
-beautiful house on the mainland ready for her, with plenty of
-everything she could desire—silks to wear and gold to spend. So
-they were betrothed, and the wedding day was fixed. But
-Dermot, the lover, said he must first cross to the mainland and
-bring back his friends and relations to the wedding, as many
-as the boat would hold.</p>
-
-<p>Eileen wept and prayed him not to leave, or at least to take
-her to steer the boat, for she knew there was danger coming, and
-she alone could have power over the evil spirits and over the
-waves and the winds. But she dared not tell the secret of the
-spell to Dermot or it would fail, and the charm be useless for ever
-after.</p>
-
-<p>Dermot, however, only laughed at her fears, for the day was
-bright and clear, and he scorned all thought of danger. So he
-put off from the shore, and reached the mainland safely, and
-filled the boat with his friends to return to the island for the
-wedding. All went well till they were within sight of the island,
-when suddenly a fierce gust of wind drove the boat on a rock, and
-it was upset, and all who were in it perished.</p>
-
-<p>Eileen heard the cry of the drowning men as she stood watching
-on the beach, but could give no help. And she was sore grieved
-for her lover, and sang a funeral wail for him in Irish, which
-is still preserved by the people. Then she lay down and died,
-and the old man, her father, disappeared. And from that day no
-one has ever ventured to live on the island, for it is haunted
-by the spirit of Eileen. And the mournful music of her wail
-is still heard in the nights when the winds are strong and the
-waves beat upon the rocks where the drowned men lay dead.</p>
-
-<p>The words of the song are very plaintive and simple, and may
-be translated literally—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“I a virgin and a widow mourn for my lover.</div>
- <div class="verse">Never more will he kiss me on the lips;</div>
- <div class="verse">The cold wave is his bridal bed,</div>
- <div class="verse">The cold wave is his wedding shroud.</div>
- <div class="verse">O love, my love, had you brought me in the boat</div>
- <div class="verse">My spirit and my spells would have saved from harm.</div>
- <div class="verse">For my power was strong over waves and wind,</div>
- <div class="verse">And the spirits of evil would have feared me.</div>
- <div class="verse">O love, my love, I go to meet you in heaven.</div>
- <div class="verse">I will ask God to let me see your face.</div>
- <div class="verse">If the fair angels give me back my lover,</div>
- <div class="verse">I will not envy the Almighty on His throne.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">62</span></p>
-
-
-
-<h3 id="THE_CHILDS_DREAM">THE CHILD’S DREAM.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The island of Innis-Sark (Shark Island) was a holy and peaceful
-place in old times; and so quiet that the pigeons used to come
-and build in a great cave by the sea, and no one disturbed them.
-And the holy saints of God had a monastery there, to which
-many people resorted from the mainland, for the prayers of
-the monks were powerful against sickness or evil, or the malice of
-an enemy.</p>
-
-<p>Amongst others, there came a great and noble prince out of
-Munster, with his wife and children and their nurse; and they
-were so pleased with the island that they remained a year or
-more; for the prince loved fishing, and often brought his wife
-along with him.</p>
-
-<p>One day, while they were both away, the eldest child, a
-beautiful boy of ten years old, begged his nurse to let him go and
-see the pigeons’ cave, but she refused.</p>
-
-<p>“Your father would be angry,” she cried, “if you went
-without leave. Wait till he comes home, and see if he will allow
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>So when the prince returned, the boy told him how he longed
-to see the cave, and the father promised to bring him next day.</p>
-
-<p>The morning was beautiful and the wind fair when they set
-off. But the child soon fell asleep in the boat, and never
-wakened all the time his father was fishing. The sleep, however,
-was troubled, and many a time he started and cried aloud. So
-the prince thought it better to turn the boat and land, and then
-the boy awoke.</p>
-
-<p>After dinner the father called for the child. “Tell me now,”
-he said, “why was your sleep troubled, so that you cried out
-bitterly in your dream.”</p>
-
-<p>“I dreamed,” said the boy, “that I stood upon a high rock,
-and at the bottom flowed the sea, but the waves made no noise;
-and as I looked down I saw fields and trees and beautiful flowers
-and bright birds in the branches, and I longed to go down and
-pluck the flowers. Then I heard a voice, saying, ‘Blessed are
-the souls that come here, for this is heaven.’</p>
-
-<p>“And in an instant I thought I was in the midst of the
-meadows amongst the birds and the flowers; and a lovely lady,
-bright as an angel, came up to me, and said, ‘What brings you
-here, dear child; for none but the dead come here.’</p>
-
-<p>“Then she left me, and I wept for her going; when suddenly
-all the sky grew black, and a great troop of wild wolves came
-round me, howling and opening their mouths wide as if to devour
-me. And I screamed, and tried to run, but I could not move, and
-the wolves came closer, and I fell down like one dead with fright,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">63</span>
-when, just then, the beautiful lady came again, and took my
-hand and kissed me.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Fear not,’ she said, ‘take these flowers, they come from
-heaven. And I will bring you to the meadow where they grow.’</p>
-
-<p>“And she lifted me up into the air, but I know nothing more;
-for then the boat stopped and you lifted me on shore, but my
-beautiful flowers must have fallen from my hands, for I never
-saw them more. And this is all my dream; but I would like to
-have my flowers again, for the lady told me they had the secret
-that would bring me to heaven.”</p>
-
-<p>The prince thought no more of the child’s dream, but went off
-to fish next day as usual, leaving the boy in the care of his nurse.
-And again the child begged and prayed her so earnestly to bring
-him to the pigeons’ cave, that at last she consented; but told him
-he must not go a step by himself, and she would bring two of the
-boys of the island to take care of him.</p>
-
-<p>So they set off, the child and his little sister with the nurse.
-And the boy gathered wild flowers for his sister, and ran down to
-the edge of the cave where the cormorants were swimming; but
-there was no danger, for the two young islanders were minding
-him.</p>
-
-<p>So the nurse was content, and being weary she fell asleep.
-And the little sister lay down beside her, and fell asleep likewise.</p>
-
-<p>Then the boy called to his companions, the two young islanders,
-and told them he must catch the cormorants. So away they ran,
-down the path to the sea, hand in hand, and laughing as they
-went. Just then a piece of rock loosened and fell beside them,
-and trying to avoid it they slipped over the edge of the narrow
-path down a steep place, where there was nothing to hold on by
-except a large bush, in the middle of the way. They got hold of
-this, and thought they were now quite safe, but the bush was not
-strong enough to bear their weight, and it was torn up by the
-roots. And all three fell straight down into the sea and were
-drowned.</p>
-
-<p>Now, at the sound of the great cry that came up from the
-waves, the nurse awoke, but saw no one. Then she woke up the
-little sister. “It is late,” she cried, “they must have gone home.
-We have slept too long, it is already evening; let us hasten and
-overtake them, before the prince is back from the fishing.”</p>
-
-<p>But when they reached home the prince stood in the doorway.
-And he was very pale, and weeping.</p>
-
-<p>“Where is my brother?” cried the little girl.</p>
-
-<p>“You will never see your brother more,” answered the prince.
-And from that day he never went fishing any more, but grew
-silent and thoughtful, and was never seen to smile. And in a
-short time he and his family quitted the island, never to return.</p>
-
-<p>But the nurse remained. And some say she became a saint, for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">64</span>
-she was always seen praying and weeping by the entrance to the
-great sea cave. And one day, when they came to look for her, she
-lay dead on the rocks. And in her hand she held some beautiful
-strange flowers freshly gathered, with the dew on them. And no
-one knew how the flowers came into her dead hand. Only some
-fishermen told the story of how the night before they had seen a
-bright fairy child seated on the rocks singing; and he had a red
-sash tied round his waist, and a golden circlet binding his long
-yellow hair. And they all knew that he was the prince’s son,
-who had been drowned in that spot just a twelvemonth before.
-And the people believe that he had brought the flowers from the
-spirit-land to the woman, and given them to her as a death sign,
-and a blessed token from God that her soul would be taken to
-heaven.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_FAIRY_CHILD">THE FAIRY CHILD.</h3>
-
-
-<p>An ancient woman living at Innis-Sark said that in her youth she
-knew a young woman who had been married for five years, but
-had no children. And her husband was a rough, rude fellow,
-and used to taunt her and beat her often, because she was childless.
-But in the course of time it came to pass that a man-child
-was born to her; and he was beautiful to look on as an angel from
-heaven. And the father was so proud of the child that he often
-stayed at home to rock the cradle, and help his wife at the work.</p>
-
-<p>One day, however, as he rocked the cradle, the child looked up
-suddenly at him, and lo! there was a great beard on its face.
-Then the father cried out to his wife—</p>
-
-<p>“This is not a child, but a demon! You have put an evil spell
-on him.”</p>
-
-<p>And he struck her and beat her worse than ever he had done in
-his life before, so that she screamed aloud for help. On this the
-place grew quite dark, and thunder rolled over their heads, and
-the door flew wide open with a great crash, and in walked two
-strange women, with red caps on their heads and stout sticks in
-their hands. And they rushed at the man, and one held his arms
-while the other beat him till he was nearly dead.</p>
-
-<p>“We are the avengers,” they said; “look on us and tremble;
-for if you ever beat your wife again, we will come and kill you.
-Kneel down now, and ask her pardon.”</p>
-
-<p>And when the poor wretch did so, all trembling with fright,
-they vanished away.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said the man, when they were gone, “this house is no
-fit place for me. I’ll leave it for ever.”</p>
-
-<p>So he went his way, and troubled his wife no more.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">65</span></p>
-
-<p>Then the child sat up in the cradle.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, mother,” says he, “since that man has gone, I’ll tell you
-what you are to do. There is a holy well near this that you have
-never seen, but you will know it by the bunch of green rushes that
-grows over the mouth. Go there and stoop down and cry out
-aloud three times, and an old woman will come up, and whatever
-you want she will give it to you. Only tell no one of the well or
-of the woman, or evil will come of it.”</p>
-
-<p>So the mother promised, and went to the well, and cried out
-three times; and an old woman came up, and said—</p>
-
-<p>“Woman, why dost thou call me?”</p>
-
-<p>And the poor mother was afraid, and answered all trembling—</p>
-
-<p>“The child sent me, and I pray thee to do me good, and not
-evil.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come down, then, with me into the well,” said the woman,
-“and have no fear.”</p>
-
-<p>So the mother held out her hand, and the other drew her down
-a flight of stone steps, and then they came to a massive closed
-door, and the old woman unlocked it and bade her enter. But the
-mother was afraid, and wept.</p>
-
-<p>“Enter,” said the other, “and fear nothing. For this is the
-gate of the king’s palace, and you will see the queen of the fairies
-herself, for it is her son you are nursing; and the king, her
-husband, is with her on his golden throne. And have no fear,
-only ask no questions, and do as they order.”</p>
-
-<p>Then they entered into a beautiful hall, and the floor was of
-marble, and the walls were of solid gold, and a great light shone over
-everything, so that the eyes could hardly see for the light. Then
-they passed on into another room, and at the end of it, on a golden
-throne, sat the king of the fairies. He was very handsome, and
-beside him sat his queen, fair and beautiful to look upon, all clad
-in silver.</p>
-
-<p>“This, madam, is the nurse of your son, the young prince,” said
-the old woman.</p>
-
-<p>The queen smiled, and bade the nurse to sit down, and asked her
-how she came to know of the place.</p>
-
-<p>“My son it is who told her,” said the king, looking very angry.</p>
-
-<p>But the queen soothed him, and turning to one of her ladies,
-said—</p>
-
-<p>“Bring here the other child.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the lady brought in an infant, and placed him in the arms
-of the mother.</p>
-
-<p>“Take him,” said the queen,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">66</span> “he is your own child, that we
-carried away, for he was so beautiful; and the boy you have at
-home is mine, a little elfish imp. Still, I want him back, and I
-have sent a man to bring him here; and you may take your own
-lovely child home in safety, for the fairy blessings are on him for
-good. And the man that beat you was not your husband at all,
-but our messenger, that we sent to change the children. So now
-go back, and you will find your own true husband at home in your
-own place, watching and waiting for you by day and by night.”</p>
-
-<p>With that the door opened, and the man who had beaten her
-came in; and the mother trembled and was afraid. But the man
-laughed, and told her not to fear, but to eat what was set before
-her, and then to go in peace.</p>
-
-<p>So they brought her to another hall, where was a table covered
-with golden dishes and beautiful flowers, and red wine in crystal
-cups.</p>
-
-<p>“Eat,” they said; “this feast has been prepared for you. As
-to us, we cannot touch it, for the food has been sprinkled with
-salt.”</p>
-
-<p>So she ate, and drank of the red wine, and never in all her life
-were so many things set before her that were lovely and good.
-And, as was right and proper, after dinner was over, she stood up,
-and folded her hands together to give God thanks. But they
-stopped her, and drew her down.</p>
-
-<p>“Hush!” they said, “that name is not to be named here.”</p>
-
-<p>There was an angry murmur in the hall. But just then beautiful
-music was heard, and singing like the singing of priests, and the
-poor mother was so enchanted that she fell on her face as one
-dead. And when she came to herself it was noonday, and she was
-standing by the door of her own house. And her husband came
-out and took her by the hand, and brought her in. And there was
-her child, more beautiful than ever, as handsome as a young
-prince.</p>
-
-<p>“Where have you been all this while?” asked the husband.</p>
-
-<p>“It is only an hour since I went away, to look for my child,
-that the fairies stole from me,” she answered.</p>
-
-<p>“An hour!” said the husband; “you have been three years
-away with your child! And when you were gone, a poor sickly
-thing was laid in the cradle—not as big as a mushroom, and I
-knew well it was a fairy changeling. But it so happened that one
-day, a tailor came by, and stopped to rest; and when he looked
-hard at the child, the ugly misshapen thing sat up quite straight
-in the cradle, and called out—</p>
-
-<p>“‘Come now, what are you looking at? Give me four straws
-to play with.’</p>
-
-<p>“And the tailor gave him the straws. And when he got them,
-the child played and played such sweet music on them as if they
-were pipes, that all the chairs and tables began to dance; and
-when he grew tired, he fell back in the cradle and dropped asleep.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Now,’ said the tailor, ‘that child is not right; but I’ll tell
-you what to do. Make down a great fire to begin with.’</p>
-
-<p>“So we made the fire. Then the tailor shut the door, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">67</span>
-lifted the unlucky little wretch out of the cradle, and sat it on the
-fire. And no sooner had the flames caught it, than it shrieked
-aloud and flew up the chimney and disappeared. And when
-everything was burned that belonged to it, I knew you would
-come back to me with our own fine boy. And now let us name
-the name of God, and make the sign of the Cross over him, and
-ill luck will never again fall on our house—no more for ever.”</p>
-
-<p>So the man and his wife lived happily from that day forth, and
-the child grew up and prospered, and was beautiful to look at and
-happy in his life; for the fairy blessings were on him of health,
-wealth, and prosperity, even as the queen of the fairies had
-promised to the mother.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_DOOM">THE DOOM.</h3>
-
-
-<p>There was a young man of Innismore, named James Lynan, noted
-through all the island for his beauty and strength. Never a one
-could beat him at hunting or wrestling, and he was, besides, the
-best dancer in the whole townland. But he was bold and reckless,
-and ever foremost in all the wild wicked doings of the young
-fellows of the place.</p>
-
-<p>One day he happened to be in chapel after one of these mad
-freaks, and the priest denounced him by name from the altar.</p>
-
-<p>“James Lynan,” he said, “remember my words; you will come
-to an ill end. The vengeance of God will fall on you for your
-wicked life; and by the power that is in me I denounce you as
-an evil liver and a limb of Satan, and accursed of all good
-men.”</p>
-
-<p>The young man turned pale, and fell on his knees before all the
-people, crying out bitterly, “Have mercy, have mercy; I repent,
-I repent,” and he wept like a woman.</p>
-
-<p>“Go now in peace,” said the priest, “and strive to lead a new
-life, and I’ll pray to God to save your soul.”</p>
-
-<p>From that day forth James Lynan changed his ways. He gave
-up drinking, and never a drop of spirits crossed his lips. And he
-began to attend to his farm and his business, in place of being at
-all the mad revels and dances and fairs and wakes in the island.
-Soon after he married a nice girl, a rich farmer’s daughter, from
-the mainland, and they had four fine children, and all things prospered
-with him.</p>
-
-<p>But the priest’s words never left his mind, and he would suddenly
-turn pale and a shivering would come over him when the
-memory of the curse came upon him. Still he prospered, and his
-life was a model of sobriety and order.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">68</span></p>
-
-<p>One day he and his wife and their children were asked to the
-wedding of a friend about four miles off; and James Lynan rode
-to the place, the family going on their own car. At the wedding
-he was the life of the party as he always was; but never a drop
-of drink touched his lips. When evening came on, the family set
-out for the return home just as they had set out; the wife and
-children on the car, James Lynan riding his own horse. But
-when the wife arrived at home, she found her husband’s horse
-standing at the gate riderless and quite still. They thought he
-might have fallen in a faint, and went back to search; when he
-was found down in a hollow not five perches from his own gate,
-lying quite insensible and his features distorted frightfully, as if
-seized while looking on some horrible vision.</p>
-
-<p>They carried him in, but he never spoke. A doctor was sent
-for, who opened a vein, but no blood came. There he lay like a
-log, speechless as one dead. Amongst the crowd that gathered
-round was an old woman accounted very wise by the people.</p>
-
-<p>“Send for the fairy doctor,” she said; “he is struck.”</p>
-
-<p>So they sent off a boy on the fastest horse for the fairy man.
-He could not come himself, but he filled a bottle with a potion.
-Then he said—</p>
-
-<p>“Ride for your life; give him some of this to drink and sprinkle
-his face and hands also with it. But take care as you pass the
-lone bush on the round hill near the hollow, for the fairies are
-there and will hinder you if they can, and strive to break the
-bottle.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the fairy man blew into the mouth and the eyes and the
-nostrils of the horse, and turned him round three times on the
-road and rubbed the dust off his hoofs.</p>
-
-<p>“Now go,” he said to the boy; “go and never look behind you,
-no matter what you hear.”</p>
-
-<p>So the boy went like the wind, having placed the bottle safely
-in his pocket; and when he came to the lone bush the horse started
-and gave such a jump that the bottle nearly fell, but the boy
-caught it in time and held it safe and rode on. Then he heard a
-cluttering of feet behind him, as of men in pursuit; but he never
-turned or looked, for he knew it was the fairies who were after
-him. And shrill voices cried to him, “Ride fast, ride fast, for the
-spell is cast!” Still he never turned round, but rode on, and never
-let go his hold of the fairy draught till he stopped at his master’s
-door, and handed the potion to the poor sorrowing wife. And she
-gave of it to the sick man to drink, and sprinkled his face and
-hands, after which he fell into a deep sleep. But when he woke
-up, though he knew every one around him, the power of speech
-was gone from him; and from that time to his death, which
-happened soon after, he never uttered word more.</p>
-
-<p>So the doom of the priest was fulfilled—evil was his youth and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">69</span>
-evil was his fate, and sorrow and death found him at last, for the
-doom of the priest is as the word of God.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_CLEARING_FROM_GUILT">THE CLEARING FROM GUILT.</h3>
-
-
-<p>To prove innocence of a crime a certain ancient form is gone
-through, which the people look on with great awe, and call it
-emphatically—“The Clearing.” It is a fearful ordeal, and instances
-are known of men who have died of fear and trembling
-from having passed through the terrors of the trial, even if innocent.
-And it is equally terrible for the accuser as well as the
-accused.</p>
-
-<p>On a certain day fixed for the ordeal the accused goes to the
-churchyard and carries away a skull. Then, wrapped in a white
-sheet, and bearing the skull in his hand, he proceeds to the house
-of the accuser, where a great crowd has assembled; for the news
-of “A Clearing” spreads like wildfire, and all the people gather
-together as witnesses of the ceremony. There, before the house
-of his accuser, he kneels down on his bare knees, makes the sign
-of the cross on his face, kisses the skull, and prays for some time
-in silence; the people also wait in silence, filled with awe and
-dread, not knowing what the result may be. Then the accuser,
-pale and trembling, comes forward and stands beside the kneeling
-man; and with uplifted hand adjures him to speak the truth. On
-which the accused, still kneeling and holding the skull in his hand,
-utters the most fearful imprecation known in the Irish language;
-almost as terrible as that curse of the Druids, which is so awful
-that it never yet was put into English words. The accused prays
-that if he fail to speak the truth all the sins of the man whose
-skull he holds may be laid upon his soul, and all the sins of his
-forefathers back to Adam, and all the punishment due to them for
-the evil of their lives, and all their weakness and sorrow both of
-body and soul be laid on him both in this life and in the life to
-come for evermore. But if the accuser has accused falsely and
-out of malice, then may all the evil rest on his head through this
-life for ever, and may his soul perish everlastingly.</p>
-
-<p>It would be impossible to describe adequately the awe with
-which the assembled people listen to these terrible words, and the
-dreadful silence of the crowd as they wait to see the result. If
-nothing happens the man rises from his knees after an interval,
-and is pronounced innocent by the judgment of the people, and
-no word is ever again uttered against him, nor is he shunned or
-slighted by the neighbours. But the accuser is looked on with fear
-and dislike; he is considered unlucky, and seeing that his life is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">70</span>
-often made so miserable by the coldness and suspicion of the
-people, many would rather suffer wrong than force the accused
-person to undergo so terrible a trial as “The Clearing.”</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_HOLY_WELL_AND_THE_MURDERER">THE HOLY WELL AND THE MURDERER.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The Well of St. Brendan, in High Island, has great virtue, but
-the miraculous power of the water is lost should a thief or a murderer
-drink of it. Now a cruel murder had been committed on
-the mainland, and the priest noticed the people that if the murderer
-tried to conceal himself in the island no one should harbour
-him or give him food or drink. It happened at that time there
-was a woman of the island afflicted with pains in her limbs, and
-she went to the Holy Well to make the stations and say the
-prayers, and so get cured. But many a day passed and still she
-got no better, though she went round and round the well on her
-knees, and recited the paters and aves as she was told.</p>
-
-<p>Then she went to the priest and told him the story, and he perceived
-at once that the well had been polluted by the touch of
-some one who had committed a crime. So he bade the woman
-bring him a bottle of the water, and she did as he desired. Then
-having received the water, he poured it out, and breathed on it
-three times in the name of the Trinity; when, lo! the water
-turned into blood.</p>
-
-<p>“Here is the evil,” cried the priest. “A murderer has washed
-his hands in the well.”</p>
-
-<p>He then ordered her to make a fire in a circle, which she did,
-and he pronounced some words over it; and a mist rose up with
-the form of a spirit in the midst, holding a man by the arm.</p>
-
-<p>“Behold the murderer,” said the spirit; and when the woman
-looked on him she shrieked—</p>
-
-<p>“It is my son! my son!” and she fainted.</p>
-
-<p>For the year before her son had gone to live on the mainland,
-and there, unknown to his mother, he had committed the
-dreadful murder for which the vengeance of God lay on him.
-And when she came to herself the spirit of the murderer was still
-there.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, my Lord! let him go, let him go!” she cried.</p>
-
-<p>“You wretched woman!” answered the priest. “How dare
-you interpose between God and vengeance. This is but the
-shadowy form of your son; but before night he shall be in the
-hands of the law, and justice shall be done.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the forms and the mist melted away, and the woman departed
-in tears, and not long after she died of a broken heart.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">71</span>
-But the well from that time regained all its miraculous powers,
-and the fame of its cures spread far and wide through all the
-islands.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3><a name="LEGENDS_OF_INNIS-SARK" id="LEGENDS_OF_INNIS-SARK">LEGENDS OF INNIS-SARK.</a><br />
-
-<small>A WOMAN’S CURSE</small>.</h3>
-
-
-<p>There was a woman of the Island of Innis-Sark who was
-determined to take revenge on a man because he called her by an
-evil name. So she went to the Saints’ Well, and, kneeling down,
-she took some of the water and poured it on the ground in the
-name of the devil, saying, “So may my enemy be poured out like
-water, and lie helpless on the earth!” Then she went round the
-well backwards on her knees, and at each station she cast a
-stone in the name of the devil, and said, “So may the curse fall
-on him, and the power of the devil crush him!” After this she
-returned home.</p>
-
-<p>Now the next morning there was a stiff breeze, and some of the
-men were afraid to go out fishing; but others said they would
-try their luck, and amongst them was the man on whom the curse
-rested. But they had not gone far from land when the boat was
-capsized by a heavy squall. The fishermen, however, saved themselves
-by swimming to shore; all except the man on whom the
-curse rested, and he sank like lead to the bottom, and the waves
-covered him, and he was drowned.</p>
-
-<p>When the woman heard of the fate that had befallen her
-enemy, she ran to the beach and clapped her hands with joy and
-exulted. And as she stood there laughing with strange and horrid
-mirth, the corpse of the man she had cursed slowly rose up from
-the sea, and came drifting towards her till it lay almost at her
-very feet. On this she stooped down to feast her eyes on the
-sight of the dead man, when suddenly a storm of wind screamed
-past her, and hurled her from the point of rock where she stood.
-And when the people ran in all haste to help, no trace of her
-body could be seen. The woman and the corpse of the man she
-had cursed disappeared together under the waves, and were never
-seen again from that time forth.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Another woman in Shark Island was considered to have an evil
-influence over any one she disliked. One day a man called her a
-devil’s hag in his anger. The woman answered nothing, but that
-night she went to a Holy Well near the place, and kneeling down,
-invoked a curse in the name of the devil. Then she went round<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">72</span>
-the well three times backward on her knees, and each time threw
-a stone in the name of the devil, saying, “So may the curse fall on
-his head!” Then she returned home, and told the people to wait
-for three days, and they would see her words had power. During
-this time the man was afraid to go out in his boat because of the
-curse. But on the third day as he was walking by the cliff he
-fell and broke his leg. And then every one knew that the woman
-had the witch-secret of evil, and she was held in much fear.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The most effective way of neutralizing the evil influence is to
-spit on the object and say, “God bless it!” But another must do
-it at your request, and sometimes people refuse, fearing to anger
-the fairies by interfering with their work, whether for good or
-evil. But the islanders have such faith in the anointing with spittle
-that they will often solicit a passing stranger to spit on the afflicted
-person. Indeed, a stranger is considered to have more power than
-a neighbour.</p>
-
-<p>A woman who kept a small day-school had reason to think that
-her son, a fine lad of twelve years old, was bewitched, for when
-he had eaten up the whole dish of stirabout at supper, he asked
-for more. And she said—</p>
-
-<p>“My son, you had enough for three men. Go to your bed and
-sleep.”</p>
-
-<p>But next morning he was worse and more ravenous, for he ate
-up all the bread that his mother had made for the scholars just as
-she took it from the oven, and not a single cake was left. Then
-she knew that witchcraft was on the boy, and she stood by the
-door to watch for a stranger. At last one came by, and she cried
-to him—</p>
-
-<p>“Come in, come in, for the love of God, and spit on the face of
-my son!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why should I spit on your son, O woman?” he answered;
-and he fled away, for he thought she was mad.</p>
-
-<p>Then she sent for the priest, and his reverence poured holy
-water over him, and laid his hands upon his head while he prayed.
-So, after a time, the power of the witchcraft was broken, and the
-boy was restored to his right mind.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The islanders believe also that angels are constantly present
-amongst them, and all blessed things—the rain, and the dew, and
-the green crops—come from their power; but the fairies often
-bring sickness, and will do malicious tricks, and lame a horse, or
-steal the milk and butter, if they have been offended or deprived
-of their rights.</p>
-
-<p>There are certain days on which it is not right to speak of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">73</span>
-fairies. These days are Wednesdays and Fridays, for then they are
-present though invisible, and can hear everything, and lay their
-plans as to what they will carry off. On Friday especially their
-power for evil is very strong, and misfortunes are dreaded in the
-household. Therefore, on that day the children and cattle are
-strictly watched; a lighted wisp of straw is turned round the
-baby’s head, and a quenched coal is set under the cradle and under
-the churn. And if the horses are restive in the stable, then the
-people know the fairies are riding on their backs. So they spit
-three times at the animal, when the fairies scamper off. This
-cure by the saliva is the most ancient of all superstitions, and the
-islanders still have the greatest faith in its mysterious power and
-efficacy.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>At Innisboffin the fairies hold a splendid court, with revelry
-and dancing, when the moon is full; and it is very dangerous for
-young girls to be out at that time, for they will assuredly be
-carried off. And if they once hear the fairy music or drink of the
-fairy wine, they will never be the same again—a fate is on them,
-and before the year is out they will either disappear or die.</p>
-
-<p>And the fairies are always on the watch for the handsome girls
-or children; for they look on mortals as of much higher race than
-themselves. And they are also glad to have the fine young men,
-the sons of mortal women, to assist them in their wars with each
-other; for there are two parties amongst the fairy spirits, one a
-gentle race that loves music and dancing, the other that has obtained
-power from the devil, and is always trying to work evil.</p>
-
-<p>A young man lay down to sleep one Friday evening in summer
-under a hay-rick, and the fairies must have carried him off as he
-slept; for when he woke he found himself in a great hall, where
-a number of little men were at work—some spinning, some making
-shoes, some making spears and arrow-heads out of fish-bones and
-elf-stones; but all busy laughing and singing with much glee and
-merriment, while the little pipers played the merriest tunes.</p>
-
-<p>Then an old man who sat in the corner came over, and looking
-very angry, told him he must not sit there idle; there were friends
-coming to dinner, and he must go down and help in the kitchen.
-So he drove the poor young fellow before him down into a great
-vaulted place, where a huge fire was burning, and a large pot was
-set over it.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said the old man, “prepare the dinner. There is the
-old hag we are going to eat.”</p>
-
-<p>And true enough, to his horror, on looking round, there was an
-old woman hung up by the arms, and an old man skinning her.</p>
-
-<p>“Now make haste and let the water boil,” said the old man;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">74</span>
-“don’t you see the pot on the fire, and I am nearly ready for you
-to begin. The company will soon be here, and there is no time
-to lose, for this old hag will take a good while to boil. Cut her
-up into little bits, and throw her into the pot.”</p>
-
-<p>However, the young fellow was so frightened that he fell down
-on the floor speechless, and could neither move hand nor foot.</p>
-
-<p>“Get up, you fool,” said another old man, who seemed to be
-the head over all; and he laughed at him. “Do your work and
-never mind; this does not hurt her a bit. When she was there
-above in the world she was a wicked miser, hard to the world,
-and cruel and bitter in her words and works; so now we have her
-here, and her soul will never rest in peace, because we shall cut up
-the body in little bits, and the soul will not be able to find it, but
-wander about in the dark to all eternity without a body.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the young man knew no more till he found himself in a
-beautiful hall, where a banquet was laid out; but, in place of the
-old hag, the table was covered with fruit, and chickens, and young
-turkeys, and butter, and cakes fresh from the oven, and crystal
-cups of bright red wine.</p>
-
-<p>“Now sit down and eat,” said the prince, who sat at the top on
-a throne, with a red sash round his waist, and a gold band on his
-head. “Sit down with this pleasant company and eat with us;
-you are welcome.”</p>
-
-<p>And there were many beautiful ladies seated round, and grand
-noblemen, with red caps and sashes; and they all smiled at him
-and bade him eat.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said the young man; “I cannot eat with you, for I see
-no priest here to bless the food. Let me go in peace.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at least till you taste our wine,” said the prince with a
-friendly smile.</p>
-
-<p>And one of the beautiful ladies rose up and filled a crystal cup
-with the bright red wine, and gave it him. And when he saw it,
-the sight of it tempted him, and he could not help himself, but
-drank it all off without stopping; for it seemed to him the most
-delicious draught he ever had in his whole life.</p>
-
-<p>But no sooner had he laid down the glass, than a noise like
-thunder shook the building, and all the lights went out; and he
-found himself alone in the dark night lying under the very same hay-rick
-where he had cast himself down to sleep, tired after his work.
-So he made his way home at last; but the taste of the fairy wine
-burned in his veins, and a fever was on him night and day for
-another draught; and he did no good, but pined away, seeking
-the fairy mansion, though he never found it any more. And so
-he died in his youth, a warning to all who eat of the fairy
-food, or drink of the fairy wine; for never more will they know
-peace or content, or be fit for their work, as in the days before the
-fairy spell was on them, which brings doom and death to all who
-fall under the fatal enchantment of its unholy power.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">75</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h3><a name="LEGENDS_OF_THE_DEAD_IN_THE" id="LEGENDS_OF_THE_DEAD_IN_THE">LEGENDS OF THE DEAD IN THE
-WESTERN ISLANDS.</a></h3>
-
-
-<p>When young people die, either men or women, who were remarkable
-for beauty, it is supposed that they are carried off by the
-fairies to the fairy mansions under the earth, where they live in
-splendid palaces and are wedded to fairy queens or princes. But
-sometimes, if their kindred greatly desire to see them, they are
-allowed to visit the earth, though no enchantment has yet been
-discovered powerful enough to compel them to remain or resume
-again the mortal life.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes when the fishermen are out they meet a strange boat
-filled with people; and when they look on them they know that
-they are the dead who have been carried off by the fairies with
-their wiles and enchantments to dwell in the fairy palaces.</p>
-
-<p>One day a man was out fishing, but caught nothing; and was
-just turning home in despair at his ill-luck when he suddenly saw
-a boat with three persons in it; and it seemed to him that they
-were his comrades, the very men who just a year before had been
-drowned in that spot, but whose bodies were never recovered, and
-he knew that he looked upon the dead. But the men were
-friendly, and called out to him—</p>
-
-<p>“Cast your line as we direct, and you will have luck.”</p>
-
-<p>So he cast his line as they bade him, and presently drew up a
-fine fish.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, cast again,” they said, “and keep beside us, and row to
-shore, but do not look on us.”</p>
-
-<p>So he did as directed and hauled up fish after fish till his boat
-was full, and then he drew it up to the landing-place.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” they said, “wait and see that no one is about before
-you land.”</p>
-
-<p>So the man looked up and down the shore, but saw no one;
-then he turned to land his fish, when, behold, the men and the
-second boat had vanished, and he saw them no more. However,
-he landed his fish with much joy and brought them all safely
-home, though the wise people said that if he had not turned away
-his head that time, but kept his eyes steadily on the men till he
-landed, the enchantment would have been broken that held them
-in fairy-land, and the dead would have been restored to the earthly
-life, and to their kindred in the island who mourned for them.</p>
-
-
-<h4><a id="THE_DEATH_SIGN"></a>THE DEATH SIGN.</h4>
-
-<p>A woman was out one day looking after her sheep in the valley,
-and coming by a little stream she sat down to rest, when suddenly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">76</span>
-she seemed to hear the sound of low music, and turning round,
-beheld at some distance a crowd of people dancing and making
-merry. And she grew afraid and turned her head away not to
-see them. Then close by her stood a young man, pale and strange
-looking, and she beheld him with fear.</p>
-
-<p>“Who are you?” she said at last; “and why do you stand
-beside me?”</p>
-
-<p>“You ought to know me,” he replied, “for I belong to this
-place; but make haste now and come away, or evil will befall
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>Then she stood up and was going away with him, when the
-crowd left off their dancing and ran towards them crying—</p>
-
-<p>“Come back; come back; come back!”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t stop; don’t listen,” said the young man, “but follow me.”</p>
-
-<p>Then they both began to run, and ran on until they reached a
-hillock.</p>
-
-<p>“Now we are safe,” said he; “they can’t harm us here.” And
-when they stopped he said to her again, “Look me in the face
-and say if you know me now?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” she answered, “you are a stranger to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Look again,” he said, “look me straight in the face and you
-will know me.”</p>
-
-<p>Then she looked, and knew instantly that he was a man who
-had been drowned the year before in the dark winter time, and
-the waves had never cast up his body on the shore. And she
-threw up her arms and cried aloud—</p>
-
-<p>“Have you news of my child? Have you seen her, my fair-haired
-girl, that was stolen from me this day seven years. Will
-she come back to me never no more?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have seen her,” said the man, “but she will never come
-back, never more, for she has eaten of the fairy food and must
-now stay with the spirits under the sea, for she belongs to them
-body and soul. But go home now, for it is late, and evil is near
-you; and perhaps you will meet her sooner than you think.”</p>
-
-<p>Then as the women turned her face homeward, the man disappeared
-and she saw him no more.</p>
-
-<p>When at last she reached the threshold of her house a fear and
-trembling came on her, and she called to her husband that some
-one stood in the doorway and she could not pass. And with that
-she fell down on the threshold on her face, but spake no word
-more. And when they lifted her up she was dead.</p>
-
-
-<h4><a id="KATHLEEN"></a>KATHLEEN.</h4>
-
-<p>A young girl from Innis-Sark had a lover, a fine young fellow,
-who met his death by an accident, to her great grief and sorrow.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">77</span></p>
-
-<p>One evening at sunset, as she sat by the roadside crying her
-eyes out, a beautiful lady came by all in white, and tapped her
-on the cheek.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t cry, Kathleen,” she said, “your lover is safe. Just take
-this ring of herbs and look through it and you will see him. He
-is with a grand company, and wears a golden circlet on his head
-and a scarlet sash round his waist.”</p>
-
-<p>So Kathleen took the ring of herbs and looked through it, and
-there indeed was her lover in the midst of a great company dancing
-on the hill; and he was very pale, but handsomer than ever,
-with the gold circlet round his head, as if they had made him a
-prince.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said the lady, “here is a larger ring of herbs. Take it,
-and whenever you want to see your lover, pluck a leaf from it and
-burn it; and a great smoke will arise, and you will fall into a
-trance; and in the trance your lover will carry you away to the
-fairy rath, and there you may dance all night with him on the
-greensward. But say no prayer, and make no sign of the cross
-while the smoke is rising, or your lover will disappear for
-ever.”</p>
-
-<p>From that time a great change came over Kathleen. She said
-no prayer, and cared for no priest, and never made the sign of the
-cross, but every night shut herself up in her room, and burned a
-leaf of the ring of herbs as she had been told; and when the
-smoke arose she fell into a deep sleep and knew no more. But in
-the morning she told her people that, though she seemed to be
-lying in her bed, she was far away with the fairies on the hill
-dancing with her lover. And she was very happy in her new life,
-and wanted no priest nor prayer nor mass any more, and all the
-dead were there dancing with the rest, all the people she had
-known; and they welcomed her and gave her wine to drink in
-little crystal cups, and told her she must soon come and stay with
-them and with her lover for evermore.</p>
-
-<p>Now Kathleen’s mother was a good, honest, religious woman,
-and she fretted much over her daughter’s strange state, for she
-knew the girl had been fairy-struck. So she determined to watch;
-and one night when Kathleen went to her bed as usual all alone
-by herself in the room, for she would allow no one to be with her,
-the mother crept up and looked through a chink in the door, and
-then she saw Kathleen take the round ring of herbs from a secret
-place in the press and pluck a leaf from it and burn it, on which
-a great smoke arose and the girl fell on her bed in a deep trance.</p>
-
-<p>Now the mother could no longer keep silence, for she saw there
-was devil’s work in it; and she fell on her knees and prayed
-aloud—</p>
-
-<p>“O Maia, mother, send the evil spirit away from the child!”</p>
-
-<p>And she rushed into the room and made the sign of the cross<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">78</span>
-over the sleeping girl, when immediately Kathleen started up and
-screamed—</p>
-
-<p>“Mother! mother! the dead are coming for me. They are
-here! they are here!”</p>
-
-<p>And her features looked like one in a fit. Then the poor mother
-sent for the priest, who came at once, and threw holy water on
-the girl, and said prayers over her; and he took the ring of herbs
-that lay beside her and cursed it for evermore, and instantly it
-fell to powder and lay like grey ashes on the floor. After this
-Kathleen grew calmer, and the evil spirit seemed to have left her,
-but she was too weak to move or to speak, or to utter a prayer,
-and before the clock struck twelve that night she lay dead.</p>
-
-
-<h4><a id="NOVEMBER_EVE"></a>NOVEMBER EVE.</h4>
-
-<p>It is esteemed a very wrong thing amongst the islanders to be
-about on November Eve, minding any business, for the fairies
-have their flitting then, and do not like to be seen or watched;
-and all the spirits come to meet them and help them. But mortal
-people should keep at home, or they will suffer for it; for the
-souls of the dead have power over all things on that one night of
-the year; and they hold a festival with the fairies, and drink red
-wine from the fairy cups, and dance to fairy music till the moon
-goes down.</p>
-
-<p>There was a man of the village who stayed out late one November
-Eve fishing, and never thought of the fairies until he saw a
-great number of dancing lights, and a crowd of people hurrying
-past with baskets and bags, and all laughing and singing and
-making merry as they went along.</p>
-
-<p>“You are a merry set,” he said, “where are ye all going to?”</p>
-
-<p>“We are going to the fair,” said a little old man with a cocked
-hat and a gold band round it. “Come with us, Hugh King, and
-you will have the finest food and the finest drink you ever set eyes
-upon.”</p>
-
-<p>“And just carry this basket for me,” said a little red-haired
-woman.</p>
-
-<p>So Hugh took it, and went with them till they came to the fair,
-which was filled with a crowd of people he had never seen on the
-island in all his days. And they danced and laughed and drank
-red wine from little cups. And there were pipers, and harpers,
-and little cobblers mending shoes, and all the most beautiful
-things in the world to eat and drink, just as if they were in a
-king’s palace. But the basket was very heavy, and Hugh longed
-to drop it, that he might go and dance with a little beauty with
-long yellow hair, that was laughing up close to his face.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, here put down the basket,” said the red-haired woman,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">79</span>
-“for you are quite tired, I see;” and she took it and opened the
-cover, and out came a little old man, the ugliest, most misshapen
-little imp that could be imagined.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, thank you, Hugh,” said the imp, quite politely; “you
-have carried me nicely; for I am weak on the limbs—indeed I
-have nothing to speak of in the way of legs: but I’ll pay you well,
-my fine fellow; hold out your two hands,” and the little imp
-poured down gold and gold and gold into them, bright golden
-guineas. “Now go,” said he, “and drink my health, and make
-yourself quite pleasant, and don’t be afraid of anything you see
-and hear.”</p>
-
-<p>So they all left him, except the man with the cocked hat and
-the red sash round his waist.</p>
-
-<p>“Wait here now a bit,” says he, “for Finvarra, the king, is
-coming, and his wife, to see the fair.”</p>
-
-<p>As he spoke, the sound of a horn was heard, and up drove a
-coach and four white horses, and out of it stepped a grand, grave
-gentleman all in black and a beautiful lady with a silver veil over
-her face.</p>
-
-<p>“Here is Finvarra himself and the queen,” said the little old
-man; but Hugh was ready to die of fright when Finvarra asked—</p>
-
-<p>“What brought this man here?”</p>
-
-<p>And the king frowned and looked so black that Hugh nearly
-fell to the ground with fear. Then they all laughed, and laughed
-so loud that everything seemed shaking and tumbling down from
-the laughter. And the dancers came up, and they all danced
-round Hugh, and tried to take his hands to make him dance with
-them.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know who these people are; and the men and women
-who are dancing round you?” asked the old man. “Look well,
-have you ever seen them before?”</p>
-
-<p>And when Hugh looked he saw a girl that had died the year
-before, then another and another of his friends that he knew had
-died long ago; and then he saw that all the dancers, men, women,
-and girls, were the dead in their long, white shrouds. And he
-tried to escape from them, but could not, for they coiled round
-him, and danced and laughed and seized his arms, and tried to
-draw him into the dance, and their laugh seemed to pierce through
-his brain and kill him. And he fell down before them there, like
-one faint from sleep, and knew no more till he found himself next
-morning lying within the old stone circle by the fairy rath on the
-hill. Still it was all true that he had been with the fairies; no
-one could deny it, for his arms were all black with the touch of
-the hands of the dead, the time they had tried to draw him into
-the dance; but not one bit of all the red gold, which the little imp
-had given him, could he find in his pocket. Not one single golden
-piece; it was all gone for evermore.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">80</span></p>
-
-<p>And Hugh went sadly to his home, for now he knew that the
-spirits had mocked him and punished him, because he troubled
-their revels on November Eve—that one night of all the year
-when the dead can leave their graves and dance in the moonlight
-on the hill, and mortals should stay at home and never dare to
-look on them.</p>
-
-
-<h4><a id="THE_DANCE_OF_THE_DEAD"></a>THE DANCE OF THE DEAD.</h4>
-
-<p>It is especially dangerous to be out late on the last night
-of November, for it is the closing scene of the revels—the last
-night when the dead have leave to dance on the hill with the
-fairies, and after that they must all go back to their graves and
-lie in the chill, cold earth, without music or wine till the next
-November comes round, when they all spring up again in their
-shrouds and rush out into the moonlight with mad laughter.</p>
-
-<p>One November night, a woman of Shark Island, coming home
-late at the hour of the dead, grew tired and sat down to rest,
-when presently a young man came up and talked to her.</p>
-
-<p>“Wait a bit,” he said, “and you will see the most beautiful
-dancing you ever looked on there by the side of the hill.”</p>
-
-<p>And she looked at him steadily. He was very pale, and seemed
-sad.</p>
-
-<p>“Why are you so sad?” she asked, “and as pale as if you
-were dead?”</p>
-
-<p>“Look well at me,” he answered. “Do you not know me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I know you now,” she said. “You are young Brien that
-was drowned last year when out fishing. What are you here for?”</p>
-
-<p>“Look,” he said, “at the side of the hill and you will see why
-I am here.”</p>
-
-<p>And she looked, and saw a great company dancing to sweet
-music; and amongst them were all the dead who had died as
-long as she could remember—men, women, and children, all in
-white, and their faces were pale as the moonlight.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said the young man, “run for your life; for if once
-the fairies bring you into the dance you will never be able to
-leave them any more.”</p>
-
-<p>But while they were talking, the fairies came up and danced
-round her in a circle, joining their hands. And she fell to the
-ground in a faint, and knew no more till she woke up in the
-morning in her own bed at home. And they all saw that her
-face was pale as the dead, and they knew that she had got the
-fairy-stroke. So the herb doctor was sent for, and every measure
-tried to save her, but without avail, for just as the moon rose that
-night, soft, low music was heard round the house, and when they
-looked at the woman she was dead.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">81</span></p>
-
-<p>It is a custom amongst the people, when throwing away water
-at night, to cry out in a loud voice, “Take care of the water;”
-or, literally from the Irish, “Away with yourself from the
-water”—for they say the spirits of the dead last buried are then
-wandering about, and it would be dangerous if the water fell on
-them.</p>
-
-<p>One dark winter’s night a woman suddenly threw out a pail of
-boiling water without thinking of the warning words. Instantly
-a cry was heard as of a person in pain, but no one was seen.
-However, the next night a black lamb entered the house, having
-the back all fresh scalded, and it lay down moaning by the hearth
-and died. Then they all knew this was the spirit that had been
-scalded by the woman. And they carried the dead lamb out
-reverently and buried it deep in the earth. Yet every night at
-the same hour it walked again into the house and lay down and
-moaned and died. And after this had happened many times, the
-priest was sent for, and finally, by the strength of his exorcism,
-the spirit of the dead was laid to rest, and the black lamb
-appeared no more. Neither was the body of the dead lamb found
-in the grave when they searched for it, though it had been laid
-by their own hands deep in the earth and covered with the
-clay.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Before an accident happens to a boat, or a death by drowning,
-low music is often heard, as if under the water, along with harmonious
-lamentations, and then every one in the boat knows that
-some young man or beautiful young girl is wanted by the fairies,
-and is doomed to die. The best safeguard is to have music and
-singing in the boat, for the fairies are so enamoured of the mortal
-voices and music that they forget to weave the spell till the fatal
-moment has passed, and then all in the boat are safe from harm.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="SUPERSTITIONS_CONCERNING_THE_DEAD">SUPERSTITIONS CONCERNING THE DEAD.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Many strange spells are effected by the means of a dead man’s
-hand—chiefly to produce butter in the churn. The milk is stirred
-round nine times with the dead hand, the operator crying aloud
-all the time, “Gather! gather! gather!” While a secret form of
-words is used which none but the initiated know.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Another use is to facilitate robberies. If a candle is placed in
-a dead hand, neither wind nor water can extinguish it. And if
-carried into a house the inmates will sleep the sleep of the dead<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">82</span>
-as long as it remains under the roof, and no power on earth can
-wake them while the dead hand holds the candle.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>For a mystic charm, one of the strongest known is the hand of
-an unbaptized infant fresh taken from the grave in the name of
-the Evil One.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A dead hand is esteemed also a certain cure for most diseases,
-and many a time sick people have been brought to a house where
-a corpse lay that the hand of the dead might be laid on them.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The souls of the dead who may happen to die abroad, greatly
-desire to rest in Ireland. And the relations deem it their duty
-to bring back the body to be laid in Irish earth. But even then
-the dead will not rest peaceably unless laid with their forefathers
-and their own people, and not amongst strangers.</p>
-
-<p>A young girl happened to die of a fever while away on a visit
-to some friends, and her father thought it safer not to bring her
-home, but to have her buried in the nearest churchyard. However,
-a few nights after his return home, he was awakened by a
-mournful wail at the window, and a voice cried, “I am alone; I
-am alone; I am alone!” Then the poor father knew well what
-it meant, and he prayed in the name of God that the spirit of his
-dead child might rest in peace until the morning. And when the
-day broke he arose and set off to the strange burial ground, and
-there he drew the coffin from the earth, and had it carried all the
-way back from Cork to Mayo; and after he had laid the dead in
-the old graveyard beside his people and his kindred, the spirit of
-his child had rest, and the mournful cry was no more heard in the
-night.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The corner of a sheet that has wrapped a corpse is a cure for
-headache if tied round the head.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The ends of candles used at wakes are of great efficacy in curing
-burns.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A piece of linen wrap taken from a corpse will cure the swelling
-of a limb if tied round the part affected.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is believed that the spirit of the dead last buried has to
-watch in the churchyard until another corpse is laid there; or has
-to perform menial offices in the spirit world, such as carrying
-wood and water until the next spirit comes from earth. They
-are also sent on messages to earth, chiefly to announce the coming<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">83</span>
-death of some relative, and at this they are glad, for then their
-time of peace and rest will come at last.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If any one stumbles at a grave it is a bad omen; but if he falls
-and touches the clay, he will assuredly die before the year is out.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Any one meeting a funeral must turn back and walk at least
-four steps with the mourners.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If the nearest relative touches the hand of a corpse it will utter
-a wild cry if not quite dead.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>On Twelfth Night the dead walk, and on every tile of the
-house a soul is sitting, waiting for your prayers to take it out of
-purgatory.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There are many strange superstitions in the western islands of
-Connemara. At night the dead can be heard laughing with the
-fairies and spinning the flax. One girl declared that she distinctly
-heard her dead mother’s voice singing a mournful Irish air away
-down in the heart of the hill. But after a year and a day the
-voices cease, and the dead are gone for ever.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is a custom in the West, when a corpse is carried to the
-grave, for the bearers to stop half way, while the nearest relatives
-build up a small monument of loose stones, and no hand would
-ever dare to touch or disturb this monument while the world lasts.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When the grave is dug, a cross is made of two spades, and the
-coffin is carried round it three times before being placed in the
-clay. Then the prayers for the dead are said, all the people
-kneeling with uncovered head.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_FATAL_LOVE-CHARM">THE FATAL LOVE-CHARM.</h3>
-
-
-<p>A potent love-charm used by women is a piece of skin taken from
-the arm of a corpse and tied on the person while sleeping whose
-love is sought. The skin is then removed after some time, and
-carefully put away before the sleeper awakes or has any consciousness
-of the transaction. And as long as it remains in the woman’s
-possession the love of her lover will be unchanged. Or the strip
-of skin is placed under the head to dream on, in the name of the
-Evil One, when the future husband will appear in the dream.</p>
-
-<p>A young girl who was servant in the large and handsome house<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">84</span>
-of a rich family tried this charm for fun, thinking she would
-dream of one of her fellow-servants, and next morning her mistress
-asked the result.</p>
-
-<p>“Throth, ma’am,” she answered, “there never was such a
-foolish trick, for it was of the master himself I was dreaming all
-night, and of no one else.”</p>
-
-<p>Soon after the lady died, and the girl, remembering her dream,
-watched her opportunity to tie a piece of skin taken from a corpse
-recently buried round the arm of her master while he slept. After
-this he became violently in love with the girl, though she was
-exceedingly ugly, and within the year he married her, his love all
-the while remaining fervent and unchanged.</p>
-
-<p>But exactly one year and a day after her marriage her bedroom
-took fire by accident, and the strip of skin, which she had kept
-carefully hidden in her wardrobe, was burnt, along with all her
-grand wedding-clothes. Immediately the magic charm was
-broken, and the hatred of the gentleman for his low-born wife
-became as strong as the love he had once felt for her.</p>
-
-<p>In her rage and grief at finding nothing but coldness and insult,
-she confessed the whole story; and, in consequence, the horror she
-inspired amongst the people was so great that no one would serve
-her with food or drink, or sit near her, or hold any intercourse with
-her; and she died miserably and half mad before the second year
-was out—a warning and a terror to all who work spells in the
-name of the Evil One.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3><a name="THE_FENIAN_KNIGHTS" id="THE_FENIAN_KNIGHTS">THE FENIAN KNIGHTS.</a><br />
-
-<small>A LEGEND OF THE WEST.</small></h3>
-
-
-<p>There is a fort near the Killeries in Connemara called <i>Lis-na-Keeran</i>.
-One day the powerful chief that lived there invited the
-great Fionn Ma-Coul, with his son Oscar and a band of Fenian
-knights, to a great banquet. But when the guests arrived they
-found no chairs prepared for them, only rough benches of wood
-placed round the table.</p>
-
-<p>So Oscar and his father would take no place, but stood watching,
-for they suspected treachery. The knights, however, fearing
-nothing, sat down to the feast, but were instantly fixed to the
-benches so firmly by magic, that they could neither rise nor
-move.</p>
-
-<p>Then Fionn began to chew his thumb, from which he always
-derived knowledge of the future, and by his magic power he saw
-clearly a great and terrible warrior riding fiercely towards the
-fort, and Fionn knew that unless he could be stopped before<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">85</span>
-crossing a certain ford, they must all die, for they had been
-brought to Lis-na-Keeran only to be slain by their treacherous
-host; and unless the warrior was killed and his blood sprinkled
-on the Fenian knights, they must remain fixed on the wooden
-benches for ever.</p>
-
-<p>So Oscar of the Lion heart rushed forth to the encounter. And
-he flung his spear at the mighty horseman, and they fought desperately
-till the setting of the sun. Then at last Oscar triumphed;
-victory was his; and he cut off the head of his adversary, and
-carried it on his spear all bleeding to the fort, where he let the
-blood drop down upon the Fenian knights that were transfixed by
-magic. On this they at once sprang up free and scatheless, all
-except one, for on him unhappily no blood had fallen, and so he
-remained fixed to the bench. His companions tried to drag him
-up by main force, but as they did so the skin of his thighs was
-left on the bench, and he was like to die.</p>
-
-<p>Then they killed a sheep, and wrapped the fleece round him
-warm from the animal to heal him. So he was cured, but ever
-after, strange to relate, seven stone of wool were annually shorn
-from his body as long as he lived.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The manner in which Fionn learned the mystery of obtaining
-wisdom from his thumb was in this wise.</p>
-
-<p>It happened one time when he was quite a youth that he was
-taken prisoner by a one-eyed giant, who at first was going to kill
-him, but then he changed his mind and sent him to the kitchen to
-mind the dinner. Now there was a great and splendid salmon
-broiling on the fire, and the giant said—</p>
-
-<p>“Watch that salmon till it is done; but if a single blister rise
-on the skin you shall be killed.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the giant threw himself down to sleep while waiting for
-the dinner.</p>
-
-<p>So Fionn watched the salmon with all his eyes, but to his
-horror saw a blister rising on the beautiful silver skin of the fish,
-and in his fright and eagerness he pressed his thumb down on it
-to flatten it; then the pain of the burn being great, he clapped
-the thumb into his mouth and kept it there to suck out the fire.
-When he drew it back, however, he found, to his surprise that he
-had a knowledge of all that was going to happen to him, and a
-clear sense of what he ought to do. And it came into his mind
-that if he put out the giant’s eye with an iron rod heated in the
-fire, he could escape from the monster. So he heated the rod,
-and while the giant slept he plunged it into his eye, and before
-the horrid being recovered from the shock, Fionn escaped, and
-was soon back safe amongst his own people, the Fenian knights;
-and ever after in moments of great peril and doubt, when he put<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">86</span>
-his thumb into his mouth and sucked it, the vision of the future
-came on him, and he could foresee clearly whatever danger lay in
-his path, and how to avoid it. But it was only in such extreme
-moments of peril that the mystic power was granted to him.
-And thus he was enabled to save his own life and the lives of his
-chosen Fenian guard when all hope seemed well-nigh gone.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="RATHLIN_ISLAND">RATHLIN ISLAND.</h3>
-
-
-<p>There is an old ruin called Bruce’s Castle on this island, and the
-legend runs that Bruce and his chief warriors lie in an enchanted
-sleep in a cave of the rock on which stands the castle, and that
-one day they will rise up and unite the island to Scotland.</p>
-
-<p>The entrance to this cave is visible only once in seven years.
-A man who happened to be travelling by at the time discovered
-it, and entering in he found himself all at once in the midst of the
-heavy-handed warriors. He looked down and saw a sabre half
-unsheathed in the earth at his feet, and on his attempting to
-draw it every man of the sleepers lifted up his head and put his
-hand on his sword. The man being much alarmed fled from the
-cave, but he heard voices calling fiercely after him: “Ugh! ugh!
-Why could we not be left to sleep?” And they clanged their
-swords on the ground with a terrible noise, and then all was still,
-and the gate of the cave closed with a mighty sound like a clap
-of thunder.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_STRANGE_GUESTS">THE STRANGE GUESTS.</h3>
-
-
-<p>A company of strangers came one day to Rathlin island and the
-people distrusted them, but pretended to be friendly, and invited
-them to a feast, meaning to put an end to them all when they
-came unarmed to the festival, and the drink flowed freely. So
-the strangers came, but each man as he sat down drew his knife
-and stuck it in the table before him ere he began to eat. When
-the islanders saw their guests so well prepared, they were afraid;
-and the feast passed off quietly.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning early, the strangers sailed away before any
-one was aware on the island; but on the table where each guest
-had sat, a piece of silver was found, covering the hole made by
-the knife. So the islanders rejoiced, and determined never again
-to plot evil against the wayfaring guests; but to be kind and hospitable
-to all wanderers for the sake of the Holy Mother, who had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">87</span>
-sent them to the island to bring good luck to the people. But they
-never saw the strangers more.</p>
-
-<p>The islanders have great faith in the power of the Virgin Mary,
-for our Lord Himself told St. Bridget that His mother had a throne
-in heaven near His own; and whatever she asked of God it was
-granted, especially if it was any grace or favour for the Irish
-people, because He held them in great esteem on account of their
-piety and good works.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_DEAD_SOLDIER">THE DEAD SOLDIER.</h3>
-
-
-<p>There is an island in the Shannon, and if a mermaid is seen sitting
-on the rocks in the sunshine, the people know that a crime
-has been committed somewhere near; for she never appears but
-to announce ill-luck, and she has a spite against mortals, and
-rejoices at their misfortunes.</p>
-
-<p>One day a young fisherman was drawn by the current towards
-the island, and he came on a long streak of red blood, and had to
-sail his boat through it till he reached the rocks where the mermaid
-was seated; and then the boat went round and round as in
-a whirlpool, and sank down at last under the waves.</p>
-
-<p>Still he did not lose consciousness. He looked round and saw
-that he was in a beautiful country, with tall plants growing all
-over it; and the mermaid came and sang sweetly to him, and
-offered him wine to drink, but he would not taste it, for it was
-red like blood. Then he looked down, and to his horror he saw
-a soldier lying on the floor with his throat cut; and all round him
-was a pool of blood, and he remembered no more till he found
-himself again in his boat drifting against a hurricane, and suddenly
-he was dashed upon a rock, where his friends who were in
-search of him found him, and carried him home. There he heard
-a strange thing: a soldier, a deserter from the Athlone Barracks,
-being pursued had cut his throat and flung himself over the bridge
-into the river; and this was the very man the young fisher had
-seen lying a corpse in the mermaid’s cave. After this he had no
-peace or comfort till he went to the priest, who exorcised him
-and gave him absolution; and then the wicked siren of the rocks
-troubled him no more, though she still haunts the islands of the
-Shannon and tries to lure victims to their death.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">88</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h3 id="THE_THREE_GIFTS">THE THREE GIFTS.</h3>
-
-
-<p>A great, noble-looking man called one night at a cottage, and
-told the woman that she must come away with him then and there
-on the instant, for his wife wanted a nurse for her baby. And so
-saying, before she could answer, he swung her up on his great
-black horse on a pillion behind him. And she sat wondering at
-his tall, shadowy form, for she could see the moonlight through
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“Do not fear,” he said, “and no harm will happen to you. Only
-ask no questions whatever happens, and drink no wine that may
-be offered to you.”</p>
-
-<p>On reaching the palace she saw the most beautiful ladies going
-about all covered with jewels, and she was led into a chamber
-hung with silk and gold, and lace as fine as cobwebs; and there
-on a bed supported by crystal pillars lay the mother, lovely as an
-angel, and her little baby beside her. And when the nurse had
-dressed the baby and handed it to the mother, the lady smiled
-and offered her wine; “for then,” she said, “you will never leave
-us, and I would love to have you always near me.”</p>
-
-<p>But the woman refused, though she was sorely tempted by the
-beautiful bright red wine.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then,” said the lord and master, “here are three gifts,
-and you may take them away in safety, for no harm will come to
-you by them. A purse, never to be opened, but while you have
-it, you will never want money; a girdle, and whoso wears it will
-never be slain in battle; and an herb that has power to cure all
-diseases for seven generations.”</p>
-
-<p>So the woman was put again upon the horse with her three
-gifts, and reached her home safely. Then, from curiosity, the
-first thing she did was to open the purse, and behold, there was
-nothing in it but some wild flowers. On seeing this, she was so
-angry that she flung away the herb, “for they were only making
-a fool of me,” she said, “and I don’t believe one word of their
-stories.” But the husband took the belt and kept it safe, and it
-went down in the family from father to son; and the last man
-who wore it was out in all the troubles of ’98, and fought in every
-one of the battles, but he never got hurt or wound. However,
-after his death, no one knew what became of the belt; it was
-never seen more.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A woman was carried off one night to a fairy palace to attend
-one of the beautiful fairy ladies who lay sick on her golden bed.
-And as she was going in at the gate a man whispered to her,
-“Eat no food, and take no money from the fairies; but ask what
-you like and it will be granted.” So when the fairy lady was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">89</span>
-well, she bade the nurse ask what she pleased. The woman
-answered, “I desire three things for my sons and their race—luck
-in fishing, luck in learning, and luck in gambling,” which things
-were granted—and to this day the family are the richest, the
-wisest, and the luckiest in the whole neighbourhood. They win
-at every game, and at every race, but always by fair play and
-without cheating; and not the priest himself can beat them at
-book learning. And every one knows that the power comes to
-them from the fairy gift, though good luck comes with it and not
-evil; and all the work of their hands has prospered through every
-generation since the day of the Three Wishes.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_FAIRIES_AS_FALLEN_ANGELS">THE FAIRIES AS FALLEN ANGELS.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The islanders, like all the Irish, believe that the fairies are the
-fallen angels who were cast down by the Lord God out of heaven
-for their sinful pride. And some fell into the sea, and some on
-the dry land, and some fell deep down into hell, and the devil
-gives to these knowledge and power, and sends them on earth
-where they work much evil. But the fairies of the earth and the
-sea are mostly gentle and beautiful creatures, who will do no
-harm if they are let alone, and allowed to dance on the fairy raths
-in the moonlight to their own sweet music, undisturbed by the
-presence of mortals. As a rule, the people look on fire as the
-great preservative against witchcraft, for the devil has no power
-except in the dark. So they put a live coal under the churn, and
-they wave a lighted wisp of straw above the cow’s head if the
-beast seems sickly. But as to the pigs, they take no trouble, for
-they say the devil has no longer any power over them now.
-When they light a candle they cross themselves, because the evil
-spirits are then clearing out of the house in fear of the light.
-Fire and Holy Water they hold to be sacred, and are powerful;
-and the best safeguard against all things evil, and the surest test
-in case of suspected witchcraft.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_FAIRY_CHANGELING">THE FAIRY CHANGELING.</h3>
-
-
-<p>One evening, a man was coming home late, and he passed a house
-where two women stood by a window, talking.</p>
-
-<p>“I have left the dead child in the cradle as you bid me,” said
-one woman,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">90</span> “and behold here is the other child, take it and let
-me go;” and she laid down an infant on a sheet by the window,
-who seemed in a secret sleep, and it was draped all in white.</p>
-
-<p>“Wait,” said the other, “till you have had some food, and then
-take it to the fairy queen, as I promised, in place of the dead child
-that we have laid in the cradle by the nurse. Wait also till the
-moon rises, and then you shall have the payment which I promised.”</p>
-
-<p>They then both turned from the window. Now the man saw
-that there was some devil’s magic in it all. And when the women
-turned away he crept up close to the open window and put his
-hand in and seized the sleeping child and drew it out quietly
-without ever a sound. Then he made off as fast as he could to
-his own home, before the women could know anything about it,
-and handed the child to his mother’s care. Now the mother was
-angry at first, but when he told her the story, she believed him,
-and put the baby to sleep—a lovely, beautiful boy with a face
-like an angel.</p>
-
-<p>Next morning there was a great commotion in the village, for
-the news spread that the first-born son of the great lord of the
-place, a lovely, healthy child, died suddenly in the night, without
-ever having had a sign of sickness. When they looked at him in
-the morning, there he laid dead in his cradle, and he was shrunk
-and wizened like a little old man, and no beauty was seen on him
-any more. So great lamentation was heard on all sides, and the
-whole country gathered to the wake. Amongst them came the
-young man who had carried off the child, and when he looked on
-the little wizened thing in the cradle he laughed. Now the
-parents were angry at his laughter, and wanted to turn him out.</p>
-
-<p>But he said, “Wait, put down a good fire,” and they did so.</p>
-
-<p>Then he went over to the cradle and said to the hideous little
-creature, in a loud voice before all the people—</p>
-
-<p>“If you don’t rise up this minute and leave the place, I will
-burn you on the fire; for I know right well who you are, and
-where you came from.”</p>
-
-<p>At once the child sat up and began to grin at him; and made
-a rush to the door to get away; but the man caught hold of it
-and threw it on the fire. And the moment it felt the heat it
-turned into a black kitten, and flew up the chimney and was seen
-no more.</p>
-
-<p>Then the man sent word to his mother to bring the other child,
-who was found to be the true heir, the lord’s own son. So there
-was great rejoicing, and the child grew up to be a great lord himself,
-and when his time came, he ruled well over the estate; and
-his descendants are living to this day, for all things prospered
-with him after he was saved from the fairies.</p>
-
-<hr class="small" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">91</span></p>
-
-
-<h3 id="FAIRY_WILES">FAIRY WILES.</h3>
-
-
-<p>When the fairies steal away a beautiful mortal child they leave
-an ugly, wizened little creature in its place. And these fairy
-changelings grow up malicious and wicked, and have voracious
-appetites. The unhappy parents often try the test of fire for the
-child, in this wise—placing it in the centre of the cabin, they light
-a fire round it, and fully expect to see it changed into a sod of turf.
-But if the child survives the ordeal it is accepted as one of the
-family, though very grudgingly; and it is generally hated by all
-the neighbours for its impish ways. But the children of the Sidhe
-and a mortal mother are always clever and beautiful, and
-specially excel in music and dancing. They are, however,
-passionate and wilful, and have strange, moody fits, when they
-desire solitude above all things, and seem to hold converse with
-unseen spiritual beings.</p>
-
-<p>Fine young peasant women are often carried off by the fairies
-to nurse their little fairy progeny. But the woman is allowed to
-come back to her own infant after sunset. However, on entering
-the house, the husband must at once throw holy water over her
-in the name of God, when she will be restored to her own shape.
-For sometimes she comes with a hissing noise like a serpent; then
-she appears black, and shrouded like one from the dead; and,
-lastly, in her own shape, when she takes her old place by the fire
-and nurses her baby; and the husband must ask no questions, but
-give her food in silence. If she falls asleep the third night, all
-will be well, for the husband at once ties a red thread across the
-door to prevent the fairies coming in to carry her off, and if the
-third night passes over safely the fairies have lost their power
-over her for evermore.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3><a name="SHAUN-MOR" id="SHAUN-MOR">SHAUN-MOR.</a><br />
-
-<small>A LEGEND OF INNIS-SARK</small>.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The islanders believe firmly in the existence of fairies who live in
-the caves by the sea—little men about the height of a sod of turf,
-who come out of the fissures of the rocks and are bright and
-merry, wearing green jackets and red caps, and ready enough to
-help any one they like, though often very malicious if offended or
-insulted.</p>
-
-<p>There was an old man on the island called Shaun-Mor, who said
-that he had often travelled at night with the little men and
-carried their sacks for them; and in return they gave him strange<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">92</span>
-fairy gifts and taught him the secret of power, so that he could
-always triumph over his enemies; and even as to the fairies, he
-was as wise as any of them, and could fight half a dozen of them
-together if he were so minded, and pitch them into the sea or
-strangle them with seaweed. So the fairies were angered at his
-pride and presumption, and determined to do him a malicious turn,
-just to amuse themselves when they were up for fun. So one
-night when he was returning home, he suddenly saw a great river
-between him and his house.</p>
-
-<p>“How shall I get across now?” he cried aloud; and immediately
-an eagle came up to him.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t cry, Shaun-Mor,” said the eagle, “but get on my back
-and I’ll carry you safely.”</p>
-
-<p>So Shaun-Mor mounted, and they flew right up ever so high,
-till at last the eagle tumbled him off by the side of a great
-mountain in a place he had never seen before.</p>
-
-<p>“This is a bad trick you have played me,” said Shaun; “tell me
-where I am now?”</p>
-
-<p>“You are in the moon,” said the eagle, “and get down the best
-way you can, for now I must be off; so good-bye. Mind you
-don’t fall off the edge. Good-bye,” and with that the eagle
-disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>Just then a cleft in the rock opened, and out came a man as pale
-as the dead with a reaping-hook in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>“What brings you here?” said he. “Only the dead come
-here,” and he looked fixedly at Shaun-Mor so that he trembled
-like one already dying.</p>
-
-<p>“O your worship,” he said, “I live far from here. Tell me how
-I am to get down, and help me I beseech you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ay, that I will,” said the pale-faced man. “Here is the help
-I give you,” and with that he gave him a blow with the reaping-hook
-which tumbled Shaun right over the edge of the moon; and
-he fell and fell ever so far till luckily he came in the midst of a
-flock of geese, and the old gander that was leading stopped and
-eyed him.</p>
-
-<p>“What are you doing here, Shaun-Mor?” said he, “for I know
-you well. I’ve often seen you down in Shark. What will your
-wife say when she hears of your being out so late at night,
-wandering about in this way. It is very disreputable, and no well
-brought up gander would do the like, much less a man; I am
-ashamed of you, Shaun-Mor.”</p>
-
-<p>“O your honour,” said the poor man, “it is an evil turn of the
-evil witches, for they have done all this; but let me just get up on
-your back, and if your honour brings me safe to my own house I
-shall be for ever grateful to every goose and gander in the world
-as long as I live.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well then, get up on my back,” said the bird, fluttering its<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">93</span>
-wings with a great clatter over Shaun; but he couldn’t manage
-at all to get on its back, so he caught hold of one leg, and he and
-the gander went down and down till they came to the sea.</p>
-
-<p>“Now let go,” said the gander, “and find your way home the
-best way you can, for I have lost a great deal of time with you
-already, and must be away;” and he shook off Shaun-Mor, who
-dropped plump down into the sea, and when he was almost dead
-a great whale came sailing by, and flapped him all over with its
-fins. He knew no more till he opened his eyes lying on the grass
-in his own field by a great stone, and his wife was standing over
-him drenching him with a great pail of water, and flapping his face
-with her apron.</p>
-
-<p>And then he told his wife the whole story, which he said was
-true as gospel, but I don’t think she believed a word of it, though
-she was afraid to let on the like to Shaun-Mor, who affirms to this
-day that it was all the work of the fairies, though wicked people
-might laugh and jeer and say he was drunk.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_CAVE_FAIRIES">THE CAVE FAIRIES.</h3>
-
-
-<h4><a id="THE_TUATHA-DE-DANANN"></a>THE TUATHA-DE-DANANN.</h4>
-
-<p>It is believed by many people that the cave fairies are the
-remnant of the ancient Tuatha-de-Dananns who once ruled
-Ireland, but were conquered by the Milesians.</p>
-
-<p>These Tuatha were great necromancers, skilled in all magic, and
-excellent in all the arts as builders, poets, and musicians. At first
-the Milesians were going to destroy them utterly, but gradually
-were so fascinated and captivated by the gifts and power of the
-Tuatha that they allowed them to remain and to build forts,
-where they held high festival with music and singing and the
-chant of the bards. And the breed of horses they reared could
-not be surpassed in the world—fleet as the wind, with the arched
-neck and the broad chest and the quivering nostril, and the large
-eye that showed they were made of fire and flame, and not of dull,
-heavy earth. And the Tuatha made stables for them in the great
-caves of the hills, and they were shod with silver and had golden
-bridles, and never a slave was allowed to ride them. A splendid
-sight was the cavalcade of the Tuatha-de-Danann knights.
-Seven-score steeds, each with a jewel on his forehead like a star,
-and seven-score horsemen, all the sons of kings, in their green
-mantles fringed with gold, and golden helmets on their head, and
-golden greaves on their limbs, and each knight having in his hand
-a golden spear.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">94</span></p>
-
-<p>And so they lived for a hundred years and more, for by their
-enchantments they could resist the power of death.</p>
-
-
-<h4><a id="EDAIN_THE_QUEEN"></a>EDAIN THE QUEEN.</h4>
-
-<p>Now it happened that the king of Munster one day saw a
-beautiful girl bathing, and he loved her and made her his queen.
-And in all the land was no woman so lovely to look upon as the
-fair Edain, and the fame of her beauty came to the ears of the
-great and powerful chief and king of the Tuatha-de-Danann, Midar
-by name. So he disguised himself and went to the court of the
-king of Munster, as a wandering bard, that he might look on the
-beauty of Edain. And he challenged the king to a game of chess.</p>
-
-<p>“Who is this man that I should play chess with him?” said the
-king.</p>
-
-<p>“Try me,” said the stranger; “you will find me a worthy foe.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the king said—“But the chess-board is in the queen’s
-apartment, and I cannot disturb her.”</p>
-
-<p>However, when the queen heard that a stranger had challenged
-the king to chess, she sent her page in with the chess-board, and
-then came herself to greet the stranger. And Midar was so
-dazzled with her beauty, that he could not speak, he could only
-gaze on her. And the queen also seemed troubled, and after a
-time she left them alone.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, what shall we play for?” asked the king.</p>
-
-<p>“Let the conqueror name the reward,” answered the stranger,
-“and whatever he desires let it be granted to him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Agreed,” replied the monarch.</p>
-
-<p>Then they played the game and the stranger won.</p>
-
-<p>“What is your demand now?” cried the king. “I have given
-my word that whatever you name shall be yours.”</p>
-
-<p>“I demand the Lady Edain, the queen, as my reward,” replied
-the stranger. “But I shall not ask you to give her up to me till
-this day year.” And the stranger departed.</p>
-
-<p>Now the king was utterly perplexed and confounded, but he
-took good note of the time, and on that night just a twelvemonth
-after, he made a great feast at Tara for all the princes, and he
-placed three lines of his chosen warriors all round the palace, and
-forbade any stranger to enter on pain of death. So all being
-secure, as he thought, he took his place at the feast with the
-beautiful Edain beside him, all glittering with jewels and a golden
-crown on her head, and the revelry went on till midnight. Just
-then, to his horror, the king looked up, and there stood the stranger
-in the middle of the hall, but no one seemed to perceive him save
-only the king, He fixed his eyes on the queen, and coming towards<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">95</span>
-her, he struck the golden harp he had in his hand and sang in a
-low sweet voice—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“O Edain, wilt thou come with me</div>
- <div class="verse">To a wonderful palace that is mine?</div>
- <div class="verse">White are the teeth there, and black the brows,</div>
- <div class="verse">And crimson as the mead are the lips of the lovers.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“O woman, if thou comest to my proud people,</div>
- <div class="verse">’Tis a golden crown shall circle thy head,</div>
- <div class="verse">Thou shalt dwell by the sweet streams of my land,</div>
- <div class="verse">And drink of the mead and wine in the arms of thy lover.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Then he gently put his arm round the queen’s waist, and drew
-her up from her royal throne, and went forth with her through
-the midst of all the guests, none hindering, and the king himself
-was like one in a dream, and could neither speak nor move. But
-when he recovered himself, then he knew that the stranger was
-one of the fairy chiefs of the Tuatha-de-Danann who had carried
-off the beautiful Edain to his fairy mansion. So he sent round
-messengers to all the kings of Erin that they should destroy all
-the forts of the hated Tuatha race, and slay and kill and let none
-live till the queen, his young bride, was brought back to him. Still
-she came not. Then the king out of revenge ordered his men to
-block up all the stables where the royal horses of the Dananns
-were kept, that so they might die of hunger; but the horses were
-of noble blood, and no bars or bolts could hold them, and they
-broke through the bars and rushed out like the whirlwind, and
-spread all over the country. And the kings, when they saw the
-beauty of the horses, forgot all about the search for Queen Edain,
-and only strove how they could seize and hold as their own some
-of the fiery steeds with the silver hoofs and golden bridles. Then
-the king raged in his wrath, and sent for the chief of the Druids,
-and told him he should be put to death unless he discovered the
-place where the queen lay hid. So the Druid went over all
-Ireland, and searched, and made spells with oghams, and at last,
-having carved four oghams on four wands of a hazel-tree, it was
-revealed to him that deep down in a hill in the very centre of
-Ireland, Queen Edain was hidden away in the enchanted palace
-of Midar the fairy chief.</p>
-
-<p>Then the king gathered a great army, and they circled the hill,
-and dug down and down till they came to the very centre; and
-just as they reached the gate of the fairy palace, Midar by his
-enchantments sent forth fifty beautiful women from the hillside,
-to distract the attention of the warriors, all so like the queen in
-form and features and dress, that the king himself could not make
-out truly, if his own wife were amongst them or not. But Edain,
-when she saw her husband so near her, was touched by love of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">96</span>
-him in her heart, and the power of the enchantment fell from her
-soul, and she came to him, and he lifted her up on his horse and
-kissed her tenderly, and brought her back safely to his royal palace
-of Tara, where they lived happily ever after.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>But soon after the power of the Tuatha-de-Danann was broken
-for ever, and the remnant that was left took refuge in the caves
-where they exist to this day, and practise their magic, and work
-spells, and are safe from death until the judgment day.</p>
-
-
-<h4><a id="THE_ROYAL_STEED"></a>THE ROYAL STEED.</h4>
-
-<p>Of the great breed of splendid horses, some remained for several
-centuries, and were at once known by their noble shape and
-qualities. The last of them belonged to a great lord in Connaught,
-and when he died, all his effects being sold by auction, the royal
-steed came to the hammer, and was bought up by an emissary of
-the English Government, who wanted to get possession of a specimen
-of the magnificent ancient Irish breed, in order to have it
-transported to England.</p>
-
-<p>But when the groom attempted to mount the high-spirited
-animal, it reared, and threw the base-born churl violently to the
-ground, killing him on the spot.</p>
-
-<p>Then, fleet as the wind, the horse galloped away, and finally
-plunged into the lake and was seen no more. So ended the great
-race of the mighty Tuatha-de-Danann horses in Ireland, the like
-of which has never been seen since in all the world for majesty
-and beauty.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Sometimes the cave fairies make a straight path in the sea from
-one island to another, all paved with coral, under the water; but
-no one can tread it except the fairy race. Fishermen coming home
-late at night, on looking down, have frequently seen them passing
-and re-passing—a black band of little men with black dogs, who
-are very fierce if any one tries to touch them.</p>
-
-<p>There was an old man named Con, who lived on an island all
-alone, except for a black dog who kept him company. Now all
-the people knew right well that he was a fairy king, and could
-walk the water at night like the other fairies. So they feared him
-greatly, and brought him presents of cakes and fowls, for they
-were afraid of him and of his evil demon, the dog. For often,
-men coming home late have heard the steps of this dog and his
-breathing quite close to them, though they could not see him; and
-one man nearly died of fright, and was only saved by the priest
-who came and prayed over him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">97</span></p>
-
-<p>But the cave fairies can assume many forms.</p>
-
-<p>One summer’s evening, a young girl, the daughter of the man
-who owned the farm, was milking the cows in the yard, when
-three beautiful ladies, all in white, suddenly appeared, and asked
-her for a drink of milk. Now the girl knew well that milk should
-not be given away without using some precaution against fairy
-wiles, so she hesitated, fearing to bring ill-luck on the cows.</p>
-
-<p>“Is that the way you treat us?” said one of the ladies, and she
-slapped the girl on the face.</p>
-
-<p>“But, you’ll remember us,” said the second lady, and she took
-hold of the girl’s thumb and twisted it out of joint.</p>
-
-<p>“And your lover will be false to you,” said the third, and with
-that she turned the girl’s mantle crooked, the back to the front.</p>
-
-<p>Then the first lady took a vessel and milked the cow, and they
-all drank of the milk as much as they wanted; after which they
-turned to the girl and bade her beware of again offending the
-spirits of the cave, for they were very powerful, and would not
-let her off so easily another time.</p>
-
-<p>The poor girl fainted from fright, and was found quite senseless
-when they came to look for her; but the white ladies had disappeared.
-Though the story must have been true, just as she told
-it when she came to her senses, for not a drop of milk was left in
-the pail, nor could a drop more be got from the cows all that
-evening.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="EVIL_SPELLS">EVIL SPELLS.</h3>
-
-
-<h4><a id="CATHAL_THE_KING"></a>CATHAL THE KING.</h4>
-
-<p>It is said by the wise women and fairy doctors that the roots of
-the elder tree, and the roots of an apple tree that bears red apples,
-if boiled together and drunk fasting, will expel any evil living
-thing or evil spirit that may have taken up its abode in the body
-of a man.</p>
-
-<p>But an evil charm to produce a living thing in the body can also
-be made, by pronouncing a certain magic and wicked spell over the
-food or drink taken by any person that an enemy wishes to injure.</p>
-
-<p>One should therefore be very cautious in accepting anything to
-eat from a person of known malicious tongue and spiteful heart,
-or who has an ill will against you, for poison lies in their glance
-and in the touch of their hands; and an evil spell is in their very
-presence, and on all they do, say, or touch.</p>
-
-<p>Cathal, king of Munster, was the tallest and handsomest of all
-the kings of Erin, and he fell deeply in love with the beautiful
-sister of Fergus, king of Ulster; and the lovers were happy in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">98</span>
-their love and resolved on marriage. But Fergus, King of the
-North, had a mortal hatred to Cathal, King of the South, and
-wished, in secret, to prevent the marriage. So he set a watch over
-his sister, and by this means found out that she was sending a
-basket of the choicest apples to her lover, by the hands of a trusty
-messenger. On this Fergus managed to get hold of the basket of
-fruit from the messenger; and he changed them secretly for
-another lot of apples, over which he worked an evil spell. Furnished
-with these the messenger set out for Cashel, and presented
-them to Cathal the king, who, delighted at this proof of love
-from his princess, began at once to eat the apples. But the more
-he ate, the more he longed for them, for a wicked spell was on
-every apple. When he had eaten them all up, he sent round the
-country for more, and ate, and ate, until there was not an apple
-left in Cashel, nor in all the country round.</p>
-
-<p>Then he bade his chieftains go forth and bring in food to appease
-his appetite; and he ate up all the cattle and the grain and the
-fruit, and still cried for more; and had the houses searched for
-food to bring to him. So the people were in despair, for they had
-no more food, and starvation was over the land.</p>
-
-<p>Now a great and wise man, the chief poet of his tribe, happened
-to be travelling through Munster at that time, and hearing of the
-king’s state, he greatly desired to see him, for he knew there was
-devil’s work in the evil spell. So they brought him to the king,
-and many strong invocations he uttered over him, and many
-powerful incantations, for poets have a knowledge of mysteries
-above all other men; until finally, after three days had passed, he
-announced to the lords and chiefs that on that night, when the
-moon rose, the spell would be broken, and the king restored to his
-wonted health. So all the chiefs gathered round in the courtyard
-to watch; but no one was allowed to enter the room where the
-king lay, save only the poet. And he was to give the signal when
-the hour had come and the spell was broken.</p>
-
-<p>So as they watched, and just as the moon rose, a great cry was
-heard from the king’s room, and the poet, flinging open the door,
-bade the chiefs enter; and there on the floor lay a huge dead wolf,
-who for a whole year had taken up his abode in the king’s body;
-but was now happily cast forth by the strong incantations of the
-poet.</p>
-
-<p>After this the king fell into a deep sleep, and when he arose he
-was quite well, and strong again as ever, in all the pride of his
-youth and beauty. At this the people rejoiced much, for he was
-greatly loved, and the poet who had restored him was honoured
-above all men in the land; for the king himself took off the
-golden torque from his own neck, and placed it on that of the
-poet, and he set him at his right hand at the feast.</p>
-
-<p>Now a strange thing happened just at this time; for Fergus,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">99</span>
-King of the North, fell ill, and wasted away to a shadow, and of
-all the beautiful meats and wines they set before him he could
-taste nothing. So he died before a year had passed by; and
-then Cathal the king wedded his beloved princess, and they lived
-happily through many years.</p>
-
-
-<h4><a id="THE_POETS_MALEDICTION"></a>THE POET’S MALEDICTION.</h4>
-
-<p>The imprecations of the poets had often also a mysterious and
-fatal effect.</p>
-
-<p>King Breas, the pagan monarch, was a fierce, cruel, and niggardly
-man, who was therefore very unpopular with the people,
-who hate the cold heart and the grudging hand.</p>
-
-<p>Amongst others who suffered by the king’s inhospitality, was
-the renowned Carbury the poet, son of Eodain, the great poetess
-of the Tuatha-de-Danann race; she who chanted the song of
-victory when her people conquered the Firbolgs, on the plains of
-Moytura; and the stone that she stood on, during the battle, in
-sight of all the warriors, is still existing, and is pointed out as the
-stone of Eodain, the poetess, with great reverence, even to this
-day.</p>
-
-<p>It was her son, Carbury the poet, who was held in such high
-honour by the nation, that King Breas invited him to his court, in
-order that he might pronounce a powerful malediction over the
-enemy with whom he was then at war.</p>
-
-<p>Carbury came on the royal summons, but in place of being
-treated with the distinction due to his high rank, he was lodged
-and fed so meanly that the soul of the poet raged with wrath;
-for the king gave him for lodgement only a small stone cell without
-fire or a bed; and for food he had only three cakes of meal
-without any flesh meat or sauce, and no wine was given him, such
-wine as is fit to light up the poet’s soul before the divine mystic
-spirit of song can awake in its power within him. So very early
-the next morning, the poet rose up and departed, with much rage
-in his heart. But as he passed the king’s house he stopped, and
-in place of a blessing, pronounced a terrible malediction over
-Breas and his race, which can still be found in the ancient books of
-Ireland, commencing thus—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Without fire, without bed, on the surface of the floor!</div>
- <div class="verse">Without meat, without fowl, on the surface of the dish.</div>
- <div class="verse">Three little dishes and no flesh thereon,</div>
- <div class="verse">A cell without bed, a dish without meat, a cup without wine,</div>
- <div class="verse">Are these fit offerings from a king to a poet?</div>
- <div class="verse">May the king and his race be three times accursed for ever and for ever!”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">100</span></p>
-<p>Immediately three large blisters rose on the king’s forehead,
-and remained there as a sign and mark of the poet’s vengeance.</p>
-
-<p>And from that day forth to his death, which happened not long
-after, the reign of Breas was a time of sore trouble and disaster,
-for he was three times defeated by his enemies, and from care and
-sorrow a grievous disease fell on him; for though hungry he could
-not swallow any food; and though all the meat and wine of the
-best was set before him, yet his throat seemed closed, and though
-raging with hunger yet not a morsel could pass his lips; and so
-he died miserably, starved in the midst of plenty, and accursed in
-all things by the power and malediction of the angry poet.</p>
-
-
-<h4><a id="DRIMIAL_AGUS_THORIAL"></a>DRIMIAL AGUS THORIAL.<br />
-
-<small>(A WICKED SPELL.)</small></h4>
-
-<p>When a girl wishes to gain the love of a man, and to make him
-marry her, the dreadful spell is used called <i>Drimial Agus Thorial</i>.
-At dead of night, she and an accomplice go to a churchyard,
-exhume a newly-buried corpse, and take a strip of the skin from
-the head to the heel. This is wound round the girl as a belt
-with a solemn invocation to the devil for his help.</p>
-
-<p>After she has worn it for a day and a night she watches her
-opportunity and ties it round the sleeping man whose love she
-desires; during which process the name of God must not be
-mentioned.</p>
-
-<p>When he awakes the man is bound by the spell; and is forced
-to marry the cruel and evil harpy. It is said the children of such
-marriages bear a black mark round the wrist, and are known and
-shunned by the people, who call them “sons of the devil.”</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="AN_IRISH_ADEPT_OF_THE_ISLANDS">AN IRISH ADEPT OF THE ISLANDS.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Some persons, even at the present day amongst the peasants,
-have strange gifts and a knowledge of the hidden mysteries, but
-they can only impart this knowledge when they know that death
-is on them, and then it must be to a female, to an unmarried man,
-or to a childless woman, for these are the most susceptible to the
-mysterious power by which miracles can be worked.</p>
-
-<p>A man now living at Innis-Sark has this strange and mystic<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">101</span>
-gift. He can heal diseases by a word, even at a distance, and his
-glance sees into the very heart, and reads the secret thoughts of
-men. He never touched beer, spirits, or meat, in all his life, but
-has lived entirely on bread, fruit, and vegetables. A man who
-knew him thus describes him—“Winter and summer his dress is
-the same, merely a flannel shirt and coat. He will pay his share
-at a feast, but neither eats nor drinks of the food and drink set before
-him. He speaks no English, and never could be made to
-learn the English tongue, though he says it might be used with
-great effect to curse one’s enemy. He holds a burial-ground
-sacred, and would not carry away so much as a leaf of ivy from a
-grave. And he maintains that the people are right in keeping to
-their ancient usages, such as never to dig a grave on a Monday;
-and to carry the coffin three times round the grave, following the
-course of the sun, for then the dead rest in peace. Like the
-people, also, he holds suicides as accursed; for they believe that
-all the dead who have been recently buried turn over on their
-faces if a suicide is laid amongst them.</p>
-
-<p>“Though well off he never, even in his youth, thought of
-taking a wife, nor was he ever known to love a woman. He
-stands quite apart from life, and by this means holds his power
-over the mysteries. No money will tempt him to impart this
-knowledge to another, for if he did he would be struck dead—so
-he believes. He would not touch a hazel stick, but carries an ash
-wand, which he holds in his hand when he prays, laid across his
-knees, and the whole of his life is devoted to works of grace and
-charity.”</p>
-
-<p>Though now an old man he has never had a day’s sickness. No
-one has ever seen him in a rage, nor heard an angry word from
-his lips but once; and then being under great irritation, he recited
-the Lord’s Prayer backwards, as an imprecation on his enemy.
-Before his death he will reveal the mystery of his power, but not
-till the hand of death is on him for certain.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_MAY_FESTIVAL">THE MAY FESTIVAL.</h3>
-
-
-<p>There were four great festivals held in Ireland from the most
-ancient pagan times, and these four sacred seasons were February,
-May, Midsummer, and November. May was the most memorable
-and auspicious of all; then the Druids lit the <i>Baal-Tinne</i>, the
-holy, goodly fire of Baal, the Sun-god, and they drove the cattle
-on a path made between two fires, and singed them with the
-flame of a lighted torch, and sometimes they cut them to spill<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">102</span>
-blood, and then burnt the blood as a sacred offering to the Sun-god.</p>
-
-<p>The great feast of Bel, or the Sun, took place on May Eve;
-and that of Samhain, or the Moon, on November Eve; when
-libations were poured out to appease the evil spirits, and also the
-spirits of the dead, who come out of their graves on that night to
-visit their ancient homes.</p>
-
-<p>The Phœnicians, it is known, adored the Supreme Being under
-the name of Bel-Samen, and it is remarkable that the peasants in
-Ireland, wishing you good luck, say in Irish, “The blessing of
-Bel, and the blessing of Samhain, be with you,” that is, of the sun
-and of the moon.</p>
-
-<p>These were the great festivals of the Druids, when all domestic
-fires were extinguished, in order to be re-lit by the sacred fire
-taken from the temples, for it was deemed sacrilege to have any
-fires kindled except from the holy altar flame.</p>
-
-<p>St. Patrick, however, determined to break down the power of
-the Druids; and, therefore, in defiance of their laws, he had a
-great fire lit on May Eve, when he celebrated the paschal
-mysteries; and henceforth Easter, or the Feast of the Resurrection,
-took the place of the Baal festival.</p>
-
-<p>The Baal fires were originally used for human sacrifices and
-burnt-offerings of the first-fruits of the cattle; but after
-Christianity was established the children and cattle were only
-passed between two fires for purification from sin, and as a safeguard
-against the power of the devil.</p>
-
-<p>The Persians also extinguished the domestic fires on the Baal
-festival, the 21st of April, and were obliged to re-light them from
-the temple fires, for which the priests were paid a fee in silver
-money. A fire kindled by rubbing two pieces of wood together
-was also considered lucky by the Persians; then water was boiled
-over the flame, and afterwards sprinkled on the people and on the
-cattle. The ancient Irish ritual resembles the Persian in every
-particular, and the Druids, no doubt, held the traditional worship
-exactly as brought from the East, the land of the sun and of tree
-worship and well worship.</p>
-
-<p>May Day, called in Irish <i>Là-Beltaine</i>, the day of the Baal fires,
-was the festival of greatest rejoicing held in Ireland. But the
-fairies have great power at that season, and children and cattle,
-and the milk and butter, must be well guarded from their
-influence. A spent coal must be put under the churn, and another
-under the cradle; and primroses must be scattered before the
-door, for the fairies cannot pass the flowers. Children that die in
-April are supposed to be carried off by the fairies, who are then
-always on the watch to abduct whatever is young and beautiful
-for their fairy homes.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes on the 1st of May, a sacred heifer, snow white,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">103</span>
-appeared amongst the cattle; and this was considered to bring the
-highest good luck to the farmer. An old Irish song that alludes
-to the heifer, may be translated thus—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“There is a cow on the mountain,</div>
- <div class="verse">A fair white cow;</div>
- <div class="verse">She goes East and she goes West,</div>
- <div class="verse">And my senses have gone for love of her;</div>
- <div class="verse">She goes with the sun and he forgets to burn,</div>
- <div class="verse">And the moon turns her face with love to her,</div>
- <div class="verse">My fair white cow of the mountain.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>The fairies are in the best of humours upon May Eve, and the
-music of the fairy pipes may be heard all through the night,
-while the fairy folk are dancing upon the rath. It is then they
-carry off the young people to join their revels; and if a girl has
-once danced to the fairy music, she will move ever after with
-such fascinating grace, that it has passed into a proverb to say of
-a good dancer, “She has danced to fairy music on the hill.”</p>
-
-<p>At the great long dance held in old times on May Day, all the
-people held hands and danced round a great May-bush erected on
-a mound. The circle sometimes extended for a mile, the girls
-wearing garlands, and the young men carrying wands of green
-boughs, while the elder people sat round on the grass as spectators,
-and applauded the ceremony. The tallest and strongest young
-men in the county stood in the centre and directed the movements,
-while the pipers and harpers, wearing green and gold sashes,
-played the most spirited dance tunes.</p>
-
-<p>The oldest worship of the world was of the sun and moon, of
-trees, wells, and the serpent that gave wisdom. Trees were the
-symbol of knowledge, and the dance round the May-bush is part
-of the ancient ophite ritual. The Baila also, or waltz, is associated
-with Baal worship, where the two circling motions are combined;
-the revolution of the planet on its own axis, and also round the
-sun.</p>
-
-<p>In Italy, this ancient festival, called <i>Calendi Maggio</i>, is celebrated
-in the rural districts much in the Irish way. Dante fell in
-love at the great May Day festival, held in the Portinari Palace.
-The Sclavonic nations likewise light sacred fires, and dance
-round a tree hung with garlands on May Day. This reverence
-for the tree is one of the oldest superstitions of humanity and the
-most universal, and the fires are a relic of the old pagan worship
-paid to the Grynian Apollo—fire above all things being held
-sacred by the Irish as a safeguard from evil spirits. It is a saying
-amongst them, “Fire and salt are the two most sacred things
-given to man, and if you give them away on May Day, you give
-away your luck for the year.” Therefore no one will allow milk,
-or fire, or salt, to be carried away from the house on that day;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">104</span>
-and if people came in and asked for a lighted sod, they would be
-driven away with curses, for their purpose was evil.</p>
-
-<p>The witches, however, make great efforts to steal the milk on
-May morning, and if they succeed, the luck passes from the
-family, and the milk and butter for the whole year will belong to
-the fairies. The best preventative is to scatter primroses on the
-threshold; and the old women tie bunches of primroses to the
-cows’ tails, for the evil spirits cannot touch anything guarded by
-these flowers, if they are plucked before sunrise, not else. A piece
-of iron, also, made red hot, is placed upon the hearth; any old
-iron will do, the older the better, and branches of whitethorn and
-mountain ash are wreathed round the doorway for luck. The
-mountain ash has very great and mysterious qualities. If a
-branch of it be woven into the roof, that house is safe from fire for
-a year at least, and if a branch of it is mixed with the timber of a
-boat, no storm will upset it, and no man in it will be drowned for
-a twelvemonth certain. To save milk from witchcraft, the people
-on May morning cut and peel some branches of the mountain ash,
-and bind the twigs round the milk pails and the churn. No witch
-or fairy will then be able to steal the milk or butter. But all this
-must be done <i>before sunrise</i>. However, should butter be missed,
-follow the cow to the field, and gather the clay her hoof has
-touched; then, on returning home, place it under the churn with
-a live coal and a handful of salt, and your butter is safe from man
-or woman, fairy or fiend, for that year. There are other methods
-also to preserve a good supply of butter in the churn; a horse-shoe
-tied on it; a rusty nail from a coffin driven into the side; a cross
-made of the leaves of veronica placed at the bottom of the milk
-pail; but the mountain ash is the best of all safeguards against
-witchcraft and devil’s magic. Without some of these precautions
-the fairies will certainly overlook the churn, and the milk and
-butter, in consequence, will fail all through the year, and the
-farmer suffer great loss. Herbs gathered on May Eve have a
-mystical and strong virtue for curing disease; and powerful
-potions are made then by the skilful herb women and fairy doctors,
-which no sickness can resist, chiefly of the yarrow, called in
-Irish “the herb of seven needs” or cures, from its many and great
-virtues. Divination is also practised to a great extent by means
-of the yarrow. The girls dance round it singing—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Yarrow, yarrow, yarrow,</div>
- <div class="verse">I bid thee good morrow,</div>
- <div class="verse">And tell me before to-morrow</div>
- <div class="verse">Who my true love shall be.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>The herb is then placed under the head at night, and in dreams
-the true lover will appear. Another mode of divination for the
-future fate in life is by snails. The young girls go out early be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">105</span>fore
-sunrise to trace the path of the snails in the clay, for always
-a letter is marked, and this is the initial of the true lover’s name.
-A black snail is very unlucky to meet first in the morning, for his
-trail would read <i>death</i>; but a white snail brings good fortune. A
-white lamb on the right hand is also good; but the cuckoo is
-ominous of evil. Of old the year began with the 1st of May, and
-an ancient Irish rhyme says—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“A white lamb on my right side,</div>
- <div class="verse">So will good come to me;</div>
- <div class="verse">But not the little false cuckoo</div>
- <div class="verse">On the first day of the year.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Prophecies were also made from the way the wind blew on May
-mornings. In ’98 an old man, who was drawing near to his end
-and like to die, inquired from those around him—</p>
-
-<p>“Where did you leave the wind last night?” (May Eve.)</p>
-
-<p>They told him it came from the north.</p>
-
-<p>“Then,” he said, “the country is lost to the Clan Gael; our
-enemies will triumph. Had it been from the south, we should
-have had the victory; but now the Sassenach will trample us to
-dust.” And he fell back and died.</p>
-
-<p>Ashes are often sprinkled on the threshold on May Eve; and if
-the print of a foot is found in the morning, turned inward, it betokens
-marriage; but if turned outward, death. On May Eve the
-fairy music is heard on all the hills, and many beautiful tunes
-have been caught up in this way by the people and the native
-musicians.</p>
-
-<p>About a hundred years ago a celebrated tune, called <i>Moraleana</i>,
-was learnt by a piper as he traversed the hills one evening; and
-he played it perfectly, note by note, as he heard it from the fairy
-pipes; on which a voice spoke to him and said that he would be
-allowed to play the tune <i>three times</i> in his life before all the
-people, but never a fourth, or a doom would fall on him. However,
-one day he had a great contest for supremacy with another
-piper, and at last, to make sure of victory, he played the wonderful
-fairy melody; when all the people applauded and declared he
-had won the prize by reason of its beauty, and that no music
-could equal his. So they crowned him with the garland; but at
-that moment he turned deadly pale, the pipes dropped from his
-hand, and he fell lifeless to the ground. For nothing escapes the
-fairies; they know all things, and their vengeance is swift and
-sure.</p>
-
-<p>It is very dangerous to sleep out in the open air in the month
-of May, for the fairies are very powerful then, and on the watch
-to carry off the handsome girls for fairy brides, and the young
-mothers as nurses for the fairy babies; while the young men are
-selected as husbands for the beautiful fairy princesses.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">106</span></p>
-
-<p>A young man died suddenly on May Eve while he was lying asleep
-under a hay-rick, and the parents and friends knew immediately
-that he had been carried off to the fairy palace in the great moat
-of Granard. So a renowned fairy man was sent for, who promised
-to have him back in nine days. Meanwhile he desired that food
-and drink of the best should be left daily for the young man at a
-certain place on the moat. This was done, and the food always
-disappeared, by which they knew the young man was living, and
-came out of the moat nightly for the provisions left for him by
-his people.</p>
-
-<p>Now on the ninth day a great crowd assembled to see the young
-man brought back from Fairyland. And in the midst stood the
-fairy doctor performing his incantations by means of fire and a
-powder which he threw into the flames that caused a dense grey
-smoke to arise. Then, taking off his hat, and holding a key in
-his hand, he called out three times in a loud voice, “Come forth,
-come forth, come forth!” On which a shrouded figure slowly
-rose up in the midst of the smoke, and a voice was heard answering,
-“Leave me in peace; I am happy with my fairy bride, and
-my parents need not weep for me, for I shall bring them good
-luck, and guard them from evil evermore.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the figure vanished and the smoke cleared, and the
-parents were content, for they believed the vision, and having
-loaded the fairy-man with presents, they sent him away home.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="MAY-DAY_SUPERSTITIONS">MAY-DAY SUPERSTITIONS.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The marsh marigold is considered of great use in divination, and
-is called “the shrub of Beltaine.” Garlands are made of it for
-the cattle and the door-posts to keep off the fairy power. Milk
-also is poured on the threshold, though none would be given
-away; nor fire, nor salt—these three things being sacred. There
-are many superstitions concerning May-time. It is not safe
-to go on the water the first Monday in May. Hares found
-on May morning are supposed to be witches, and should be
-stoned.</p>
-
-<p>If the fire goes out on May morning it is considered very unlucky,
-and it cannot be re-kindled except by a lighted sod brought
-from the priest’s house. And the ashes of this blessed turf are
-afterwards sprinkled on the floor and the threshold of the house.
-Neither fire, nor water, nor milk, nor salt should be given away
-for love or money, and if a wayfarer is given a cup of milk, he
-must drink it in the house, and salt must be mixed with it. Salt
-and water as a drink is at all times considered a potent charm<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">107</span>
-against evil, if properly prepared by a fairy doctor and the magic
-words said over it.</p>
-
-<p>One day in May a young girl lay down to rest at noontide on a
-fairy rath and fell asleep—a thing of great danger, for the fairies
-are strong in power during the May month, and are particularly
-on the watch for a mortal bride to carry away to the fairy mansions,
-for they love the sight of human beauty. So they spirited
-away the young sleeping girl, and only left a shadowy resemblance
-of her lying on the rath. Evening came on, and as the
-young girl had not returned, her mother sent out messengers in
-all directions to look for her. At last she was found on the fairy
-rath, lying quite unconscious, like one dead.</p>
-
-<p>They carried her home and laid her on her bed, but she neither
-spoke nor moved. So three days passed over. Then they thought
-it right to send for the fairy doctor. At once he said that she
-was fairy struck, and he gave them a salve made of herbs to
-anoint her hands and her brow every morning at sunrise, and every
-night when the moon rose; and salt was sprinkled on the threshold
-and round her bed where she lay sleeping. This was done for
-six days and six nights, and then the girl rose up suddenly and
-asked for food. They gave her to eat, but asked no questions,
-only watched her that she should not quit the house. And then
-she fixed her eyes on them steadily and said—</p>
-
-<p>“Why did you bring me back? I was so happy. I was in a
-beautiful palace where lovely ladies and young princes were
-dancing to the sweetest music; and they made me dance with
-them, and threw a mantle over me of rich gold; and now it is all
-gone, and you have brought me back, and I shall never, never see
-the beautiful palace more.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the mother wept and said—</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, child, stay with me, for I have no other daughter, and if
-the fairies take you from me I shall die.”</p>
-
-<p>When the girl heard this, she fell on her mother’s neck and
-kissed her, and promised that she would never again go near the
-fairy rath while she lived, for the fairy doctor told her that if
-ever she lay down there again and slept, she would never return
-alive to her home any more.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="FESTIVALS">FESTIVALS.</h3>
-
-
-<h4><a id="CANDLEMAS"></a>CANDLEMAS.</h4>
-
-<p>Candlemas day, the 2nd of February, used to be held in the old
-pagan times as a kind of saturnalia, with dances and torches and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">108</span>
-many unholy rites. But these gave occasion to so much ill conduct
-that in the ninth century the Pope abolished the festival,
-and substituted for it the Feast of the Purification of the Blessed
-Virgin, when candles were lit in her honour. Hence the name of
-Candlemas.</p>
-
-
-<h4><a id="WHITSUNTIDE"></a>WHITSUNTIDE.</h4>
-
-<p>Whitsuntide is a very fatal and unlucky time. Especially beware
-of water then, for there is an evil spirit in it, and no one
-should venture to bathe, nor to sail in a boat for fear of being
-drowned; nor to go a journey where water has to be crossed. And
-everything in the house must be sprinkled with holy water at
-Whitsuntide to keep away the fairies, who at that season are
-very active and malicious, and bewitch the cattle, and carry off
-the young children, and come up from the sea to hold strange
-midnight revels, when they kill with their fairy darts the unhappy
-mortal who crosses their path and pries at their mysteries.</p>
-
-
-<h4><a id="WHITSUNTIDE_LEGEND_OF_THE_FAIRY_HORSES"></a>WHITSUNTIDE LEGEND OF THE FAIRY HORSES.</h4>
-
-<p>There was a widow woman with one son, who had a nice farm
-of her own close to a lake, and she took great pains in the cultivation
-of the land, and her corn was the best in the whole
-country. But when nearly ripe, and just fit for cutting, she found
-to her dismay that every night it was trampled down and
-cruelly damaged; yet no one could tell by what means it was
-done.</p>
-
-<p>So she set her son to watch. And at midnight he heard a great
-noise and a rushing of waves on the beach, and up out of the
-lake came a great troop of horses, who began to graze the corn
-and trample it down madly with their hoofs.</p>
-
-<p>When he told all this to his mother she bade him watch the
-next night also, but to take several of the men with him furnished
-with bridles, and when the horses rose from the lake they were to
-fling the bridles over as many as they could catch.</p>
-
-<p>Now at midnight there was the same noise heard again, and the
-rush of the waves, and in an instant all the field was filled with
-the fairy horses, grazing the corn and trampling it down. The
-men pursued them, but only succeeded in capturing one, and he
-was the noblest of the lot. The rest all plunged back into the
-lake. However, the men brought home the captured horse to the
-widow, and he was put in the stable and grew big and strong,
-and never another horse came up out of the lake, nor was the
-corn touched after that night of his capture. But when a year<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">109</span>
-had passed by the widow said it was a shame to keep so fine a
-horse idle, and she bade the young man, her son, take him out to
-the hunt that was held that day by all the great gentry of the
-country, for it was Whitsuntide.</p>
-
-<p>And, in truth, the horse carried him splendidly at the hunt, and
-every one admired both the fine young rider and his steed. But
-as he was returning home, when they came within sight of the
-lake from which the fairy steed had risen, he began to plunge
-violently, and finally threw his rider. And the young man’s foot
-being unfortunately caught in the stirrup, he was dragged along
-till he was torn limb from limb, while the horse still continued
-galloping on madly to the water, leaving some fragment of the
-unhappy lad after him on the road, till they reached the margin
-of the lake, when the horse shook off the last limb of the dead
-youth from him, and plunging into the waves disappeared from
-sight.</p>
-
-<p>The people reverently gathered up the remains of the dead, and
-erected a monument of stones over the lad in a field by the edge
-of the lake; and every one that passes by still lays a stone and
-says a prayer that the spirit of the dead may rest in peace.</p>
-
-<p>The phantom horses were never seen again, but the lake has an
-evil reputation even to this day amongst the people; and no one
-would venture a boat on it after sundown at Whitsuntide, or
-during the time of the ripening of the corn, or when the harvest
-is ready for the sickle, for strange sounds are heard at night, like
-the wild galloping of a horse across the meadow, along with the
-cries as of a man in his death agony.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="NOVEMBER_SPELLS">NOVEMBER SPELLS.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The ancient Irish divided the year into summer and winter—<i>Samrath</i>
-and <i>Gheimrath</i>; the former beginning in May, the latter
-in November, called also <i>Sam-fuim</i> (summer end). At this season,
-when the sun dies, the powers of darkness exercise great and evil
-influence over all things. The witch-women say they can then
-ride at night through the air with Diana of the Ephesians, and
-Herodias, and others leagued with the devil; and change men to
-beasts; and ride with the dead and cover leagues of ground on
-swift spirit-horses. Also on November Eve, by certain incantations,
-the dead can be made to appear and answer questions;
-but for this purpose blood must be sprinkled on the dead body
-when it rises; for it is said the spirits love blood. The colour
-excites them and gives them for the time the power and the semblance
-of life.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">110</span></p>
-
-<p>Divination by fire, by earth, and by water, is also largely
-practised; but, as an ancient writer has observed, “All such
-divinations are accursed, for they are worked by the power of the
-fallen angels, who give knowledge only through malice, and to
-bring evil on the questioner. Neither should times and seasons be
-held lucky or unlucky, nor the course of the moon, nor the death
-of the sun, nor the so-called Egyptian days; for all things are
-blessed to a Christian. And this is the doctrine of the Holy
-Church, which all men should take to heart.... But a prayer
-to God, written fine, may be worn tyed round the neck, for this is
-done in a holy spirit, and is not against the ordinances of the
-Church.”</p>
-
-<p>The scapular here alluded to is a piece of cloth on which the
-name of Mary is written on one side and I.H.S. on the other. It
-preserves against evil spirits, and is a passport to heaven, and
-ensures against the pains of hell; for the Blessed Virgin takes the
-wearer under her especial care. It is placed in a little silk bag
-and worn tied round the neck, and is left upon the dead in their
-coffin for the angels to see at the resurrection. The scapular is
-never given to an evil liver, so it is a sign both of a pious life here
-and a blessed life hereafter.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="NOVEMBER_EVE_2">NOVEMBER EVE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>All the spells worked on November Eve are performed in the
-name of the devil, who is then forced to reveal the future fate of
-the questioner. The most usual spell is to wash a garment in a
-running brook, then hang it on a thorn bush, and wait to see the
-apparition of the lover, who will come to turn it. But the tricks
-played on this night by young persons on each other have often
-most disastrous consequences. One young girl fell dead with
-fright when an apparition really came and turned the garment she
-had hung on the bush. And a lady narrates that on the 1st of
-November her servant rushed into the room and fainted on the
-floor. On recovering, she said that she had played a trick that
-night in the name of the devil before the looking-glass; but what
-she had seen she dared not speak of, though the remembrance of
-it would never leave her brain, and she knew the shock would kill
-her. They tried to laugh her out of her fears, but the next night
-she was found quite dead, with her features horribly contorted,
-lying on the floor before the looking-glass, which was shivered to
-pieces.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">111</span></p>
-
-<p>Another spell is the building of the house. Twelve couples are
-taken, each being made of two holly twigs tied together with a
-hempen thread; these are all named and stuck round in a circle in
-the clay. A live coal is then placed in the centre, and whichever
-couple catches fire first will assuredly be married. Then the
-future husband is invoked in the name of the Evil One to appear
-and quench the flame.</p>
-
-<p>On one occasion a dead man in his shroud answered the call,
-and silently drew away the girl from the rest of the party. The
-fright turned her brain, and she never recovered her reason afterwards.
-The horror of that apparition haunted her for ever, especially
-as on November Eve it is believed firmly that the dead
-really leave their graves and have power to appear amongst the
-living.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A young girl in a farmer’s service was in the loft one night
-looking for eggs when two men came into the stable underneath,
-and through a chink in the boards she could see them quite well
-and hear all they said. To her horror she found that they were
-planning the murder of a man in the neighbourhood who was
-suspected of being an informer, and they settled how they would
-get rid of the body by throwing it into the Shannon. She
-crept home half dead with fright, but did not venture to tell any
-one what she had heard. Next day, however, the news spread
-that the man was missing, and it was feared he was murdered.
-Still the girl was afraid to reveal what she knew, though the
-ghost of the murdered man seemed for ever before her. Finally
-she could bear the place no longer, and, giving up her situation,
-she went to another village some miles off and took service. But
-on November Eve, as she was washing clothes in the Shannon,
-the dead body of the murdered man arose from the water and
-floated towards her, until it lay quite close to her feet. Then she
-knew the hand of God was in it, and that the spirit of the
-dead would not rest till he was avenged. So she went and gave
-information, and on her evidence the two murderers were convicted
-and executed.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If the cattle fall sick at this season, it is supposed that some old
-fairy man or woman is lying hid about the place to spy out the
-doings of the family and work some evil spells.</p>
-
-<p>A farmer had a splendid cow, the pride of his farm, but suddenly
-it seemed ailing and gave no milk, though every morning it
-went and stood quite patiently under an old hawthorn-tree as if
-some one were milking her. So the man watched the time, and
-presently the cow came of herself and stood under the hawthorn,
-when a little old wizened woman came forth from the trunk of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">112</span>
-tree, milked the cow, and then retreated into the tree again. On
-this the farmer sent at once for a fairy doctor, who exorcised the
-cow and gave it a strong potion, after which the spell was broken
-and the cow was restored to its usual good condition and gave
-the milk as heretofore.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The fairies also exercise a malign influence by making a path
-through a house, when all the children begin to pine and a blight
-falls on the family.</p>
-
-<p>A farmer who had lost one son by heart disease (always a
-mysterious malady to the peasants) and another by gradual decay,
-consulted a wise fairy woman as to what should be done, for his
-wife also had become delicate and weak. The woman told him
-that on November Eve the fairies had made a road through the
-house, and were going back and forward ever since, and whatever
-they looked upon was doomed. The only remedy was to
-build up the old door and open another entrance. This the man
-did, and when the witch-women came as usual in the morning to
-beg for water or milk or meal they found no door, and were
-obliged to turn back. After this the spell was taken off the
-household, and they all prospered without fear of the fairies.</p>
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3><a id="A_TERRIBLE_REVENGE"></a>A TERRIBLE REVENGE.</h3>
-
-<p>The fairies often take a terrible revenge if they are ever slighted
-or offended. A whole family once came under their ban because
-a fairy woman had been refused admittance into the house. The
-eldest boy lost his sight for some time, and though he recovered
-the use of his eyes yet they always had a strange expression, as if
-he saw some terrible object in the distance that scared him. And
-at last the neighbours grew afraid of the family, for they brought
-ill-luck wherever they went, and nothing prospered that they
-touched.</p>
-
-<p>There were six children, all wizened little creatures with
-withered old faces and thin crooked fingers. Every one knew
-they were fairy changelings, and the smith wanted to put them
-on the anvil, and the wise women said they should be passed
-through the fire; but destiny settled the future for them, for one
-after another they all pined away and died, and the ban of the
-fairies was never lifted from the ill-fated house till the whole
-family lay in the grave.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">113</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h3 id="MIDSUMMER">MIDSUMMER.</h3>
-
-
-<h4><a id="THE_BAAL_FIRES_AND_DANCES"></a>THE BAAL FIRES AND DANCES.</h4>
-
-<p>This season is still made memorable in Ireland by lighting fires
-on every hill, according to the ancient pagan usage, when the
-Baal fires were kindled as part of the ritual of sun-worship,
-though now they are lit in honour of St. John. The great bonfire
-of the year is still made on St. John’s Eve, when all the people
-dance round it, and every young man takes a lighted brand
-from the pile to bring home with him for good luck to the
-house.</p>
-
-<p>In ancient times the sacred fire was lighted with great ceremony
-on Midsummer Eve; and on that night all the people of
-the adjacent country kept fixed watch on the western promontory
-of Howth, and the moment the first flash was seen from that spot
-the fact of ignition was announced with wild cries and cheers
-repeated from village to village, when all the local fires began to
-blaze, and Ireland was circled by a cordon of flame rising up from
-every hill. Then the dance and song began round every fire, and
-the wild hurrahs filled the air with the most frantic revelry.</p>
-
-<p>Many of these ancient customs are still continued, and the fires
-are still lighted on St. John’s Eve on every hill in Ireland. When
-the fire has burned down to a red glow the young men strip to
-the waist and leap over or through the flames; this is done backwards
-and forwards several times, and he who braves the greatest
-blaze is considered the victor over the powers of evil, and is
-greeted with tremendous applause. When the fire burns still
-lower, the young girls leap the flame, and those who leap clean
-over three times back and forward will be certain of a speedy
-marriage and good luck in after life, with many children. The
-married women then walk through the lines of the burning
-embers; and when the fire is nearly burnt and trampled down,
-the yearling cattle are driven through the hot ashes, and their
-back is singed with a lighted hazel twig. These hazel rods are
-kept safely afterwards, being considered of immense power to
-drive the cattle to and from the watering places. As the fire
-diminishes the shouting grows fainter, and the song and the dance
-commence; while professional story-tellers narrate tales of fairy-land,
-or of the good old times long ago, when the kings and
-princes of Ireland dwelt amongst their own people, and there
-was food to eat and wine to drink for all comers to the feast at
-the king’s house. When the crowd at length separate, every one
-carries home a brand from the fire, and great virtue is attached to
-the lighted <i>brone</i> which is safely carried to the house without
-breaking or falling to the ground. Many contests also arise<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">114</span>
-amongst the young men; for whoever enters his house first with
-the sacred fire brings the good luck of the year with him.</p>
-
-<p>On the first Sunday in Midsummer all the young people used to
-stand in lines after leaving chapel, to be hired for service—the
-girls holding white hands, the young men each with an emblem
-of his trade. The evening ended with a dance and the revelry
-was kept up until the dawn of the next day, called “Sorrowful
-Monday,” because of the end of the pleasure and the frolic.</p>
-
-
-<h4><a id="THE_FAIRY_DOCTRESS"></a>THE FAIRY DOCTRESS.</h4>
-
-<p>But all this time the fairies were not idle; for it was at this
-very season of dances and festivals, when the mortals around them
-were happiest, that Finvarra the king and his chosen band were
-on the watch to carry off the prettiest girls to the fairy mansions.</p>
-
-<p>There they kept them for seven years, and at the end of that
-time, when they grew old and ugly, they were sent back, for the
-fairies love nothing so much as youth and beauty. But as a compensation
-for the slight put on them, the women were taught all
-the fairy secrets and the magical mystery that lies in herbs, and
-the strange power they have over diseases. So by this means the
-women became all-powerful, and by their charms or spells or
-potions could kill or save as they chose.</p>
-
-<p>There was a woman of the islands greatly feared, yet respected
-by the people for her knowledge of herbs, which gave her power
-over all diseases. But she never revealed the nature of the herb,
-and always gathered the leaves herself at night and hid them
-under the eaves of the house. And if the person who carried the
-herb home let it fall to the ground by the way, it lost its power;
-or if they talked of it or showed it to any one, all the virtue went
-out of it. It was to be used secretly and alone, and then the cure
-would be perfected without fail.</p>
-
-<p>One time, a man who was told of this came over from the mainland
-in a boat with two other men to see the fairy woman; for
-he was lame from a fall and could do no work.</p>
-
-<p>Now the woman knew they were coming, for she had a knowledge
-of all things through the power of divination she had
-learned from the fairies, and could see and hear though no man
-told her. So she went out and prepared the herb, and made a
-salve and brewed a potion, and had all ready for the man and his
-friends.</p>
-
-<p>When they appeared she stood at the door and cried, “Enter!
-This is the lucky day and hour; have no fear, for you will be
-cured by the power that is in me, and by the herb I give you.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the man bowed down before her, and said, “Oh, mother,
-this is my case.” And he told her, that being out one day on the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">115</span>
-mountains, he slipped and fell on his face. A mere slight fall,
-but when he rose up his leg was powerless though no bone seemed
-broken.</p>
-
-<p>“I know how it happened,” she said. “You trod upon a fairy
-herb under which the fairies were resting, and you disturbed them
-and broke in the top of their dwelling, so they were angry and
-struck you on the leg and lamed you out of spite. But my power
-is greater than theirs. Do as I tell you and you will soon be
-cured.”</p>
-
-<p>So she gave him the salve and the bottle of potion, and bade
-him take it home carefully and use it in silence and alone, and in
-three days the power of the limb would come back to him.</p>
-
-<p>Then the man offered her silver; but she refused.</p>
-
-<p>“I do not sell my knowledge,” she said, “I give it. And so
-the strength and the power remain with me.”</p>
-
-<p>On this the men went their way. But after three days a message
-came from the man to say that he was cured. And he sent
-the wise woman a handsome present also; for a gift works no
-evil, though to sell the sacred power and mysteries of knowledge
-for money would be fatal; for then the spirit of healing that
-dwelt in the woman would have fled away and returned no more.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="MARRIAGE_RITES">MARRIAGE RITES.</h3>
-
-
-<p>In old times in Ireland it was thought right and proper to seem
-to use force in carrying off the bride to her husband. She was
-placed on a swift horse before the bridegroom, while all her
-kindred started in pursuit with shouts and cries. Twelve maidens
-attended the bride, and each was placed on horseback behind the
-young men who rode after the bridal pair. On arriving at her
-future home, the bride was met on the threshold by the bridegroom’s
-mother, who broke an oaten cake over her head as a good
-augury of plenty in the future. In the mountains where horses
-cannot travel, the bridal party walk in procession; the young
-men carrying torches of dried bogwood to light the bride over the
-ravines, for in winter the mountain streams are rapid and dangerous
-to cross.</p>
-
-<p>The Celtic ceremonial of marriage resembles the ancient Greek
-ritual in many points. A traveller in Ireland some fifty years
-ago, before politics had quite killed romance and ancient tradition
-in the hearts of the people, thus describes a rustic marriage
-festival which he came on by chance one evening in the wilds of
-Kerry:—</p>
-
-<p>A large hawthorn tree that stood in the middle of a field near<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">116</span>
-a stream was hung all over with bits of coloured stuff, while
-lighted rush candles were placed here and there amongst the
-branches, to symbolize, no doubt, the new life of brightness preparing
-for the bridal pair. Then came a procession of boys
-marching slowly with flutes and pipes made of hollow reeds, and
-one struck a tin can with a stick at intervals, with a strong rhythmical
-cadence. This represented the plectrum. Others rattled
-slates and bones between their fingers, and beat time, after the
-manner of the Crotolistrai—a rude attempt at music, which
-appears amongst all nations of the earth, even the most savage.
-A boy followed, bearing a lighted torch of bogwood. Evidently
-he was Hymen, and the flame of love was his cognizance. After
-him came the betrothed pair hand-in-hand, a large square canopy
-of black stuff being held over their heads; the emblem, of course,
-of the mystery of love, shrouded and veiled from the prying light
-of day.</p>
-
-<p>Behind the pair followed two attendants bearing high over the
-heads of the young couple a sieve filled with meal; a sign of the
-plenty that would be in their house, and an omen of good luck
-and the blessing of children.</p>
-
-<p>A wild chorus of dancers and singers closed the procession; the
-chorus of the epithalamium, and grotesque figures, probably the
-traditional fauns and satyrs, nymphs and bacchanals, mingled
-together with mad laughter and shouts and waving of green
-branches.</p>
-
-<p>The procession then moved on to a bonfire, evidently the ancient
-altar; and having gone round it three times, the black shroud was
-lifted from the bridal pair, and they kissed each other before all
-the people, who shouted and waved their branches in approval.</p>
-
-<p>Then the preparations for the marriage supper began, on
-which, however, the traveller left them, having laid some money
-on the altar as an offering of good-will for the marriage future.
-At the wedding supper there was always plenty of eating
-and drinking, and dancing and the feast were prolonged till
-near morning, when the wedding song was sung by the whole
-party of friends standing, while the bride and bridegroom remained
-seated at the head of the table. The chorus of one of
-these ancient songs may be thus literally translated from the Irish—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“It is not day, nor yet day,</div>
- <div class="verse">It is not day, nor yet morning;</div>
- <div class="verse">It is not day, nor yet day,</div>
- <div class="verse">For the moon is shining brightly.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Another marriage song was sung in Irish frequently, each verse
-ending with the lines—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“There is sweet enchanting music, and the golden harps are ringing;</div>
- <div class="verse">And twelve comely maidens deck the bride-bed for the bride.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">117</span></p>
-<p>A beautiful new dress was presented to the bride by her husband
-at the marriage feast; at which also the father paid down her
-dowry before the assembled guests; and all the place round the
-house was lit by torches when night came on, and the song and
-the dance continued till daylight, with much speech-making and
-drinking of poteen. All fighting was steadily avoided at a
-wedding; for a quarrel would be considered a most unlucky
-omen. A wet day was also held to be very unlucky, as the
-bride would assuredly weep for sorrow throughout the year. But
-the bright warm sunshine was hailed joyfully, according to the
-old saying—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Happy is the bride that the sun shines on;</div>
- <div class="verse">But blessed is the corpse that the rain rains on.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_DEAD">THE DEAD.</h3>
-
-
-<p>There are many strange superstitions concerning the dead.
-The people seem to believe in their actual presence, though
-unseen, and to have a great fear and dread of their fatal and mysterious
-power.</p>
-
-<p>If a person of doubtful character dies, too bad for heaven, too
-good for hell, they imagine that his soul is sent back to earth, and
-obliged to obey the order of some person who bids him remain in
-a particular place until the Day of Judgment, or until another
-soul is found willing to meet him there, and then they may both
-pass into heaven together, absolved.</p>
-
-<p>An incident is related that happened in the County Galway,
-concerning this superstition.</p>
-
-<p>A gentleman of rank and fortune, but of a free and dissipated
-life, became the lover of a pretty girl, one of the tenant’s daughters.
-And the girl was so devoted to him that perhaps he might have
-married her at last; but he was killed suddenly, when out hunting,
-by a fall from his horse.</p>
-
-<p>Some time after, the girl, coming home late one evening, met
-the ghost of her lover, at a very lonesome part of the road. The
-form was the same as when living, but it had no eyes. The girl
-crossed herself, on which the ghost disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>Again she met the same apparition at night, and a third
-time, when the ghost stood right before her in the path, so
-that she could not pass. Then she spoke, and asked in the
-name of God and the good angels, why he appeared to her;
-and he answered, that he could not rest in his grave till he
-had received some command from her, which he was bound to
-obey.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">118</span></p>
-
-<p>“Then,” she said, “go stand by the gate of heaven till the
-Judgment Day, and look in at the blessed dead on their
-thrones, but you may not enter. This is my judgment on your
-soul.”</p>
-
-<p>On this the ghost sighed deeply and vanished, and was seen no
-more. But the girl prayed earnestly that she soon might meet
-her lover at the gate of heaven, whither she had sent him, that so
-both might enter together into the blessed land. And thus it
-happened; for by that day year she was carried to her grave in
-the churchyard, but her soul went forth to meet her lover, where
-he waited for her by the gate of heaven; and through her love he
-was absolved, and permitted to enter within the gate before the
-Judgment Day.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It was considered disrespectful to the dead to take a short
-cut when carrying the coffin to the grave.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In the Islands, when a person is dying, they place twelve lighted
-rushes round the bed. This, they say, is to prevent the devil
-coming for the soul; for nothing evil can pass a circle of fire.
-They also forbid crying for the dead until three hours have passed
-by, lest the wail of the mourners should waken the dogs who are
-waiting to devour the souls of men before they can reach the
-throne of God.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is a very general custom during some nights after a death to
-leave food outside the house—a griddle cake, or a dish of
-potatoes. If it is gone in the morning, the spirits must have
-taken it; for no human being would touch the food left for the
-dead.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The great and old families of Ireland consider it right to be
-buried with their kindred, and are brought from any distance,
-however remote, to be laid in the ancient graveyard of the race.</p>
-
-<p>A young man of family having died far away, from fever,
-it was thought advisable not to bring him home, but to bury him
-where he died. However, on the night of the funeral a phantom
-hearse with four black horses stopped at the churchyard. Some
-men then entered with spades and shovels and dug a grave, after
-which the hearse drove away. But next morning no sign of the
-grave was to be found, except a long line marked out, the length
-of a man’s coffin.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is unlucky and a bad omen to carry fire out of a house where
-any one is ill. A gentleman one day stopped at a cabin to get a light<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">119</span>
-for his cigar, and having wished good morning in the usual friendly
-fashion, he took a stick from the fire, blew it into a blaze, and
-was walking away, when the woman of the house rose up fiercely
-and told him it was an evil thing to take fire away when her
-husband was dying. On looking round he saw a wretched
-skeleton lying on a bed of straw; so he flung back the stick
-at once, and fled from the place, leaving his blessing in the
-form of a silver offering, to neutralize the evil of the abducted
-fire.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>After the priest has left a dying person, and confession has
-been made, all the family kneel round the bed reciting the Litany
-for the Dying, and holy water is sprinkled over the room until the
-soul departs.</p>
-
-<p>Then they all rise and begin the mournful death-wail in a loud
-voice; and by this cry all the people in the village know the exact
-moment of the death, and each one that hears it utters a prayer
-for the departing soul.</p>
-
-<p>At the wake the corpse is often dressed in the habit of a
-religious order. A cross is placed in the hands and the scapular
-on the breast. Candles are lighted all round in a circle, and the
-friends and relatives arrange themselves in due order, the nearest
-of kin being at the head. At intervals they all stand up and
-intone the death-wail, rocking back and forward over the dead,
-and reciting his virtues; while the widow and orphans frequently
-salute the corpse with endearing epithets, and recall the happy
-days they spent together.</p>
-
-<p>When the coffin is borne to the grave each person present helps
-to carry it a little way; for this is considered a mode of showing
-honour to the dead. The nearest relatives take the front handles
-first; then after a little while they move to the back and others
-take their place, until every person in turn has borne the head of
-the coffin to the grave—for it would be dishonourable to the
-dead to omit this mark of respect.</p>
-
-<p>As the coffin is lowered into the grave the death-cry rises up
-with a loud and bitter wail, and the excitement often becomes so
-great that women have fallen into hysterics; and at one funeral a
-young girl in her agony of grief jumped into her father’s grave
-and was taken up insensible.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_WAKE_ORGIES">THE WAKE ORGIES.</h3>
-
-
-<p>From ancient times the wakes, or funeral games, in Ireland were
-held with many strange observances carried down by tradition<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">120</span>
-from the pagan era. Some of the rites, however, were so revolting
-and monstrous that the priesthood used all their influence to
-put them down. The old funeral customs, in consequence, have
-now been discontinued almost entirely amongst the people, and
-the ancient traditional usages are unknown to the new generation,
-though the elders of the village can yet remember them. An old
-man still living thus described to an inquiring antiquary and
-lover of folk-lore, his experience of the ceremonial of a wake at
-which he had been present in the South of Ireland, when he was
-quite a youth, some fifty years before.</p>
-
-<p>“One dark winter’s night, about seven o’clock, a large party of
-us,” he said, “young men and women, perhaps thirty or more, set
-out across the mountain to attend a wake at the house of a rich
-farmer, about three miles off. All the young men carried lighted
-torches, for the way was rugged and dangerous; and by their
-light we guided the women as best we could over the deep
-clefts and across the rapid streams, swollen by the winter’s rain.
-The girls took off their shoes and stockings and walked barefoot,
-but where the water was heavy and deep the men carried them
-across in their arms or on their backs. In this way we all arrived
-at last at the farmhouse, and found a great assemblage in the
-large barn, which was hung throughout with branches of evergreen
-and festoons of laurel and holly.</p>
-
-<p>“At one end of the barn, on a bed decorated with branches of
-green leaves, lay the corpse, an old woman of eighty, the mother
-of the man of the house. He stood by the head of the dead
-woman, while all the near relatives had seats round. Then the
-mourning women entered and sat down on the ground in a circle,
-one in the centre cloaked and hooded, who began the chant or
-funeral wail, all the rest joining in chorus. After an interval
-there would come a deep silence; then the chant began again, and
-when it was over the women rose up and went out, leaving the
-place free for the next comers, who acted a play full of ancient
-symbolic meaning. But, first, whisky was served round, and the
-pipers played; for every village had sent their best player and
-singer to honour the wake.</p>
-
-<p>“When a great space was cleared in the centre of the barn,
-the first set of players entered. They wore masks and fantastic
-garments, and each carried a long spear and a bit of plaited straw
-on the arm for a shield. At once they began to build a fort, as it
-were, marking out the size with their spears, and using some rough
-play with the spectators. While thus engaged a band of enemies
-appeared, also masked and armed. And now a great fight began
-and many prisoners were taken; but to save slaughter a horn was
-blown, and a fight demanded between the two best champions of
-the hostile forces. Two of the finest young men were then
-selected and placed at opposite ends of the barn, when they ran a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">121</span>
-tilt against one another with their spears, uttering fierce, loud cries,
-and making terrible demonstrations. At length one fell down as
-if mortally wounded; then all the hooded women came in again
-and keened over him, a male voice at intervals reciting his deeds,
-while the pipers played martial tunes. But on its being suggested
-that perhaps he was not dead at all, an herb doctor was sent for to
-look at him; and an aged man with a flowing white beard was
-led in, carrying a huge bundle of herbs. With these he performed
-sundry strange incantations, until finally the dead man
-sat up and was carried off the field by his comrades, with shouts
-of triumph. So ended the first play.</p>
-
-<p>“Then supper was served and more whisky drunk, after which
-another play was acted of a different kind. A table was set in
-the middle of the barn, and two chairs, while all the people, about
-a hundred or more, gathered round in a circle. Then two men,
-dressed as judges, took their seats, with guards beside them, and
-called on another man to come forth and address the people. On
-this a young man sprang on the table and poured forth an oration
-in Irish, full of the most grotesque fun and sharp allusions, at
-which the crowd roared with laughter. Then he gave out a verse
-like a psalm, in gibberish Irish, and bade the people say it after
-him. It ran like this, being translated—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“‘Yellow Macauly has come from Spain,</div>
- <div class="verse">He brought sweet music out of a bag,</div>
- <div class="verse">Sing <i>See-saw, Sulla Vick Dhau,</i></div>
- <div class="verse"><i>Sulla, Sulla Vick Dhau righ</i>.’</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">(That is, Solomon, son of David the King.)</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>“If any one failed to repeat this verse after him he was ordered
-to prison by the judges, and the guards seized him to cut off his
-head; or if any one laughed the judge sentenced him, saying in
-Irish, ‘Seize that man, he is a pagan: he is mocking the Christian
-faith. Let him die!’</p>
-
-<p>“After this the professional story-teller was in great force, and
-held the listeners enchained by the wonders of his narration and the
-passionate force of his declamation. So the strange revelry went
-on, and the feasting and the drinking, till sunrise, when many of
-the guests returned to their homes, but others stayed with the
-family till the coffin was lifted for the grave.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Full details of these strange wake orgies can seldom be obtained,
-for the people are afraid of the priesthood, who have vehemently
-denounced them. Yet the peasants cling to them with a mysterious
-reverence, and do not see the immorality of many of the wake
-practices. They accept them as mysteries, ancient usages of their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">122</span>
-forefathers, to be sacredly observed, or the vengeance of the dead
-would fall on them.</p>
-
-<p>According to all accounts an immense amount of dramatic talent
-was displayed by the actors of these fantastic and symbolic plays.
-An intelligent peasant, who was brought to see the acting at the
-Dublin theatre, declared on his return: “I have now seen the
-great English actors, and heard plays in the English tongue, but
-poor and dull they seemed to me after the acting of our own
-people at the wakes and fairs; for it is a truth, the English cannot
-make us weep and laugh as I have seen the crowds with us when
-the players played and the poets recited their stories.”</p>
-
-<p>The Celts certainly have a strong dramatic tendency, and there
-are many peasant families in Ireland who have been distinguished
-for generations as bards and actors, and have a natural and
-hereditary gift for music and song.</p>
-
-<p>On the subject of wake orgies, a clever writer observes that
-they are evidently a remnant of paganism, and formed part of
-those Druidic rites meant to propitiate the evil spirits and the
-demons of darkness and doom; for the influence of Druidism
-lasted long after the establishment of Christianity. The Druid
-priests took shelter with the people, and exercised a powerful and
-mysterious sway over them by their magic spells. Druid practices
-were known to exist down to the time of the Norman invasion in
-the twelfth century, and even for centuries after; and to this
-Druidic influence may be traced the sarcasms on Christianity
-which are occasionally introduced into the mystery plays of the
-wake ceremonial. As in the one called “Hold the Light,” where
-the passion of the Lord Christ is travestied with grotesque imitation.
-The same writer describes the play acted at wakes called
-“The Building of the Ship,” a symbolic rite still older than
-Druidism, and probably a remnant of the primitive Arkite
-worship. This was followed by a scene called “Drawing the
-Ship out of the Mud.” It was against these two plays that the
-anathemas of the Church were chiefly directed, in consequence of
-their gross immorality, and they have now entirely ceased to form
-any portion of the wake ceremonial of Ireland. Hindu priests
-would recognize some of the ceremonies as the same which are
-still practised in their own temples; and travellers have traced a
-similarity also in these ancient usages to the “big canoe games”
-of the Mandan Indians.</p>
-
-<p>In the next play, the Hierophant, or teacher of the games,
-orders all the men out of the room; a young girl is then dressed
-with a hide thrown over her, and horns on her head, to simulate a
-cow, while her maidens form a circle and slowly dance round her
-to music, on which a loud knocking is heard at the door. “Who
-wants to enter?” asks the Hierophant. He is answered, “The
-guards demand admittance for the bull who is without.” Admit<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">123</span>tance
-is refused, and the maidens and the cow affect great alarm.
-Still the knocking goes on, and finally the door is burst open and
-the bull enters. He also is robed with a hide and wears horns,
-and is surrounded by a band of young men as his guards. He
-endeavours to seize the cow, who is defended by her maidens,
-forming the dramatic incidents of the play. A general mock fight
-now takes place between the guards and the maidens, and the
-scene ends with uproarious hilarity and the capture of the cow.</p>
-
-<p>There are other practices mentioned by writers on the subject,
-who trace in the Irish observances a tradition of the Cabyric rites,
-and also a striking similarity to the idolatrous practices of Hindustan
-as described in the “Asiatic Researches,” and in Moore’s
-“Hindu Pantheon.”</p>
-
-<p>It is remarkable also that in the Polynesian Islands the funeral
-rites were accompanied by somewhat similar ceremonies. These
-the early missionaries viewed with horror, and finally succeeded
-in extirpating them.</p>
-
-<p>These ancient funeral rites have now disappeared in Ireland;
-still the subject remains one of intense interest to the ethnologist
-and antiquary, who will find in the details indications of the
-oldest idolatries of the world, especially of that primitive religion
-called Arkite, as in the dramatic performance called “The Building
-of the Ship,” where one man prostrates himself on the ground as
-the ship, while two others sit head and foot to represent the prow
-and stern. This ship drama is, perhaps, a fragment of the earliest
-tradition of humanity represented by a visible symbol to illustrate
-the legend of the Deluge.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_ANCIENT_MYSTERIES">THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Ireland, from its remote position and immunity from Roman
-conquest, remained longer in the possession of the Druidic mysteries
-than any other nation of Europe. Besides, the early missionaries
-adopted no intolerant measures against the ancient creed;
-no persecutions are recorded. The sacred trees were not cut
-down, nor the sacrificial stones destroyed; but the holy wells and
-the antique monuments were sanctified by association with a
-saint’s name and history, and from being objects of pagan idolatry
-became shrines of prayer and centres of holy worship, where
-enlightened men preached the new gospel of light, purity, and
-love to an awe-struck, wondering multitude.</p>
-
-<p>To this tolerant policy, as Mr. Windell, the learned antiquary,
-remarks, may be attributed the strong endurance of Druidic
-superstitions and usages in Ireland. Much also is due to the
-peculiar and truly Oriental tenacity with which the Irish at all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">124</span>
-times have clung to the customs and traditions of their forefathers.
-The belief in a fairy race ever present amongst them and around
-them, is one of these ineffaceable superstitions which the people
-still hold with a faith as fervent as those of the first Aryan tribes
-who wandered westward from the mystic East, where all creeds,
-symbols, and myths had their origin.</p>
-
-<p>Many other broken fragments of the early ritual of the world
-can also still be traced in the popular superstitions and usages of
-the people. The sun and moon with the mysterious powers of
-nature were the first gods of humanity. Astarte, Ashtaroth, and
-Isis were all the same moon-goddess under different names, and all
-were represented by the symbol of the horned cow. The Egyptians
-typified the sun and moon, Osiris and Isis, as the ox and the cow;
-and these symbols were still used at the Irish wake ceremonial
-until very recently: for the Druids also worshipped the sun and
-moon and the winds, and venerated trees, fountains, rivers, and
-pillar stones, like their Persian ancestry. But the Irish considered
-the east wind demoniacal, the Druidic wind of accursed power.
-They called it “The Red Wind,” “A wind that blasts the trees
-and withers men is that Red Wind,” according to a bard.</p>
-
-<p>The Hindus had their triad of Brahmȃ, Vishnu, and Siva,
-representing the sun at morning, noon, and evening; so the Irish
-Druids had their triad of Baal, Budh, and Grian, and they called
-the May festival <i>Lá Budha na Baal tinne</i> (the day of Buddha of
-the Baal fires). Chrishna was another Hindu name for the sun,
-and the Irish had Crias, a name for the sun likewise.</p>
-
-<p>The Hindus had their cattle, or cow festival in spring, when
-they walked round the animals with great ceremony, always going
-westward, while they flung garlands on their horns. So in Ireland
-there was also a procession, when the cows were decorated with
-vervain and the rowan, and were sprinkled with the <i>Sgaith-an-Tobar</i>
-(the purity of the well), that is, the first water drawn from
-a sacred well after midnight on May Eve. This was considered an
-effective antidote to witchcraft, and whoever succeeded in being
-first at the well, cast into it a tuft of grass, called <i>Cuisheag grass</i>,
-to show that the <i>Sgaith-an-Tobar</i> had been abstracted. So also
-the Hindus esteem the <i>Cusha grass</i> as sacred, and cast it into their
-wells for a like purpose. The ceremonial of wreathing the horns
-of the cows was in honour of the moon, the wife of the Sun-god,
-whose emblem, as we know, all through the East, as in Ireland,
-was the horned cow.</p>
-
-<p>Many and strange, indeed, are the analogies between the practices
-of the Egyptians, Hindus, Persians, and the Irish; and the
-legend may, after all, have some truth in it which brings the first
-Colonists of Ireland from Egypt, and makes the first Queen of
-Erin a daughter of Pharaoh. The ancient war-cry of the Irish clans
-was <i>Pharrah!</i> a word that has no significance in the Irish lan<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">125</span>guage,
-but which is supposed by some antiquarians to be the same
-as <i>Phi-Ra</i>, the sun—the regal title of the Egyptian kings, by which
-they were invoked by the warriors as they rushed into battle.</p>
-
-<p>The ancient funeral ceremonies of Egypt can be still seen and
-studied at the wake of an Irish peasant; especially in that singular
-symbol, when a man and a woman appeared, one bearing the
-head of an ox, the other that of a cow at the funeral games; a
-custom which has now lost all its meaning, but which originally,
-no doubt, represented Isis and Osiris waiting to receive the soul
-of the dead.</p>
-
-<p>The Persians held that fire and water were the most sacred of
-all things and so did the Irish; hence their reverence for the
-waters of purification at the holy wells. And as the heathen
-passed their children and cattle through the fire to Moloch, so
-the Irish performed the same rite at the Baal festival, when the
-young men leaped through the flames, and the cattle were driven
-through the hot embers. Fire was held to be the visible symbol
-of the invisible God, endowed with mystic cleansing powers, and
-the ascending flame was thought to be a divine spirit dwelling in
-the substance ignited. For this reason the Irish made a circle of
-fire round their children and their cattle to guard them from evil,
-holding the belief that no evil spirit could pass this special emblem
-of divinity.</p>
-
-<p>But even in matters less divine there was a similarity between
-the Persian and Irish usages. The Persian Magi made a considerable
-revenue from the sacred fire; for each devotee paid a silver
-coin for the ember carried away from the holy temple, to light
-the home fire on the day of the Sun-festival. And fire was also
-a source of wealth to the Druid priests; each person being
-obliged to buy it from them on the great day of Baal. Therefore
-it was a sin to give away fire on that day; and the habit of
-borrowing it to light the home fire was denounced as fatal and
-unlucky. The true reason being that to borrow the sacred element
-was to injure the priestly revenue. Yet this ancient ordinance is
-still religiously observed in Ireland; and even to this day no
-peasant would venture to give away fire or milk on May Day,
-for fear of the worst consequences to the giver; while any one
-who came to borrow a lighted brand would be looked on as an
-emissary of Satan.</p>
-
-<p>The sacred fire of Tara (<i>Tamhair-na-Righ</i>, Tara of the Kings)
-was only lit every three years, and then with great ceremony.
-The sun’s rays were concentrated by means of a brazen lens, on
-some pieces of dried wood, and from this alone were all the sacred
-fires in Ireland kindled in the holy places.</p>
-
-<p>At the present time, if a peasant has to light a fire in the house
-on May morning, which does not often happen, as the custom is
-to keep the fire burning all night, a lighted sod taken from the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">126</span>
-priest’s house is esteemed of great virtue and sacredness, just as
-in old time a lighted brand from the altar of Baal was used to
-light the domestic fire.</p>
-
-<p>The sacred fire was also obtained from the friction of wood, or
-the striking of stones; and it was supposed that the spirits of fire
-dwelt in these objects, and when the priest invoked them to appear,
-they brought good luck to the household for the coming year; but
-if invoked by other hands on that special day their influence was
-malific.</p>
-
-<p>The migration of races can be clearly traced by their superstitions.
-The oldest seem to have come from Persia and Egypt;
-while mutilated, though still authentic portions of the old-world
-ritual can still be found all along the Mediterranean, marking the
-westward progress of the primitive nations, till the last wave
-found a resting-place on our own far-distant shores, washed by
-the waters of the Atlantic.</p>
-
-<p>Assyria was the teacher of Egypt; Egypt of Greece; and
-Greece of Europe; and little seems to have been lost during the
-progress of sixty centuries. The old myths still remain at the
-base of all thought and all creeds; broken fragments of the primal
-faith; shadowy traditions of some great human life that once
-was real and actual, or of some great event that changed the
-destiny of nations, and the echo of which still vibrates through
-the legends, the songs, the poetry, and the usages of every people
-on the face of the earth.</p>
-
-<p>Persia, Egypt, India, the Teuton, and the Celt, have all the
-same primal ideas in their mythology, and the same instincts of
-superstition; and the signs to which past ages have given a
-mystic meaning still come to us laden with a fateful significance,
-even in this advanced era of culture and the triumph of reason.</p>
-
-<p>We still cannot help believing that prophecies come in the
-night, for the mystical and prophetic nature of dreams is confirmed
-by the personal experience of almost every human being;
-and few are found brave enough, even amongst the educated
-classes, lightly to break through a traditional usage on which all
-the ages have set the seal of good or ill luck.</p>
-
-<p>Superstition, or the belief in unseen, mysterious, spiritual influences,
-is an instinct of human nature. A vague, shadowy,
-formless belief, certainly, yet ineradicable. We feel that our
-dual humanity, the material as well as the psychical, holds some
-strange and mystic relation with an unseen spiritual world, though
-we cannot define the limits, nor bring it under a law.</p>
-
-<p>Before the written word existed, the people strove to express
-their creed and history in symbols. Divine nations, like the
-Greeks, made the symbols beautiful, and these the uncultured
-tribes may afterwards have distorted into grotesque and rude
-imitations; but the same idea can be traced through all forms<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">127</span>
-by which humanity has tried to represent history, nature, and
-God.</p>
-
-<p>And the old Pagan customs of the early world seem to have an
-enduring vitality, and to have become fixed, even in the usages of
-the enlightened nineteenth century. The Persian Magi and the
-Druid priest exacted a tribute of the firstlings of the flock as a
-burnt-offering to the Sun-god on the day of his festival; so in
-modern times, we sacrifice a lamb at Easter and an ox at Christmas,
-retaining the pagan rite while we honour the Christian
-legend. The Christmas-tree is still lighted to guide the Sun-god
-back to life; and the spotted cake, anciently made in his honour,
-of corn and fruit, still finds its place on our tables, as the plum
-pudding of civilization, even as its primitive prototype was laid
-on the sacred altars of the Persians as an offering of gratitude to
-the Lord of Light and Life.</p>
-
-<p>The widespread range of the same traditional customs and superstitions
-amongst all peoples and through every age is a most interesting
-study, as showing the primitive unity of the human race and
-the subsequent divergence of the nations, even as recorded in the
-Biblical narrative; but it would be endless to follow the lines of
-affinity that run through all the creeds, legends, usages and superstitions
-of the world. Thus the Algonquil Indians, according to
-Mr. Leland, held the ash-tree and the elm as sacred and mystical,
-because these trees were made human. Of the ash was made
-man, of the elm, woman.</p>
-
-<p>So in the Edda, we read of the mighty ash-tree whose summit
-reaches to heaven, and whose roots go down to hell. Two fountains
-sprang from beneath it—one the knowledge of all that is;
-the other of all that shall be. And out of the wood man was
-created.</p>
-
-<p>The Irish also hold the ash-tree as all-powerful against witchcraft;
-therefore branches of it were wreathed rounds the horns of
-the cattle, and round the child’s cradle to keep off evil influence;
-while in all their weird tales of the fairy dances with the dead,
-the mortals drawn into their company are infallibly safe if they
-get possession of a branch of the ash-tree, and hold it safely till
-out of reach of the evil spell.</p>
-
-<p>The alder is another of the mystical trees of Ireland, held
-sacred, as in Persia, on account of its possessing strange mysterious
-properties and powers to avert evil; and the hawthorn
-likewise was sacred to the Irish fairies, therefore a libation of
-milk was poured over the roots on May Day, as the Hindus
-poured milk on the earth round the sacred tree as an offering to
-the manes of the dead.</p>
-
-<p>In the Transylvanian legends and superstitions, of which
-Madame Gerard has recently given an interesting record, many
-will be found identical with the Irish; such as these—Friday is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">128</span>
-the most unlucky day of all the week; evil spirits are strongest
-between sunset and midnight; it is ill-luck to have your path
-crossed by a hare; on entering a strange house sit down a
-moment, or a death will happen; spitting is at all times most
-efficacious against the influence of the devil; an infant’s nails
-should be bitten, not cut; never rock an empty cradle; the robin
-and the swallow bring luck; never kill a spider; the crow and
-a black hen are ominous of evil. The dead are only in a
-trance; they hear everything but can make no sign. The Irish
-also believe that the dead are allowed at certain times to visit
-their living kindred. A whirlwind denotes that a devil is
-dancing with a witch; so the Irish believe that the fairies are
-rushing by in the whirlwind intent on carrying off some mortal
-victim to the fairy mansions; and the only help is to fling clay at
-the passing wind, when the fairies will be obliged to drop the
-mortal child, or the beautiful young girl they have abducted.</p>
-
-<p>But the Roumanians are a mixed race—Greek, Slav, Teuton,
-Gypsey—and many of their superstitions are dark and gloomy,
-especially those relating to vampires, wolves, and terrible demons,
-evil spirits, and fearful witches. The Irish legends rarely deal
-with anything terrible or revolting. They circle, in general,
-round the mythus of the fairy, a bright and beautiful creation,
-only living for pleasure, music, and the dance, and rarely malignant
-or ill-natured, except when their dancing grounds are interfered
-with, or when they are not treated with proper generous
-consideration in the matter of wine.</p>
-
-<p>The strange dance practised at Midsummer in Ireland round
-the Baal fires can clearly be traced from the East to Erin; and in
-its origin was evidently a religious symbol and rite. The Greeks
-practised it from the most ancient times. It was called the
-Pyrrhic dance—from <i>pur</i> fire—and simulated the windings of a
-serpent.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Syrtos</i>, the great national dance of the Ægean Islands, so
-well described by Mr. Bent in his interesting book on the Cyclades,
-also resembles the winding of a serpent. The dancers hold hands
-and circle round in tortuous curves precisely as in Ireland, where
-the line of dancers with joined hands, always moving from east to
-west, extends sometimes for a mile in length. It was probably a
-mystic dance symbolic of the path of the sun, though the esoteric
-meaning has now been entirely lost; part of the primal range of
-ideas out of which man first formed a religion and ritual of worship.</p>
-
-<p>Many other practices and superstitions of the Greek islanders
-strongly resemble the Irish. The Nereids of the Ægean play the
-part of the Irish fairies, and are as capricious though often more
-malignant. If a child grows wan and weak the Nereids have
-struck it; and it is laid naked for a night on the altar steps to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">129</span>
-test the truth of the suspicion. If the poor child dies under the
-trial, then it certainly was bewitched by the evil spirits, and the
-parents are well content to be rid of the unholy thing.</p>
-
-<p>The funeral wail over the dead also closely resembles the Irish,
-when the hired mourning women sit round the corpse, tear their
-hair, beat their breast and rock to and fro, intoning in a monotone
-chant the praises of the deceased, the cries at times rising to a
-scream, in a frenzy of grief and despair.</p>
-
-<p>The islanders likewise use many charms and incantations like
-the Irish, while the old women amongst them display wonderful
-knowledge of the mystic nature and power of herbs, and are most
-expert in the cure of disease. It is indeed remarkable that,
-amongst all primitive tribes and nations, women have always
-shown the highest skill in the treatment of disease, and have
-been rightly accounted the best doctors, and the most learned in
-mystic medicinal lore.</p>
-
-<p>The Marquis of Lorne, in his graphic and instructive “Canadian
-Pictures,” speaks of the wonderful skill of the Indian women, and
-the remarkable cures effected by the squaws through their knowledge
-of the varied properties of herbs. The Indians also have a
-sweating bath for the sick, such as was used by the ancient Irish.
-A bath is made by stones covered over with branches; hot water
-is then poured on the stones, and the patient crouches over the
-heated vapour evolved until a violent perspiration is produced,
-which carries off the disease, or the pains in the members, without
-fail. The sweating bath of the Irish was made quite on the
-same principles, and is the most effective cure known for pains in
-the bones and feverish disorders. It is still used in the Western
-Islands. “The Sweating House,” as it is called, is made of rough
-stones with a narrow entrance, through which the patient creeps
-on all-fours; when inside, however, he can stand up. A peat fire
-is kindled, and divesting himself of all clothing, he undergoes the
-process of sweating in a profuse perspiration as he lies on the
-stone floor. The place is heated like a baker’s oven, but there is
-sufficient ventilation kept up by means of chinks and apertures
-through the stone work of the walls.</p>
-
-<p>The cures effected by this process are marvellous. As the
-people say of it themselves, “Any disease that has a hold on the
-bones can’t stand before it no time at all, at all.”</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_POWER_OF_THE_WORD">THE POWER OF THE WORD.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The belief in the malific influence of the Evil Eye pervades all
-the Greek islands, and the same preventive measures are used as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">130</span>
-in Ireland. An old woman is employed to spit three times at the
-person affected, if she is a person learned in the mysteries and
-accounted wise. Salt and fire are also used as safeguards, precisely
-as the Irish peasant employs them to guard his cattle and children
-from the evil influence. But no superstition is more widely
-spread; it seems to pervade all the world, and to be instinctive to
-humanity. The educated are as susceptible to it as the illiterate,
-and no nerves are strong enough, apparently, to resist the impression
-made by an envious, malicious glance, for a poison that
-blights and withers seems to emanate from it. Reason appeals in
-vain; the feelings cannot be overcome that the presence and
-glance of some one person in a room can chill all the natural flow
-of spirits, while the presence of another seems to intensify all our
-mental powers, and transform us for the moment into a higher
-being.</p>
-
-<p>But a malific power, stronger even than the glance of the
-Evil Eye, was exercised by the Bards of Erin: whom they would
-they blessed, but whom they would they also banned; and the
-poet’s malison was more dreaded and was more fatal than any
-other form of imprecation—for the bard had the mystic prophet
-power: he could foresee, and he could denounce. And no man
-could escape from the judgment pronounced by a poet over one he
-desired to injure; for the poet had the knowledge of all mysteries
-and was Lord over the secrets of life by the power of The Word.
-Therefore poets were emphatically called the tribe of <i>Duars</i>, that
-is, <span class="smcap">The Men of The Word</span>; for by a word the poets could
-produce deformities in those they disliked, and make them objects
-of scorn and hateful in the sight of other men.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_POET_AND_THE_KING">THE POET AND THE KING.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Nuadhé, the celebrated poet, is remembered in history by a
-memorable exercise of his malific power, and the punishment that
-fell on him in consequence; for Heaven is just, and even a bard
-cannot escape the penalty due for sin.</p>
-
-<p>He was nephew to Caer, the king of Connaught, who reared
-him with all kindness and gentleness as his own son. But by an
-evil fate the wife of Caer the king loved the young man; and she
-gave him a silver apple in proof of her love, and further promised
-him the kingdom and herself if he could overthrow Caer and
-make the people depose him from the sovranty.</p>
-
-<p>“How can I do this?” answered Nuadhé, “for the king has
-ever been kind to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ask him for some gift,” said the queen,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">131</span> “that he will refuse,
-and then put a blemish on him for punishment, that so he can be
-no longer king;” for no one with a blemish was ever suffered to
-reign in Erin.</p>
-
-<p>“But he refuses me nothing,” answered Nuadhé.</p>
-
-<p>“Try him,” said the queen. “Ask of him the dagger he
-brought from Alba, for he is under a vow never to part with it.”</p>
-
-<p>So Nuadhé went to him, and asked for the dagger that came
-out of Alba as a gift.</p>
-
-<p>“Woe is me!” said the king. “This I cannot grant; for I am
-under a solemn vow never to part with it, or give it to another.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the poet by his power made a satire on him, and this was
-the form of the imprecation—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Evil death, and a short life</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Be on Caer the king!</div>
- <div class="verse">Let the spears of battle wound him,</div>
- <div class="verse">Under earth, under ramparts, under stones,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Let the malediction be on him!”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>And when Caer rose up in the morning he put his hand to his face
-and found it was disfigured with three blisters, a white, a red,
-and a green. And when he saw the blemish he fled away filled
-with fear that any man should see him, and took refuge in a fort
-with one of his faithful servants, and no one knew where he
-lay hid.</p>
-
-<p>So Nuadhé took the kingdom and held it for a year, and had
-the queen to wife. But then grievous to him was the fate of
-Caer, and he set forth to search for him.</p>
-
-<p>And he was seated in the king’s own royal chariot, with the
-king’s wife beside him, and the king’s greyhound at his feet, and
-all the people wondered at the beauty of the charioteer.</p>
-
-<p>Now Caer was in the fort where he had found shelter, and
-when he saw them coming he said—</p>
-
-<p>“Who is this that is seated in my chariot in the place of the
-champion, and driving my steeds?”</p>
-
-<p>But when he saw that it was Nuadhé he fled away and hid
-himself for shame.</p>
-
-<p>Then Nuadhé drove into the fort in the king’s chariot, and
-loosed the dogs to pursue Caer. And they found him hid under
-the flagstone behind the rock even where the dogs tracked him.
-And Caer fell down dead from shame on beholding Nuadhé, and
-the rock where he fell flamed up and shivered into fragments, and
-a splinter leaped up high as a man, and struck Nuadhé on the
-eyes, and blinded him for life. Such was the punishment decreed,
-and just and right was the vengeance of God upon the sin of the
-poet.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">132</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h3 id="THE_SIDHE_RACE">THE SIDHE RACE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The Sidhe dwell in the Sifra, or fairy palace of gold and crystal,
-in the heart of the hill, and they have been given youth, beauty,
-joy, and the power over music, yet they are often sad; for they
-remember that they were once angels in heaven though now cast
-down to earth, and though they have power over all the mysteries
-of Nature, yet they must die without hope of regaining heaven,
-while mortals are certain of immortality. Therefore this one
-sorrow darkens their life, a mournful envy of humanity; because,
-while man is created immortal, the beautiful fairy race is doomed
-to annihilation.</p>
-
-<p>One day a great fairy chief asked Columb-Kille if there were
-any hope left to the Sidhe that one day they would regain heaven
-and be restored to their ancient place amongst the angels. But
-the saint answered that hope there was none; their doom was
-fixed, and at the judgment-day they would pass through death
-into annihilation; for so had it been decreed by the justice of
-God.</p>
-
-<p>On hearing this the fairy chief fell into a profound melancholy,
-and he and all his court sailed away from Ireland, and went back
-to their native country of Armenia, there to await the coming of
-the terrible judgment-day, which is fated to bring the fairy race
-certain death on earth, without any hope of regaining heaven.</p>
-
-<p>The West of Ireland is peculiarly sacred to ancient superstitions
-of the Sidhe race. There is a poetry in the scenery that touches
-the heart of the people; they love the beautiful glens, the mountains
-rising like towers from the sea, the islands sanctified by the
-memory of a saint, and the green hills where Finvarra holds his
-court. Every lake and mountain has its legend of the spirit-land,
-some holy traditions of a saint, or some historic memory of a
-national hero who flourished in the old great days when Ireland
-had native chiefs and native swords to guard her; and amongst
-the Western Irish, especially, the old superstitions of their forefathers
-are reverenced with a solemn faith and fervour that is
-almost a religion. Finvarra the king is still believed to rule over
-all the fairies of the west, and <i>Onagh</i> is the fairy queen. Her
-golden hair sweeps the ground, and she is robed in silver gossamer
-all glittering as if with diamonds, but they are dew-drops that
-sparkle over it.</p>
-
-<p>The queen is more beautiful than any woman of earth, yet Finvarra
-loves the mortal women best, and wiles them down to his
-fairy palace by the subtle charm of the fairy music, for no one
-who has heard it can resist its power, and they are fated to belong
-to the fairies ever after. Their friends mourn for them as dead
-with much lamentation, but in reality they are leading a joyous<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">133</span>
-life down in the heart of the hill, in the fairy palace with the
-silver columns and the crystal walls.</p>
-
-<p>Yet sometimes they are not drawn down beneath the earth,
-but remain as usual in the daily life, though the fairy spell is
-still on them; and the young men who have once heard the fairy
-harp become possessed by the spirit of music which haunts them
-to their death, and gives them strange power over the souls
-of men. This was the case with Carolan, the celebrated bard.
-He acquired all the magic melody of his notes by sleeping out on
-a fairy rath at night, when the fairy music came to him in his
-dreams; and on awaking he played the airs from memory. Thus
-it was that he had power to madden men to mirth, or to set them
-weeping as if for the dead, and no one ever before or since played
-the enchanting fairy music like Carolan, the sweet musician of
-Ireland.</p>
-
-<p>There was another man also who heard the fairy music when
-sleeping on a rath, and ever after he was haunted by the melody
-day and night, till he grew mad and had no pleasure in life, for he
-longed to be with the fairies again that he might hear them sing.
-So one day, driven to despair by the madness of longing, he threw
-himself from the cliff into the mountain lake near the fairy rath,
-and so died and was seen no more.</p>
-
-<p>In the Western Islands they believe that the magic of fairy
-music is so strong that whoever hears it cannot choose but follow
-the sound, and the young girls are drawn away by the enchantment,
-and dance all night with Finvarra the king, though in the
-morning they are found fast asleep in bed, yet with a memory of
-all they had heard and seen; and some say that, while with
-the fairies, the young women learn strange secrets of love potions,
-by which they can work spells and dangerous charms over those
-whose love they desire, or upon any one who has offended and
-spoken ill of them.</p>
-
-<p>It is a beautiful idea that the Irish airs, so plaintive, mournful,
-and tear-compelling, are but the remembered echoes of that spirit
-music which had power to draw souls away to the fairy mansions,
-and hold them captive by the sweet magic of the melody.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="MUSIC">MUSIC.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Music formed the chief part of education in ancient Ireland as
-in Greece, where the same word signified a song and a law.
-Laws, religion, sciences, and history were all taught in music
-to the Irish people by the <i>Ollamhs</i>, or learned men. The Poets
-chanted the <i>Ros-Catha</i>, or song of battle, to incite the warriors to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">134</span>
-deeds of bravery. The Bards recited the deeds of the chiefs,
-or pleasant tales of love, at the festivals, and struck the harp
-to sustain the voice. The Brehons intoned the law in a recitative
-or monotone chant, seated on an eminence in the open
-air, while all the people were gathered round to listen. The
-Senachie chanted the history, genealogies, and traditions of
-the tribe, and the female mourners were instructed by the poets
-in the elegiac measure, or funeral wail over the dead.</p>
-
-<p>The poet-power was also believed to confer the gift of prophecy;
-and no great expedition was undertaken by the tribe without the
-advice and sanction of the bard, and especially of the poet-priestess
-of the tribe. Thus Ethna the poetess stood on a high
-stone at the battle of Moytura, and gave inspiration by her chants
-to the warriors of the Tuatha-de-Dananns, and stimulated their
-courage by her prophecies of victory; and the stone she stood on
-is in existence to this day on the plain of the battle, and is
-still called by the people “the Stone of the Prophetess.”</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3><a name="POET_INSPIRATION" id="POET_INSPIRATION">POET INSPIRATION.</a><br />
-
-<small>EODAIN THE POETESS</small>.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The <i>Leanan-Sidhe</i>, or the spirit of life, was supposed to be
-the inspirer of the poet and singer, as the <i>Ban-Sidhe</i> was the
-spirit of death, the foreteller of doom.</p>
-
-<p>The Leanan-Sidhe sometimes took the form of a woman, who
-gave men valour and strength in the battle by her songs. Such
-was Eodain the poetess, by whom Eugene, king of Munster,
-gained complete victory over his foes. But afterwards he gave
-himself up to luxury and pleasure, and went away to Spain, where
-he remained nine years, and took to wife the daughter of the king
-of Spain. At the end of that time he returned to Ireland with a
-band of Spanish followers. But he found his kingdom plundered
-and ruined, and the revellers and drunkards were feasting in his
-banquet hall, and wasting his revenues for their pleasures while
-the people starved. And the whole nation despised the king, and
-would not hear his words when he sat down in his golden
-chair to give just judgment for iniquity. Then Eugene the
-king, in his deep sorrow and humiliation, sent for Eodain the
-poetess to come and give him counsel. So Eodain came to him,
-and upheld him with her strong spirit, for she had the power
-within her of the poet and the prophet, and she said—</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">135</span></p>
-<p>“Arise now, O king, and govern like a true hero, and bring
-confusion on the evil workers. Be strong and fear not, for by
-strength and justice kings should rule.”</p>
-
-<p>And Eugene the king was guided by her counsel and was
-successful. And he overthrew his enemies and brought back
-peace and order to the land. For the strength of the Leanan-Sidhe
-was in the words of Eodain, the power of the spirit of life
-which is given to the poet and the prophet, by which they inspire
-and guide the hearts of men.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_BANSHEE">THE BANSHEE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The Banshee means, especially, the woman of the fairy race, from
-<i>van</i>, “the Woman—the Beautiful;” the same word from which
-comes <i>Venus</i>. Shiloh-Van was one of the names of Buddha—“the
-son of the woman;” and some writers aver that in the Irish—<i>Sullivan</i>
-(Sulli-van), may be found this ancient name of
-Buddha.</p>
-
-<p>As the Leanan-Sidhe was the acknowledged <i>spirit of life</i>,
-giving inspiration to the poet and the musician, so the Ban-Sidhe
-was the <i>spirit of death</i>, the most weird and awful of all the fairy
-powers.</p>
-
-<p>But only certain families of historic lineage, or persons gifted
-with music and song, are attended by this spirit; for music and
-poetry are fairy gifts, and the possessors of them show kinship to
-the spirit race—therefore they are watched over by the spirit
-of life, which is prophecy and inspiration; and by the spirit
-of doom, which is the revealer of the secrets of death.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes the Banshee assumes the form of some sweet singing
-virgin of the family who died young, and has been given the
-mission by the invisible powers to become the harbinger of coming
-doom to her mortal kindred. Or she may be seen at night as a
-shrouded woman, crouched beneath the trees, lamenting with
-veiled face; or flying past in the moonlight, crying bitterly: and
-the cry of this spirit is mournful beyond all other sounds on earth,
-and betokens certain death to some member of the family whenever
-it is heard in the silence of the night.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Banshee even follows the old race across the ocean and
-to distant lands; for space and time offer no hindrance to the
-mystic power which is selected and appointed to bear the prophecy
-of death to a family. Of this a well-authenticated instance
-happened a few years ago, and many now living can attest the
-truth of the narrative.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">136</span></p>
-
-<p>A branch of the ancient race of the O’Gradys had settled in
-Canada, far removed, apparently, from all the associations, traditions,
-and mysterious influences of the old land of their forefathers.</p>
-
-<p>But one night a strange and mournful lamentation was heard
-outside the house. No word was uttered, only a bitter cry, as of
-one in deepest agony and sorrow, floated through the air.</p>
-
-<p>Inquiry was made, but no one had been seen near the house at
-the time, though several persons distinctly heard the weird,
-unearthly cry, and a terror fell upon the household, as if some
-supernatural influence had overshadowed them.</p>
-
-<p>Next day it so happened that the gentleman and his eldest son
-went out boating. As they did not return, however, at the usual
-time for dinner, some alarm was excited, and messengers were
-sent down to the shore to look for them. But no tidings came
-until, precisely at the exact hour of the night when the spirit-cry
-had been heard the previous evening, a crowd of men
-were seen approaching the house, bearing with them the dead
-bodies of the father and the son, who had both been drowned
-by the accidental upsetting of the boat, within sight of land, but
-not near enough for any help to reach them in time.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the Ban-Sidhe had fulfilled her mission of doom, after
-which she disappeared, and the cry of the spirit of death was heard
-no more.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>At times the spirit-voice is heard in low and soft lamenting, as
-if close to the window.</p>
-
-<p>Not long ago an ancient lady of noble lineage was lying near
-the death-hour in her stately castle. One evening, after twilight,
-she suddenly unclosed her eyes and pointed to the window, with
-a happy smile on her face. All present looked in the direction,
-but nothing was visible. They heard, however, the sweetest
-music, low, soft, and spiritual, floating round the house, and at
-times apparently close to the window of the sick room.</p>
-
-<p>Many of the attendants thought it was a trick, and went out to
-search the grounds; but nothing human was seen. Still the wild
-plaintive singing went on, wandering through the trees like the
-night wind—a low, beautiful music that never ceased all through
-the night.</p>
-
-<p>Next morning the noble lady lay dead; then the music ceased,
-and the lamentation from that hour was heard no more.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There was a gentleman also in the same country who had a
-beautiful daughter, strong and healthy, and a splendid horsewoman.
-She always followed the hounds, and her appearance at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">137</span>
-the hunt attracted unbounded admiration, as no one rode so well
-or looked so beautiful.</p>
-
-<p>One evening there was a ball after the hunt, and the young
-girl moved through the dance with the grace of a fairy queen.</p>
-
-<p>But that same night a voice came close to the father’s window,
-as if the face were laid close to the glass, and he heard a mournful
-lamentation and a cry; and the words rang out on the air—</p>
-
-<p>“In three weeks death; in three weeks the grave—dead—dead—dead!”</p>
-
-<p>Three times the voice came, and three times he heard the words;
-but though it was bright moonlight, and he looked from the
-window over all the park, no form was to be seen.</p>
-
-<p>Next day, his daughter showed symptoms of fever, and exactly
-in three weeks, as the Ban-Sidhe had prophesied, the beautiful
-girl lay dead.</p>
-
-<p>The night before her death soft music was heard outside the
-house, though no word was spoken by the spirit-voice, and the
-family said the form of a woman crouched beneath a tree, with a
-mantle covering her head, was distinctly visible. But on approaching,
-the phantom disappeared, though the soft, low music
-of the lamentation continued till dawn.</p>
-
-<p>Then the angel of death entered the house with soundless feet,
-and he breathed upon the beautiful face of the young girl, and
-she rested in the sleep of the dead, beneath the dark shadows of
-his wings.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the prophecy of the Banshee came true, according to the
-time foretold by the spirit-voice.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="QUEEN_MAEVE">QUEEN MAEVE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>A remarkable account is given in the Bardic Legends of a
-form that appeared to Maeve, queen of Connaught, on the eve of
-battle.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly there stood before the queen’s chariot, a tall and
-beautiful woman. She wore a green robe clasped with a golden
-bodkin, a golden fillet on her head, and seven braids for the Dead
-of bright gold were in her hand. Her skin was white as snow
-that falls in the night; her teeth were as pearls; her lips red as
-the berries of the mountain ash; her golden hair fell to the
-ground; and her voice was sweet as the golden harp-string when
-touched by a skilful hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Who art thou, O woman?” asked the queen, in astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>“I am Feithlinn, the fairy prophetess of the Rath of Cruachan,”
-she answered.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">138</span></p>
-
-<p>“’Tis well, O Feithlinn the prophetess,” said Maeve; “but
-what dost thou foresee concerning our hosts?”</p>
-
-<p>“I foresee bloodshed; I foresee power; I foresee defeat!”
-answered the prophetess.</p>
-
-<p>“My couriers have brought me good tidings!” said the queen;
-“my army is strong, my warriors are well prepared. But speak
-the truth, O prophetess; for my soul knows no fear.”</p>
-
-<p>“I foresee bloodshed; I foresee victory!” answered the
-prophetess the second time.</p>
-
-<p>“But I have nothing to fear from the Ultonians,” said the
-queen, “for my couriers have arrived, and my enemies are under
-dread. Yet, speak the truth, O prophetess, that our hosts may
-know it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I foresee bloodshed; I foresee conquest; I foresee <i>death</i>!”
-answered the prophetess, for the third time.</p>
-
-<p>“To me then it belongs not, thy prophecy of evil,” replied the
-queen, in anger.</p>
-
-<p>“Be it thine, and on thy own head.”</p>
-
-<p>And even as she spoke the prophet maiden disappeared, and the
-queen saw her no more.</p>
-
-<p>But it so happened that, some time afterwards, Queen Maeve
-was cruelly slain by her own kinsman, at Lough Rea by the
-Shannon, to avenge the assistance she had given in war to the
-king of Ulster; there is an island in the lake where is shown the
-spot where the great queen was slain, and which is still known to
-the people as—<i>the stone of the dead queen</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Maeve, the great queen of Connaught, holds a distinguished
-place in Bardic Legends. When she went to battle, it is said, she
-rode in an open car, accompanied by four chariots—one before,
-another behind, and one on each side—so that the golden <i>assion</i>
-on her head and her royal robes should not be defiled by the dust
-of the horses’ feet, or the foam of the fiery steeds; for all the
-sovereigns of Ireland sat crowned with a diadem in battle, as
-they drove in their war-chariots, as well as in the festal and the
-public assemblies.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="DEATH_SIGNS">DEATH SIGNS.</h3>
-
-
-<p>In one Irish family a cuckoo always appears before a death. A
-lady who arrived on a visit at a house observed one morning a
-cuckoo perched on the window-sill, but she felt no alarm, for
-there was no sickness in the family. Next day, however, one of
-the sons was carried home dead. He had been thrown from his
-horse when hunting, and killed on the spot.</p>
-
-<p>In another family a mysterious sound is heard like the crashing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">139</span>
-of boards, and a rush of wind seems to pass through the house,
-yet nothing is broken or disturbed. The death of an officer in
-the Crimea was in this way announced to his family, for the news
-came immediately after the warning sound, and then they knew
-that the rush of the wind was the spirit of the dead which had
-passed by them, but without taking any visible form.</p>
-
-
-<h4><a id="THE_HARTPOLE_DOOM"></a>THE HARTPOLE DOOM.</h4>
-
-<p>There is a tradition concerning the Hartpole family of Shrule
-Castle in the Queen’s County (called the castle on the bloody
-stream, from the sanguinary deeds of the owner) that every male
-member of the family is doomed and fated to utter three screeches
-terrible to hear when dying. As to the origin of this doom the
-story goes that Sir Richard Hartpole about 300 years ago, in the
-time of the Elizabethan wars, committed many savage acts against
-the Irish, he being an upholder of the English faction.</p>
-
-<p>One day a priest named O’More, having come to the castle on
-some friendly mission, the savage Hartpole ordered his retainers
-to seize him and hang him up in the courtyard.</p>
-
-<p>“Good God!” exclaimed the priest. “Give me at least a
-moment to pray!”</p>
-
-<p>“Go then,” said Hartpole, “you may pray.”</p>
-
-<p>The priest kneeled down apart from the crowd. But Hartpole
-grew impatient, and ordered him to rise.</p>
-
-<p>“You have prayed long enough,” he said, “prepare for death.”</p>
-
-<p>And when the priest heard the order for his death, and saw the
-man approach to seize him, he swayed from right to left and gave
-three fearful screams.</p>
-
-<p>“Why do you screech?” asked the tyrant.</p>
-
-<p>“So shall you scream, and all your descendants in your last
-agony,” exclaimed O’More, “as a sign of the doom upon your
-race. You have murdered my people, you are now going to take
-my life; but I lay the curse of God on you and yours—your
-property shall pass away; your race shall perish off the earth;
-and by the three death screeches all men shall know that you and
-your posterity are accursed.”</p>
-
-<p>The words of O’More only made the tyrant more furious, and
-the priest was hung at once in the courtyard before the eyes of
-Hartpole. But the prophecy of doom was fulfilled—the property
-perished, the castle became a ruin. The last Hartpole died miserably
-of want and hunger, and the whole race finally has become
-extinct.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">140</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h3 id="SUPERSTITIONS">SUPERSTITIONS.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The two great festivals of the ancient Irish were <i>Lá Baal Tinné</i>,
-or May Day (sacred to the Sun), and <i>Lá Samnah</i>, or November
-Eve (sacred to the Moon).</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Food should be left out on November Eve for the dead, who
-are then wandering about. If the food disappears, it is a sign
-that the spirits have taken it, for no mortal would dare to touch
-or eat of the food so left.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Never turn your head to look if you fancy you hear footsteps
-behind you on that night; for the dead are walking then, and
-their glance would kill.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In November a distaff is placed under the head of a young man
-at night to make him dream of the girl he is destined to marry.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If a ball of worsted is thrown into a lime-kiln and wound up till
-the end is caught by invisible hands, the person who winds it
-calls out, “Who holds the ball?” and the answer will be the
-name of the future husband or wife. But the experiment must be
-made only at midnight, and in silence and alone.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Whitsuntide is a most unlucky time; horses foaled then will
-grow up dangerous and kill some one.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A child born at Whitsuntide will have an evil temper, and may
-commit a murder.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Beware also of water at Whitsuntide, for an evil power is on
-the waves and the lakes and the rivers, and a boat may be
-swamped and men drowned unless a bride steers; then the danger
-ceases.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>To turn away ill-luck from a child born at that time, a grave
-must be dug and the infant laid in it for a few minutes. After
-this process the evil spell is broken, and the child is safe.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If any one takes ill at Whitsuntide there is great danger of
-death, for the evil spirits are on the watch to carry off victims,
-and no sick person should be left alone at this time, nor in the
-dark. Light is a great safeguard, as well as fire, against malific
-influences.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In old times at Whitsuntide blood was poured out as a libation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">141</span>
-to the evil spirits; and the children and cattle were passed through
-two lines of fire.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>On May morning the Skellig rocks go out full sail to meet the
-opposite rocks, which advance half way to meet them, and then
-slowly retire like retreating ships.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>At Midsummer the fairies try to pass round the Baal fires in a
-whirlwind in order to extinguish them, but the spirits may be
-kept off by throwing fire at them. Then the young men are free
-to leap over the burning embers and to drive the cattle through
-the flames, while coals of fire must also be passed three times
-over and three times under the body of each animal.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Foot-worship was a homage to Buddha, and it was also a Christian
-ceremony to wash the feet of the saints. The Irish had many
-superstitions about foot-water, and no woman was allowed to
-wash her feet in the sacred wells though the lavation was
-permitted to men.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If a child is fairy-struck, give it a cup of cold water in the
-name of Christ and make the sign of the cross over it.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>On St. Martin’s Day when blood is spilt, whoever is signed with
-the blood is safe, for that year at least, from disease.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>For the Evil Eye, a piece cut from the garment of the evil-eyed,
-burned to tinder and ground to powder, must be given to the
-person under the baneful spell, while his forehead is anointed with
-spittle thrice. So the Greeks spat three times in the face of the
-evil-eyed to break the spell.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Pass a red-hot turf three times over and under the body of an
-animal supposed to be fairy-struck, singeing the hair along the
-back. This drives off the fairies.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Irish always went westward round a holy well, following
-the course of the sun, and creeping on their hands and knees. So
-did the ancient Persians when offering homage at the sacred
-fountains.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Red-haired people were held to be evil and malicious and
-unlucky, probably because Typhon, the evil principle, was red;
-and therefore a red heifer was sacrificed to him by the Egyptians.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In the mystic, or snake dance, performed at the Baal festival,
-the gyrations of the dancers were always westward, in the track<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">142</span>
-of the sun, for the dance was part of the ancient ritual of sun
-worship.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_FAIRY_RATH">THE FAIRY RATH.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The ancient rath, or fort, or liss, generally enclosed about half an
-acre, and had two or more ramparts, formed by the heads of the
-tribe for defence. But when the race of the chieftains died out,
-then the Sidhe crowded into the forts, and there held their councils
-and revels and dances; and if a man put his ear close to the
-ground at night he could hear the sweet fairy music rising up
-from under the earth.</p>
-
-<p>The rath ever after is sacred to the fairies, and no mortal is
-allowed to cut down a tree that grows on it, or to carry away a
-stone. But dangerous above all would it be to build on a fairy
-rath. If a man attempted such a rash act, the fairies would put
-a blast on his eyes, or give him a crooked mouth; for no human
-hand should dare to touch their ancient dancing grounds.</p>
-
-<p>It is not right, the people say, to sing or whistle at night that
-old air, “The pretty girl milking her cow;” for it is a fairy tune,
-and the fairies will not suffer a mortal to sing their music while
-they are dancing on the grass. But if a person sleeps on the rath
-the music will enter into his soul, and when he awakes he may
-sing the air he has heard in his dreams.</p>
-
-<p>In this way the bards learned their songs, and they were skilled
-musicians, and touched the harp with a master hand, so that the
-fairies often gathered round to listen, though invisible to mortal
-eyes.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="FAIRY_NATURE">FAIRY NATURE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The <i>Siodh-Dune</i>, or the Mount of Peace, is also a favourite resort
-of the fairies. It is an ancient, sacred place, where the Druids in
-old time used to retire to pray, when they desired solitude; and
-the fairies meet there every seven years to perform the act of
-lamentation and mourning for having been cast out of heaven.</p>
-
-<p>Earth, lake, and hill are peopled by these fantastic, beautiful
-gods of earth; the wilful, capricious child-spirits of the world.
-The Irish seem to have created this strange fairy race after their
-own image, for in all things they strangely resemble the Irish
-character.</p>
-
-<p>The Sidhe passionately love beauty and luxury, and hold in
-contempt all the mean virtues of thrift and economy. Above all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">143</span>
-things they hate the close, niggard hand that gathers the last
-grain, and drains the last drop in the milk-pail, and plucks the
-trees bare of fruit, leaving nothing for the spirits who wander by
-in the moonlight. They like food and wine to be left for them
-at night, yet they are very temperate; no one ever saw an intoxicated
-fairy.</p>
-
-<p>But people should not sit up too late; for the fairies like to
-gather round the smouldering embers after the family are in bed,
-and drain the wine-cup, and drink the milk which a good housewife
-always leaves for them, in case the fairies should come in and
-want their supper. A vessel of pure water should also be left for
-them to bathe in, if they like. And in all things the fairies are
-fond of being made much of, and flattered and attended to; and
-the fairy blessing will come back in return to the giver for whatever
-act of kindness he has done to the spirits of the hill and the
-cave. Some unexpected good fortune or stroke of luck will come
-upon his house or his children; for the fairy race is not ungrateful,
-and is powerful over man both for good and evil.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore be kind to the wayfarer, for he may be a fairy prince
-in disguise, who has come to test the depth of your charity, and
-of the generous nature that can give liberally out of pure love
-and kindliness to those who are in need, and not in hope of a
-reward.</p>
-
-<p>If treated well, the fairies will discover the hidden pot of gold,
-and reveal the mysteries of herbs, and give knowledge to the
-fairy women of the mystic spells that can cure disease, and save
-life, and make the lover loved.</p>
-
-<p>All they ask in return is to be left in quiet possession of the
-rath and the hill and the ancient hawthorn trees that have been
-theirs from time immemorial, and where they lead a joyous life
-with music and dance, and charming little suppers of the nectar
-of flowers, down in the crystal caves, lit by the diamonds that
-stud the rocks.</p>
-
-<p>But some small courtesies they require. Never drain your
-wine-glass at a feast, nor the poteen flask, nor the milk-pail; and
-never rake out all the fire at night, it looks mean, and the fairies
-like a little of everything going, and to have the hearth comfortable
-and warm when they come in to hold a council after all the
-mortal people have gone to bed. In fact, the fairies are born aristocrats,
-true ladies and gentlemen, and if treated with proper
-respect are never in the least malignant or ill-natured.</p>
-
-<p>All the traditions of the fairies show that they love beauty and
-splendour, grace of movement, music and pleasure; everything, in
-fact, that is artistic, in contradistinction to violent, brutal enjoyment.
-Only an Aryan people, therefore, could have invented the
-Sidhe race.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">144</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h3 id="IRISH_NATURE">IRISH NATURE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The Irish show their Aryan descent by the same characteristics
-as the Fairy race, for they also love everything that is artistic—the
-fascinations of life, beauty of form, music, poetry, song,
-splendour, and noble pleasures. Their kings in ancient times
-were elected for their personal beauty as much as for their
-chivalrous qualities. No man with a blemish or a deformity was
-allowed to reign. Then, their appreciation of intellect proved the
-value they set on the spiritual and ideal above the material and the
-brutal. The poet ranked next to the princes of the land. His
-person was sacred in battle; he was endowed with an estate, so
-that his soul might be free from sordid cares; and his robe of
-many colours, and the golden circlet on his brow at the festivals,
-showed his claim and right to rank next to royalty, and to sit at
-the right hand of the king. Poetry, learning, music, oratory,
-heroism, and splendour of achievement—these were the true objects
-of homage and admiration amongst the ancient Irish.</p>
-
-<p>There was nothing brutal in their ideal of life; no hideous
-images or revolting cruelties; and the beautiful and graceful
-Sidhe race, with their plaintive music and soft melancholy, and
-aspirations for a lost heaven, is the expression in a graceful and
-beautiful symbol of the instinctive tendencies of the Irish nature
-to all that is most divine in human intellect, and soft and tender
-in human emotion.</p>
-
-<p>Ireland is a land of mists and mystic shadows; of cloud-wraiths
-on the purple mountains; of weird silences in the lonely hills, and
-fitful skies of deepest gloom alternating with gorgeous sunset
-splendours. All this fantastic caprice of an ever-varying atmosphere
-stirs the imagination, and makes the Irish people strangely
-sensitive to spiritual influences. They see visions and dream
-dreams, and are haunted at all times by an ever-present sense of
-the supernatural. One can see by the form of the Irish head—a
-slender oval, prominent at the brows and high in the region of
-veneration, so different from the globular Teutonic head—that the
-people are enthusiasts, religious, fanatical; with the instincts of
-poetry, music, oratory, and superstition far stronger in them than
-the logical and reasoning faculties. They are made for
-worshippers, poets, artists, musicians, orators; to move the world
-by passion, not by logic. Scepticism will never take root in
-Ireland; infidelity is impossible to the people. To believe
-fanatically, trust implicitly, hope infinitely, and perhaps to
-revenge implacably—these are the unchanging and ineradicable
-characteristics of Irish nature, of Celtic nature, we may say; for
-it has been the same throughout all history and all ages. And it
-is these passionate qualities that make the Celt the great motive<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">145</span>
-force of the world, ever striving against limitations towards some
-vision of ideal splendour; the restless centrifugal force of life, as
-opposed to the centripetal, which is ever seeking a calm quiescent
-rest within its appointed sphere.</p>
-
-<p>The very tendency to superstition, so marked in Irish nature,
-arises from an instinctive dislike to the narrow limitations of
-common sense. It is characterized by a passionate yearning
-towards the vague, the mystic, the invisible, and the boundless
-infinite of the realms of imagination. Therefore the <i>Daine-Sidhe</i>,
-the people of the fairy mansions, have an irresistible attraction
-for the Irish heart. Like them, the Irish love youth, beauty,
-splendour, lavish generosity, music and song, the feast and the
-dance. The mirth and the reckless gaiety of the national temperament
-finds its true exponent in the mad pranks of the <i>Phouka</i> and
-the <i>Leprehaun</i>, the merry spirits that haunt the dells and glens,
-and look out at the wayfarer from under the dock-leaf with their
-glittering eyes. The inspiration that rises to poetry under the
-influence of excitement is expressed by the belief in the <i>Leanan-Sidhe</i>,
-who gives power to song; while the deep pathos of Irish
-nature finds its fullest representation in the tender, plaintive,
-spiritual music of the wail and lamentation of the <i>Ban-Sidhe</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">146</span></p>
-
-
-<h2 id="LEGENDS_OF_ANIMALS">LEGENDS OF ANIMALS.</h2>
-
-
-<p>There are no traces in Irish legend of animal worship, but many
-concerning the influence of animals upon human life, and of their
-interference with human affairs.</p>
-
-<p>The peasants believe that the domestic animals know all about
-us, especially the dog and the cat. They listen to everything that
-is said; they watch the expression of the face, and can even read
-the thoughts. The Irish say it is not safe to ask a question of a
-dog, for he may answer, and should he do so the questioner will
-surely die.</p>
-
-<p>The position of the animal race in the life scheme is certainly
-full of mystery. Gifted with extraordinary intelligence, yet
-with dumb souls vainly struggling for utterance, they seem like
-prisoned spirits in bondage, suffering the punishment, perhaps, for
-sin in some former human life, and now waiting the completion of
-the cycle of expiation that will advance them again to the human
-state.</p>
-
-<p>The three most ancient words in the Irish language are, it is
-said, <i>Tor</i>, a tower; <i>Cu</i>, a hound, and <i>Bo</i>, a cow. The latter word
-is the same as is found in the Greek <i>Bosphorus</i>, and in the nomenclature
-of many places throughout Europe.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="CONCERNING_DOGS">CONCERNING DOGS.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Some very weird superstitions exist in Ireland concerning the
-howlings of dogs. If a dog is heard to howl near the house of a
-sick person, all hope of his recovery is given up, and the patient
-himself sinks into despair, knowing that his doom is sealed. But
-the Irish are not alone in holding this superstition. The Egyptians,
-Hebrews, Greeks, and Romans all looked on the howling of the
-dog as ominous. The very word <i>howling</i> may be traced in the
-Latin <i>ululu</i>, the Greek <i>holuluzo</i>, the Hebrew <i>hululue</i>, and the Irish
-<i>ulluloo</i>. In Ireland the cry raised at the funeral ceremony was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">147</span>
-called the <i>Caoin</i>, or keen, probably from χυων, a dog. And this
-doleful lamentation was also common to other nations of antiquity.
-The Hebrews, Greeks, and Romans had their hired mourners, who,
-with dishevelled hair and mournful cadenced hymns, led on the
-melancholy parade of death. Thus the Trojan women keened over
-Hector, the chorus being led by the beautiful Helen herself.</p>
-
-<p>The howling of the dog was considered by these nations as the
-first note of the funeral dirge and the signal that the coming of
-death was near.</p>
-
-<p>But the origin of the superstition may be traced back to Egypt,
-where dogs and dog-faced gods were objects of worship; probably
-because Sirius, the Dog-star, appeared precisely before the rising
-of the Nile, and thereby gave the people a mystic and supernatural
-warning to prepare for the overflow.</p>
-
-<p>The Romans held that the howling of dogs was a fatal presage
-of evil, and it is noted amongst the direful omens that preceded
-the death of Cæsar. Horace also says that Canidia by her spells
-and sorceries could bring ghosts of dogs from hell; and Virgil
-makes the dog to howl at the approach of Hecate.</p>
-
-<p>It is remarkable that when dogs see spirits (and they are keenly
-sensitive to spirit influence) they never bark, but only howl. The
-Rabbins say that “when the Angel of Death enters a city the dogs
-do howl. But when Elias appears then the dogs rejoice and are
-merry.” And Rabbi Jehuda the Just states, that once upon a time
-when the Angel of Death entered a house the dog howled and
-fled; but being presently brought back he lay down in fear and
-trembling, and so died.</p>
-
-<p>This strange superstition concerning the howling of dogs, when,
-as is supposed, they are conscious of the approach of the Spirit of
-Death, and see him though he is shrouded and invisible to human
-eyes, may be found pervading the legends of all nations from the
-earliest period down to the present time; for it still exists in full
-force amongst all classes, the educated, as well as the unlettered
-peasantry; and to this day the howling of a dog where a sick
-person is lying is regarded in Ireland in all grades of society with
-pale dismay as a certain sign of approaching death.</p>
-
-<p>The Irish may have obtained the superstition through Egypt,
-Phœnicia, or Greece, for it is the opinion of some erudite writers
-that the Irish wolf-dog (<i>Canis gracius Hibernicus</i>) was descended
-from the dogs of Greece.</p>
-
-<p>It is strange and noteworthy that although the dog is so faithful
-to man, yet it is never mentioned in the Bible without an expression
-of contempt; and Moses in his code of laws makes the dog
-an unclean animal, probably to deter the Israelites from the
-Egyptian worship of this animal. It was the lowest term of
-offence—“Is thy servant a dog?” False teachers, persecutors,
-Gentiles, unholy men, and others sunk in sin and vileness were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">148</span>
-called dogs; while at the same time the strange prophetic power
-of these animals was universally acknowledged and recognized.</p>
-
-<p>The Romans sacrificed a dog at the Lupercalia in February.
-And to meet a dog with her whelps was considered in the highest
-degree unlucky. Of all living creatures the name of “dog”
-applied to any one expressed the lowest form of insult, contempt,
-and reproach. Yet, of all animals, the dog has the noblest
-qualities, the highest intelligence, and the most enduring affection
-for man.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Irish wolf-dog had a lithe body, a slender head, and was
-fleet as the wind. The form of the animal is produced constantly
-in Irish ornamentation, but the body always terminates in endless
-twisted convolutions. The great Fionn Ma-Coul had a celebrated
-dog called “Bran,” who is thus described in the bardic legends:
-“A ferocious, small-headed, white-breasted, sleek-haunched
-hound; having the eyes of a dragon, the claws of a wolf, the vigour
-of a lion, and the venom of a serpent.”</p>
-
-<p>In the same poem Fionn himself is described in highly ornate
-bardic language, as he leads the hound by a chain of silver
-attached to a collar of gold: “A noble, handsome, fair-featured
-Fenian prince; young, courteous, manly, puissant; powerful in
-action; the tallest of the warriors; the strongest of the champions;
-the most beautiful of the human race.”</p>
-
-<p>Bran, like his master, was gifted in a remarkable degree with
-the foreknowledge of evil, and thus he was enabled to give his
-young lord many warnings to keep him from danger.</p>
-
-<p>Once, when victory was not for the Fenian host, Bran showed
-the deepest sorrow.</p>
-
-<p>“He came to Fionn, wet and weary, and by this hand,” says the
-chronicler, “his appearance was pitiful. He lay down before the
-chief, and cried bitterly and howled.</p>
-
-<p>“‘’Tis likely, my dog,’ saith Fionn, ‘that our heads are in great
-danger this day.’”</p>
-
-<p>Another time, the Fenian host having killed a huge boar, Ossian,
-the bard and prophet, ordered it to be burnt as of demon race.
-Bran, hearing this, went out readily and knowingly, and he brings
-in three trees in his paw; no one knew from whence; but the
-trees were put into the fire and the great pig was burnt, and the
-ashes of the beast were cast into the sea.</p>
-
-<p>The Fenian princes generally went to the hunt accompanied
-altogether by about three thousand hounds; Bran leading, the
-wisest and fleetest of all. The chiefs formed a goodly army, a
-thousand knights or more—each wearing a silken shirt and a
-<i>chotan</i> of fine silk, a green mantle and fine purple cloak over to
-protect it; a golden diademed helmet on the head, and a javelin
-in each man’s hand.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">149</span></p>
-
-<p>Once, a chief, being jealous of the splendour of the Fenian
-princes, became their bitter enemy, and set himself to curse Bran
-above all hounds in the land.</p>
-
-<p>But Fionn answered, “If thou shouldest curse Bran, my wise,
-intelligent dog, not a room east or west in thy great mansion but
-I will burn with fire.”</p>
-
-<p>So Bran rested on the mountain with Fionn, his lord and
-master, and was safe from harm.</p>
-
-<p>Yet, so fate decreed, Bran finally met his death by means of a
-woman. One day a snow-white hart, with hoofs that shone like
-gold, was scented on the hill, and all the hounds pursued, Bran
-leading. Hour after hour passed by, and still the hart fled on, the
-hounds following, till one by one they all dropped off from weariness,
-and not one was left save Bran. Then the hart headed for
-the lake, and reaching a high cliff, she plunged from it straight
-down into the water; the noble hound leaped in at once after her,
-and seized the hart as she rose to the surface; but at that instant
-she changed into the form of a beautiful lady, and laying her hand
-upon the head of Bran, she drew him down beneath the water,
-and the beautiful lady and Fionn’s splendid hound disappeared
-together and were seen no more. But in memory of the event the
-cliff from which he leaped is called Coegg-y-Bran; while the lake
-and the castle beside it are called <i>Tiernach Bran</i> (the lordship of
-Bran) to this day. So the name and memory of Fionn’s hound,
-and his wisdom and achievements are not forgotten by the people;
-and many dogs of the chase are still called after him, for the name
-is thought to bring luck to the hunter and sportsman. But the
-<i>Cailleach Biorar</i> (the Hag of the Water) is held in much dread,
-for it is believed that she still lives in a cave on the hill, and is
-ready to work her evil spells whenever opportunity offers, and
-her house is shown under the cairn, also the beaten path she
-traversed to the lake. Many efforts have been made to drain the
-lake, but the Druid priestess, the Hag of the Water, always interferes,
-and casts some spell to prevent the completion of the
-work. The water of the lake has, it is said, the singular property
-of turning the hair a silvery white; and the great Fionn having
-once bathed therein, he emerged a withered old man, and was
-only restored to youth by means of strong spells and incantations.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In Cormac’s Glossary there is an interesting account of how the
-first lapdog came into Ireland, for the men of Britain were under
-strict orders that no lapdog should be given to the Gael, either of
-solicitation or of free will, for gratitude or friendship.</p>
-
-<p>Now it happened that Cairbré Musc went to visit a friend of
-his in Britain, who made him right welcome and offered him
-everything he possessed, save only his lapdog, for that was for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">150</span>bidden
-by the law. Yet this beautiful lapdog was the one only
-possession that Cairbré coveted, and he laid his plans cunningly
-to obtain it.</p>
-
-<p>There was a law at that time in Britain to this effect: “Every
-criminal shall be given as a forfeit for his crime to the person he
-has injured.”</p>
-
-<p>Now Cairbré had a wonderful dagger, around the haft of which
-was an adornment of silver and gold. It was a precious jewel,
-and he took fat meat and rubbed it all over the haft, with much
-grease. Then he set it before the lapdog, who began to gnaw at
-the haft, and continued gnawing all night till the morning, so that
-the haft was spoiled and was no longer beautiful.</p>
-
-<p>Then on the morrow, Cairbré made complaint that his beautiful
-dagger was destroyed, and he demanded a just recompense.</p>
-
-<p>“That is indeed fair,” said his friend, “I shall pay a price for
-the trespass.”</p>
-
-<p>“I ask no other price,” said Cairbré, “than what the law of
-Britain allows me, namely, the criminal for his crime.”</p>
-
-<p>So the lapdog was given to Cairbré, and it was called ever after
-<i>Mug-Eimé</i>, the slave of the haft, which name clung to it because
-it passed into servitude as a forfeit for the trespass.</p>
-
-<p>Now when Cairbré brought it back to Erin with him, all the
-kings of Ireland began to wrangle and contend for possession of
-the lapdog, and the contention at last ended in this wise—it was
-agreed that the dog should abide for a certain time in the house
-of each king. Afterwards the dog littered, and each of them had
-a pup of the litter, and from this stock descends every lapdog in
-Ireland from that time till now.</p>
-
-<p>After a long while the lapdog died, and the bare skull being
-brought to the blind poet Maer to try his power of divination, he
-at once exclaimed, through the prophetic power and vision in him,
-“O Mug-Eimé! this is indeed the head of Mug-Eimé, the slave
-of the haft, that was brought into Ireland and given over to the
-fate of a bondsman, and to the punishment of servitude as a
-forfeit.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The word hound entered into many combinations as a name for
-various animals. Thus the rabbit was called, “the hound of the
-brake;” the hare was the “brown hound;” the moth was called
-“the hound of fur,” owing to the voracity with which it devoured
-raiment. And the otter is still called by the Irish <i>Madradh-Uisgue</i>
-(the dog of the water).</p>
-
-<p>The names of most creatures of the animal kingdom were primitive,
-the result evidently of observation. Thus the hedgehog
-was named “the ugly little fellow.” The ant was the “slender
-one.” The trout, <i>Breac</i>, or “the spotted,” from the skin. And
-the wren was called “the Druid bird,” because if any one under<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">151</span>stood
-the chirrup, they would have a knowledge of coming events
-as foretold by the bird.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="CONCERNING_CATS">CONCERNING CATS.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Cats have been familiar to the human household from all
-antiquity, but they were probably first domesticated in Egypt,
-where, so far back as two thousand years ago, a temple was dedicated
-to the goddess of cats—Bubastis Pasht—represented with a
-cat’s head. The Greeks had this feline pet of the house from
-Egypt, and from Greece the cat race, such as we have it now, was
-disseminated over Europe. It was a familiar element in Greek
-household life, and if anything was broken, according to Aristophanes,
-the phrase went then as now, “The cat did it.” But
-cats were never venerated in Greece with religious adoration as in
-Egypt, the only country that gave them Divine honour, and
-where, if a cat died, the whole family shaved off their eyebrows
-in token of mourning.</p>
-
-<p>The Irish have always looked on cats as evil and mysteriously
-connected with some demoniacal influence. On entering a house
-the usual salutation is, “God save all here, except the cat.” Even
-the cake on the griddle may be blessed, but no one says, “God
-bless the cat.”</p>
-
-<p>It is believed that the devil often assumes the form of these
-animals. The familiar of a witch is always a black cat; and it is
-supposed that black cats have powers and faculties quite different
-from all other of the feline tribe. They are endowed with reason,
-can understand conversations, and are quite able to talk if they
-considered it advisable and judicious to join in the conversation.
-Their temperament is exceedingly unamiable, they are artful,
-malignant, and skilled in deception, and people should be very
-cautious in caressing them, for they have the venomous heart and
-the evil eye, and are ever ready to do an injury. Yet the liver of
-a black cat has the singular power to excite love when properly
-administered. If ground to powder and infused into potion, the
-recipient is fated to love passionately the person who offers it and
-has worked the charm.</p>
-
-<p>An instance of this is narrated as having happened not very
-long ago. A farmer’s daughter, a pretty coquette, attracted the
-attention of the young squire of the place. But though he was
-willing to carry on a flirtation, the young gentleman had no idea
-of debasing his proud lineage by an alliance. Yet a marriage was
-exactly what the girl desired, and which she was determined to
-accomplish. So she and a friend, an accomplice, searched the
-village till they found a black cat, black as night, with only three<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">152</span>
-white hairs on the breast. Him they seized, and having tied up
-the animal in a bag, they proceeded to throw him from one to the
-other over a low wall, till the poor beast was quite dead. Then
-at midnight they began their unholy work. The liver and heart
-were extracted in the name of the Evil One, and then boiled down
-until they became so dry that they could easily be reduced to a
-powder, which was kept for use when opportunity offered. This
-soon came; the young squire arrived one evening as usual, to pay
-a visit to the pretty Nora, and began to make love to the girl
-with the ordinary amount of audacity and hypocrisy. But Nora
-had other views, so she made the tea by her little fire in a <i>black</i>
-teapot, for this was indispensable, and induced her lover to stay
-and partake of it with her, along with a fresh griddle cake. Then
-cunningly she infused the powder into his cup and watched him
-as he drank the tea with feverish anxiety. The result was even
-beyond her hopes. A violent and ardent passion seemed suddenly
-to have seized the young man, and he not only made earnest love to
-the pretty Nora, but offered her his hand in marriage, vowing that
-he would kill himself if she refused to become his lawful bride.
-To avoid such a catastrophe, Nora gently yielded to his request,
-and from that evening they were engaged. Daily visits followed
-from the young squire, and each time that he came Nora took care
-to repeat the charm of the love powder, so that the love was kept
-at fever heat, and finally the wedding day was fixed.</p>
-
-<p>The family of the young squire were, however, not quite contented,
-especially as rumours of witchcraft and devil’s dealings
-were bruited about the neighbourhood. And on the very eve of
-the marriage, just as the young man was pouring forth his vows
-of eternal love to the bride expectant, the door was burst open, and
-a body of men entered, headed by the nearest relations of the
-squire, who proceeded at once to belabour the young bridegroom
-with hazel sticks in the most vigorous manner. In vain the bride
-tried to interpose. She only drew the blows on herself, and
-finally the young man was carried away half stunned, lifted into
-the carriage and driven straight home, where he was locked up in
-his own room, and not allowed to hold any communication with
-the bride elect.</p>
-
-<p>The daily doses of the powder having thus ceased, he began to
-recover from the love madness, and finally the fever passed away.
-And he looked back with wonder and horror on the fatal step he
-had so nearly taken. Now he saw there was really witchcraft in
-it, which the power of the hazel twigs had completely broken.
-And the accomplice having confessed the sorcery practised on
-him by Nora and herself, he hated the girl henceforth as much
-as he had once loved her.</p>
-
-<p>And after a little he went away on foreign travel, and remained
-abroad for three years. When he returned, he found that Nora<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">153</span>
-had degenerated into a withered little witch-faced creature, who
-was shunned by every one, and jeered at for the failure of her
-wicked spells, which had all come to nothing, though she had the
-Evil One himself to aid her; for such is the fate of all who deal
-in sorcery and devil’s magic, especially with the help of Satan’s
-chief instrument of witchcraft—the black cat.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>But there is a certain herb of more power even than the cat’s
-liver to produce love. Though what this herb is, only the adept
-knows and can reveal. The influence it exercises lasts, it is said,
-for twenty-one years, and then ceases and cannot be renewed.</p>
-
-<p>A gentleman, now living, once ate of this herb, which was
-given to him by his wife’s serving-maid, and in consequence he
-was fated to love the girl for the specified time. Not being then
-able to endure his wife’s presence, he sent her away from the
-house, and devoted himself exclusively to the servant. Nineteen
-years have now passed by, and the poor lady is still waiting
-patiently to the end of the twenty-one years, believing that the
-witch-spell will then cease, and that her husband’s love will be
-hers once more. For already he has been inquiring after her and
-his children, and has been heard lamenting the madness that
-forced him to drive them from the house for the sake of the
-menial, who usurped his wife’s place by means of some wicked
-sorcery which he had no power to resist.</p>
-
-
-<h4><a id="THE_KING_OF_THE_CATS"></a>THE KING OF THE CATS.</h4>
-
-<p>A most important personage in feline history is the King of the
-Cats. He may be in your house a common looking fellow enough,
-with no distinguishing mark of exalted rank about him, so that it
-is very difficult to verify his genuine claims to royalty. Therefore
-the best way is to cut off a tiny little bit of his ear. If he is really
-the royal personage, he will immediately speak out and declare
-who he is; and perhaps, at the same time, tell you some very disagreeable
-truths about yourself, not at all pleasant to have discussed
-by the house cat.</p>
-
-<p>A man once, in a fit of passion, cut off the head of the domestic
-pussy, and threw it on the fire. On which the head exclaimed, in
-a fierce voice, “Go tell your wife that you have cut off the head
-of the King of the Cats; but wait! I shall come back and be
-avenged for this insult,” and the eyes of the cat glared at him
-horribly from the fire.</p>
-
-<p>And so it happened; for that day year, while the master of the
-house was playing with a pet kitten, it suddenly flew at his throat
-and bit him so severely that he died soon after.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">154</span></p>
-
-<p>A story is current also, that one night an old woman was sitting
-up very late spinning, when a knocking came to the door.
-“Who is there?” she asked. No answer; but still the knocking
-went on. “Who is there?” she asked a second time. No
-answer; and the knocking continued. “Who is there?” she
-asked the third time, in a very angry passion.</p>
-
-<p>Then there came a small voice—“Ah, Judy, agrah, let me in,
-for I am cold and hungry; open the door, Judy, agrah, and let
-me sit by the fire, for the night is cold out here. Judy, agrah,
-let me in, let me in!”</p>
-
-<p>The heart of Judy was touched, for she thought it was some
-small child that had lost its way, and she rose up from her spinning,
-and went and opened the door—when in walked a large
-black cat with a white breast, and two white kittens after her.</p>
-
-<p>They all made over to the fire and began to warm and dry
-themselves, purring all the time very loudly; but Judy said
-never a word, only went on spinning.</p>
-
-<p>Then the black cat spoke at last—“Judy, agrah, don’t stay up
-so late again, for the fairies wanted to hold a council here to-night,
-and to have some supper, but you have prevented them;
-so they were very angry and determined to kill you, and only for
-myself and my two daughters here you would be dead by this
-time. So take my advice, don’t interfere with the fairy hours
-again, for the night is theirs, and they hate to look on the face of
-a mortal when they are out for pleasure or business. So I ran on
-to tell you, and now give me a drink of milk, for I must be off.”</p>
-
-<p>And after the milk was finished the cat stood up, and called her
-daughters to come away.</p>
-
-<p>“Good-night, Judy, agrah,” she said. “You have been very
-civil to me, and I’ll not forget it to you. Good-night, good-night.”</p>
-
-<p>With that the black cat and the two kittens whisked up the
-chimney; but Judy looking down saw something glittering on the
-hearth, and taking it up she found it was a piece of silver, more
-than she ever could make in a month by her spinning, and she
-was glad in her heart, and never again sat up so late to interfere
-with the fairy hours, but the black cat and her daughters came no
-more again to the house.</p>
-
-
-<h4><a id="THE_DEMON_CAT"></a>THE DEMON CAT.</h4>
-
-<p>The cat of the foregoing legend had evidently charming manners,
-and was well intentioned; but there are other cats of evil
-and wicked ways, that are, in fact, demons or witches, who assume
-the cat-form, in order to get easy entrance to a house, and spy
-over everything.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">155</span></p>
-
-<p>There was a woman in Connemara, the wife of a fisherman,
-and as he always had very good luck, she had plenty of fish at all
-times stored away in the house ready for market. But to her
-great annoyance she found that a great cat used to come in at
-night and devour all the best and finest fish. So she kept a big
-stick by her and determined to watch.</p>
-
-<p>One day, as she and a woman were spinning together, the house
-suddenly became quite dark; and the door was burst open as if
-by the blast of the tempest, when in walked a huge black cat,
-who went straight up to the fire, then turned round and growled
-at them.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, surely this is the devil!” said a young girl, who was
-by, sorting the fish.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll teach you how to call me names,” said the cat; and,
-jumping at her, he scratched her arm till the blood came. “There
-now,” he said, “you will be more civil another time when a
-gentleman comes to see you.” And with that he walked over to
-the door and shut it close to prevent any of them going out, for
-the poor young girl, while crying loudly from fright and pain,
-had made a desperate rush to get away.</p>
-
-<p>Just then a man was going by, and hearing the cries he pushed
-open the door and tried to get in, but the cat stood on the threshold
-and would let no one pass. On this, the man attacked him
-with his stick, and gave him a sound blow; the cat, however,
-was more than his match in the fight, for it flew at him and tore
-his face and hands so badly that the man at last took to his heels
-and ran away as fast as he could.</p>
-
-<p>“Now it’s time for my dinner,” said the cat, going up to
-examine the fish that was laid out on the tables. “I hope the
-fish is good to-day. Now don’t disturb me, nor make a fuss; I
-can help myself.” With that he jumped up and began to devour
-all the best fish, while he growled at the woman.</p>
-
-<p>“Away, out of this, you wicked beast!” she cried, giving it a
-blow with the tongs that would have broken its back, only it was
-a devil; “out of this! No fish shall you have to-day.”</p>
-
-<p>But the cat only grinned at her, and went on tearing and spoiling
-and devouring the fish, evidently not a bit the worse for the
-blow. On this, both the women attacked it with sticks, and
-struck hard blows enough to kill it, on which the cat glared at
-them, and spit fire; then making a leap, it tore their hands and
-arms till the blood came, and the frightened women rushed
-shrieking from the house.</p>
-
-<p>But presently the mistress returned, carrying with her a bottle
-of holy water; and looking in, she saw the cat still devouring the
-fish, and not minding. So she crept over quietly and threw the
-holy water on it without a word. No sooner was this done than
-a dense black smoke filled the place, through which nothing was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">156</span>
-seen but the two red eyes of the cat, burning like coals of fire.
-Then the smoke gradually cleared away, and she saw the body of
-the creature burning slowly till it became shrivelled and black
-like a cinder, and finally disappeared. And from that time the
-fish remained untouched and safe from harm, for the power of the
-Evil One was broken, and the demon cat was seen no more.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Cats are very revengeful, and one should be very careful not to
-offend them. A lady was in the habit of feeding the cat from
-her own table at dinner, and no doubt giving it choice morsels;
-but one day there was a dinner party, and pussy was quite forgotten.
-So she sulked and plotted revenge; and that night, after
-the lady was in bed, the cat, who had hid herself in the room,
-sprang at the throat of her friend and mistress, and bit her so
-severely that in a week the lady died of virulent blood poisoning.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Yet it is singular that the blood of the black cat is esteemed of
-wonderful power when mixed with herbs, for charms; and also
-of great efficacy in potions for the cure of disease; but three
-drops of the blood are sufficient, and it is generally obtained by
-nipping off a small piece of the tail.</p>
-
-
-<h4><a id="CAT_NATURE"></a>CAT NATURE.</h4>
-
-<p>The observation of cats is very remarkable, and also their
-intense curiosity. They examine everything in a house, and in a
-short time know all about it as well as the owner. They are
-never deceived by stuffed birds, or any such weak human delusions.
-They fathom it all at one glance, and then turn away
-with apathetic indifference, as if saying, in cat language—“We
-know all about it.”</p>
-
-<p>A favourite cat in a gentleman’s house was rather fond of
-nocturnal rambles and late hours, perhaps copying his master,
-but no matter what his engagements were the cat always returned
-regularly next morning precisely at nine o’clock, which was the
-breakfast hour, and <i>rang the house bell</i> at the hall door. This
-fact was stated to me on undoubted authority; and, in truth,
-there is nothing too wonderful to believe about the intellect of
-cats; no matter what strange things may be narrated of them,
-nothing should be held improbable or impossible to their intelligence.</p>
-
-<p>But cats are decidedly malific; they are selfish, revengeful,
-treacherous, cunning, and generally dangerous. The evil spirit
-in them is easily aroused. It is an Irish superstition that if you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">157</span>
-are going a journey, and meet a cat, you should turn back. But
-the cat must meet you on the road, not simply be in the house;
-and it must look you full in the face. Then cross yourself and
-turn back; for a witch or a devil is in your path.</p>
-
-<p>It is believed also that if a black cat is killed and a bean placed
-in the heart, and the animal afterwards buried, the beans that
-grow from that seed will confer extraordinary power; for if a
-man places one in his mouth, he will become invisible, and can go
-anywhere he likes without being seen.</p>
-
-<p>Cats have truly something awful in them. According to the
-popular belief they know everything that is said, and can take
-various shapes through their demoniac power. A cat once lived
-in a farmer’s family for many years, and understood both Irish
-and English perfectly. Then the family grew afraid of it, for
-they said it would certainly talk some day. So the farmer put it
-into a bag, determined to get rid of it on the mountains. But on
-the way he met a pack of hounds, and the dogs smelt at the bag
-and dragged it open, on which the cat jumped out; but the
-hounds were on it in a moment, and tore the poor animal to
-pieces. However, before her death she had time to say to the
-farmer in very good Irish—“It is well for you that I must die to-day,
-for had I lived I meant to have killed you this very night.”
-These were the last dying words of the cat uttered in her death
-agonies, before the face of many credible witnesses, so there can
-be no doubt on the matter.</p>
-
-<p>Cats were special objects of mysterious dread to the ancient
-Irish. They believed that many of them were men and women
-metamorphosed into cats by demoniacal power. Cats also were
-the guardians of hidden treasure, and had often great battles
-among themselves on account of the hidden gold; when a demon,
-in the shape of the chief cat, led on the opposing forces on each
-side, and compelled all the cats in the district to take part in the
-conflict.</p>
-
-<p>The Druidical or royal cat, the chief monarch of all the cats in
-Ireland, was endowed with human speech and faculties, and
-possessed great and singular privileges. “A slender black cat,
-wearing a chain of silver,” so it is described.</p>
-
-<p>There is a legend that a beautiful princess, a king’s daughter,
-having gone down to bathe one day, was there enchanted by her
-wicked stepmother, who hated her; and by the spell of the enchantment
-she was doomed to be one year a cat, another a swan,
-and another an otter; but with the privilege of assuming her
-natural shape one day in each year, under certain conditions. It
-is to be regretted that we have no account as to the mode in
-which the Princess Faithlean exercised her brief enjoyment of
-human rights; for the narration would have had a mystic and
-deep psychological interest if the fair young victim had only<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">158</span>
-retained during all her transformations the memory of each of
-her successive incarnations as the cat, the swan, and the otter.</p>
-
-<p>This abnormal mode of existence, however, was not unusual
-amongst the Irish. Fionn himself had a wife who for seven
-years was alive by day and dead by night; and the Irish Princess
-Zeba, being enchanted by her wicked stepfather, the king of
-Munster, died and came to life again each alternate year.</p>
-
-<p>All nations seem to have appreciated the mysterious and almost
-human qualities of cat nature; the profound cunning, the impertinent
-indifference, the intense selfishness, yet capable of the most
-hypocritical flatteries when some point has to be gained. Their
-traits are not merely the product of brute instinct with unvarying
-action and results, but the manifestation of a calculating intellect,
-akin to the human. Then their grace and flexile beauty make
-them very attractive; while the motherly virtues of the matron
-cat are singularly interesting as a study of order, education, and
-training for the wilful little kitten, quite on the human lines of
-salutary discipline. Humboldt declared that he could spend a
-whole day with immense profit and advantage to himself as a
-philosopher, by merely watching a cat with her kittens, the profound
-wisdom of the mother and the incomparable grace of the
-children. For cats are thoroughly well-bred, born aristocrats;
-never abrupt, fussy, or obtrusive like the dog, but gentle, grave,
-and dignified in manner. Cats never run, they glide softly, and
-always with perfect and beautiful curves of motion; and they
-express their affection, not violently, like the dog, but with the
-most graceful, caressing movements of the head.</p>
-
-<p>Their intellect also is very remarkable, they easily acquire the
-meaning of certain words, and have a singular and exact knowledge
-of hours.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. St. George Mivart, in his interesting and exhaustive work
-on cats, has devoted a whole chapter to the psychology of the cat;
-in which he shows that the race possesses evident mental qualities
-and peculiar intelligence, with also a decided and significant
-language of sounds and gestures to express the emotions of the cat
-mind. The highly reflective and observant nature of the cat is
-also admirably described in that very clever novel called “The
-Poison Tree,” recently translated from the Bengalee. There the
-house-cat is drawn with the most lifelike touches, as she sits
-watching the noble and beautiful lady at work on her embroidery,
-while her little child is playing beside her with all the pretty toys
-scattered over the carpet: “The cat’s disposition was grave: her
-face indicated much wisdom, and a heart devoid of fickleness. She
-evidently was thinking<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">159</span>—‘the condition of human creatures is
-frightful; their minds are ever given to sewing of canvas, playing
-with dolls, or some such silly employment; their thoughts are
-not turned to good works, such as providing suitable food for cats.
-What will become of them hereafter!’ Then, seeing no means
-by which the disposition of mankind could be improved, the cat,
-heaving a sigh, slowly departs.”</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3><a name="SEANCHAN_THE_BARD_AND_THE_KING" id="SEANCHAN_THE_BARD_AND_THE_KING">SEANCHAN THE BARD AND THE KING
-OF THE CATS.</a></h3>
-
-
-<p>There is an amusing legend preserved in Ossianic tradition of
-the encounter between Seanchan, the celebrated chief poet of
-Ireland, and the King of all the Cats, who dwelt in a cave near
-Clonmacnoise.</p>
-
-<p>In ancient Ireland the men of learning were esteemed beyond
-all other classes; all the great ollaves and professors and poets
-held the very highest social position, and took precedence of the
-nobles, and ranked next to royalty. The leading men amongst
-them lived luxuriously in the great Bardic House; and when they
-went abroad through the country they travelled with a train of
-minor bards, fifty or more, and were entertained free of cost by
-the kings and chiefs, who considered themselves highly honoured
-by the presence of so distinguished a company at their court. If
-the receptions were splendid and costly, the praise of the entertainer
-was chanted by all the poets at the feast; but if any slight
-were offered, then the Ard-Filé poured forth his stinging satire in
-such bitter odes, that many declared they would sooner die than
-incur the anger of the poets or be made the subject of their
-scathing satire.</p>
-
-<p>All the learned men and professors, the ollaves of music, poetry,
-oratory, and of the arts and sciences generally, formed a great
-Bardic Association, who elected their own president, with the
-title of Chief Poet of all Ireland, and they also elected chief poets
-for each of the provinces. Learned women, likewise, and
-poetesses, were included in the Bardic Association, with distinct
-and recognized privileges, both as to revenue and costly apparel.
-Legal enactments even were made respecting the number of
-colours allowed to be worn in their mantles—the poet being
-allowed six colours, and the poetess five in her robe and mantle;
-the number of colours being a distinct recognition and visible
-sign of rank, and therefore very highly esteemed. But, in time,
-as a consequence of their many and great privileges, the pride and
-insolence of the learned class, the ollamhs, poets, and poetesses,
-became so insufferable, that even the kings trembled before them.
-This is shown in the Ossianic tale, from which we may gather
-that Seanchan the Bard, when entertained at the court of King
-Guaire, grew jealous of the attention paid to the nobles while he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">160</span>
-was present. So he sulked at the festival, and made himself
-eminently disagreeable, as will be seen by the following legend:—</p>
-
-<p>When Seanchan, the renowned Bard, was made <i>Ard-Filé</i>, or
-Chief Poet of Ireland, Guaire, the king of Connaught, to do him
-honour, made a great feast for him and the whole Bardic Association.
-And all the professors went to the king’s house, the great
-ollaves of poetry and history and music, and of the arts and
-sciences; and the learned, aged females, Grug and Grag and
-Grangait; and all the chief poets and poetesses of Ireland, an
-amazing number. But Guaire the king entertained them all
-splendidly, so that the ancient pathway to his palace is still
-called “The Road of the Dishes.”</p>
-
-<p>And each day he asked, “How fares it with my noble guests?”
-But they were all discontented, and wanted things he could not
-get for them. So he was very sorrowful, and prayed to God to
-be delivered from “the learned men and women, a vexatious
-class.”</p>
-
-<p>Still the feast went on for three days and three nights. And
-they drank and made merry. And the whole Bardic Association
-entertained the nobles with the choicest music and professional
-accomplishments.</p>
-
-<p>But Seanchan sulked and would neither eat nor drink, for he
-was jealous of the nobles of Connaught. And when he saw how
-much they consumed of the best meats and wine, he declared he
-would taste no food till they and their servants were all sent away
-out of the house.</p>
-
-<p>And when Guaire asked him again, “How fares my noble
-guest, and this great and excellent people?” Seanchan answered,
-“I have never had worse days, nor worse nights, nor worse dinners
-in my life.” And he ate nothing for three whole days.</p>
-
-<p>Then the king was sorely grieved that the whole Bardic Association
-should be feasting and drinking while Seanchan, the chief
-poet of Erin, was fasting and weak. So he sent his favourite
-serving-man, a person of mild manners and cleanliness, to offer
-special dishes to the bard.</p>
-
-<p>“Take them away,” said Seanchan; “I’ll have none of them.”</p>
-
-<p>“And why, oh, Royal Bard?” asked the servitor.</p>
-
-<p>“Because thou art an uncomely youth,” answered Seanchan.
-“Thy grandfather was chip-nailed—I have seen him; I shall eat
-no food from thy hands.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the king called a beautiful maiden to him, his foster
-daughter, and said, “Lady, bring thou this wheaten cake and this
-dish of salmon to the illustrious poet, and serve him thyself.” So
-the maiden went.</p>
-
-<p>But when Seanchan saw her he asked: “Who sent thee hither,
-and why hast thou brought me food?”</p>
-
-<p>“My lord the king sent me, oh, Royal Bard,” she answered,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">161</span>
-“because I am comely to look upon, and he bade me serve thee
-with food myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Take it away,” said Seanchan, “thou art an unseemly girl, I
-know of none more ugly. I have seen thy grandmother; she sat
-on a wall one day and pointed out the way with her hand to some
-travelling lepers. How could I touch thy food?” So the maiden
-went away in sorrow.</p>
-
-<p>And then Guaire the king was indeed angry, and he exclaimed,
-“My malediction on the mouth that uttered that! May the kiss
-of a leper be on Seanchan’s lips before he dies!”</p>
-
-<p>Now there was a young serving-girl there, and she said to
-Seanchan, “There is a hen’s egg in the place, my lord, may I bring
-it to thee, oh, Chief Bard?”</p>
-
-<p>“It will suffice,” said Seanchan; “bring it that I may eat.”</p>
-
-<p>But when she went to look for it, behold the egg was gone.</p>
-
-<p>“Thou hast eaten it,” said the bard, in wrath.</p>
-
-<p>“Not so, my lord,” she answered; “but the mice, the nimble
-race, have carried it away.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I will satirize them in a poem,” said Seanchan; and
-forthwith he chanted so bitter a satire against them that ten mice
-fell dead at once in his presence.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis well,” said Seanchan; “but the cat is the one most to
-blame, for it was her duty to suppress the mice. Therefore I shall
-satirize the tribe of the cats, and their chief lord, Irusan, son of
-Arusan. For I know where he lives with his wife Spit-fire, and
-his daughter Sharp-tooth, with her brothers, the Purrer and the
-Growler. But I shall begin with Irusan himself, for he is king,
-and answerable for all the cats.”</p>
-
-<p>And he said—“Irusan, monster of claws, who strikes at the
-mouse, but lets it go; weakest of cats. The otter did well who
-bit off the tips of thy progenitor’s ears, so that every cat since is
-jagged-eared. Let thy tail hang down; it is right, for the mouse
-jeers at thee.”</p>
-
-<p>Now Irusan heard these words in his cave, and he said to his
-daughter, Sharp-tooth: “Seanchan has satirized me, but I will be
-avenged.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nay, father,” she said, “bring him here alive, that we may all
-take our revenge.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall go then and bring him,” said Irusan; “so send thy
-brothers after me.”</p>
-
-<p>Now when it was told to Seanchan that the King of the Cats
-was on his way to come and kill him, he was timorous, and besought
-Guaire and all the nobles to stand by and protect him.
-And before long a vibrating, impressive, impetuous sound was
-heard, like a raging tempest of fire in full blaze. And when the
-cat appeared he seemed to them of the size of a bullock; and this
-was his appearance—rapacious, panting, jagged-eared, snub-nosed,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">162</span>
-sharp-toothed, nimble, angry, vindictive, glare-eyed, terrible,
-sharp-clawed. Such was his similitude. But he passed on
-amongst them, not minding till he came to Seanchan; and him
-he seized by the arm and jerked him up on his back, and made off
-the way he came before any one could touch him; for he had no
-other object in view but to get hold of the poet.</p>
-
-<p>Now Seanchan, being in evil plight, had recourse to flattery.
-“Oh, Irusan,” he exclaimed, “how truly splendid thou art, such
-running, such leaps, such strength, and such agility! But what
-evil have I done, oh, Irusan, son of Arusan? spare me, I entreat.
-I invoke the saints between thee and me, oh, great King of the
-Cats.”</p>
-
-<p>But not a bit did the cat let go his hold for all this fine talk,
-but went straight on to Clonmacnoise where there was a forge;
-and St. Kieran happened to be there standing at the door.</p>
-
-<p>“What!” exclaimed the saint; “is that the Chief Bard of Erin
-on the back of a cat? Has Guaire’s hospitality ended in this?”
-And he ran for a red-hot bar of iron that was in the furnace, and
-struck the cat on the side with it, so that the iron passed through
-him, and he fell down lifeless.</p>
-
-<p>“Now my curse on the hand that gave that blow!” said the
-bard, when he got upon his feet.</p>
-
-<p>“And wherefore?” asked St. Kieran.</p>
-
-<p>“Because,” answered Seanchan, “I would rather Irusan had
-killed me, and eaten me every bit, that so I might bring disgrace
-on Guaire for the bad food he gave me; for it was all owing to
-his wretched dinners that I got into this plight.”</p>
-
-<p>And when all the other kings heard of Seanchan’s misfortunes,
-they sent to beg he would visit their courts. But he would have
-neither kiss nor welcome from them, and went on his way to the
-bardic mansion, where the best of good living was always to be
-had. And ever after the kings were afraid to offend Seanchan.</p>
-
-<p>So as long as he lived he had the chief place at the feast, and
-all the nobles there were made to sit below him, and Seanchan
-was content. And in time he and Guaire were reconciled; and
-Seanchan and all the ollamhs, and the whole Bardic Association,
-were feasted by the king for thirty days in noble style, and had
-the choicest of viands and the best of French wines to drink,
-served in goblets of silver. And in return for his splendid hospitality
-the Bardic Association decreed, unanimously, a vote of
-thanks to the king. And they praised him in poems as “Guaire
-the Generous,” by which name he was ever after known in history,
-for the words of the poet are immortal.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">163</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h3 id="THE_BARDS">THE BARDS.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The Irish kings in ancient times kept up splendid hospitality at
-their respective courts, and never sat down to an entertainment,
-it was said, without a hundred nobles at least being present. Next
-in rank and superb living to the royal race came the learned men,
-the ollamhs and poets; they were placed next the king, and above
-the nobles at the festivals, and very gorgeous was the appearance
-of the Ard-Filé on these occasions, in his white robes clasped
-with golden brooches, and a circlet of gold upon his head; while
-by his side lay the golden harp, which he seized when the poetic
-frenzy came upon him, and swept the chords to songs of love, or
-in praise of immortal heroes. The queen alone had the privilege
-to ask the poet to recite at the royal banquets, and while he declaimed,
-no man dared to interrupt him by a single word.</p>
-
-<p>A train of fifty minor bards always attended the chief poet, and
-they were all entertained free of cost wherever they visited,
-throughout Ireland, while the Ard-Filé was borne on men’s
-shoulders to the palace of the king, and there presented with a
-rich robe, a chain, and a girdle of gold. Of one bard, it is recorded
-that the king gave him, in addition, his horse and armour,
-fifty rings to his hand, one thousand ounces of pure gold, and his
-chess-board.</p>
-
-<p>The game of chess is frequently referred to in the old bardic
-tales; and chess seems to have been a favourite pastime with the
-Irish from the most remote antiquity. The pieces must have been
-of great size, for it is narrated that the great Cuchullen killed
-a messenger who had told him a lie, by merely flinging a chessman
-at him, which pierced his brain. The royal chess-board was very
-costly and richly decorated. One is described in a manuscript of
-the twelfth century: “It was a board of silver and pure gold,
-and every angle was illuminated with precious stones. And there
-was a man-bag of woven brass wire.” But the ancestors of the
-same king had in their hall a chess-board with the pieces formed
-of the <i>bones of their hereditary enemies</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The dress of the bards added to their splendour, for the Brehon
-laws enacted that the value of the robes of the chief poet should
-be five milch cows, and that of the poetess three cows; the
-queen’s robes being of the value of seven cows, including a diadem
-and golden veil, and a robe of scarlet silk, embroidered in divers
-colours. The scions of the royal house had also the right to seven
-colours in their mantle; while the poet was allowed six, and the
-poetess five—the number of colours being a sign of dignity and
-rank.</p>
-
-<p>Learning was always highly esteemed in Ireland, and in ancient
-Erin the <i>literati</i> ranked next to the kings.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">164</span></p>
-
-<p>The great and wise <i>Ollamh-Fodla</i>, king of Ireland in Druidic
-times, built and endowed a college at Tara, near the royal palace,
-which was called <i>Mur-Ollamh</i>, “the Wall of the Learned.” All
-the arts and sciences were represented there by eminent professors,
-the great ollaves of music, history, poetry, and oratory;
-and they lived and feasted together, and formed the great Bardic
-Association, ruled over by their own president, styled the Ard-Filé,
-or chief poet of Ireland, from <i>Filidecht</i> (philosophy or the
-highest wisdom); for the poets, above all men, were required to
-be pure and free from all sin that could be a reproach to learning.
-From them was demanded—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Purity of hand,</div>
- <div class="verse">Purity of mouth,</div>
- <div class="verse">Purity of learning,</div>
- <div class="verse">Purity of marriage;”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>and any ollamh that did not preserve these four purities lost half
-his income and his dignity, the poet being esteemed not only the
-highest of all men for his learning and intellect, but also as being
-the true revealer of the supreme wisdom.</p>
-
-<p>Music was sedulously taught and cultivated at the college
-of the ollamhs; for all the ancient life of Ireland moved to
-music.</p>
-
-<p>The Brehons seated on a hill intoned the laws to the listening
-people; the Senachies chanted the genealogies of the kings; and
-the Poets recited the deeds of the heroes, or sang to their gold
-harps those exquisite airs that still enchant the world, and which
-have been wafted down along the centuries, an echo, according to
-tradition, of the soft, pathetic, fairy music, that haunted the hills
-and glens of ancient Ireland.</p>
-
-<p>The chief poet was required to know by heart four hundred
-poems, and the minor bards two hundred. And they were bound
-to recite any poem called for by the kings at the festivals. On one
-occasion a recitation was demanded of the legend of the <i>Taine-bo-Cuailne</i>,
-or The Great Cattle Raid, of which Maeve, queen of Connaught,
-was the heroine, but none of the bards knew it. This was
-felt to be a great disgrace, and Seanchan and the bards set forth
-to traverse Ireland in search of the story of the Taine, under
-<i>Geasa</i>, or a solemn oath, not to sleep twice in the same place till
-it was found.</p>
-
-<p>At length it was revealed to them that only the dead Fergus-Roy
-knew the poem, and forthwith they proceeded to his grave,
-and fasted and prayed for three days, while they invoked him to
-appear. And on their invocation Fergus-Roy uprose in awful
-majesty, and stood in his grave clothes before them, and recited
-the Taine from beginning to end to the circle of listening bards.
-Then, having finished, he descended again into the grave, and the
-earth closed over him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">165</span></p>
-
-<p>During this expedition, Guaire the Generous took charge of all
-the wives and the poetesses of the Bardic Association, so as they
-should not trouble the bards while on their wanderings in search
-of the ballad of the Taine. Yet they do not seem to have been
-great feeders, these learned ladies; for it is related of one of
-them, Brigit the poetess, that although she only ate one
-hen’s egg at a meal, yet she was called “Brigit of the great
-appetite.”</p>
-
-<p>It was on their return from the search for the Taine that the
-bards decreed a vote of thanks to Guaire the king.</p>
-
-<p>In order to keep up the dignity of the great bardic clan, an income
-was paid by the State to each of the professors and poets
-according to his eminence; that of the chief poet being estimated
-by antiquarians at about five thousand a year of our money, for the
-lofty and learned Bardic Association disdained commerce and toil.
-The Fileas lived only on inspiration and the hospitality of their
-royal and noble patrons, which they amply repaid by laudatory odes
-and sonnets. But, if due homage were denied them, they denounced
-the ungenerous and niggard defaulter in the most scathing and
-bitter satires. Of one chief it is recorded that he absolutely went
-mad and died in consequence of the malignant poems that were
-made on him by a clever satirical bard.</p>
-
-<p>At last the Brehons found it necessary to take cognizance
-of this cruel and terrible implement of social torture, and enactments
-were framed against it, with strict regulations regarding
-the quality and justice of the satires poured out
-by the poets on those who had the courage to resist their
-exactions and resent their insolence. Finally, however, the
-ollamhs, poets, and poetesses became so intolerable that the reigning
-king of Ireland about the seventh century made a great effort
-to extirpate the whole bardic race, but failed; they were too
-strong for him, though he succeeded in, at least, materially
-abridging their privileges, lessening their revenues, and reducing
-their numbers; and though they still continued to exist as
-the Bardic Association, yet they never afterwards regained the
-power and dignity which they once held in the land, before their
-pride and insolent contempt of all classes who were not numbered
-amongst the ollamhs and fileas, had aroused such violent animosity.
-The Brehon laws also decreed, as to the distraint of
-a poet, that his horsewhip be taken from him, “as a warning that
-he is not to make use of it until he renders justice.” Perhaps by
-the horsewhip was meant the wand or staff which the poets carried,
-made of wood, on which it is conjectured they may have inscribed
-their verses in the Ogham character.</p>
-
-<p>The Brehons seem to have made the most minute regulations
-as to the life of the people, even concerning the domestic cats.
-In the <i>Senchas Mor</i> (The Great Antiquity) it is enacted that the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">166</span>
-cat is exempt from liability for eating the food which he finds in
-the kitchen, “owing to negligence in taking care of it.” But
-if it were taken from the security of a vessel, then the cat is
-in fault, and he may safely be killed. The cat, also, is exempt
-from liability for injuring an idler in catching mice while
-mousing; but <i>half-fines</i> are due from him for the profitable
-worker he may injure, and the excitement of his mousing takes
-the other half. For the distraint of a dog, a stick was placed
-over his trough in order that he be not fed. And there was
-a distress of two days for a black and white cat if descended from
-the great champion, which was taken from the ship of Breasal
-Breac, in which were white-breasted black cats; the same for the
-lapdog of a queen.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="KING_ARTHUR_AND_THE_CAT">KING ARTHUR AND THE CAT.</h3>
-
-
-<p>While on the subject of cats, the curious and interesting legend
-of “King Arthur’s Fight with the Great Cat” should not be passed
-over; for though not exactly Irish, yet it is at least Celtic, and belongs
-by affinity to our ancient race. It is taken from a prose
-romance of the fifteenth century, entitled, “Merlin; or, The Early
-Life of King Arthur,” recently edited, from the unique Cambridge
-Manuscript, by Mr. Wheatly.</p>
-
-<p>Merlin told the king that the people beyond the Lake of
-Lausanne greatly desired his help, “for there repaireth a devil
-that destroyeth the country. It is a cat so great and ugly
-that it is horrible to look on.” For one time a fisher came
-to the lake with his nets, and he promised to give our Lord
-the first fish he took. It was a fish worth thirty shillings; and
-when he saw it so fair and great, he said to himself softly,
-“God shall not have this; but I will surely give Him the
-next.” Now, the next was still better, and he said, “Our Lord
-may wait yet awhile; but the third shall be His without doubt.”
-So he cast his net, but drew out only a little kitten, as black
-as any coal.</p>
-
-<p>And when the fisher saw it he said he had need of it at home
-for rats and mice; and he nourished it and kept it in his house
-till it strangled him and his wife and children. Then the cat fled
-to a high mountain and destroyed and slew all that came in his
-way, and was great and terrible to behold.</p>
-
-<p>When the king heard this he made ready and rode to the
-Lac de Lausanne and found the country desolate and void of
-people, for neither man nor woman would inhabit the place for
-fear of the cat.</p>
-
-<p>And the king was lodged a mile from the mountain, with Sir<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">167</span>
-Gawvain and Merlin and others. And they clomb the mountain,
-Merlin leading the way. And when they were come up, Merlin
-said to the king, “Sir, in that rock liveth the cat;” and he
-showed him a great cave, large and deep, in the mountain.</p>
-
-<p>“And how shall the cat come out?” said the king.</p>
-
-<p>“That shall ye see hastily,” quoth Merlin; “but look you, be
-ready to defend, for anon he will assail you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then draw ye all back,” said the king, “for I will prove his
-power.”</p>
-
-<p>And when they withdrew, Merlin whistled loud, and the cat
-leaped out of the cave, thinking it was some wild beast, for
-he was hungry and fasting; and he ran boldly to the king, who
-was ready with his spear, and thought to smite him through the
-body. But the fiend seized the spear in his mouth and broke it
-in twain.</p>
-
-<p>Then the king drew his sword, holding his shield also before
-him. And as the cat leaped at his throat, he struck him so
-fiercely that the creature fell to the ground; but soon was up
-again, and ran at the king so hard that his claws gripped through
-the hauberk to the flesh, and the red blood followed the claws.</p>
-
-<p>Now the king was nigh falling to earth; but when he saw the red
-blood he was wonder-wrath, and with his sword in his right hand
-and his shield at his breast, he ran at the cat vigorously, who sat
-licking his claws, all wet with blood. But when he saw the king
-coming towards him, he leapt up to seize him by the throat, as
-before, and stuck his fore-feet so firmly in the shield that they
-stayed there; and the king smote him on the legs, so that he cut
-them off to the knees, and the cat fell to the ground.</p>
-
-<p>Then the king ran at him with his sword; but the cat stood on
-his hind-legs and grinned with his teeth, and coveted the throat of
-the king, and the king tried to smite him on the head; but the cat
-strained his hinder feet and leaped at the king’s breast, and fixed
-his teeth in the flesh, so that the blood streamed down from breast
-and shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>Then the king struck him fiercely on the body, and the cat fell
-head downwards, but the feet stayed fixed in the hauberk. And
-the king smote them asunder, on which the cat fell to the ground,
-where she howled and brayed so loudly that it was heard through
-all the host, and she began to creep towards the cave; but the
-king stood between her and the cave, and when she tried to catch
-him with her teeth he struck her dead.</p>
-
-<p>Then Merlin and the others ran to him and asked how it was
-with him.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, blessed be our Lord!” said the king,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">168</span> “for I have slain
-this devil; but, verily, I never had such doubt of myself, not even
-when I slew the giant on the mountain; therefore I thank the
-Lord.”</p>
-
-<p>(This was the great giant of St. Michael’s Mount, who supped
-all the season on seven knave children chopped in a charger of
-white silver, with powder of precious spices, and goblets full
-plenteous of Portugal wine.)</p>
-
-<p>“Sir,” said the barons, “ye have great cause for thankfulness.”</p>
-
-<p>Then they looked on the feet that were left in the shield and in
-the hauberk, and said, “Such feet were never seen before!” And
-they took the shield and showed it to the host with great joy.</p>
-
-<p>So the king let the shield be with the cat’s feet; but the other
-feet he had laid in a coffin to be kept. And the mountain was
-called from that day, “The Mountain of the Cat,” and the name
-will never be changed while the world endureth.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="CONCERNING_COWS">CONCERNING COWS.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The most singular legends of Ireland relate to bulls and cows,
-and there are hundreds of places all commencing with the word <i>Bo</i>
-(one of the most ancient words in the Irish language), which
-recall some mystic or mythical story of a cow, especially of a
-white heifer, which animal seems to have been an object of the
-greatest veneration from all antiquity.</p>
-
-<p>In old times there arose one day a maiden from the sea, a
-beautiful Berooch, or mermaid, and all the people on the Western
-Coast of Erin gathered round her and wondered at her beauty.
-And the great chief of the land carried her home to his house,
-where she was treated like a queen.</p>
-
-<p>And she was very gentle and wise, and after some time she
-acquired the language, and could talk to the people quite well in
-their own Irish tongue, to their great delight and wonder. Then
-she informed them that she had been sent to their country by a
-great spirit, to announce the arrival in Ireland of the three sacred
-cows—<i>Bo-Finn</i>, <i>Bo-Ruadh</i>, and <i>Bo-Dhu</i>—the white, the red, and
-the black cows, who were destined to fill the land with the most
-splendid cattle, so that the people should never know want while
-the world lasted.</p>
-
-<p>This was such good news that the people in their delight carried
-the sea-maiden from house to house in procession, in order that
-she might tell it herself to every one; and they crowned her with
-flowers, while the musicians went before her, singing to their
-harps.</p>
-
-<p>After dwelling with them a little longer she asked to be taken
-back to the sea, for she had grown sad at being away so long from
-her own kindred. So, on May Eve, a great crowd accompanied
-her down to the strand, where she took leave of them, telling them<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">169</span>
-that on that day year they should all assemble at the same place
-to await the arrival of the three cows. Then she plunged into the
-sea and was seen no more.</p>
-
-<p>However, on that day year all the people of Ireland assembled
-on the shore to watch, as they had been directed by the beautiful
-sea-maiden; and all the high cliffs and all the rocks were covered
-with anxious spectators from the early dawn. Nor did they wait
-in vain. Exactly at noon the waves were stirred with a mighty
-commotion, and three cows rose up from the sea—a white, a red,
-and a black—all beautiful to behold, with sleek skins, large soft
-eyes, and curved horns, white as ivory. They stood upon the
-shore for a while, looking around them. Then each one went in a
-different direction, by three roads; the black went south, the red
-went north, and the milk-white heifer—the <i>Bo-Finn</i>—crossed the
-plain of Ireland to the very centre, where stood the king’s palace.
-And every place she passed was named after her, and every well
-she drank at was called <i>Lough-na-Bo</i>, or <i>Tober-Bo-Finn</i> (the well
-of the white cow), so her memory remains to this day.</p>
-
-<p>In process of time the white heifer gave birth to twins, a male
-and female calf, and from them descended a great race, still existing
-in Ireland; after which the white cow disappeared into a great
-cave by the sea, the entrance to which no man knows. And there
-she remains, and will remain, in an enchanted sleep, until the true
-king of Eire, the lord of Ireland, shall come to waken her; but the
-lake near the cave is still known as <i>Lough-na-Bo-banna</i> (the lake
-of the snow-white cow). Yet some say that it was the king’s
-daughter was carried off by enchantment to the cave, in the form
-of a cow, and she will never regain her form until she sleeps on
-the summit of each of the three highest mountains in Ireland;
-but only the true king of Eire can wake her from her sleep, and
-bring her to “the rock of the high place,” when she will be
-restored at last to her own beautiful form.</p>
-
-<p>Another legend says that a red-haired woman struck the
-beautiful Bo-Finn with her staff, and smote her to death; and the
-roar which the white cow gave in dying was heard throughout
-the whole of Ireland, and all the people trembled. This is evidently
-an allegory. The beautiful Bo-Finn—the white cow—is
-Ireland herself; and the red-haired woman who smote her to
-death was Queen Elizabeth, “in whose time, after her cruel wars,
-the cry of the slaughtered people was heard all over the land, and
-went up to heaven for vengeance against the enemies of Ireland;
-and the kingdom was shaken as by an earthquake, by the roar of
-the oppressed against the tyrant.”</p>
-
-<p>The path of the white cow across Ireland is marked by small
-rude stone monuments, still existing. They show the exact spot
-where she rested each night and had her bed, and the adjoining
-lands have names connected with the tradition—as,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">170</span> “The plain of
-the Fenian cows;” “The hill of worship;” “The pool of the
-spotted ox,” called after him because he always waited to drink
-till the white cow came, for they were much attached to each
-other.</p>
-
-<p>There are also Druid stones at one resting-place, with Ogham
-marks on them. Some time ago an endeavour was made to remove
-and carry off the stones of one of the monuments; but the man
-who first put a spade in the ground was “struck,” and remained
-bedridden for seven years.</p>
-
-<p>The plain of the death of the <i>Bo-banna</i> (the white cow), where
-she gave the roar that shook all Ireland is called “the plain of
-lamentation.” It never was tilled, and never will be tilled. The
-people hold it as a sacred spot, and until recently it was the
-custom to have dances there every Sunday. But these old usages
-are rapidly dying out; for though meant originally as mystic
-ceremonies, yet by degrees they degenerated to such licentious
-revelry that the wrath of the priesthood fell on them, and they
-were discontinued.</p>
-
-<p>There is a holy well near “the plain of lamentation,” called
-<i>Tobar-na-Bo</i> (the well of the white cow); and these ancient
-names, coming down the stream of time from the far-off Pagan
-era, attest the great antiquity of the legend of the coming to
-Ireland of the mystic and beautiful <i>Bo-Finn</i>.</p>
-
-<p>There is another legend concerning the arrival of the three cows—the
-white, the red, and the black—which is said to be taken
-from the Book of Enoch.</p>
-
-<p>Four cows sprang at once from the earth—two white, a red,
-and a black—and one of the four went over to the white cow and
-taught it a mystery. And it trembled and became a man, and
-this was the first man that appeared in Erin. And the man
-fashioned a ship and dwelt there with the cows while a deluge
-covered the earth. And when the waters ceased, the red and the
-black cows went their way, but the white remained.</p>
-
-<p>The story is supposed by Bryant to be a literal rendering of
-some ancient hieroglyph, descriptive of the three races of mankind,
-and of the dispersion of the primal human family.</p>
-
-
-<h4><a id="FAIRY_WILES_2"></a>FAIRY WILES.</h4>
-
-<p>The fairies are very desirous to abduct handsome cows and
-carry them off to the fairy palace under the earth; and if a
-farmer happens to find one of his stock ailing or diseased, the
-belief is that the fairies have carried off the real good animal, and
-sent an old wizened witch to take the form of the farmer’s cow.
-It is therefore to neutralize the fairy spells that the cattle are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">171</span>
-driven through the fire on St. John’s Eve; and other devices are
-employed—a bunch of primroses is very effective tied on the tail,
-or a hot coal run down the cow’s back to singe the hair.</p>
-
-<p>One evening a boy was driving home his father’s cows when a
-fairy blast arose in the form of a whirlwind of dust, on which the
-cows took fright, and one of them ran upon a fairy rath. The
-boy followed to turn her back, when he was met and stopped by
-an old witch-woman.</p>
-
-<p>“Let her alone, Alanna,” she cried, “she is on our ground now,
-and you can’t take her away. So just run home and tell your
-father that on this day twelvemonth the cow will be restored to
-him, and bring a fine young calf along with her. But the fairies
-want her badly now, for our beautiful queen down there is
-fretting her life out for want of some milk that has the scent
-of the green grass in it and of the fresh upper air. Now don’t
-fret, Alanna, but trust my words. There, take yon hazel stick
-and strike the cow boldly three times on the head, that so the
-way may be clear we have to travel.”</p>
-
-<p>With that the boy struck the animal as he was desired, for the
-old witch-woman was so nice and civil that he liked to oblige her,
-and immediately after she and the cow vanished away as if they
-had sunk into the earth.</p>
-
-<p>However, the father minded the time, and when that day year
-came round he sent his son to the fairy rath to see if the witch
-had kept her promise, and there truly was the cow standing quite
-patiently, and a fine white calf by her side. So there were great
-rejoicings when he brought them home, for the fairies had kept
-their promise and behaved honourably, as indeed they always do
-when properly treated and trusted.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Not but that the fairies will do wicked things sometimes, and,
-above all, steal the milk when they get a chance, or skim the
-cream off the milk crocks.</p>
-
-<p>A farmer had a fine cow that was the pride of his farm and
-gave splendid milk, but suddenly the animal seemed ailing and
-queer; for she gave no milk, but went every morning and stood
-under the old hawthorn-tree quite quietly as if some one were
-milking her.</p>
-
-<p>So the man watched the place at milking time, and as usual
-down the field came the cow and took up her position close under
-the old hawthorn. Then the farmer beheld the trunk of the tree
-open, and out of the cleft came a little witch-woman all in red,
-who milked the cow in a vessel she had with her, and then
-she retreated into the tree again.</p>
-
-<p>Here was devil’s work in earnest, so thought the farmer, and he
-hastened off for the greatest fairy doctor in the country. And<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">172</span>
-when he came the cow was singed all along its back with a
-live coal; and then an incantation was said over it, but no one
-heard the words the fairy doctor uttered; after this he gave the
-animal a strong potion to drink, but no one knew the herbs of
-which it was made. However, the next day the cow was quite
-restored, and gave her milk as heretofore, and the spell was
-broken for ever and ever, after they had drawn a circle round
-the old hawthorn-tree with a red-hot piece of iron taken from the
-hearth; for neither witch nor fairy can pass a circle of fire.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_DEAD_HAND">THE DEAD HAND.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Witchcraft is sometimes practised by the people to produce
-butter in the churn, the most efficacious being to stir the milk
-round with the hand of a dead man, newly taken from the churchyard;
-but whoever is suspected of this practice is looked upon
-with great horror and dread by the neighbours.</p>
-
-<p>A woman of the mainland got married to a fine young fellow
-of one of the islands. She was a tall, dark woman who seldom
-spoke, and kept herself very close and reserved from every one.
-But she minded her business; for she had always more butter to
-bring to market than any one else, and could therefore undersell
-the other farmers’ wives. Then strange rumours got about
-concerning her, and the people began to whisper among themselves
-that something was wrong, and that there was witchcraft
-in it, especially as it was known that whenever she churned she
-went into an inner room off the kitchen, shut the door close, and
-would allow no one to enter. So they determined to watch and
-find out the secret, and one day a girl from the neighbourhood,
-when the woman was out, got in through a window and hid herself
-under the bed, waiting there patiently till the churning began.</p>
-
-<p>At last in came the woman, and having carefully closed the
-door began her work with the milk, churning in the usual way
-without any strange doings that might seem to have magic in
-them. But presently she stopped, and going over to a box
-unlocked it, and from this receptacle, to the girl’s horror, she
-drew forth the hand of a dead man, with which she stirred the
-milk round and round several times, going down on her knees and
-muttering an incantation all the while.</p>
-
-<p>Seven times she stirred the milk with the dead hand, and seven
-times she went round the churn on her knees muttering some
-strange charm. After this she rose up and began to gather the
-butter from the churn with the dead hand, filling a pail with as
-much butter as the milk of ten cows. When the pail was quite<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">173</span>
-full she dipped the dead hand three times in the milk, then dried
-it and put it back again in the box.</p>
-
-<p>The girl, as soon as she could get away unperceived, fled in
-horror from the room, and spread the news amongst the people.
-At once a crowd gathered round the house with angry cries and
-threats to break open the door to search for the dead hand.</p>
-
-<p>At last the woman appeared calm and cold as usual, and told
-them they were taking a deal of trouble about nothing, for there
-was no dead hand in the house. However, the people rushed in
-and searched, but all they saw was a huge fire on the hearth, though
-the smell of burning flesh was distinctly perceptible, and by this
-they knew that she had burnt the dead hand. Yet this did not
-save her from the vengeance of the neighbours. She was shunned
-by every one; no one would eat with her, or drink with her,
-or talk to her, and after a while she and her husband quitted the
-island and were never more heard of.</p>
-
-<p>However, after she left and the butter was brought to the
-market, all the people had their fair and equal rights again, of
-which the wicked witchcraft of the woman had defrauded them for
-so long, and there was great rejoicing in the island over the fall
-and punishment of the wicked witch of the dead hand.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_WICKED_WIDOW">THE WICKED WIDOW.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The evil spells over milk and butter are generally practised by
-women, and arise from some feeling of malice or envy against a
-prosperous neighbour. But the spell will not work unless some
-portion of the milk is first given by consent. The people therefore
-are very reluctant to give away milk, unless to some friend
-that they could not suspect of evil. Tramps coming in to beg for
-a mug of milk should always be avoided, they may be witches in
-disguise; and even if milk is given, it must be drunk in the house,
-and not carried away out of it. In every case the person who
-enters must give a hand to the churn, and say, “God bless all
-here.”</p>
-
-<p>A young farmer, one of the fine handsome fellows of the West,
-named Hugh Connor, who was also well off and rich, took to wife
-a pretty young girl of the village called Mary, one of the Leydons,
-and there was no better girl in all the country round, and they
-were very comfortable and happy together. But Hugh Connor
-had been keeping company before his marriage with a young
-widow of the place, who had designs on him, and was filled with
-rage when Mary Leydon was selected for Connor’s bride, in place
-of herself. Then a desire for vengeance rose up in her heart, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">174</span>
-she laid her plans accordingly. First she got a fairy woman to
-teach her some witch secrets and spells, and then by great pretence
-of love and affection for Mary Connor, she got frequent
-admission to the house, soothing and flattering the young wife;
-and on churning days she would especially make it a point to
-come in and offer a helping hand, and if the cakes were on the
-griddle, she would sit down to watch and turn them. But it so happened
-that always on these days the cakes were sure to be burned
-and spoiled, and the butter would not rise in the churn, or if any
-did come, it was sour and bad, and of no use for the market. But
-still the widow kept on visiting, and soothing, and flattering, till
-Mary Connor thought she was the very best friend to her in the
-whole wide world, though it was true that whenever the widow
-came to the house something evil happened. The best dish fell
-down of itself off the dresser and broke; or the rain got in
-through the roof, and Mary’s new cashmere gown, a present that
-had come to her all the way from Dublin, was quite ruined and
-spoiled. But worse came, for the cow sickened, and a fine young
-brood of turkeys walked straight into the lake and got drowned.
-And still worst of all, the picture of the Blessed Virgin Mother,
-that was pinned up to the wall, fell down one day, and was blown
-into the fire and burned.</p>
-
-<p>After this, what luck could be on the house? and Mary’s heart
-sank within her, and she fairly broke down, and cried her very life
-out in a torrent of tears.</p>
-
-<p>Now it so happened that an old woman with a blue cloak, and
-the hood of it over her head, a stranger, was passing by at the
-time, and she stepped in and asked Mary kindly what ailed her.
-So Mary told her all her misfortunes, and how everything in the
-house seemed bewitched for evil.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said the stranger, “I see it all, for I am wise, and
-know the mysteries. Some one with the Evil Eye comes to your
-house. We must find out who it is.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Mary told her that the nearest friend she had was the
-widow, but she was so sweet and kind, no one could suspect her
-of harm.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll see,” said the stranger, “only do as I bid you, and have
-everything ready when she comes.”</p>
-
-<p>“She will be here soon,” said Mary, “for it is churning day,
-and she always comes to help exactly at noon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I’ll begin at once; and now close the door fast,” said the
-stranger.</p>
-
-<p>And with that, she threw some herbs on the fire, so that a great
-smoke arose. Then she took all the plough irons that were about,
-and one of them she drove into the ground close beside the churn,
-and put a live coal beside it; and the other irons she heated red-hot
-in the fire, and still threw on more herbs to make a thick<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">175</span>
-smoke, which Mary thought smelt like the incense in the church.
-Then with a hot iron rod from the fire, the strange woman made
-the sign of the cross on the threshold, and another over the hearth.
-After which a loud roaring was heard outside, and the widow
-rushed in crying out that a hot stick was running through her
-heart, and all her body was on fire. And then she dropped down
-on the floor in a fit, and her face became quite black, and her limbs
-worked in convulsions.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said the stranger, “you see who it is put the Evil Eye
-on all your house; but the spell has been broken at last. Send
-for the men to carry her back to her own house, and never let that
-witch-woman cross your threshold again.”</p>
-
-<p>After this the stranger disappeared, and was seen no more in
-the village.</p>
-
-<p>Now when all the neighbours heard the story, they would have
-no dealings with the widow. She was shunned and hated; and
-no respectable person would be seen talking to her, and she went
-by the name of the Evil Witch. So her life was very miserable,
-and not long after she died of sheer vexation and spite, all by herself
-alone, for no one would go near her; and the night of the
-wake no one went to offer a prayer, for they said the devil would
-be there in person to look after his own. And no one would walk
-with her coffin to the grave, for they said the devil was waiting
-at the churchyard gate for her; and they firmly believe to this
-day that her body was carried away on that night from the graveyard
-by the powers of darkness. But no one ventured to test the
-truth of the story by opening the coffin, so the weird legend remains
-still unsolved.</p>
-
-<p>But as for Hugh Connor and the pretty Mary, they prospered
-after that in all things, and good luck and the blessing of God
-seemed to be evermore on them and their house, and their cattle,
-and their children. At the same time, Mary never omitted on
-churning days to put a red-hot horse-shoe under the churn according
-as the stranger had told her, who she firmly believed was a
-good fairy in disguise, who came to help her in the time of her
-sore trouble and anxiety.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_BUTTER_MYSTERY">THE BUTTER MYSTERY.</h3>
-
-
-<p>There were two brothers who had a small farm and dairy between
-them, and they were honest and industrious, and worked hard to
-get along, though they had barely enough, after all their labour,
-just to keep body and soul together.</p>
-
-<p>One day while churning, the handle of the dash broke, and
-nothing being near to mend it, one of the brothers cut off a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">176</span>
-branch from an elder-tree that grew close to the house, and tied
-it to the dash for a handle. Then the churning went on, but to
-their surprise, the butter gathered so thick that all the crocks in
-the house were soon full, and still there was more left. The same
-thing went on every churning day, so the brothers became rich,
-for they could fill the market with their butter, and still had more
-than enough for every buyer.</p>
-
-<p>At last, being honest and true men, they began to fear that
-there was witchcraft in it, and that they were wronging their
-neighbours by abstracting their butter, and bringing it to their
-own churn in some strange way. So they both went off together
-to a great fairy doctor, and told him the whole story, and asked
-his advice.</p>
-
-<p>“Foolish men,” he said to them, “why did you come to me?
-for now you have broken the spell, and you will never have your
-crocks filled with butter any more. Your good fortune has passed
-away, for know the truth now. You were not wronging your
-neighbours; all was fair and just that you did, but this is how it
-happened. Long ago, the fairies passing through your land had
-a dispute and fought a battle, and having no arms, they flung
-lumps of butter at each other, which got lodged in the branches
-of the elder-tree in great quantities, for it was just after May
-Eve, when butter is plenty. This is the butter you have had,
-for the elder-tree has a sacred power which preserved it until
-now, and it came down to you through the branch you cut for a
-handle to the dash. But the spell is broken now that you have
-uttered the mystery, and you will have no more butter from the
-elder-tree.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the brothers went away sorrowful, and never after did
-the butter come beyond the usual quantity. However, they had
-already made so much money that they were content. And they
-stocked their farm, and all things prospered with them, for they
-had dealt uprightly in the matter, and the blessing of the Lord
-was on them.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="CONCERNING_BIRDS">CONCERNING BIRDS</h3>
-
-
-<p>In all countries superstitions of good or evil are attached to certain
-birds. The raven, for instance, has a wide-world reputation
-as the harbinger of evil and ill-luck. The wild geese portend a
-severe winter; the robin is held sacred, for no one would think of
-harming a bird who bears on his breast the blessed mark of the
-blood of Christ; while the wren is hunted to death with intense
-and cruel hate on St. Stephen’s Day.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">177</span></p>
-
-
-<h4><a id="THE_MAGPIE"></a>THE MAGPIE.</h4>
-
-<p>There is no Irish name for the Magpie. It is generally called
-<i>Francagh</i>, a Frenchman, though no one knows why. Many queer
-tales are narrated of this bird, arising from its quaint ways,
-its adroit cunning and habits of petty larceny. Its influence is
-not considered evil, though to meet one alone in the morning
-when going a journey is an ill omen, but to meet more than one
-magpie betokens good fortune, according to the old rhyme which
-runs thus—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“One for Sorrow,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Two for Mirth,</div>
- <div class="verse">Three for Marriage,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Four for a Birth.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<h4><a id="THE_WREN"></a>THE WREN.</h4>
-
-<p>The wren is mortally hated by the Irish; for on one occasion,
-when the Irish troops were approaching to attack a portion of
-Cromwell’s army, the wrens came and perched on the Irish drums,
-and by their tapping and noise aroused the English soldiers, who
-fell on the Irish troops and killed them all. So ever since the
-Irish hunt the wren on St. Stephen’s Day, and teach their children
-to run it through with thorns and kill it whenever it can be
-caught. A dead wren was also tied to a pole and carried from
-house to house by boys, who demanded money; if nothing was
-given the wren was buried on the door-step, which was considered
-a great insult to the family and a degradation.</p>
-
-
-<h4><a id="THE_RAVEN_AND_WATER_WAGTAIL"></a>THE RAVEN AND WATER WAGTAIL.</h4>
-
-<p>If ravens come cawing about a house it is a sure sign of death,
-for the raven is Satan’s own bird; so also is the water wagtail, yet
-beware of killing it, for it has three drops of the devil’s blood in
-its little body, and ill-luck ever goes with it, and follows it.</p>
-
-
-<h4><a id="THE_CUCKOO_AND_ROBIN_REDBREAST"></a>THE CUCKOO AND ROBIN REDBREAST.</h4>
-
-<p>It is very unlucky to kill the cuckoo or break its eggs, for it
-brings fine weather; but most unlucky of all things is to kill the
-robin redbreast. The robin is God’s own bird, sacred and holy,
-and held in the greatest veneration because of the beautiful
-tradition current amongst the people, that it was the robin<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">178</span>
-plucked out the sharpest thorn that was piercing Christ’s brow on
-the cross; and in so doing the breast of the bird was dyed red
-with the Saviour’s blood, and so has remained ever since a sacred
-and blessed sign to preserve the robin from harm and make it
-beloved of all men.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="CONCERNING_LIVING_CREATURES">CONCERNING LIVING CREATURES.</h3>
-
-
-<h4><a id="THE_CRICKET"></a>THE CRICKET.</h4>
-
-<p>The crickets are believed to be enchanted. People do not like to
-express an exact opinion about them, so they are spoken of with
-great mystery and awe, and no one would venture to kill them
-for the whole world. But they are by no means evil; on the
-contrary, the presence of the cricket is considered lucky, and their
-singing keeps away the fairies at night, who are always anxious,
-in their selfish way, to have the whole hearth left clear for themselves,
-that they may sit round the last embers of the fire, and
-drink the cup of milk left for them by the farmer’s wife, in peace
-and quietness. The crickets are supposed to be hundreds of years
-old, and their talk, could we understand it, would no doubt be
-most interesting and instructive.</p>
-
-
-<h4><a id="THE_BEETLE"></a>THE BEETLE.</h4>
-
-<p>The beetle is not killed by the people for the following reason:
-they have a tradition that one day the chief priests sent messengers
-in every direction to look for the Lord Jesus, and they
-came to a field where a man was reaping, and asked him—</p>
-
-<p>“Did Jesus of Nazareth pass this way?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said the man, “I have not seen him.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I know better,” said a little clock running up, “for He
-was here to-day and rested, and has not long gone away.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is false,” said a great big black beetle, coming forward;
-“He has not passed since yesterday, and you will never find Him
-on this road; try another.”</p>
-
-<p>So the people kill the clock because he tried to betray Christ;
-but they spare the beetle and will not touch him, because he
-saved the Lord on that day.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">179</span></p>
-
-
-<h4><a id="THE_HARE"></a>THE HARE.</h4>
-
-<p>Hares are considered unlucky, as the witches constantly assume
-their form in order to gain entrance to a field where they can
-bewitch the cattle. A man once fired at a hare he met in the
-early morning, and having wounded it, followed the track of the
-blood till it disappeared within a cabin. On entering he found
-Nancy Molony, the greatest witch in all the county, sitting by the
-fire, groaning and holding her side. And then the man knew that
-she had been out in the form of a hare, and he rejoiced over her
-discomfiture.</p>
-
-<p>Still it is not lucky to kill a hare before sunrise, even when it
-crosses your path; but should it cross <i>three</i> times, then turn
-back, for danger is on the road before you.</p>
-
-<p>A tailor one time returning home very late at night from a
-wake, or better, very early in the morning, saw a hare sitting on
-the path before him, and not inclined to run away. As he
-approached, with his stick raised to strike her, he distinctly heard
-a voice saying, “Don’t kill it.” However, he struck the hare
-three times, and each time heard the voice say, “Don’t kill it.”
-But the last blow knocked the poor hare quite dead; and
-immediately a great big weasel sat up, and began to spit at him.
-This greatly frightened the tailor who, however, grabbed the hare,
-and ran off as fast as he could. Seeing him look so pale and
-frightened, his wife asked the cause, on which he told her the
-whole story; and they both knew he had done wrong, and
-offended some powerful witch, who would be avenged. However,
-they dug a grave for the hare and buried it; for they were
-afraid to eat it, and thought that now perhaps the danger was
-over. But next day the man became suddenly speechless, and
-died off before the seventh day was over, without a word evermore
-passing his lips; and then all the neighbours knew that the
-witch-woman had taken her revenge.</p>
-
-
-<h4><a id="THE_WEASEL"></a>THE WEASEL.</h4>
-
-<p>Weasels are spiteful and malignant, and old withered witches
-sometimes take this form. It is extremely unlucky to meet a
-weasel the first thing in the morning; still it would be hazardous
-to kill it, for it might be a witch and take revenge. Indeed one
-should be very cautious about killing a weasel at any time, for all
-the other weasels will resent your audacity, and kill your chickens
-when an opportunity offers. The only remedy is to kill one
-chicken yourself, make the sign of the cross solemnly three times
-over it, then tie it to a stick hung up in the yard, and the weasels
-will have no more power for evil, nor the witches who take their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">180</span>
-form, at least during the year, if the stick is left standing; but
-the chicken may be eaten when the sun goes down.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A goose is killed on St. Michael’s Day because the son of a
-king, being then at a feast, was choked by the bone of a goose;
-but was restored by St. Patrick. Hence the king ordered a goose
-to be sacrificed every year on the anniversary of the day to commemorate
-the event, and in honour of St. Michael.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A fowl is killed on St. Martin’s Day, and the blood sprinkled
-on the house. In Germany a black cock is substituted.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A crowing hen, a whistling girl, and a black cat, are considered
-most unlucky. Beware of them in a house.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If a cock comes on the threshold and crows, you may expect
-visitors.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>To see three magpies on the left hand when on a journey is unlucky;
-but two on the right hand is a good omen.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If you hear the cuckoo on your right hand you will have luck
-all the year after.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Whoever kills a robin redbreast will never have good luck were
-they to live a thousand years.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A water wagtail near the house betokens bad news on its way
-to you.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If the first lamb of the season is born black, it foretells mourning
-garments for the family within the year.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is very lucky for a hen and her chickens to stray into your
-house. Also it is good to meet a white lamb in the early morning
-with the sunlight on its face.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is unlucky to meet a magpie, a cat, or a lame woman when
-going a journey. Or for a cock to meet a person in the doorway
-and crow before him—then the journey should be put off.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If one magpie comes chattering to your door it is a sign of
-death; but if two prosperity will follow. For a magpie to come
-to the door and look at you is a sure death-sign, and nothing can
-avert the doom.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">181</span></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A flight of rooks over an army betokens defeat; if over a house,
-or over people when driving or walking, death will follow.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is very unlucky to ask a man on his way to fish where he is
-going. And many would turn back, knowing that it was an evil
-spell.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When a swarm of bees suddenly quits the hive it is a sign that
-death is hovering near the house. But the evil may be averted by
-the powerful prayers and exorcism of the priest.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The shoe of a horse or of an ass nailed to the door-post will
-bring good luck; because these animals were in the stall when
-Christ was born, and are blessed for evermore. But the shoe
-must be found, not given, in order to bring luck.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In whatever quarter you are looking when you first hear the
-cuckoo in the season, you will be travelling in that direction before
-the year is over.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It was the privilege of the chief bards to wear mantles made of
-birds’ plumage. A short cape flung on the shoulders made of
-mallards’ necks and crests must have been very gorgeous in effect,
-glittering like jewels, when the torch-light played on the colours
-at the festivals.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3><a name="THE_PROPERTIES_OF_HERBS_AND_THEIR" id="THE_PROPERTIES_OF_HERBS_AND_THEIR">THE PROPERTIES OF HERBS AND THEIR
-USE IN MEDICINE.</a></h3>
-
-
-<p>The Irish, according to the saying of a wise man of the race, are
-the last of the 305 great Celtic nations of antiquity spoken of by
-Josephus, the Jewish historian; and they alone preserve inviolate
-the ancient venerable language, minstrelsy, and Bardic traditions,
-with the strange and mystic secrets of herbs, through whose
-potent powers they can cure disease, cause love or hatred, discover
-the hidden mysteries of life and death, and dominate over the
-fairy wiles or the malific demons.</p>
-
-<p>The ancient people used to divine future events, victory in wars,
-safety in a dangerous voyage, triumph of a projected undertaking,
-success in love, recovery from sickness, or the approach of death;
-all through the skilful use of herbs, the knowledge of which had
-come down to them through the earliest traditions of the human
-race. One of these herbs, called the <i>Fairy-plant</i>, was celebrated
-for its potent power of divination; but only the adepts knew the
-mystic manner of its preparation for use.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">182</span></p>
-
-<p>There was another herb of which a drink was made, called <i>the
-Bardic potion</i>, for the Bards alone had the secret of the herb, and
-of the proper mode of treatment by which its mystic power could
-be revealed. This potion they gave their infant children at their
-birth, for it had the singular property of endowing the recipient
-with a fairy sweetness of voice of the most rapturous and thrilling
-charm. And instances are recorded of men amongst the Celtic
-Bards, who, having drunk of this potion in early life, were ever
-after endowed with the sweet voice, like fairy music, that swayed
-the hearts of the hearers as they chose to love or war, joy or sadness,
-as if by magic influence, or lulled them into the sweet calm
-of sleep. Such, according to the Bardic legends, was the extraordinary
-power of voice possessed by the great Court Minstrel of
-Fionn Ma-Coul, who resided with the great chief at his palace of
-Almhuin, and always sat next him at the royal table.</p>
-
-<p>The virtue of herbs is great, but they must be gathered at night,
-and laid in the hand of a dead man to hold. There are herbs that
-produce love, and herbs that produce sterility; but only the fairy
-doctor knows the secrets of their power, and he will reveal the
-knowledge to no man unless to an adept. The wise women learn
-the mystic powers from the fairies, but how they pay for the
-knowledge none dare to tell.</p>
-
-<p>The fairy doctors are often seized with trembling while uttering
-a charm, and look round with a scared glance of terror, as if
-some awful presence were beside them. But the people have the
-most perfect faith in the herb-men and wise women, and the faith
-may often work the cure.</p>
-
-<p>There are seven herbs of great value and power; they are
-ground ivy, vervain, eyebright, groundsel, foxglove, the bark of
-the elder-tree, and the young shoots of the hawthorn.</p>
-
-<p>Nine balls of these mixed together may be taken, and afterwards
-a potion made of bog-water and salt, boiled in a vessel, with
-a piece of money and an elf-stone. The elf-stone is generally
-found near a rath; it has great virtues, but being once lifted up by
-the spade it must never again touch the earth, or all its virtue is
-gone. (This elf-stone is in reality only an ancient stone arrow-head.)</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The <i>Mead Cailleath</i>, or wood anemone, is used as a plaister for
-wounds.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The hazel-tree has many virtues. It is sacred and powerful
-against devils’ wiles, and has mysteries and secret properties known
-to the wise and the adepts. The ancient Irish believed that there
-were fountains at the head of the chief rivers of Ireland, over
-each of which grew nine hazel-trees that at certain times produced
-beautiful red nuts. These nuts fell on the surface of the water,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">183</span>
-and the salmon in the river came up and ate of them, which caused
-the red spots on the salmon. And whoever could catch and eat
-one of these salmon would be indued with the sublimest poetic
-intellect. Hence the phrase current amongst the people: “Had I
-the net of science;” “Had I eaten of the salmon of knowledge.”
-And this supernatural knowledge came to the great Fionn through
-the touch of a salmon, and made him foreknow all events.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Of all herbs the yarrow is the best for cures and potions. It is
-even sewn up in clothes as a preventive of disease.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The <i>Liss-more</i>, or great herb, has also strong healing power,
-and is used as a charm.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There is an herb, also, or fairy grass, called the <i>Faud Shaughran</i>,
-or the “stray sod,” and whoever treads the path it grows on is
-compelled by an irresistible impulse to travel on without stopping,
-all through the night, delirious and restless, over bog and mountain,
-through hedges and ditches, till wearied and bruised and
-cut, his garments torn, his hands bleeding, he finds himself in the
-morning twenty or thirty miles, perhaps, from his own home.
-And those who fall under this strange influence have all the time
-the sensation of flying and are utterly unable to pause or turn
-back or change their career. There is, however, another herb
-that can neutralize the effects of the <i>Faud Shaughran</i>, but only
-the initiated can utilize its mystic properties.</p>
-
-<p>Another grass is the <i>Fair-Gortha</i>, or the “hunger-stricken sod,”
-and if the hapless traveller accidentally treads on this grass by the
-road-side, while passing on a journey, either by night or day, he
-becomes at once seized with the most extraordinary cravings of
-hunger and weakness, and unless timely relief is afforded he must
-certainly die.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When a child is sick a fairy woman is generally sent for, who
-makes a drink for the patient of those healing herbs of which she
-only has the knowledge. A childless woman is considered to
-have the strongest power over the secrets of herbs, especially
-those used for the maladies of children.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There is an herb, grown on one of the western islands off the
-coast of Connemara, which is reported to have great and mystic
-power. But no one will venture to pronounce its name. If it is
-desired to know for certain whether one lying sick will recover,
-the nearest relative must go out and look for the herb just as the
-sun is rising. And while holding it in the hand, an ancient form
-of incantation must be said. If the herb remains fresh and green
-the patient will certainly recover; but if it wither in the hand<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">184</span>
-while the words of the incantation are said over it, then the sick
-person is doomed. He will surely die.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It was from their great knowledge of the properties of herbs
-that the Tuatha-de-Dananns obtained the reputation of being
-sorcerers and necromancers. At the great battle of Moytura in
-Mayo, fought about three thousand years ago, Dianecht, the great,
-wise Druid physician to the army, prepared a bath of herbs and
-plants in the line of the battle, of such wonderful curative efficacy
-that the wounded who were plunged into it came out whole, it
-being a sovereign remedy for all diseases. But the king of the
-Tuatha having lost his hand in the combat, the bath had no power
-to heal him. So Dianecht made him a silver hand, and the
-monarch was ever after known in history as <i>Nuad Airgeat lamh</i>
-(Nuad of the silver hand).</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>All herbs pulled on May Day Eve have a sacred healing power,
-if pulled in the name of the Holy Trinity; but if in the name of
-Satan, they work evil. Some herbs are malific if broken by the
-hand. So the plant is tied to a dog’s foot, and when he runs it
-breaks, without a hand touching it, and may be used with safety.</p>
-
-<p>A man pulled a certain herb on May Eve to cure his son who
-was sick to death. The boy recovered, but disappeared and was
-never heard of after, and the father died that day year. He had
-broken the fatal herb with the hand and so the doom fell on
-him.</p>
-
-<p>Another man did the like, and gave the herb to his son to eat,
-who immediately began to bark like a dog, and so continued till
-he died.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The fatal herbs have signs known only to the fairy doctors, who
-should always be consulted before treating the sick in the family.</p>
-
-<p>There are <i>seven</i> herbs that nothing natural or supernatural can
-injure; they are vervain, John’s-wort, speedwell, eyebright, mallow,
-yarrow, and self-help. But they must be pulled at noon on
-a bright day, near the full of the moon, to have full power.</p>
-
-<p>It is firmly believed that the herb-women who perform curses
-receive their knowledge from the fairies, who impart to them the
-mystical secrets of herbs and where to find them; but these secrets
-must not be revealed except on the death-bed, and then only to
-the eldest of the family. Many mysterious rites are practised in
-the making and the giving of potions; and the messenger who
-carries the draught to the sufferer must never look behind him nor
-utter a word till he hands the medicine to the patient, who
-instantly swallows a cup of the mixture before other hands have
-touched it.</p>
-
-<p>A celebrated doctor in the south was an old woman, who had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">185</span>
-lived seven years with the fairies. She performed wonderful
-cures, and only required a silver tenpence to be laid on her table
-for the advice given and for the miraculous herb potion.</p>
-
-
-<h4>A LOVE POTION.</h4>
-
-<p>Some of the country people have still a traditional remembrance
-of very powerful herbal remedies, and love potions are even now
-frequently in use. They are generally prepared by an old woman;
-but must be administered by the person who wishes to inspire the
-tender passion. At the same time, to give a love potion is
-considered a very awful act, as the result may be fatal, or at least
-full of danger.</p>
-
-<p>A fine, handsome young man, of the best character and conduct,
-suddenly became wild and reckless, drunken and disorderly, from
-the effect, it was believed, of a love potion administered to him by
-a young girl who was passionately in love with him. When she
-saw the change produced in him by her act, she became moody
-and nervous, as if a constant terror were over her, and no one
-ever saw her smile again. Finally, she became half deranged, and
-after a few years of a strange, solitary life, she died of melancholy
-and despair. This was said to be “The Love-potion Curse.”</p>
-
-
-<h4>LOVE DREAMS.</h4>
-
-<p>The girl who wishes to see her future husband must go out and
-gather certain herbs in the light of the full moon of the new year,
-repeating this charm—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Moon, moon, tell unto me</div>
- <div class="verse">When my true love I shall see?</div>
- <div class="verse">What fine clothes am I to wear?</div>
- <div class="verse">How many children shall I bear?</div>
- <div class="verse">For if my love comes not to me</div>
- <div class="verse">Dark and dismal my life will be.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Then the girl, cutting three pieces of clay from the sod with a
-black-hafted knife, carries them home, ties them up in the left
-stocking with the right garter, places the parcel under her pillow,
-and dreams a true dream of the man she is to marry and of all
-her future fate.</p>
-
-
-<h4>TO CAUSE LOVE.</h4>
-
-<p>Ten leaves of the hemlock dried and powdered and mixed in
-food or drink will make the person you like to love you in return.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">186</span>
-Also keep a sprig of mint in your hand till the herb grows moist
-and warm, then take hold of the hand of the woman you love,
-and she will follow you as long as the two hands close over the
-herb. No invocation is necessary; but silence must be kept between
-the two parties for ten minutes, to give the charm time to
-work with due efficacy.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3><a name="MEDICAL_SUPERSTITIONS_AND_ANCIENT" id="MEDICAL_SUPERSTITIONS_AND_ANCIENT">MEDICAL SUPERSTITIONS AND ANCIENT
-CHARMS.</a></h3>
-
-
-<p>The healing art in all the early stages of a nation’s life, and
-amongst all primitive tribes, has been associated with religion.
-For the wonderful effects produced by certain herbs and modes of
-treatment were believed by the simple and unlettered people to
-be due to supernatural influence acting in a mystic and magical
-manner on the person afflicted.</p>
-
-<p>The medicine men were therefore treated with the profoundest
-awe and respect. And the medicine women came in also for
-their share of veneration and often of superstitious dread; for
-their mysterious incantations were supposed to have been taught
-to them by fairies and the spirits of the mountain.</p>
-
-<p>The Irish from the most remote antiquity were devoted to mystical
-medicine, and had a remarkable knowledge of cures and
-remedies for disease, obtained through the power and action of
-herbs on the human frame.</p>
-
-<p>The physicians of the pagan era formed a branch of the Druid
-priesthood, and were treated with distinguished honour. They
-had special places assigned to them at the royal banqueting table
-at Tara, and a certain revenue was secured to them that they
-might live honourably.</p>
-
-<p>When in attendance on a patient the doctor was entitled by
-law to his diet, along with four of his pupils; but if he failed to
-cure from deficiency of skill, he was obliged to refund the fees
-and pay back all the expenses of his keep; a measure which no
-doubt greatly stimulated the serious attention of the learned
-ollamhs of healing to the case in hand.</p>
-
-<p>So great, indeed, was the importance attached to the healing
-art in Ireland, that even prior to the Christian era, a building of
-the nature of an hospital was erected at Tara, near to the palace
-of the king. This was called “The House of Sorrow,” and the
-sick and wounded were provided there with all necessary care.</p>
-
-<p>On one occasion it is recorded that a great chief and prince out
-of Munster was brought to “The House of Sorrow” to be treated
-of wounds received in battle, but the attendant, through treachery,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">187</span>
-placed poison in the wounds, and then closed them so carefully
-that there was no external sign, though the groans of the wounded
-man were terrible to hear. Then the learned Fioneen was sent
-for, “the prophetic physician,” as he was called, from his great
-skill in diagnosis; and when he arrived with three of his pupils at
-the hospital they found the chief lying prostrate, groaning in
-horrible agony.</p>
-
-<p>“What groan is that?” asked the master of the first pupil.</p>
-
-<p>“It is from a poisoned barb,” he answered.</p>
-
-<p>“And what groan is that?” asked the master, of the second
-pupil.</p>
-
-<p>“It is from a hidden reptile,” he answered.</p>
-
-<p>“And what groan is that?” asked Fioneen of the third pupil.</p>
-
-<p>“It is from a poisoned seed,” he answered.</p>
-
-<p>Then Fioneen set to work, and having cauterized the wounds
-with red hot irons, the poisonous bodies were extracted from
-beneath the skin, and the chief was healed.</p>
-
-<p>In later times the Irish physicians were much celebrated for their
-learning, and numerous Irish medical manuscripts are in existence,
-both in Ireland and England, and are also scattered through the
-public libraries of the continent. They are chiefly written in Latin,
-with a commentary in Irish, and show a thorough knowledge on
-the part of the writers of the works of Hippocrates, Galen, Aristotle,
-and others as celebrated. For after the introduction of
-Christianity Latin was much cultivated in the Irish schools, and
-the priests and physicians not only wrote, but could converse
-fluently in Latin, which language became the chief medium of
-communication between them and the learned men of the continent.
-But the most ancient mode of procedure amongst the Irish
-ollamhs and adepts was of a medico-religious character; consisting
-of herb cures, fairy cures, charms, invocations, and certain magical
-ceremonies. A number of these cures have been preserved traditionally
-by the people, and form a very interesting study of early
-medical superstitions, as they have been handed down through
-successive generations; for the profession of a physician was
-hereditary in certain families, and the accumulated lore of centuries
-was transmitted carefully from father to son by this custom
-and usage.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Many of the ancient cures and charms are strange and mystic,
-and were accompanied by singular mysterious forms, which no
-doubt in many cases aided the cure; especially amongst a people
-so imaginative and susceptible to spiritual influences as the Irish.
-Others show a fervent faith and have a pathetic simplicity of
-expression, such as we find in “The Charm against Sorrow,” and
-others, from the original Irish, of equal pathos and tenderness, to
-be quoted further on. The utterance evidently of a people of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">188</span>
-deep, almost sublime, faith in the Divine power of the Ruler of
-the world, and of the ever-present ministration of saints and
-angels to humanity.</p>
-
-<p>Every act of the Irish peasant’s life has always been connected
-with the belief in unseen spiritual agencies. The people live
-in an atmosphere of the supernatural, and nothing would induce
-them to slight an ancient form or break through a traditional
-usage. They believe that the result would be something awful;
-too terrible to be spoken of save in a whisper, should the customs
-of their forefathers be lightly interfered with.</p>
-
-<p>In the Western Islands especially, the old superstitions that
-have come down from the ancient times are observed with the
-most solemn reverence, and the people in fact, as to their habits
-and ideas, remain much the same as St. Patrick left them fourteen
-hundred years ago. The swift currents of thought that stir the
-great centres of civilization and impel the human intellect on its
-path of progress, have never reached them; all the waves of the
-centuries drift by their shores and leave them unchanged.</p>
-
-<p>It is therefore in the islands and along the western coast that
-one gathers most of those strange legends, charms, mysteries, and
-world-old superstitions which have lingered longer in Ireland
-than in any other part of Europe.</p>
-
-<p>Many of those included in the following selection were narrated
-by the peasants, either in Irish, or in the expressive Irish-English,
-which still retains enough of the ancient idiom to make the
-language impressively touching and picturesque. The ancient
-charms which have come down by tradition from a remote antiquity
-are peculiarly interesting from their deep human pathos,
-blended with the sublime trust in the Divine invisible power, so
-characteristic of the Irish temperament in all ages. A faith that
-believes implicitly, trusts devoutly, and hopes infinitely; when
-the soul in its sorrow turns to heaven for the aid which cannot be
-found on earth, or given by earthly hands. The following charms
-from the Irish express much of this mingled spirit of faith and
-hope:—</p>
-
-
-<h4>AGAINST SORROW.</h4>
-
-<p>A charm set by Mary for her Son, before the fair man and the
-turbulent woman laid Him in the grave.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">The charm of Michael with the shield;</div>
- <div class="verse">Of the palm-branch of Christ;</div>
- <div class="verse">Of Bridget with her veil.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>The charm which God set for Himself when the divinity within
-Him was darkened.</p>
-
-<p>A charm to be said by the cross when the night is black and the
-soul is heavy with sorrow.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">189</span></p>
-
-<p>A charm to be said at sunrise, with the hands on the breast,
-when the eyes are red with weeping, and the madness of grief is
-strong.</p>
-
-<p>A charm that has no words, only the silent prayer.</p>
-
-
-<h4>TO WIN LOVE.</h4>
-
-<p>“O Christ, by your five wounds, by the nine orders of angels, if
-this woman is ordained for me, let me hold her hand now, and
-breathe her breath. O my love, I set a charm to the top of your
-head; to the sole of your foot; to each side of your breast, that you
-may not leave me nor forsake me. As a foal after the mare, as a
-child after the mother, may you follow and stay with me till death
-comes to part us asunder. <span class="smcap">Amen.</span>”</p>
-
-
-<p><i>Another.</i></p>
-
-<p>A charm of most desperate love, to be written with a raven’s
-quill in the blood of the ring finger of the left hand.</p>
-
-<p>“By the power that Christ brought from heaven, mayest thou
-love me, woman! As the sun follows its course, mayest thou
-follow me. As light to the eye, as bread to the hungry, as joy to
-the heart, may thy presence be with me, O woman that I love, till
-death comes to part us asunder.”</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR THE NIGHT-FIRE (<span class="smcap lowercase">THE FEVER</span>).</h4>
-
-<p>“God save thee, Michael, archangel! God save thee!”</p>
-
-<p>“What aileth thee, O man?”</p>
-
-<p>“A headache and a sickness and a weakness of the heart. O
-Michael, archangel, canst thou cure me, O angel of the Lord?”</p>
-
-<p>“May three things cure thee, O man. May the shadow of
-Christ fall on thee! May the garment of Christ cover thee!
-May the breath of Christ breathe on thee! And when I come
-again thou wilt be healed.”</p>
-
-<p>These words are said over the patient while his arms are lifted
-in the form of a cross, and water is sprinkled on his head.</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR A PAIN IN THE SIDE.</h4>
-
-<p>“God save you, my three brothers, God save you! And how
-far have ye to go, my three brothers?”</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">190</span></p>
-
-<p>“To the Mount of Olivet, to bring back gold for a cup to hold
-the tears of Christ.”</p>
-
-<p>“Go, then. Gather the gold; and may the tears of Christ fall
-on it, and thou wilt be cured, both body and soul.”</p>
-
-<p>These words must be said while a drink is given to the patient.</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR THE MEASLES.</h4>
-
-<p>“‘The child has the measles,’ said John the Baptist.</p>
-
-<p>“‘The time is short till he is well,’ said the Son of God.</p>
-
-<p>“‘When?’ said John the Baptist.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Sunday morning, before sunrise,’ said the Son of God.”</p>
-
-<p>This is to be repeated three times, kneeling at a cross, for three
-mornings before sunrise, and the child will be cured by the Sunday
-following.</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR THE MAD FEVER.</h4>
-
-<p>Three stones must be charmed by the hands of a wise fairy
-doctor, and cast by his hand, saying as he does so—</p>
-
-<p>“The first stone I cast is for the head in the mad fever; the
-second stone I cast is for the heart in the mad fever; the third
-stone I cast is for the back in the mad fever.</p>
-
-<p>“In the name of the Trinity, let peace come. <span class="smcap">Amen.</span>”</p>
-
-
-<h4>AGAINST ENEMIES.</h4>
-
-<p>Three things are of the Evil One—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">An evil eye;</div>
- <div class="verse">An evil tongue;</div>
- <div class="verse">An evil mind.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Three things are of God; and these three are what Mary told
-to her Son, for she heard them in heaven—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">The merciful word;</div>
- <div class="verse">The singing word;</div>
- <div class="verse">And the good word.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>May the power of these three holy things be on all the men and
-women of Erin for evermore.</p>
-
-
-<h4>TO EXTRACT A THORN.</h4>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">191</span></p>
-<p>“The briar that spreads, the thorn that grows, the sharp spike
-that pierced the brow of Christ, give you power to draw this thorn
-from the flesh, or let it perish inside; in the name of the Trinity.
-<span class="smcap">Amen.</span>”</p>
-
-
-<h4>TO CAUSE HATRED BETWEEN LOVERS.</h4>
-
-<p>Take a handful of clay from a new-made grave, and shake it
-between them, saying—</p>
-
-<p>“Hate ye one another! May ye be as hateful to each other as
-sin to Christ, as bread eaten without blessing is to God.”</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR LOVE.</h4>
-
-<p>This is a charm I set for love; a woman’s charm of love and
-desire; a charm of God that none can break—</p>
-
-<p>“You for me, and I for thee and for none else; your face to
-mine, and your head turned away from all others.”</p>
-
-<p>This is to be repeated three times secretly, over a drink given to
-the one beloved.</p>
-
-
-<h4>HOW TO HAVE MONEY ALWAYS.</h4>
-
-<p>Kill a black cock, and go to the meeting of three cross-roads
-where a murderer is buried. Throw the dead bird over your left
-shoulder then and there, after nightfall, in the name of the devil,
-holding a piece of money in your hand all the while. And ever
-after, no matter what you spend, you will always find the same
-piece of money undiminished in your pocket.</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR THE GREAT WORM.<a id="FNanchor_8_8" href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">8</a></h4>
-
-<p>“I kill a hound. I kill a small hound. I kill a deceitful hound.
-I kill a worm, wherein there is terror; I kill all his wicked brood.
-Seven angels from Paradise will help me, that I may do valiantly,
-and give no more time to the worm to live than while I recite
-this prayer. <span class="smcap">Amen.</span>”</p>
-
-<h4>FOR SORE EYES.</h4>
-
-<p>“Take away the pain, O Mary, mother, and scatter the mist<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">192</span>
-from the eyes. For all power is given to the mother of Christ to
-give light to the eyes, and to drive the red mist back to the
-billows whence it came.”</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR PAINS IN THE BODY.</h4>
-
-<p>Rub the part affected with flax and tow, heated in the fire,
-repeating in Irish—</p>
-
-<p>“In the name of a rough man and a mild woman, and of the
-Lamb of God, be healed from your pains and your sins. So be it.
-<span class="smcap">Amen.</span>”</p>
-
-<p>This custom refers to the tradition that one day the Lord Christ,
-being weary, asked leave to rest in a house, but was refused by the
-master of the house, a rough, rude man. Then the wife, being a
-mild woman, had pity on the wayfarer, and brought Him in to
-rest, and gave Him a cup of water to drink, and spake kindly to
-Him. After which the man was suddenly taken with severe pains,
-and seemed like to die in his agony.</p>
-
-<p>On this Christ called for some flax and tow, and, breathing on
-it, placed it on the part affected, by which means the man was quite
-healed. And then the Lord Christ went His way, but not before
-the man had humbly asked pardon for his rudeness to a stranger.</p>
-
-<p>The tradition of this cure has remained ever since, and a hot
-plaster of flax and tow is used by the peasantry invariably for all
-sudden pains, and found to be most efficacious as a cure.</p>
-
-
-<h4>AGAINST DROWNING.</h4>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“May Christ and His saints stand between you and harm.</div>
- <div class="verse indent16">Mary and her Son.</div>
- <div class="verse indent16">St. Patrick with his staff.</div>
- <div class="verse indent16">Martin with his mantle.</div>
- <div class="verse indent16">Bridget with her veil.</div>
- <div class="verse indent16">Michael with his shield.</div>
- <div class="verse">And God over all with His strong right hand.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<h4>IN TIME OF BATTLE.</h4>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">193</span></p>
-
-<p>“O Mary, who had the victory over all women, give me victory
-now over my enemies, that they may fall to the ground, as wheat
-when it is mown.”</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR THE RED RASH.</h4>
-
-<p>“Who will heal me from the red, thirsty, shivering cold disease
-that came from the foreigner, and kills people with its poisonous
-pain?” “The prayer of Mary to her Son, the prayer of Columbkill
-to God; these will heal thee. <span class="smcap">Amen.</span>”</p>
-
-
-<p><i>Another.</i></p>
-
-<p>Say this oration three times over the patient, making the sign
-of the cross each time—</p>
-
-<p>“Bridget, Patrick, Solomon, and the great Mary, banish this
-redness off you.”</p>
-
-<p>Then take butter, breathe on it quite close, and give it to the
-person to chafe himself therewith.</p>
-
-<p>To ascertain if he will recover, put a handful of yarrow in his
-hand while he is sleeping; if it is withered in the morning
-he will die; but if it remains fresh the disease will leave him.</p>
-
-
-<h4>TO TAME A HORSE.</h4>
-
-<p>Whisper the Creed in his right ear on a Friday, and again in
-his left ear on a Wednesday. Do this weekly till he is tamed;
-for so he will be.</p>
-
-
-<h4>A VERY ANCIENT CHARM AGAINST WOUNDS OR
-POISONS.</h4>
-
-<p>“The poison of a serpent, the venom of the dog, the sharpness
-of the spear, doth not well in man. The blood of one dog, the
-blood of many dogs, the blood of the hound of Fliethas—these I
-invoke. It is not a wart to which my spittle is applied. I
-strike disease; I strike wounds. I strike the disease of the
-dog that bites, of the thorn that wounds, of the iron that strikes.
-I invoke the three daughters of Fliethas against the serpent.
-Benediction on this body to be healed; benediction on the spittle;
-benediction on him who casts out the disease. In the name of
-God. <span class="smcap">Amen.</span>”</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR A SORE BREAST.</h4>
-
-<p>To be said in Irish, while a piece of butter is rubbed over the
-breast—</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">194</span></p>
-<p>“O Son, see how swelled is the breast of the woman! O, you
-that bore a Son, look at it yourself! O Mary! O King of
-Heaven, let this woman be healed! <span class="smcap">Amen.</span>”</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR A WOUND.</h4>
-
-<p>Close the wound tightly with the two fingers, and repeat these
-words slowly—</p>
-
-<p>“In the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Mary. The wound
-was red, the cut was deep, and the flesh was sore; but there will
-be no more blood, and no more pain, till the blessed Virgin Mary
-bears a child again.”</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR THE EVIL EYE.</h4>
-
-<p>This is a charm Mary gave to St. Bridget, and she wrote it
-down, and hid it in the hair of her head, without deceit—</p>
-
-<p>“If a fairy, or a man, or a woman hath overlooked thee,
-there are three greater in heaven who will cast all evil from
-thee into the great and terrible sea. Pray to them, and to the
-seven angels of God, and they will watch over thee. <span class="smcap">Amen.</span>”</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR ST. ANTHONY’S FIRE.</h4>
-
-<p>“The fire of earth is hot, and the fire of hell is hotter; but the
-love of Mary is above all. Who will quench the fire? Who
-will heal the sick? May the fire of God consume the Evil One!
-<span class="smcap">Amen.</span>”</p>
-
-
-<h4>HOW TO GO INVISIBLE.</h4>
-
-<p>Get a raven’s heart, split it open with a black-hafted knife;
-make three cuts and place a black bean in each cut. Then
-plant it, and when the beans sprout put one in your mouth
-and say—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“By virtue of Satan’s heart,</div>
- <div class="verse">And by strength of my great art,</div>
- <div class="verse">I desire to be invisible.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>And so it will be as long as the bean is kept in the mouth.</p>
-
-<h4>FOR PAINS.</h4>
-
-<p>“I kill the evil; I kill the worm in the flesh, the worm in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">195</span>
-grass. I put a venomous charm in the murderous pain. The
-charm that was set by Peter and Paul; the charm that kills the
-worm in the flesh, in the tooth, in the body.”</p>
-
-<p>This oration to be said three times, while the patient is rubbed
-with butter on the place of the pain.</p>
-
-
-<p><i>Another.</i></p>
-
-<p>A happy mild charm, a charm which Christ discovered. The
-charm that kills the worm in the flesh.</p>
-
-<p>“May Peter take, may Paul take, may Michael take, the pain
-away, the cruel pain that kills the back and the life, and darkens
-the eyes.”</p>
-
-<p>This oration written, and tied to a hare’s foot, is always to be
-worn by the person afflicted, hung round the neck.</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR A SPRAIN.</h4>
-
-<p>In the Western Isles the following charm is used for a
-sprain—</p>
-
-<p>A strand of black wool is wound round and round the ankle,
-while the operator recites in a low voice—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“The Lord rade and the foal slade,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">He lighted and He righted;</div>
- <div class="verse">Set joint to joint and bone to bone,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And sinew unto sinew.</div>
- <div class="verse">In the name of God and the Saints,</div>
- <div class="verse">Of Mary and her Son,</div>
- <div class="verse">Let this man be healed. <span class="smcap">Amen.</span>”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>A similar charm was used in Germany in the tenth century, according
-to Jacob Grimm.</p>
-
-
-<h4>TO CAUSE LOVE.</h4>
-
-<p>Golden butter on a new-made dish, such as Mary set before
-Christ. This to be given in the presence of a mill, of a stream,
-and the presence of a tree; the lover saying softly—</p>
-
-<p>“O woman, loved by me, mayest thou give me thy heart, thy
-soul and body. <span class="smcap">Amen.</span>”</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR THE BITE OF A MAD DOG.</h4>
-
-<p>An oration which Colum-Cille set to a wound full of poison<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">196</span>—“Arise,
-O Carmac, O Clunane, through Christ be thou healed.
-By the hand of Christ he thou healed in blood, in marrow, and in
-bone. <span class="smcap">Amen.</span>”</p>
-
-<p>This oration to be pronounced over a man or a woman, a horse
-or a cow, but never over a hog or a dog. The wound to be rubbed
-with butter during the oration.</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR TOOTHACHE.</h4>
-
-<p>Go to a graveyard; kneel upon any grave; say three paters
-and three aves for the soul of the dead lying beneath. Then
-take a handful of grass from the grave, chew it well, casting
-forth each bite without swallowing any portion. After this process
-the sufferer, were he to live a hundred years, will never have
-toothache any more.</p>
-
-
-<p><i>Another.</i></p>
-
-<p>The patient must vow a vow to God, the Virgin, and the
-new moon, never to comb his hair on a Friday, in remembrance
-of relief should he be cured; and whenever or wherever
-he first sees the moon he must fall on his knees and say five
-prayers in gratitude for the cure, even if crossing a river at the
-time.</p>
-
-
-<p><i>Another.</i></p>
-
-<p>Carry in your pocket the two jaw-bones of a haddock; for ever
-since the miracle of the loaves and fishes these bones are an infallible
-remedy against toothache, and the older they are the better,
-as nearer the time of the miracle.</p>
-
-<p>Also this charm is to be sewn on the clothes—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“As Peter sat on a marble stone,</div>
- <div class="verse">The Lord came to him all alone,</div>
- <div class="verse">‘Peter, Peter, what makes you shake?’</div>
- <div class="verse">‘O Lord and Master, it is the toothache.’</div>
- <div class="verse">Then Christ said, ‘Take these for My sake,</div>
- <div class="verse">And never more you’ll have toothache.’”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>To avoid toothache never shave on a Sunday.</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR FRECKLES.</h4>
-
-<p>Anoint a freckled face with the blood of a bull, or of a hare,
-and it will put away the freckles and make the skin fair and clear.
-Also the distilled water of walnuts is good.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">197</span></p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR A BURN.</h4>
-
-<p>There is a pretty secret to cure a burn without a scar:
-“Take sheep’s suet and the rind of the elder-tree, boil both
-together, and the ointment will cure a burn without leaving a
-mark.”</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR THE MEMORY.</h4>
-
-<p>The whitest of frankincense beaten fine, and drunk in white
-wine, wonderfully assisteth the memory, and is profitable for the
-stomach also.</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR THE FALLING SICKNESS.</h4>
-
-<p>Take a hank of grey yarn, a lock of the patient’s hair, some
-parings of his nails, and bury them deep in the earth, repeating,
-in Irish, as a burial service, “Let the great sickness lie there for
-ever. By the power of Mary and the soul of Paul, let the great
-sickness lie buried in the clay, and never more rise out of the
-ground. <span class="smcap">Amen.</span>”</p>
-
-<p>If the patient, on awaking from sleep, calls out the name of the
-person who uttered these words, his recovery is certain.</p>
-
-<p>If a person crosses over the patient while he is in a fit, or stands
-between him and the fire, then the sickness will cleave to him and
-depart from the other that was afflicted.</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR CHIN-COUGH.</h4>
-
-<p>A griddle cake made of meal, to be given, not bought or made;
-but a cake <i>given</i> of love or of charity, not for begging; a cake
-given freely, with a prayer and a blessing; and from the breakfast
-of a man and his wife who had the same name before marriage;
-this is the cure.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The touch of a piebald horse. Even a piebald horse pawing
-before the door helps the cure.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The child to be passed seven times under and over an ass while
-a red string is tied on the throat of the patient.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Nine hairs from the tail of a black cat, chopped up and soaked
-in water, which is then swallowed, and the cough will be relieved.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">198</span></p>
-
-<p>“One day when out snipe shooting,” a gentleman writes, “I
-saw a horrid-looking insect staring up at me. I called to a man
-close by, and asked him the name of it. He told me it was called
-the <i>Thordall</i>, and was reckoned a great cure for the <i>chin-cough</i>;
-for if any one got it safe in a bottle and kept it prisoner till
-it died, the disease would go away from the patient. It was just
-the time to try the cure, for my child was laid up with the
-epidemic. So I bottled my friend and daily examined the state
-of his health. It lasted for a fortnight, and at the end of that
-time the child had quite recovered, and the horrible-looking
-insect creature lay dead.”</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR RHEUMATISM.</h4>
-
-<p>The operator makes passes, like the mesmerist, over the member
-affected by the rheumatic pain, never touching the part, but
-moving his hand slowly over it at some distance, while he mutters
-a form of words in a low voice.</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR A STYE ON THE EYELID.</h4>
-
-<p>Point a gooseberry thorn at it nine times, saying, “Away,
-away, away!” and the stye will vanish presently and disappear.</p>
-
-
-<h4>TO CURE WARTS.</h4>
-
-<p>On meeting a funeral, take some of the clay from under the feet
-of the men who bear the coffin and apply it to the wart, wishing
-strongly at the same time that it may disappear; and so it
-will be.</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR A STITCH IN THE SIDE.</h4>
-
-<p>Rub the part affected with unsalted butter, and make the sign
-of the cross seven times over the place.</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR WEAK EYES.</h4>
-
-<p>A decoction of the flowers of daisies boiled down is an excellent
-wash, to be used constantly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">199</span></p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR WATER ON THE BRAIN.</h4>
-
-<p>Cover the head well with wool, then place oil-skin over, and the
-water will be drawn up out of the head. When the wool is quite
-saturated the brain will be free and the child cured.</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR HIP DISEASE.</h4>
-
-<p>Take three green stones, gathered from a running brook,
-between midnight and morning, while no word is said. In silence
-it must be done. Then uncover the limb and rub each stone
-several times closely downwards from the hip to the toe, saying
-in Irish—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Wear away, wear away,</div>
- <div class="verse">There you shall not stay,</div>
- <div class="verse">Cruel pain—away, away.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<h4>FOR THE MUMPS.</h4>
-
-<p>Wrap the child in a blanket, take it to the pigsty, rub the
-child’s head to the back of a pig, and the mumps will leave it
-and pass from the child to the animal.</p>
-
-
-<p><i>Another.</i></p>
-
-<p>Take nine black stones gathered before sunrise, and bring the
-patient with a rope round his neck to a holy well—not speaking
-all the while. Then cast in three stones in the name of God,
-three in the name of Christ, and three in the name of Mary.
-Repeat this process for three mornings and the disease will be
-cured.</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR EPILEPSY.</h4>
-
-<p>Take nine pieces of young elder twig; run a thread of silk of
-three strands through the pieces, each piece being an inch long.
-Tie this round the patient’s neck next the skin. Should the
-thread break and the amulet fall, it must be buried deep in the
-earth and another amulet made like the first, for if once it touches
-the ground the charm is lost.</p>
-
-
-<p><i>Another.</i></p>
-
-<p>Take nine pieces of a dead man’s skull, grind them to powder,
-and then mix with a decoction of wall rue. Give the patient a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">200</span>
-spoonful of this mixture every morning fasting, till the whole
-potion is swallowed. None must be left, or the dead man would
-come to look for the pieces of his skull.</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR DEPRESSION OF HEART.</h4>
-
-<p>When a person becomes low and depressed and careless about
-everything, as if all vital strength and energy had gone, he is said
-to have got a fairy blast. And blast-water must be poured over
-him by the hands of a fairy doctor while saying, “In the name of
-the saint with the sword, who has strength before God and stands
-at His right hand.” Great care being taken that no portion of the
-water is profaned. Whatever is left after the operation, must be
-poured on the fire.</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR THE FAIRY DART.</h4>
-
-<p>Fairy darts are generally aimed at the fingers, causing the joints
-to swell and grow red and inflamed. An eminent fairy-woman
-made the cure of fairy darts her speciality, and she was sent for
-by all the country round, and was generally successful. But she
-had no power unless <i>asked</i> to make the cure, and she took no
-reward at the time; not till the patient was cured, and the dart
-extracted. The treatment included a great many prayers and
-much anointing with a salve, of which she only had the secret.
-Then she proceeded to extract the dart with great solemnity,
-working with a small instrument, on the point of which she finally
-produced the dart. This proved to be a bit of flax artfully laid
-under the skin by the malicious fairies, causing all the evil, and of
-course on seeing the flax no one could doubt the power of the
-operator, and the grateful patient paid his fee.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="VARIOUS_SUPERSTITIONS_AND_CURES">VARIOUS SUPERSTITIONS AND CURES.</h3>
-
-
-<p>There is a book, a little book, and the house which has it will
-never be burned; the ship that holds it will never founder; the
-woman who keeps it in her hand will be safe in childbirth. But
-none except a fairy man knows the name of the book, and he will
-not reveal it for love or money; only on his death-bed will he tell
-the secret of the name to the one person he selects.</p>
-
-<p>The adepts and fairy doctors keep their mysteries very secret,
-and it is not easy to discover the word of a charm, for the operator<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">201</span>
-loses his power if the words are said without the proper preliminaries,
-or if said by a profane person without faith, for the
-operator should not have uttered the mystery in the hearing of one
-who would mock, or treat the matter lightly; therefore he is
-punished.</p>
-
-<p>Some years ago an old man lived in Mayo who had great knowledge
-of charms, and of certain love philtres that no woman could
-resist. But before his death he enclosed the written charms in a
-strong iron box, with directions that no one was to dare to open it
-except the eldest son of an eldest son in a direct line from
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>Some people pretend that they have read the charms; and one
-of them has the strange power to make every one in the house
-begin to dance, and they can never cease dancing till another spell
-has been said over them.</p>
-
-<p>But the guardian of the iron box is the only one who knows
-the magic secret of the spell, and he exacts a good price before he
-utters it, and so reveals or destroys the witchcraft of the dance.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The juice of deadly night-shade distilled, and given in a drink,
-will make the person who drinks believe whatever you will to
-tell him, and choose him to believe.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A bunch of mint tied round the wrist is a sure remedy for disorders
-of the stomach.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A sick person’s bed must be placed north and south, not cross
-ways.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Nettles gathered in a churchyard and boiled down for a drink
-have the power to cure dropsy.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The touch from the hand of a seventh son cures the bite of a
-mad dog. This is also an Italian superstition.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The hand of a dead man was a powerful incantation, but it was
-chiefly used by women. The most eminent fairy women always
-collected the mystic herbs for charms and cures by the light of a
-candle held by a dead man’s hand at midnight or by the full
-moon.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When a woman first takes ill in her confinement, unlock instantly
-every press and drawer in the house, but when the child is born,
-lock them all up again at once, for if care is not taken the fairies
-will get in and hide in the drawers and presses, to be ready to
-steal away the little mortal baby when they get the opportunity,
-and place some ugly, wizened changeling in the cradle beside the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">202</span>
-poor mother. Therefore every key should be turned, every lock
-made fast; and if the fairies are hidden inside, let them stay
-there until all danger is over for the baby by the proper precautions
-being taken, such as a red coal set under the cradle, and
-a branch of mountain ash tied over it, or of the alder-tree, according
-to the sex of the child, for both trees have mystic virtues, probably
-because of the ancient superstition that the first man was
-created from an alder-tree, and the first woman from the mountain
-ash.</p>
-
-<p>The fairies, however, are sometimes successful in carrying off a
-baby, and the mother finds in the morning a poor weakly little
-sprite in the cradle in place of her own splendid child. But
-should the mortal infant happen to grow up ugly, the fairies send
-it back, for they love beauty above all things; and the fairy chiefs
-greatly desire a handsome mortal wife, so that a handsome girl
-must be well guarded, or they will carry her off. The children
-of such unions grow up beautiful and clever, but are also wild,
-reckless and extravagant. They are known at once by the beauty
-of their eyes and hair, and they have a magic fascination that no
-one can resist, and also a fairy gift of music and song.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If a person is bitten by a dog, the dog must be killed, whether
-mad or not, for it might become mad; then, so also would the
-person who had been touched by the saliva of the animal.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If, by accident, you find the back tooth of a horse, carry it about
-with you as long as you live, and you will never want money;
-but it must be found by chance.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When a family has been carried off by fever, the house where
-they died may be again inhabited with safety if a certain number
-of sheep are driven in to sleep there for three nights.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>An iron ring worn on the fourth finger was considered effective
-against rheumatism by the Irish peasantry from ancient times.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Paralysis is cured by stroking, but many forms and mystic incantations
-are also used during the process; and only certain persons
-have the power in the hands that can effect a cure by the magic
-of the stroke.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The seed of docks tied to the left arm of a woman will prevent
-her being barren.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A spoonful of <i>aqua vitæ</i> sweetened with sugar, and a little
-grated bread added, that it may not annoy the brain or the liver,
-will preserve from lethargy and apoplexy and all cold diseases.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">203</span></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The juice of carrots boiled down is admirable for purifying the
-blood.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Clippings of the hair and nails of a child tied up in a linen cloth
-and placed under the cradle will cure convulsions.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Tober Maire</i> (Mary’s well), near Dundalk, has a great reputation
-for cures. And thousands used to visit it on Lady Day for weak
-eyesight, and the lowness of heart. Nine times they must go
-round the well on their knees, always westward. Then drink a
-cup of the water, and not only are they cured of their ailment, but
-are as free from sin as the angels in heaven.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When children are pining away, they are supposed to be fairy-struck;
-and the juice of twelve leaves of foxglove may be given:
-also in cases of fever the same.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A bunch of mint tied round the wrist keeps off infection and
-disease.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There is a well near the Boyne where King James washed his
-sword after the battle, and ever since the water has power to cure
-the king’s evil.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When a seventh son is born, if an earth-worm is put into the
-infant’s hand and kept there till it dies, the child will have power
-to charm away all diseases.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The ancient arrowheads, called elf-stones by the people, are
-used as charms to guard the cattle.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is not safe to take an unbaptized child in your arms without
-making the sign of the cross over it.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is unlucky to give a coal of fire out of the house before the
-child is baptized. And a piece of iron should be sewn in the
-infant’s clothes, and kept there till after the baptism.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Take a piece of bride-cake and pass it three times through a
-wedding-ring, then sleep on it, and you will see in a dream the
-face of your future spouse.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is unlucky to accept a lock of hair, or a four-footed beast
-from a lover.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>People ought to remember that egg-shells are favourite retreats
-of the fairies, therefore the judicious eater should always break<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">204</span>
-the shell after use, to prevent the fairy sprite from taking up his
-lodgment therein.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Finvarra, the king of the fairies of the west, keeps up the most
-friendly relations with most of the best families of Galway,
-especially with the Kirwans of Castle Hacket, for Finvarra is a
-gentleman, every inch of him, and the Kirwans always leave out
-kegs of wine for him at night of the best Spanish wine. And in
-return, it is said, the wine vaults at Castle Hacket are never empty,
-though the wine flows freely for all comers.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If a living worm is put into the hand of a child before he is
-baptized, and kept there till the worm is dead, that child will
-have power in after life to cure all diseases to which children are
-subject.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>After being cured from a sickness, take an oath never to comb
-the hair on a Friday, that so the memory of the grace received
-may remain by this sign till your death. Or whenever you first
-see the new moon, kneel down and say an ave and a pater; this
-also is for memory of grace done.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>People born in the morning cannot see spirits or the fairy
-world; but those born at night have power over ghosts, and can
-see the spirits of the dead.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Unbaptized children are readily seized by the fairies. The best
-preventive is a little salt tied up in the child’s dress when it is
-laid to sleep in the cradle.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If pursued at night by an evil spirit, or the ghost of one dead,
-and you hear footsteps behind you, try and reach a stream of
-running water, for if you can cross it, no devil or ghost will be
-able to follow you.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If a chair fall as a person rises, it is an unlucky omen.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The fortunate possessor of the four-leaved shamrock will have
-luck in gambling, luck in racing, and witchcraft will have no
-power over him. But he must always carry it about his person,
-and never give it away, or even show it to another.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A purse made from a weasel’s skin will never want for money;
-but the purse must be found, not given or made.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If a man is ploughing, no one should cross the path of the
-horses.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">205</span></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is unlucky to steal a plough, or take anything by stealth
-from a smith’s forge.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When yawning make the sign of the cross instantly over the
-mouth, or the evil spirit will make a rush down and take up his
-abode within you.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Never give away water before breakfast, nor milk while churning
-is going on.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A married woman should not walk upon graves, or her child
-will have a club-foot. If by accident she treads on a grave she
-must instantly kneel down, say a prayer, and make the sign of the
-cross on the sole of her shoe three times over.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Never take an infant in your arms, nor turn your head to look
-at it without saying, “God bless it.” This keeps away the fatal
-influence of the Evil Eye.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If a bride steers a boat on the day of her marriage, the winds
-and the waves have no power over it, be the tempest ever so fierce
-or the stream ever so rapid.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Do not put out a light while people are at supper, or there will
-be one less at the table before the year is out.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Never give any salt or fire while churning is going on. To
-upset the salt is exceedingly unlucky and a bad omen; to avert
-evil gather up the salt and fling it over the right shoulder into
-the fire, with the left hand.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If you want a person to win at cards, stick a crooked pin in
-his coat.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The seventh son of a seventh son has power over all diseases,
-and can cure them by laying on of hands; and a son born after
-his father’s death has power over fevers.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There is one hour in every day when whatever you wish will
-be granted, but no one knows what that hour is. It is all a chance
-if we come on it. There is also one hour in the day when ghost-seers
-can see spirits—but only one—at no other time have they
-the power, yet they never know the hour, the coming of it is
-a mystery.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In some parts of Ireland the people, it is said, on first seeing
-the new moon, fall on their knees and address her in a loud voice<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">206</span>
-with the prayer: “O moon; leave us well as thou hast found
-us!”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is unlucky to meet a cat, a dog, or a woman, when going out
-first in the morning; but unlucky above all is it to meet a woman
-with red hair the first thing in the morning when going on a
-journey, for her presence brings ill-luck and certain evil.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is unlucky to pass under a hempen rope; the person who
-does so will die a violent death, or is fated to commit an evil act
-in after life, so it is decreed.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The cuttings of your hair should not be thrown where birds can
-find them; for they will take them to build their nests, and then
-you will have headaches all the year after.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The cause of a club-foot is this—The mother stood on a cross
-in a churchyard before her child was born—so evil came.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>To cure fever, place the patient on the sandy shore when the
-tide is coming in, and the retreating waves will carry away the
-disease and leave him well.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>To make the skin beautiful, wash the face in May dew upon
-May morning just at sunrise.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If the palm of the hand itches you will be getting money; if
-the elbow, you will be changing beds; if the ear itches and is red
-and hot, some one is speaking ill of you.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If three drops of water are given to an infant before it is
-baptized, it will answer the first three questions put to it.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>To know the name of the person you are destined to marry, put
-a snail on a plate of flour—cover it over and leave it all night;
-in the morning the initial letter of the name will be found traced
-on the flour by the snail.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If one desires to know if a sick person will recover, take nine
-smooth stones from the running water; fling them over the right
-shoulder, then lay them in a turf fire to remain untouched for one
-night. If the disease is to end fatally the stones in the morning
-will emit a clear sound like a bell when struck together.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A whitethorn stick is a very unlucky companion on a journey;
-but a hazel switch brings good luck and has power over the
-devil.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">207</span></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A hen that crows is very unlucky and should be killed; very
-often the hen is stoned, for it is believed that she is bewitched by
-the fairies.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is asserted that on Christmas morning the ass kneels down
-in adoration of Christ, and if a person can manage to touch the
-cross on the back of the animal at that particular moment the
-wish of his heart will be granted, whatever it may be.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When taking possession of a new house, every one should bring
-in some present, however trifling, but nothing should be taken
-away, and a prayer should be said in each corner of your bedroom,
-and some article of your clothing be deposited there at the
-same time.</p>
-
-
-<h4>TO FIND STOLEN GOODS.</h4>
-
-<p>Place two keys on a sieve, in the form of a cross. Two men
-hold the sieve, while a third makes the sign of the cross on the
-forehead of the suspected party, and calls out his name loudly,
-three times over. If innocent, the keys remain stationary; but if
-guilty, the keys revolve slowly round the sieve, and then there is
-no doubt as to who is the thief.</p>
-
-
-<h4>A PRAYER AGAINST THE PLAGUE.</h4>
-
-<p>“O Star of Heaven, beloved of the Lord, drive away the foul
-constellation that has slain the people with the wound of dreadful
-death. O Star of the Sea, save us from the poison-breath that
-kills, from the enemy that slays in the night. <span class="smcap">Amen.</span>”</p>
-
-
-<h4>A BLESSING.</h4>
-
-<p>“O aged old woman of the grey locks, may eight hundred
-blessings twelve times over be on thee! Mayest thou be free
-from desolation, O woman of the aged frame! And may many
-tears fall on thy grave.”</p>
-
-
-<h4>A CURE FOR CATTLE.</h4>
-
-<p>Take nine leaves of the male crowfoot, plucked on a Sunday
-night; bruise them on a stone that never was moved since the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">208</span>
-world began, and never can be moved. Mix with salt and spittle,
-and apply the plaster to the ear of the sick beast. Repeat this
-three times for a man, and twice for a horse.</p>
-
-
-<h4>A CHARM FOR SAFETY.</h4>
-
-<p>Pluck ten blades of yarrow, keep nine, and cast the tenth away
-for tithe to the spirits. Put the nine in your stocking, under the
-heel of the right foot, when going a journey, and the Evil One
-will have no power over you.</p>
-
-
-<h4>AN ELIXIR OF POTENCY.</h4>
-
-<p>(FROM A MANUSCRIPT OF DATE 1770.)</p>
-
-<p>Two ounces of cochineal, one ounce of gentian root, two drachms
-of saffron, two drachms of snakeroot, two drachms of salt of wormwood,
-and the rind of ten oranges. The whole to be steeped in a
-quart of brandy, and kept for use.</p>
-
-
-<h4>FOR THE BITE OF A MAD DOG.</h4>
-
-<p>Six ounces of rue, four ounces of garlic, two ounces of Venice
-treacle, and two ounces of pewter filings. Boil for two hours in
-a close vessel, in two quarts of ale, and give a spoonful fasting
-each morning till the cure is effected. The liquor is to be strained
-before use.</p>
-
-
-<h4>DREAMS.</h4>
-
-<p>Never tell your dreams fasting, and always tell them first to a
-woman called Mary.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>To dream of a hearse with white plumes is a wedding; but to
-dream of a wedding is grief, and death will follow.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>To dream of a woman kissing you is deceit; but of a man,
-friendship; and to dream of a horse is exceedingly lucky.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>To dream of a priest is bad; even to dream of the devil is
-better. Remember, also, either a present or a purchase from a
-priest is unlucky.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">209</span></p>
-
-
-<h4>FAIRY DOCTORS.</h4>
-
-<p>The fairy doctors are generally females. Old women, especially,
-are considered to have peculiar mystic and supernatural power.
-They cure chiefly by charms and incantations, transmitted by
-tradition through many generations; and by herbs, of which they
-have a surprising knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>The fairies have an aversion to the sight of blood; and the
-peasants, therefore, have a great objection to being bled, lest “the
-good people” would be angry. Besides, they have much more
-faith in charms and incantations than in any dispensary doctor
-that ever practised amongst them.</p>
-
-
-<h4>CHARMS BY CRYSTALS.</h4>
-
-<p>The charms by crystals are of great antiquity in Ireland—a
-mode of divination, no doubt, brought from the East by the early
-wandering tribes. Many of these stones have been found throughout
-the country, and are held in great veneration. They are
-generally globular, and appear to have been originally set in royal
-sceptres or sacred shrines. A very ancient crystal globe of this
-kind, with miraculous curative powers, is still to be seen at Currahmore,
-the seat of the Marquis of Waterford, and it is believed
-to have been brought from the Holy Land by one of the Le
-Poers, who had it as a gift from Godfrey de Bouillon. The ball
-is of rock crystal, a little larger than an orange, and is circled
-round the middle by a silver band. It is still constantly borrowed
-by the people to effect cures upon cattle suffering from murrain
-or other distempers. This is done by placing the ball in a running
-stream, through which the cattle are driven backwards and
-forwards many times.</p>
-
-<p>The peasants affirm that the charm never fails in success, and
-the belief in its miraculous powers is so widespread that people
-from the most distant parts of Ireland send to Currahmore to
-borrow it. Even to this day the faith in its magic power continues
-unabated, and requests for the loan come from every
-quarter. The Marquis of Waterford leaves it in the care of his
-steward, and it is freely lent to all comers; but to the credit of
-the people it may be noted, that the magic crystal is always
-brought back to Currahmore with the most scrupulous care.<a id="FNanchor_9_9" href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">9</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">210</span></p>
-
-
-<h4>ALECTROMANTIA.</h4>
-
-<p>Should a person be bewitched by an evil neighbour, he must
-take two black cocks, lay a charm over the head of one and let it
-loose; but the other must be boiled down, feathers and all, and
-eaten. Then the malice of the neighbour will have no effect on
-him or his.</p>
-
-<p>Ancient Egypt and Greece had likewise superstitions on the
-subject of sacrificing a cock. Even the last words of Socrates had
-reference to this subject. It is remarkable also that in the
-Christian legend it was a cock that testified indignantly by his
-crowing against Peter’s treachery and cowardice, and aroused in
-him the remorse that was evidenced by his tears.</p>
-
-
-<h4>FAIRY POWER.</h4>
-
-<p>It is on Fridays that the fairies have the most power to work
-evil; therefore Friday is an unlucky day to begin work, or to go
-on a journey, or to have a wedding; for the spirits are then present
-everywhere, and hear and see everything that is going on,
-and will mar and spoil all they can, just out of malice and
-jealousy of the mortal race.</p>
-
-<p>It is then they strike cattle with their elfin arrows, lame a
-horse, steal the milk, and carry off the handsome children, leaving
-an ugly changeling in exchange, who is soon known to be a
-fairy sprite by its voracious appetite, without any natural increase
-in growth.</p>
-
-<p>This superstition makes the peasant-women often very cruel
-towards weakly children; and the trial by fire is sometimes
-resorted to in order to test the nature of the child who is suspected
-of being a changeling. For this purpose a fairy woman is
-usually sent for, who makes a drink for the little patient of certain
-herbs of whose power she alone has the secret knowledge;
-and a childless woman is considered the best to make the potion.
-Should there be no improvement in the child after the treatment
-with herbs, then the witch-women sometimes resort to terrible
-measures to test the fairy nature of the sufferer.</p>
-
-<p>A child who was suspected of being a changeling, because he
-was wasted and thin and always restless and fretful, was ordered
-by the witch-woman to be placed for three nights on a shovel outside
-the door from sunset to sunrise, during which time he was
-given foxglove to chew, and cold water was flung over him to
-banish the fire-devil. The screams of the child at night were
-frightful, calling on his mother to come and take him in; but the
-fairy doctor told the mother not to fear; the fairies were certainly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">211</span>
-tormenting him, but by the third night their power would cease,
-and the child would be quite restored. However, on the third
-night the poor little child lay dead.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="OMENS_AND_SUPERSTITIONS">OMENS AND SUPERSTITIONS.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Auguries and prophecies of coming fate may also be obtained
-from the flight of birds, the motion of the winds, from sneezing,
-dreams, lots, and the signs from a verse of the Psalter or Gospels.
-The peasantry attach great importance to the first verses of St.
-John’s Gospel, and maintain that when the cock crows in the
-morning he is repeating these verses (from the 1st to the 14th),
-and if we understood the language of animals and birds, we could
-often hear them quoting these same verses.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A charm against sickness is an amulet worn round the neck,
-enclosing a piece of paper, on which is written the first three
-verses of St. John’s Gospel.</p>
-
-
-<h4>OMENS THAT FORBODE EVIL.</h4>
-
-<p>To stick a penknife in the mast of a boat when sailing is most
-unlucky.</p>
-
-<p>To meet a man with red hair, or a woman with a red petticoat,
-the first thing in the morning.</p>
-
-<p>To kill the robin redbreast.</p>
-
-<p>To pass a churn and not give a helping hand.</p>
-
-<p>To meet a funeral and not go back three steps with it.</p>
-
-<p>To have a hare cross your path before sunrise.</p>
-
-<p>To take away a lighted sod on May days or churning days; for
-fire is the most sacred of all things, and you take away the blessing
-from the house along with it.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Irish are very susceptible to omens. They say, “Beware
-of a childless woman who looks fixedly at your child.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Fire is the holiest of all things. Walk three times round a fire
-on St. John’s Eve, and you will be safe from disease for all that
-year.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is particularly unlucky to meet a red-haired man the first
-thing in the morning. There is a tradition that Judas Iscariot<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">212</span>
-had red hair, and it is from this the superstitious dread of the
-evil interference of a red-haired man may have originated.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Never begin work on a Friday.</p>
-
-<p>Never remove from a house or leave a situation on Saturday.</p>
-
-<p>Never begin to make a dress on Saturday, or the wearer will die
-within the year.</p>
-
-<p>Never mend a rent in a dress while on, or evil and malicious
-reports will be spread about you.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Some days are unlucky to certain families—as Tuesday to the
-Tudors. Henry VIII., Edward, Mary, and Elizabeth all died
-upon a Tuesday.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>To throw a slipper after a party going a journey is lucky. Also
-to breakfast by candle-light on Christmas morning.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is fatal at a marriage to tie a knot in a red handkerchief,
-and only an enemy would do it. To break the spell the handkerchief
-should be burned.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The first days of the year and of the week are the luckiest.
-Never begin a journey on a Friday or Saturday, nor move from
-your residence, nor change a situation. Never cut out a dress or
-begin to make it on a Friday, nor fix a marriage, for of all days
-the fairies have the most malific power on a Friday. They are
-present then, and hear all that is said, therefore beware of speaking
-ill of them, for they will work some evil if offended.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Never pay away money on the first Monday of the year, or you
-will lose your luck in gaining money all the year after.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Presents may be given on New Year’s Day, but no money should
-be paid away.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Those who marry in autumn will die in spring.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The yew-tree, the ash, and the elder-tree were sacred. The
-willow has a mystery in it of sound. The harp of King Brian-Boru
-was made of willow-wood.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When a servant leaves her place, if her mistress gives her a
-piece of bread let her put by some of it carefully, for as long as
-she has it good luck will follow her.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">213</span></p>
-
-
-<h4>TO ATTRACT BEES.</h4>
-
-<p>Gather foxglove, raspberry leaves, wild marjorum, mint,
-camomile, and valerian; mix them with butter made on May
-Day, and let the herbs also be gathered on May Day. Boil them
-all together with honey; then rub the vessel into which the bees
-should gather, both inside and out, with the mixture; place it in
-the middle of a tree, and the bees will soon come. Foxglove or
-“fairy fingers” is called “the great herb” from its wondrous properties.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="SUPERSTITIONS_OF_THE_ISLANDS">SUPERSTITIONS OF THE ISLANDS.</h3>
-
-
-<h4>CONCERNING THE DEAD.</h4>
-
-<p>It is ill luck when going with a funeral to meet a man on a white
-horse. No matter how high the rank of the rider may be, the
-people must seize the reins and force him to turn back and join
-the procession at least for a few yards.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The three most powerful divinations are by fire, by water, and
-by clay. These are the three great powers—the power that
-ascends, which is fire; the power that falls, which is water; and
-the power that lies level on the earth, and has the mystery of the
-dead, which is clay.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If a short cut should be taken while carrying a corpse to the
-grave the dead will be disturbed in the coffin, for it is a slight and
-an insult to the corpse.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When a death was expected it was usual to have a good deal
-of bread ready baked in the house in order that the evil spirits
-might be employed eating it, and so let the soul of the dying
-depart in peace. Twelve candles stuck in clay should also be
-placed round the dying.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If two funerals meet at the same churchyard, the last corpse
-that enters will have to supply the dead with water till the next
-corpse arrives.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Never take a child in your arms after being at a wake where a
-corpse was laid out unless you first dip your hands in holy water.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The moment the soul leaves the body the evil spirits try to seize
-it, but the guardian angel fights against them, and those around<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">214</span>
-must pray earnestly that the angel may conquer. After death
-the body must not be disturbed, nor should the funeral chant be
-raised for one hour.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There are many superstitions prevalent in the Western Islands
-which are implicitly believed and acted on. Fishermen when
-going to sea must always enter the boat by the right side, no
-matter how inconvenient.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A coal of fire thrown after the fisherman brings him good
-fortune.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A sick person must not be visited on a Friday, nor by any
-person who has just quitted a wake and looked upon the dead.
-The hair and nails of a sick person must not be cut till after
-recovery.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If a corpse falls to the ground the most fatal events will happen
-to the family.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The lid must not be nailed on the coffin of a new-born child, or
-the mother that bore it will never have another.</p>
-
-
-<h4>THE COASTGUARD’S FATE.</h4>
-
-<p>One day a coastguard man was out in his boat with some of the
-islanders when a terrible storm arose with thunder and lightning.
-The poor people fell on their knees and prayed devoutly, but the
-man laughed at them, called them fools and cowards, and said he
-also could make lightning and thunder as well as the God they
-were praying to. So he immediately prepared a small cannon he
-had on board, and set a match to the powder and fired it off.
-But before the echo died away a stream of lightning passed over
-him, and he fell dead in the boat a blackened corpse—a dreadful
-sign of the vengeance of heaven on his blasphemous daring.</p>
-
-
-<h4>RELICS.</h4>
-
-<p>If a false oath is taken upon a relic the vengeance of God falls
-upon the swearer, and the doom that few can bear and live rests
-upon him and upon all his descendants even to the seventh generation.
-They are shunned by the people, and looked upon as unlucky
-and accursed. There are some living even now from whom
-the curse of the past is not lifted, because the seventh generation
-has not yet passed by.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">215</span></p>
-
-
-<h2 id="LEGENDS_OF_THE_SAINTS">LEGENDS OF THE SAINTS.</h2>
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="ST_PATRICK">ST. PATRICK.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Many saints in old time used to come and take up their abode in
-the wild desolate Western Islands for the rest and sanctity of
-solitude, and innumerable evidences of their presence still remain
-in the ancient ruins of the so-called cells or churches built in the
-rudest form, but always placed in a picturesque locality beside a
-well, which ever since has been held sacred, and no woman is
-allowed to wash her feet in the water.</p>
-
-<p>In one of these islands is a stone bed called “The Bed of the
-Holy Ghost,” and many people go from the mainland to lie a night
-in this bed, though the sea is always rough and dangerous,
-believing that it heals all diseases, and it brings good luck to all,
-and to women the blessing of children.</p>
-
-<p>If the lark sings on St. Bridget’s Day it is a good omen, and a
-sign of fine weather. And whoever hears it the first thing in the
-morning will have good luck in all he does for that whole day.
-St. Bridget was granted by the Lord to have every second Sunday
-fine so that she might preach to the converts that came to her.</p>
-
-<p>Then St. Patrick greatly desired that his day should also be fine
-so that the people might gather together in remembrance of him,
-and this also was granted. So from that time forth the Saints’
-Day, the 17th of March, is always fine, for so it was decreed from
-the ancient times when he was upon earth.</p>
-
-<p>On St. Patrick’s Day it is the usage in the islands to affix large
-crosses made of straw and flowers on the door-posts, and a black
-cock is sacrificed in honour of the saint, though no one can tell
-why it is considered necessary that blood should be spilt, except
-that the idea of sacrifice is found in all religions and rituals of
-worship. At first the object most loved or most prized was
-sacrificed—a child, or a costly jewel. Then the human sacrifice
-began to be replaced by the offering of an animal, who was made
-the medium of expiation. And the god was satisfied so that blood
-was spilled to purify from sin.</p>
-
-<p>It is remarkable that relics of this ancient ritual of sacrifice can<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">216</span>
-still be found even in the enlightened households of this advanced
-nineteenth century. An ox is still slaughtered at Christmas,
-though Baal is forgotten; and a lamb is sacrificed at Easter, as
-the Druids offered the firstlings of the flock to the Sun-god; while
-a goose is slain on St. Michael’s Day as a burnt-offering to the
-saint.</p>
-
-
-<h4>THE WELL OF THE BOOK.</h4>
-
-<p>When St. Patrick was one time amongst the Pagan Irish they
-grew very fierce and seemed eager to kill him. Then his life
-being in great danger, he kneeled down before them and prayed
-to God for help and for the conversion of their souls. And the
-fervour of the prayer was so great that as the saint rose up the
-mark of his knees was left deep in the stone, and when the people
-saw the miracle they believed.</p>
-
-<p>Now when he came to the next village the people said if he
-performed some wonder for them they also would believe and
-pray to his God. So St. Patrick drew a great circle on the
-ground and bade them stand outside it; and then he prayed, and
-lo! the water rushed up from the earth, and a well pure and
-bright as crystal filled the circle. And the people believed and
-were baptized.</p>
-
-<p>The well can be seen to this day, and is called <i>Tober-na-Lauer</i>
-(The Well of the Book), because St. Patrick placed his own
-prayer-book in the centre of the circle before the water rose.</p>
-
-
-<h4>ST. PATRICK AND THE SERPENT.</h4>
-
-<p>There is a lake in one of the Galtee mountains where there is a
-great serpent chained to a rock, and he may be heard constantly
-crying out, “O Patrick, is the <i>Luan</i>, or Monday, long from us?”
-For when St. Patrick cast this serpent into the lake he bade him
-be chained to the rock till <i>La-an-Luan</i> (The Day of Judgment).
-But the serpent mistook the word, and thought the saint meant
-<i>Luan</i>, Monday.</p>
-
-<p>So he still expects to be freed from one Monday to another, and
-the clanking of his chains on that day is awful to hear as he strives
-to break them and get free.</p>
-
-<p>In another lake there is a huge-winged creature, it is said,
-which escaped the power of St. Patrick, and when he gambols in
-the water such storms arise that no boat can withstand the tumult
-of the waves.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">217</span></p>
-
-
-<h4>ST. PATRICK AND THE PRINCESSES.</h4>
-
-<p>One day the two daughters of the King of Meath, named Ethna
-and Fedalma, went down to the river to bathe, and there they
-beheld St. Patrick and his band of converts all draped in white
-robes, for they were celebrating morning prayers. And the
-princesses seeing strange men in white garments thought they
-were of the race of the male fairies, the <i>Daine-Sidhe</i>. And they
-questioned them. Then St. Patrick expounded the truth to them,
-and the maidens asked him many questions: “Who is your God?
-Is He Handsome? Are His daughters as handsome as we are?
-Is He rich? Is He young or aged? Is He to die, or does He
-live for ever?”</p>
-
-<p>Now St. Patrick having satisfied them on all these points the
-maidens, Ethna and Fedalma, were baptized, and became zealous
-workers for the Christian cause.</p>
-
-
-<h4>THE POISON CUP.</h4>
-
-<p>St. Patrick went on to Tara, and there he lit the Paschal fire
-and celebrated the Easter mysteries. But the Druids were wroth,
-for it was against their ordinances for any fire to be lit until the
-chief Druid himself had kindled the sacred fire. Therefore they
-sought to poison St. Patrick, and a cupful of poison was given
-him by one of the Druids; but the danger was revealed to him,
-and thereupon he pronounced certain words over the liquor, and
-whoever pronounceth these words over poison shall receive no
-injury from it. He also then composed the prayer, “In nomine
-Dei Patris,” and recited it over the cup of poison.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The number of companions with whom St. Patrick travelled
-through the country was seven score and ten, and before his time
-only three classes of persons were allowed to speak in public in
-Erin—the chronicler, to relate events; the poet, to eulogize and
-satirize; and the Brehon, to pass judgment according to the law.
-But after St. Patrick’s arrival every utterance of the three professions
-was subject to “the men of the white language”—that is,
-the Gospel—and only such utterances were allowed as did not
-clash with the Gospel.</p>
-
-
-<h4>DIVINATION.</h4>
-
-<p>In ancient Pagan times in Ireland the poets were supposed to
-possess the gift of prophecy, and by certain means could throw<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">218</span>
-themselves into a state in which they had lucid vision of coming
-events. This state, called <i>Imbas for Osna</i>, was produced by incantations
-and the offering of the flesh of a red pig, a dog, or a
-cat to their idols. Then the poet, laying the two palms of his
-hands on his two cheeks, lay down and slept; his idol gods being
-beside him. And when he awoke he could see all things and foretell
-all things. He could make verses with the ends of his fingers,
-and repeat the same without studying, and in this way proved his
-right to be chief poet at the court of the king. Also he laid his
-staff upon the head of a person, and thus he found out his name,
-and the name of his father and mother, and all unknown things
-that were proposed to him. And this prophetic power was also
-obtained by <i>Imbas for Osna</i>, though a different kind of offering
-was made to the idol.</p>
-
-<p>But Patrick abolished these practices, and declared that whoever
-used them should enjoy neither heaven nor earth; and he
-substituted for them the <i>Corus Cerda</i> (the Law of Poetry), in
-which no offering was made to demons; for the profession of the
-poet, he said, was pure, and should not be subject to the power
-of the devil. He left to the poets, however, the gift of extemporaneous
-recital, because it was acquired through great knowledge
-and diligent study, but all other rites he strictly forbade to
-the poets of Erin.</p>
-
-
-<h4>THE BLIND POET.</h4>
-
-<p>As a proof of the magnetic, lucid vision obtained by the great
-ollamhs of poetry, it is recorded of the blind poet, Louad Dall,
-that his attendants having brought him the skull of an animal
-found upon the strand, they asked him to declare its history.
-And thereupon placing the end of his wand upon the skull, he
-beheld with the inner vision, and said—</p>
-
-<p>“The tempestuous waters have destroyed Breccan, and this is
-the skull of his lapdog; and but little of greatness now remains,
-for Breccan and his people have perished in the waves.”</p>
-
-<p>And this was “divination by the staff”—a power possessed only
-by the chief poets, and by none else.</p>
-
-
-<h4>THE STORY OF BRECCAN.</h4>
-
-<p>The story of Breccan is related in Cormac’s Glossary. He was
-a merchant who traded between Ireland and Scotland with fifty
-corracles. Now there was a great whirlpool at Rathlin Island
-caused by the meeting of the seas, and they formed a caldron
-vast enough to swallow all Ireland. And it happened on a time<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">219</span>
-that Breccan and all his corracles were lost and engulfed in this
-caldron. Not a man was left to tell the tale of how or where
-they had perished. Thus it was that the skull of a small animal
-being discovered on the beach, it was brought to the blind poet,
-who laying his staff on it obtained the inner vision by which he
-revealed the fate of Breccan and his fifty corracles.</p>
-
-
-<h4>BARDIC PRIVILEGES.</h4>
-
-<p>Now St. Patrick left the poets all their rights of divination by
-wisdom, and all their ancient rights over story-telling with the
-music of the harp, three hundred and fifty stories being allowed
-to the chief poet. He also secured just judgments for their professional
-rights; so that if land was mentioned in their songs as
-having been walled and trenched by them, that was considered to
-be sufficient legal evidence of title to the soil.</p>
-
-<p>But what they received of St. Patrick was better, he affirmed,
-than all the evil rites to devils which they had abandoned; along
-with the profane practice of magic by the two palms, called <i>Imbas
-for Osna</i>, by which lucid vision and the spirit of prophecy was
-supposed to come on them after invocations to idols and demons—all
-of which evil practices St. Patrick abolished, but left to the
-poets the skilled hand in music and the fluent tongue in recitation;
-for which none can equal the Bards of Ireland throughout
-all the world.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The ogham writing on the poet’s staff is mentioned in very old
-manuscripts as in use in the Pagan period, before St. Patrick’s
-time, though no specimen of ogham writing has yet been found of
-earlier date than the Christian era.</p>
-
-<p>St. Patrick introduced Latin and the Latin letters, which superseded
-ogham. And after his time Latin was taught very generally
-in the Irish schools.</p>
-
-<p>St. Patrick also confirmed as right and proper for observance,
-whatever was just in the Brehon laws, so as it was not at variance
-with the law of Christ, for the people had been guided by the
-Brehon laws from all antiquity, and it was not easy to overthrow
-them. Besides, many or most of them were framed with strict
-regard to justice and morality.</p>
-
-<p>When St. Patrick was dying, an angel of the Lord was sent to
-him, who announced to the great and holy saint that God had
-granted this favour to his prayers—namely, that his jurisdiction
-over the Church was ordained to be for ever at Armagh; and
-that Patrick, as the Apostle of Ireland, should be the judge of all
-the Irish at the last day, and none other, according to the promise<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">220</span>
-made to the other apostles, “Ye shall sit upon twelve thrones
-judging the tribes of Israel.”</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="ST_CIARON">ST. CIARON.</h3>
-
-
-<p>This eminent saint died at the early age of thirty-three; and it
-is said that his death was caused by the prayers of the other
-saints of Ireland, who were jealous of his power and fame for
-sanctity. St. Ciaron knowing that death was coming upon him,
-composed a verse which has been preserved as an appeal against
-the cruel fate that ended his life while he was yet in his prime.
-And the pathos of the quatrain is very tender and natural—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“I ask is it right, O King of Stars,</div>
- <div class="verse">To reap a cornfield before it is ripe?</div>
- <div class="verse">It is eating fruit before the time,</div>
- <div class="verse">It is plucking the blossom from a hazel when it is white.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="ST_MARTIN">ST. MARTIN.</h3>
-
-
-<p>St. Martin was a bad man before his conversion, and, above all,
-was exceedingly close-fisted, as they say, to the poor; giving
-nothing and grasping all. So he was very rich but hated by
-every one.</p>
-
-<p>One day, when going out, he charged the servant to have a fine
-batch of loaves ready made and baked by the time he returned.
-While she was kneading the dough in came a poor man and
-begged for some as he was hungry; but she told him she dare not
-give away anything or the master would beat her. Still the poor
-man begged the harder, and at last she gave him dough enough
-for a couple of loaves. However, when the girl’s back was
-turned, he threw the dough into the oven and went his way without
-a word.</p>
-
-<p>Now when the dough was ready, the girl opened the oven to
-put in the loaves, but, behold, it was already quite full of
-baked bread, and would hold no more. So when Martin came
-home she told him all the truth; and his heart smote him,
-and he cried out, “An Angel of the Lord has been here;
-God has sent His messenger to rebuke me of my sins!” And
-he ran out to search for the man along the road, and at last
-saw him a great way off. Then Martin flung off his coat that he
-might run the faster; and when he came up to the man he fell on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">221</span>
-his knees before him on the ground, and cried out, “Oh, my Lord,
-I repent me of my sins; pray to God for me, for I know you are
-His angel.” And from that moment Martin’s heart was changed,
-and the devil left him; and he became a true saint and servant of
-God, and, above all, the saint and patron of the poor.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, St. Bridget was offended with St. Martin, because
-she thought he did not receive her with sufficient hospitality and
-consideration. Perhaps some of the old stinginess of nature still
-clung to him. And she thus pronounced her malediction over him—</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, little man, the sea-wave shall come up over thy house, and
-thy name shall lie in ashes, while my name and fame shall be
-glorious all over the world.”</p>
-
-<p>And this was fulfilled; for the sea actually broke in and covered
-the saint’s dwelling; and the house of St. Martin can still be seen
-low down beneath the waves, but if any one tries to reach it the
-house fades away into the mist and is seen no more.</p>
-
-<p>There is an old superstition still observed by the people, that
-blood must be spilt on St. Martin’s Day; so a goose is killed, or a
-black cock, and the blood is sprinkled over the floor and on the
-threshold. And some of the flesh is given to the first beggar that
-comes by, in the name and in honour of St. Martin.</p>
-
-<p>In the Arran Isles St. Martin’s Day is observed with particular
-solemnity, and it was held necessary, from ancient times, to spill
-blood on the ground in honour of the saint. For this purpose a
-cock was sacrificed; but if such could not be procured people have
-been known to cut their finger in order to draw blood, and let it
-fall upon the earth. The custom arose in this way:—St. Martin,
-having given away all his goods to the poor, was often in want of
-food, and one day he entered a widow’s house and begged for
-something to eat. The widow was poor, and having no food in
-the house, she sacrificed her young child, boiled it, and set it
-before the saint for supper. Having eaten, and taken his departure,
-the woman went over to the cradle to weep for her lost
-child; when lo! there he was, lying whole and well, in a beautiful
-sleep, as if no evil had ever happened to him; and to commemorate
-this miracle and from gratitude to the saint, a sacrifice
-of some living thing is made yearly in his honour. The blood is
-poured or sprinkled on the ground, and along the door-posts, and
-both within and without the threshold, and at the four corners of
-each room in the house.</p>
-
-<p>For this symbol of purification by blood the rich farmers sacrifice
-a sheep; while the poorer people kill a black cock or a white hen,
-and sprinkle the blood according to ancient usage. Afterwards
-the whole family dine upon the sacrificial victim.</p>
-
-<p>In some places it was the custom for the master of the house to
-draw a cross on the arm of each member of the family and mark
-it out in blood. This was a very sacred sign which no fairy or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">222</span>
-evil spirit, were they ever so strong, could overcome; and whoever
-was signed with the blood was safe.</p>
-
-<p>There is a singular superstition forbidding work of a certain
-kind to be done on St. Martin’s Day, the 11th of November. No
-woman should spin on that day; no miller should grind his corn,
-and no wheel should be turned. And this custom was long held
-sacred, and is still observed in the Western Islands.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="ST_BRIDGET">ST. BRIDGET.</h3>
-
-
-<p>At one time a certain leper came to St. Bridget to beg a cow
-from her.</p>
-
-<p>“Which would you prefer?” said the holy Bridget, “to be
-healed of your disease or to have the cow?”</p>
-
-<p>“I would be healed,” he answered.</p>
-
-<p>Then she touched him, and he became whole and went away
-rejoicing.</p>
-
-<p>After this Bridget’s fame spread all over Ireland; and a man of
-the Britons, and his son, came to be healed; but she was at Mass,
-and sent to them to wait till Mass was over.</p>
-
-<p>Now the Britons are a hasty people, and the man said, “You
-healed your own people yesterday and you shall heal us to-day.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Bridget came forth and prayed over them, and they were
-healed.</p>
-
-<p>Another time, two lepers came to beg, and Bridget said, “I have
-but this one cow—take it between you and go in peace.”</p>
-
-<p>But one leper was proud, and made answer: “I shall divide my
-goods with no man. Give me the cow and I shall go.”</p>
-
-<p>And she gave it to him.</p>
-
-<p>Then the other leper said, “Give me your prayers, holy Bridget,
-I ask no more.”</p>
-
-<p>And she gave him her blessing. And as he turned to depart a
-man came in, and offered a cow as a present to the holy woman.</p>
-
-<p>“Now the Lord has blessed you,” she said to the humble leper.
-“Take this cow and depart to your home.”</p>
-
-<p>So the man drove the cow before him, and presently came up
-with the proud leper just at the ford of the river. “Cross you first,”
-said the proud leper, “there is not room for two,” and the humble
-leper crossed in safety with his cow; but when the other entered
-the ford, the river rose, and he and his cow were carried away and
-drowned, for the blessing of St. Bridget was not on him.</p>
-
-<p>Another time, two lepers came to be healed, and Bridget
-ordered one of them to wash the other; which he did, and the
-man was healed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">223</span></p>
-
-<p>“Now,” she said, “do to your comrade as he has done to you;
-wash him with water that he may be made clean of his leprosy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, veiled woman,” he answered, “why should I, that am
-clean now in body and limb, touch this filthy leper of the blue-grey
-skin? Ask me not to do this thing.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Bridget took water and washed the leper herself. Immediately
-the other who had been healed, cried out, “A fire is
-raging under my skin;” and the disease came again on him worse
-than ever. Thus was he punished for his pride.</p>
-
-<p>The lark is sacred to St. Bridget because its song woke her
-every morning to prayers, when she had service for the women
-who were her converts.</p>
-
-<p>The influence of St. Bridget remains a permanent power in
-Ireland even to this day, and she is much feared by the enemy of
-souls and the ill-doer. When Earl Strongbow was dying, he
-affirmed that he saw St. Bridget approaching his bed, and she
-struck him on the foot, and the wound she gave him mortified,
-and of this he died. This happened six hundred years after
-Bridget’s death.</p>
-
-<p>St. Bridget, throughout her long life, held the highest position
-and dignity in the Irish Church. She erected a temple in Kildare,
-ordained bishops, and was head and chief of all the sacred virgins.</p>
-
-<p>She also held equal rank with the archbishop; if he had an
-episcopal chair (<i>cathedra episcopalis</i>), so St. Bridget had a virginal
-chair (<i>cathedra puellaris</i>), and was pre-eminent above all the
-abbesses of Ireland, or of the Scots, for sanctity and power.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="ST_KIERAN">ST. KIERAN.</h3>
-
-
-<p>St. Kieran, also, did good service five hundred years after his
-death; for when a great chief and his band plundered Clonmacnoise
-and carried off the jewels from the shrine, the spirit of
-St. Kieran was seen in the doorway, crosier in hand, striking at
-the plunderers; and when they fled to their boat, St. Kieran raised
-up a strong wind that drove back the boat, and finally the chief
-robber was taken and put to death, having first confessed his
-crime, and testified as to St. Kieran’s wrath against him.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="ST_KEVIN">ST. KEVIN.</h3>
-
-
-<p>It is related of St. Kevin that after he had been seven years at
-Glendalough, a weariness of life came over him, and a longing to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">224</span>
-hear the voice of man once more. Then Satan came to him in
-the form of an angel, bright and beautiful, and persuaded him
-that he should quit the valley and travel abroad and see the
-world, while yet his youth was left to him. And St. Kevin was
-near yielding to the words of the tempter, when fortunately St.
-Munna came by that way, and he at once saw through the trick,
-and showed to St. Kevin that the advice was from the devil, and
-not from God. And St. Kevin promised St. Munna that he would
-never leave the valley till his death. However, God, not willing
-that the saint should eat his heart away in idleness, bade him build
-a monastery on the east of the lake, the place where the resurrection
-was to be; and he sent his angel to show him the exact
-spot.</p>
-
-<p>But St. Kevin, when he saw the place so wild and rude, could
-not help telling the friendly angel that it was very rugged and
-difficult to build on; and the stones were heavy and hard to be
-moved. Then the angel, to prevent any difficulty in the building,
-rendered the stones light and easy to move, and so the work of
-building went on to the glory of God; and St. Kevin rejoiced in
-the task set before him.</p>
-
-<p>And the monk who tells the story adds, that from that day in
-all the place which the angel appointed for the building, there is
-now no stone that cannot be lightly moved and easily worked all
-through the valley of Glendalough.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="CHRISTIAN_LEGENDS">CHRISTIAN LEGENDS.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The Round Tower of Clonmacnoise was never finished, for the
-monks objected to the price demanded by the chief mason; and one
-day that he was at the top of the tower, they said he should never
-come down till he lowered the price; and they removed the
-scaffolding.</p>
-
-<p>Then he said, “It is easier to pull down than to build a
-tower,” and he began to cast down stone by stone, so that he could
-descend in safety.</p>
-
-<p>On this the monks grew alarmed, and prayed him to desist and
-the price should be paid; so he came down at their request, but
-would never again lay hand to the work, so the tower remains unfinished
-to this day.</p>
-
-<p>The first bells ever used in all Ireland were hung at Clonmacnoise,
-but the people of Athlone, being jealous, came at night to
-steal the bells, and succeeded in carrying them away in a boat.
-However, before they got out of sight of the church, the boat
-went down, and the bells were never recovered, though the river
-was dragged from Athlone to Shannon Bridge.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">225</span></p>
-
-<p>At the seven churches of Clonmacnoise is to be seen the great
-cross of St. Kieran, beautifully carved of a stone not common to
-the country, called the Grecian stone, and if a woman can clasp
-the cross round with her arms she will never die in childbirth.</p>
-
-<p>At a pattern held there one time, a soldier from Athlone shot
-off the hand of a figure of St. Kieran, which was over the grand
-entrance, but returning home he fell from the boat, and was
-drowned in the very spot where the bells went down a hundred
-years before.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>At Saints’ Island, in the Shannon, the ruins of a monastery,
-which was destroyed by King John, may still be seen. When the
-monks, broken-hearted and beggared, were leaving their beautiful
-home, one of them kneeled down and prayed to God for forgiveness
-of his enemies. Immediately a well of pure water sprang up
-where the monk had knelt; and the water even to this day is
-held by the people to have the power to cure all diseases, if the
-soul of the patient, as he drinks of the well, is free from all
-malice and the desire of revenge upon those who may have injured
-him.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="SWEARING_STONES_AND_RELICS">SWEARING STONES AND RELICS.</h3>
-
-
-<h4>THE CREMAVE.</h4>
-
-<p>In the old churchyard of the monastery at Saints’ Island, there is
-an ancient black marble flagstone; and the monks gave it power
-as <i>A Revealer of Truth</i>, and it is called the <i>Cremave</i>, or Swearing
-Stone.</p>
-
-<p>Any one suspected of sin or crime is brought here from the
-country round, and if the accused swears falsely, the stone has the
-power to set a mark upon him and his race for seven generations.
-But if no mark appears then he is known to be innocent; and as
-long as the world lasts, the stone is to have this power, for so the
-monks decreed; and with many holy and mystic ceremonies
-they gave it consecration, as the “Revealer of Truth.” And
-though the English burned the monastery and defaced the altar
-and carried off the holy vessels, yet they had no power over the
-Cremave, or Swearing Stone, which remains to this day.</p>
-
-<p>Many years ago, so runs the tale, a murder was committed in
-the neighbourhood, and a certain man being suspected as the murderer,
-he was forced to go to the “clearing stone”; for the people
-said, “If he is innocent, the Cremave will clear him; and if
-guilty, let him suffer for his crime.”</p>
-
-<p>So, on the appointed day, he went with his friends and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">226</span>
-accuser to the Swearing Stone; and there he was met by the
-priest, who adjured him to speak the truth in presence of all the
-people and before the face of God.</p>
-
-<p>The man laid his hand upon the stone, and solemnly swore that
-he was innocent; but instantly his right arm was shrivelled up,
-his feet failed, and he was carried home a miserable cripple, and
-so remained to the end of his life.</p>
-
-<p>Some weeks after a daughter was born to him, who bore across
-her forehead the impress of a bloody hand; and every one of his
-descendants have some strange mark, by which the people know
-that the race is accursed to the seventh generation; after which
-time the doom will be lifted, and the expiation made for the
-crime and the perjury will be considered sufficient by the Lord in
-heaven, who will then grant to the race pardon and grace at last.</p>
-
-
-<h4>RELICS FOR CLEARING FROM GUILT.</h4>
-
-<p>Another relic held in reverence for swearing on by an accused
-person is St. Finian’s Dish. This was found about one hundred
-and fifty years ago, buried in the ruins of an old abbey. It is of
-silver with stones set in it, which, the people say, are the eyes of
-Christ looking at them while they swear. And when the dish is
-shaken a rattling noise is heard, which they believe is made by
-the Virgin Mary’s bones that are enclosed therein.</p>
-
-<p>Should a false oath be taken on the relic, the perjurer will at
-once be stricken by disease, and die before the year is out. And
-so great is the terror inspired by this belief, that men have fainted
-from fear when brought up to swear on it. This is done by
-placing the hand on the cross that is engraved in the centre of the
-dish, while the two eyes of Christ are fixed on the swearer who
-comes for clearance from guilt.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The <i>Ghar-Barra</i>, or Crosier of St. Barry, is also a holy relic once
-overlaid with gold, on which it was the custom to take a clearing
-oath; as the people held it in great reverence, and nothing was
-more dreaded than the consequence of a false oath on the <i>Ghar-Barra</i>.
-Once a man who swore falsely thereon had his mouth
-turned awry, and it so remained to his life’s end, a proof of the
-saint’s hatred for the sin of perjury. The relic is kept covered
-carefully with green cloth, and whoever is brought to take a
-clearing oath thereon must first lay down a small piece of silver
-for the guardian of the shrine.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">227</span></p>
-
-
-<h4>INNIS-MURRY.</h4>
-
-<p>At Innis-Murry, Sligo, there is a large table-stone supported on
-eight perpendicular stones as a pedestal. And on the table are
-seventy-three stones, from five to twenty inches in circumference,
-which have been lying there from the most ancient times; for to
-remove them would be at the peril of one’s life.</p>
-
-<p>On these seventy-three stones all the anathematic spirit of the
-island is concentrated. If the islanders suffer any injury, real or
-supposed, they come and turn these stones, uttering a malediction
-over their enemy, and should he be guilty he will assuredly die,
-or suffer some calamity before the year is out.</p>
-
-<p>A Scripture reader, having boldly taken away one of these
-stones to show the folly of the superstition, was obliged to restore
-it and to quit the island, or his life would not have been safe.</p>
-
-<p>There is another stone on the island where alone can fires be
-lighted, should all the domestic fires become extinct, and the
-spark must be struck from the stone itself.</p>
-
-<p>Innis-Murry is a desolate spot, rarely visited; the approach is
-so dangerous on account of the sunken rocks. The crops are
-scanty, and the soil is poor and light, growing only a short
-herbage of a spiral and sharp kind. Neither scythe nor sickle could
-be used in the entire island. Meal is unknown, and dairy produce
-scarcely to be had, as the grass can only support a few sheep; but
-the islanders have fish in abundance, crabs, lobsters, and mackerel
-especially.</p>
-
-<p>A traveller, who visited the island about fifty years ago, describes
-the manners and mode of living as most primitive; but the
-women have the reputation of being exceedingly virtuous, and
-the households are happy and well conducted. At that time a
-rude stone image was venerated by the people, called “Father
-Molosh,” but supposed to be an ancient pagan idol, probably
-Moloch. The priest, however, has since had it destroyed.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">228</span></p>
-
-
-<h2 id="MYSTERIES_OF_FAIRY_POWER">MYSTERIES OF FAIRY POWER.</h2>
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_EVIL_STROKE">THE EVIL STROKE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Some persons are possessed naturally with the power of the Evil
-Stroke, but it is not considered at all so unlucky as the Evil Eye;
-for the person who has it does not act from intentional malice but
-from necessity, from a force within him which acts without his
-will, and often to his deep regret: as in hurling matches, where a
-chance stroke of his may do serious injury, and even the dust of
-the earth raised by his foot has blinded his opponent for a week.</p>
-
-<p>One day a young man, while wrestling with another in play at
-a fair, where they met by chance, struck him on the arm, which
-immediately became fixed and powerless as stone. His friends
-brought him home, but nothing would restore the power of the
-arm or bring back the life; so after he had lain in this state for
-three days his family sent for the young man who had struck
-him, to ask for his help. When he came and saw the arm stiff as
-stone, he anointed it all over with spittle, making also the sign of
-the cross; and after some time the arm began to move again with
-life, and finally was quite restored. But the young man of the Evil
-Stroke was so dismayed at this proof of the strange power in him,
-that he would never again join in sports for fear of some unlucky
-accident.</p>
-
-<p>The power, however, is sometimes very useful, as in the case of
-attack from a bull or a ferocious dog; for a touch from the hand
-of a person possessing the Evil Stroke at once quells the madness
-in the animal, who will crouch down trembling with fear, and
-become as incapable of doing injury as if suddenly and powerfully
-mesmerized.</p>
-
-<p>But the power does not come by volition, only at intervals;
-and the person possessing it does not himself know the moment
-when it can be effectively exercised.</p>
-
-<p>Women, also, have the mysterious gift of this strange occult
-force, and one young girl was much dreaded in the country
-in consequence; for anything struck by her, beast or man, became
-instantly paralyzed, as if turned to stone. One day, at a hurling
-match, she threw a lump of clay at the winner in anger, because<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">229</span>
-her own lover had failed to win the prize. Immediately the
-young victor fell down stunned and lifeless, and was so carried
-home to his mother. Then they sent in all haste for the young
-girl to restore him to consciousness; but she was so frightened
-at her own evil work that she went and hid herself. Finding it
-then impossible to bring her, his friends sent for the fairy doctor,
-who, by dint of many charms and much stroking, at last restored
-the young man to life. The girl, however, was in such dread
-of the curses of the mother, that she fled, and took service in
-a distant part of the country. And all the people rejoiced much
-over her departure from amongst them.</p>
-
-<p>Yet it was considered lucky in some ways to have a fairy-stricken
-child in the house, for the fairies generally did a good
-turn by the family to compensate for the evil. And so there was
-always plenty of butter in the churn, and the cattle did not
-sicken wherever there was a stricken child.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is also lucky to employ a half-simpleton about the farm, and
-to be kind to the deaf and dumb, and other afflicted creatures.
-No one in Ireland would harm them or turn them out of their
-way, and they always get food and drink for the asking, without
-any payment being thought of or accepted.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_CHANGELING">THE CHANGELING.</h3>
-
-
-<p>A woman was one night lying awake while her husband slept,
-when the door suddenly opened and a tall dark man entered, of
-fierce aspect, followed by an old hag with a child in her arms—a
-little, misshapen, sickly-looking little thing. They both sat
-down by the fire to warm themselves, and after some time
-the man looked over at the cradle that stood beside the mother’s
-bed with her boy in it, and kept his eyes on it for several
-minutes. Then he rose, and when the mother saw him walking
-over direct to the cradle, she fainted and knew no more.</p>
-
-<p>When she came to herself she called to her husband, and bade
-him light a candle; this he did, on which the old hag in the
-corner rose up at once and blew it out. Then he lit it a second
-time, and it was blown out; and still a third time he lit the
-candle, when again it was blown out, and a great peal of laughter
-was heard in the darkness.</p>
-
-<p>On this the man grew terribly angry, and taking up the tongs
-he made a blow at the hag; but she slipped away, and struck him
-on the arm with a stick she held in her hand. Then he grew<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">230</span>
-more furious, and beat her on the head till she roared, when
-he pushed her outside and locked the door.</p>
-
-<p>After this he lit the candle in peace; but when they looked at
-the cradle, lo! in place of their own beautiful boy, a hideous
-little creature, all covered with hair, lay grinning at them.
-Great was their grief and lamentation, and both the man and his
-wife wept and wailed aloud for the loss of their child, and
-the cry of their sorrow was bitter to hear.</p>
-
-<p>Just then the door suddenly opened, and a young woman came
-in, with a scarlet handkerchief wound round her head.</p>
-
-<p>“What are you crying for,” she asked, “at this time of night,
-when every one should be asleep?”</p>
-
-<p>“Look at this child in the cradle,” answered the man, “and
-you will cease to wonder why we mourn and are sad at heart.”
-And he told her all the story.</p>
-
-<p>When the young woman went over to the cradle and looked at
-the child, she laughed, but said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>“Your laughter is stranger than our tears,” said the man.
-“Why do you laugh in the face of our sorrows?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because,” she said, “this is my child that was stolen from me
-to-night; for I am one of the fairy race, and my people, who live
-under the fort on the hill, thought your boy was a fine child, and
-so they changed the babies in the cradle; but, after all, I would
-rather have my own, ugly as he is, than any mortal child in the
-world. So now I’ll tell you how to get back your own son, and
-I’ll take away mine at once. Go to the old fort on the hill when
-the moon is full, and take with you three sheafs of corn and some
-fire, and burn them one after the other. And when the last sheaf
-is burning, an old man will come up through the smoke, and
-he will ask you what it is you desire. Then tell him you must
-have your child back, or you will burn down the fort, and leave
-no dwelling-place for his people on the hill. Now, the fairies
-cannot stand against the power of fire, and they will give you
-back your child at the mere threat of burning the fort. But mind,
-take good care of him after, and tie a nail from a horse-shoe
-round his neck, and then he will be safe.”</p>
-
-<p>With that the young woman took up the ugly little imp from
-the cradle in her arms, and was away before they could see
-how she got out of the house.</p>
-
-<p>Next night, when the moon was full, the man went to the old
-fort with the three sheafs of corn and the fire, and burned them
-one after the other; and as the second was lighted there came up
-an old man and asked him what was his desire.</p>
-
-<p>“I must have my child again that was stolen,” he answered,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">231</span>
-“or I’ll burn down every tree on the hill, and not leave you a
-stone of the fort where you can shelter any more with your fairy
-kindred.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the old man vanished, and there was a great silence, but
-no one appeared.</p>
-
-<p>On this the father grew angry, and he called out in a loud
-voice, “I am lifting the third sheaf now, and I’ll burn and destroy
-and make desolate your dwelling-place, if my child is not returned.”</p>
-
-<p>Then a great tumult and clamour was heard in the fort, and a
-voice said, “Let it be. The power of the fire is too strong for
-us. Bring forth the child.”</p>
-
-<p>And presently the old man appeared, carrying the child in
-his arms.</p>
-
-<p>“Take him,” he said. “By the spell of the fire, and the corn
-you have conquered. But take my advice, draw a circle of fire,
-with a hot coal this night, round the cradle when you go home,
-and the fairy power cannot touch him any more, by reason of
-the fire.”</p>
-
-<p>So the man did as he was desired, and by the spell of fire
-and of corn the child was saved from evil, and he grew and
-prospered. And the old fort stands to this day safe from
-harm, for the man would allow no hand to move a stone or harm
-a tree; and the fairies still dance there on the rath, when the
-moon is full, to the music of the fairy pipes, and no one hinders
-them.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_FAIRY_DOCTOR">THE FAIRY DOCTOR.</h3>
-
-
-<p>If a healthy child suddenly droops and withers, that child is
-fairy-struck, and a fairy doctor must be at once called in. Young
-girls also, who fall into rapid decline, are said to be fairy-struck;
-for they are wanted in Fairy-land as brides for some chief or
-prince, and so they pine away without visible cause till they die.</p>
-
-<p>The other malign influences that act fatally on life are the Wind
-and the Evil Eye. The evil power of the Wind is called a fairy-blast;
-while, of one suffering from the Evil Eye, they say he has
-been “overlooked.”</p>
-
-<p>The fairy doctor must pronounce from which of these three
-causes the patient is suffering. The fairy-stroke, or the fairy-blast,
-or the Evil Eye; but he must take no money for the opinion
-given. He is paid in some other way; by free gracious offerings
-in gratitude for help given.</p>
-
-<p>A person who visited a great fairy doctor for advice, thus
-describes the process of cure at the interview:—</p>
-
-<p>“The doctor always seems as if expecting you, and had full
-knowledge of your coming. He bids you be seated, and after
-looking fixedly on your face for some moments, his proceedings<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">232</span>
-begin. He takes three rods of witch hazel, each three inches
-long, and marks them separately, ‘For the Stroke,’ ‘For the
-Wind,‘ ‘For the Evil Eye.’ This is to ascertain from which of
-these three evils you suffer. He then takes off his coat, shoes,
-and stockings; rolls up his shirt sleeves, and stands with his face
-to the sun in earnest prayer. After prayer he takes a dish of pure
-water and sets it by the fire, then kneeling down, he puts the
-three hazel rods he had marked into the fire, and leaves them
-there till they are burned black as charcoal. All the time his
-prayers are unceasing; and when the sticks are burned, he rises,
-and again faces the sun in silent prayer, standing with his
-eyes uplifted and hands crossed. After this he draws a circle
-on the floor with the end of one of the burned sticks, within which
-circle he stands, the dish of pure water beside him. Into this he
-flings the three hazel rods, and watches the result earnestly. The
-moment one sinks he addresses a prayer to the sun, and taking
-the rod out of the water he declares by what agency the patient
-is afflicted. Then he grinds the rod to powder, puts it in a bottle
-which he fills up with water from the dish, and utters an incantation
-or prayer over it, in a low voice, with clasped hands held
-over the bottle. But what the words of the prayer are no one
-knows, they are kept as solemn mysteries, and have been handed
-down from father to son through many generations, from the
-most ancient times. The potion is then given to be carried home,
-and drunk that night at midnight in silence and alone. Great
-care must be taken that the bottle never touches the ground;
-and the person carrying it must speak no word, and never
-look round till home is reached. The other two sticks he buries
-in the earth in some place unseen and unknown. If none of the
-three sticks sink in the water, then he uses herbs as a cure.
-Vervain, eyebright, and yarrow are favourite remedies, and all
-have powerful properties known to the adept; but the words and
-prayers he utters over them are kept secret, and whether they
-are good or bad, or addressed to Deity or to a demon, none but
-himself can tell.”</p>
-
-<p>These are the visible mysteries of the fairy doctor while working
-out his charms and incantations. But other fairy doctors
-only perform the mysteries in private, and allow no one to see
-their mode of operation or witness the act of prayer.</p>
-
-<p>If a potion is made up of herbs it must be paid for in silver
-but charms and incantations are never paid for, or they would lose
-their power. A present, however, may be accepted as an offering
-of gratitude.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">233</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h3 id="THE_POETS_SPELL">THE POET’S SPELL.</h3>
-
-
-<p>A very ancient story, as old as the tenth century, is narrated, and
-firmly believed by the people, that once on a time when the
-reapers were at work, a fine handsome young married woman, who
-was in the field with them, suddenly fell down dead. This caused
-a great fear and consternation, especially as it was asserted that
-just before the fatal event, a fairy blast had passed over the field,
-carrying a cloud of dust and stones with it; and there could be no
-doubt but that the fairies had rushed by in the cloud, and struck
-the woman dead as they passed.</p>
-
-<p>Then her people sent for the great wise poet of the tribe, who
-was reputed to have the power by his song to break the strongest
-fairy spells: and he chanted low music over her, and uttered
-mystic incantations, the words of which no man heard; but after
-a while the woman unclosed her eyes and rose up, restored to life.</p>
-
-<p>When they questioned her, she told them all she knew.</p>
-
-<p>“In sickness I was,” she said, “and I appeared to be dead, for
-I could neither speak nor move, till the song of the poet gave me
-power. Then the life rose up in me again, and the strength, and
-I was healed.”</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="CHARM_FOR_THE_FAIRY_STROKE">CHARM FOR THE FAIRY STROKE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>There is a very ancient and potent charm which may be tried
-with great effect in case of a suspected fairy-stroke.</p>
-
-<p>Place three rows of salt on a table in three lines, three equal
-measures to each row. The person performing the spell then
-encloses the rows of salt with his arm, leaning his head down
-over them, while he repeats the Lord’s Prayer three times over
-each row—that is, nine times in all. Then he takes the hand of
-the one who has been fairy-struck, and says over it,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">234</span> “By the
-power of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, let
-this disease depart, and the spell of the evil spirits be broken! I
-adjure, I command you to leave this man [naming him]. In the
-name of God I pray; in the name of Christ I adjure; in the name
-of the Spirit of God I command and compel you to go back and
-leave this man free! <span class="smcap">Amen! Amen! Amen!</span>”</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_FARMERS_FATE">THE FARMER’S FATE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The peasants have the greatest dread of the fairy-stroke, and
-consider it the most dangerous indication of fairy hostility.
-When a person is struck, he becomes wholly insensible to external
-things, as if his soul had been taken out of him and carried away.</p>
-
-<p>A farmer once began to build a barn on a fairy circle, to the
-great horror of the neighbours, who warned him of the danger;
-but he only laughed at their nonsense, and built and finished his
-barn on the fairy rath.</p>
-
-<p>However, riding home one evening after sunset, he was
-suddenly “struck,” and fell insensible to the ground. They
-carried him home and laid him on his bed, where he lay for
-several days, his eyes fixed and staring without any motion of the
-eyelids, and no indication of life remaining, except his colour
-which never changed.</p>
-
-<p>All the doctors came and looked at him, but could do nothing.
-There was no fracture nor injury of any kind to his frame; so the
-doctors shook their heads and went their way, saying they would
-call again in a day or two. But the family objected to delay, and
-sent at once for the great fairy doctor of the district. The
-moment he came he threw herbs on the fire, when a fragrant smell
-filled the room like church incense. Then he pounded some herbs
-and mixed a liquid with them, but what the herbs were, no one
-knew. And with this mixture he touched the brow and the lips
-and the hands of the man, and sprinkled the rest over his insensible
-form. After this he told them to keep silence round him for two
-hours, when he would return and finish the cure. And so it
-happened, for in two hours the life came back to the man, though
-he could not speak. But strength came gradually; and by the
-next day he rose up, and said he had dreamed a dream, and heard
-a voice saying to him, “Pull down the barn, for ill-luck is on it.”
-Accordingly he gave orders to his men, and every stick and stone
-was carried away, and the fairy rath left free again for the fairies
-to dance on, as in the olden time, when they were the gods of the
-earth, long before men came to dispute their rights, and take
-possession of their ancient pleasure grounds—an indignity no
-high-spirited fairy could calmly endure. For in their councils
-they had decreed that the fairy rath, at least, should be sacred for
-all time, and woe to the man who builds his house thereon. An
-evil fate is on him and on the house for evermore. Down it must
-come, or the evil spell will never be lifted. There is no hope for
-it, for the most dangerous and subtle of all enemies is an angry
-fairy.</p>
-
-<p>Nor should the paths even be crossed by work of human hand,
-which the fairies traverse from one palace to another. Their line of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">235</span>
-march must not be impeded. Finvarra and his men would resent
-such a gross insult to the royal fairy rights, and severely punish
-the audacious and offending mortal. Not even the Grand Jury
-would be allowed to interfere, for if they did, every man of them
-would be demolished in some way or other by fairy power.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_FAIRY_RATH_2">THE FAIRY RATH.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The fairies, beside being revengeful, are also very arrogant, and
-allow no interference with their old-established rights.</p>
-
-<p>There is a rath in the Queen’s County, only four yards in
-diameter, but held so sacred as the fairies’ dancing ground that no
-one dared to remove a handful of earth from the mound; and at
-night the sweetest low music may be heard floating round the hill,
-as if played by silver bagpipes.</p>
-
-<p>One evening a boy lay down on the rath to listen to the music,
-and, without thinking, began to gather up balls of the clay and
-fling them hither and thither in sport, when suddenly he was
-struck down by a violent blow and became senseless.</p>
-
-<p>There he was found by his people, who went to search for him;
-and when he came to himself he bleated like a calf, and it was a
-long time before he recovered his reason, for the power of the
-fairies is great, and none can resist it.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">236</span></p>
-
-
-<h2 id="THE_HOLY_WELLS">THE HOLY WELLS</h2>
-
-
-<p>There is no superstition stronger in Ireland than a belief in the
-curative power of the sacred wells that are scattered over the
-country; fountains of health and healing which some saint had
-blessed, or by which some saint had dwelt in the far-off ancient
-times. But well-worship is even older than Christianity. It is
-part of the early ritual of humanity, brought from the Eastern
-lands by the first Aryan tribes who migrated westward, passing
-along from the Mediterranean to the Atlantic shores.</p>
-
-<p>The Delphic oracle in its origin was nothing more than a holy
-well, shadowed by trees, on which were hung the votive offerings
-of the praying peasants, long before the rival kings brought to the
-sacred spot their votive tributes of silver and gold, and crowns of
-precious stones.</p>
-
-<p>In Ireland the beautiful, picturesque, and tree-shadowed wells
-of the country were held sacred by the Druid priests, as is evident
-from the many remarkable Druidical remains that have been found
-in their vicinity—ruins of temples and pillar-stones, and stones
-with strange carvings. Much also of the ancient Druidic
-ceremonial has been preserved by the people, such as the symbolic
-dances, the traditions of sun-worship, and other pagan rites, which
-were incorporated into the Christian ritual of well-worship by the
-early converts, and are still retained, though, through the lapse of
-ages, they have entirely lost their original significance, and are
-now only practised as ancient customs, for which the Irish have
-great reverence, as having come down to them from their forefathers.
-The ceremonial is the same at all these places of devout
-pilgrimage. The pilgrims go round the well a certain number of
-times, either three or nine, creeping on their hands and knees, but
-always from east to west, following the apparent motion of the
-sun, and reciting paters and aves all the time. At the close of
-each round they build up a small pile of stones; for at the last
-day the angels will reckon these stones, and he who has said the
-most prayers will have the highest place in heaven, each saint
-keeping count for his own votaries. The patient then descends
-the broken steps to the well and, kneeling down, bathes his forehead
-and hands in the water, after which oblation the pain or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">237</span>
-disease he suffered from will be gradually removed, and depart
-from him for evermore.</p>
-
-<p>At some wells there is often a rude stone monument of the
-ancient times, and the eyes of the pilgrim must be kept steadily
-fixed on it while reciting the prayers.</p>
-
-<p>Whenever a white-thorn or an ash-tree shadows the place, the
-well is held to be peculiarly sacred; and on leaving, having first
-drunk of the water, the patient ties a votive offering to the branches—generally
-a coloured handkerchief or a bright red strip cut from
-a garment; and these offerings are never removed. They remain
-for years fluttering in the wind and the rain, just as travellers
-have described the votive offerings on the sacred trees that
-shadow the holy wells of Persia. They are signs and tokens of
-gratitude to the patron saint, and are meant to show the devil that
-he has no longer power to harm the praying pilgrim, or torment
-him with pains and aches as heretofore. It is not supposed that
-the water of the well has any natural medicinal properties. The
-curative efficacy is wholly due to the observance of the ritual in
-honour of the saint, whose spirit and influence is still over the
-well, by which he lived, and of which he drank while living on
-the earth.</p>
-
-
-<h4>THE WHITE STONES.</h4>
-
-<p>At many of the wells quantities of beautiful white stones are
-found that glitter in the sun, and these are highly esteemed by
-the pilgrims to build up their prayer monuments.</p>
-
-<p>One day some women were eagerly collecting these stones, after
-each round of praying, in order to build up a monument; when
-suddenly a strain of soft, exquisite music seemed to rise up from
-the water and float by them. In their joy and wonder the women
-clapped their hands and laughed aloud, when instantly the music
-ceased and the pile of stones fell down. By which sign they
-knew that they should not have laughed while the angels were
-singing; and they fell on their knees and prayed.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A holy well once lost all its power because a murder had been
-committed near it; and another because it was cursed by a priest
-in consequence of the immorality that prevailed at the patterns.</p>
-
-
-<h4>THE SACRED TROUT.</h4>
-
-<p>The water of the sacred well must never be used for household
-purposes—cooking, washing, or the like. But after the well was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">238</span>
-cursed by the priest, and the tents were struck, and no pattern
-was held there any longer, it lost all its sanctity, and was no
-longer held sacred by the people, who began to fill their pails,
-and carry the water away home for cooking and household use;
-while also they all washed their clothes down at the well, just as
-if no sanctity had ever been in the water.</p>
-
-<p>However, one day a woman having put down a pot of water to
-boil, found that no amount of fire would heat it. Still it remained
-ice-cold, as if just drawn from the well. So she looked carefully
-into the pot, and there beheld the Sacred Speckled Trout sailing
-round and round quite contented and happy. On seeing this, she
-knew that the curse was lifted from the well, and she ran and
-told the priest. His reverence having seen the Sacred Trout with
-his own eyes, ordered it to be carried back to the well, the water
-of which at once regained all its sacred powers by the blessing of
-the priest; and he gave the people leave thenceforth to hold their
-pattern there, so as they behaved themselves like decent, God-fearing
-Christians for the future. But the water was not allowed
-to be carried away any more to their houses for household purposes;
-the desecration of the holy water of a sacred well being
-strictly forbidden as dangerous and unlucky.</p>
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="ST_AUGUSTINES_WELL">ST. AUGUSTINE’S WELL.</h3>
-
-
-<p>At a holy well in the south, dedicated to St. Augustine, the friars
-began to build a convent. And during all the hours of work bells
-were heard ringing sweetly and voices singing; but one day
-a woman came and washed her feet in the water of the well, and
-thereupon all the bells ceased and the singing stopped, and the
-work could not go on. So the friars chose another site, and they
-drew a circle round it, within which no woman was to set her
-foot; and after this the bells began to ring again and the voices
-sang, and the work went on safely till the convent was completed
-in the name of God and St. Augustine; but no woman during all
-that time ever set foot on the holy ground.</p>
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_GRILLED_TROUT">THE GRILLED TROUT.</h3>
-
-
-<p>In Sligo there is a well called <i>Tober-na-alt</i>, beautifully shadowed
-by trees, the branches of which are thickly hung with all sorts of
-votive offerings from those who have been cured by the water;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">239</span>
-and miracle-men attended, who professed to heal diseases by
-charms, prayers, and incantations.</p>
-
-<p>A man who had been born blind once recited his experiences
-there. “Oh, Christians, look on me! I was blind from my
-birth and saw no light till I came to the blessed well; now I see
-the water and the speckled trout down at the bottom, with the
-white cross on his back. Glory be to God for the cure.” And
-when the people heard that he could really see the speckled trout,
-of course they all believed in the miracle. For a tradition exists
-that a sacred trout has lived there from time immemorial, placed
-in the well by the saint who first sanctified the water. Now there
-was an adventurous man who desired much to get possession of
-this trout, and he watched it till at last he caught it asleep.
-Then he carried it off and put it on the gridiron. The trout bore
-the grilling of one side very patiently; but when the man tried
-to turn it on the fire, the trout suddenly jumped up and made off
-as hard as it could back to the well, where it still lives, and can
-be seen at times by those who have done proper penance and paid
-their dues to the priest, with one side all streaked and marked
-brown by the bars of the gridiron, which can never be effaced.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="LEGEND_OF_NEAL-MOR">LEGEND OF NEAL-MOR.</h3>
-
-
-<p>There is a great hole or well near the river Suir, always filled
-with water, whose depth no man has yet fathomed. Near it is a
-castle, which in old times belonged to a powerful chief called
-<i>Neal-mor</i>. One day while his servants were saving the hay, a
-violent tempest of wind and rain came on, which quite destroyed
-the crop. Then Neal-mor was filled with rage, and he mounted
-his horse and drew his sword, and rode forth to the field; and
-there he challenged the Lord God Himself to battle. And he
-swung his sword round his head and struck at the air, as if
-he would kill and slay the Great Invisible Spirit. On which suddenly
-a strange thing happened, for a great whirlwind arose and
-the earth opened, and Neal-mor, still astride on his horse and
-with his sword in his hand, was lifted high up into the air and
-then cast down alive into the great hole, called <i>Poul-mor</i>, which
-may be seen to this day, and the castle is still standing by the
-margin. But no trace of Neal-mor or his steed was ever again
-beheld. They perished utterly by the vengeance of God.</p>
-
-<p>But some time after his disappearance, a rude stone figure
-seated on a horse, was cast up out of the earth; and then all men
-knew the fate of the terrible chief who had braved the wrath of
-God, for here was his image and the sign of his destruction. The
-stone figure is still preserved at the castle, and tradition says that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">240</span>
-if it were removed, the whole castle would crumble to pieces in a
-single night and be cast into the <i>Poul-mor</i>.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="ST_JOHNS_WELL">ST. JOHN’S WELL.</h3>
-
-
-<p>At St. John’s well, County Cork, there is a large stone, believed
-to be the real true head of John the Baptist, grown hard and solid
-from time and the action of the elements. And the stone has
-certainly a rude resemblance to a human head.</p>
-
-<p>Suspected persons are brought to swear on it for a clearing from
-guilt; for it is held in high reverence. Compacts are also made
-there, which are held inviolate, for no one who swears with his
-hand on the stone, would ever dream of breaking the oath, and
-each person present as witness scratches a cross on the surface
-with a sharp piece of slate.</p>
-
-<p>A number of pagan remains are in the vicinity, but they are
-now held in reverence as places of Christian sanctity.</p>
-
-<p>Some time ago an ancient stone image was dug up from the
-earth, which antiquarians pronounced to be a pagan idol, probably
-the Irish Siva. This was at first consecrated as Saint Gobnath,
-but afterwards the priest destroyed the image with his own
-hands.</p>
-
-<p>All the paths round the well are marked deep by the lines of
-praying pilgrims who go round it on their knees. And there are
-piles of the little stones that mark the prayers of the penitents,
-all ready for the angels to count. Most of the stones are of pure
-quartz, white and glistening, and these are highly esteemed.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_WELL_OF_FIONN_MA-COUL">THE WELL OF FIONN MA-COUL.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The ancient churches and cells of the saints were generally
-placed in the vicinity of a well, which then became sanctified and
-endowed with miraculous healing power. Or the well may have
-been held sacred by the Druids, and the scene of their pagan
-rites; therefore selected by the saint specially as his dwelling-place,
-so that he might bring it under the fosterage and holy
-influence of Christianity.</p>
-
-<p>The grave of the great Fionn was laid by a celebrated well in
-the County Cork, and it is certain that a massive human jawbone
-was found there not long ago, far exceeding in size the bones of
-the present race of men. This jawbone was sent to London to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">241</span>
-inspected by the learned philosophers, but was never returned—a
-great and grievous wrong to the renowned Irish chief, for no
-doubt the mighty Fionn will want it badly at the last day, when
-he is gathering up his bones to appear before the Lord.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="ST_SEENANS_WELL">ST. SEENAN’S WELL.</h3>
-
-
-<p>There is a place on the shore of Scattery Island, where, according
-to the most ancient tradition, a sacred well once existed, with
-miraculous curative powers. But no one could ever discover the
-place, for at high water the sea covered every point up to the
-edge of the land, and the shifting sand made all efforts to find the
-locality of the well vain and fruitless.</p>
-
-<p>But one day a young man who was lame in both legs from the
-effects of a fall, and much disabled in consequence, was going
-along the shore with some companions, when he suddenly sank up
-to his waist in the sand. With much difficulty, and after a long
-while, his comrades managed to haul him up, when to their
-amazement they found that his legs were now quite straight, and
-he stood up before them four inches taller than before he sank
-down into the sand.</p>
-
-<p>So at once they knew that the sacred well must have worked
-the cure, and they dug and dug and cleared away the sand, till at
-last they came on some ancient steps, and down below lay the
-well, clear and fresh, and untouched by the salt of the sea, the
-holy well of St. Seenan, that their fathers and forefathers had
-vainly looked for.</p>
-
-<p>Now there was great rejoicing in the country when the news
-spread; and all the people from far and near who had pains and
-ailments rushed off to the well and drank of the waters and
-poured libations of it over their persons, wherever the pain or
-the disease lay, and in a short time wonderful cures were effected.
-So next day still greater crowds arrived to try their good luck.
-But when they came to the place, not a vestige of the well could
-be found. The sand and the sea had covered all, and from that
-day to this the holy well of St. Seenan has never been seen by
-mortal eyes.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="KIL-NA-GREINA">KIL-NA-GREINA.</h3>
-
-
-<p><i>Tober Kil-na-Greina</i> (the well of the fountain of the sun) was
-discovered only about eighty years ago, by a strange chance in
-the County Cork.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">242</span></p>
-
-<p>The land was a desolate marsh, no one built on it, and nothing
-grew on it or near it. But a large grey stone lay there, with
-a natural hollow in the centre that would hold about a gallon of
-water, and close by were the remains of an old pagan fort.</p>
-
-<p>One day, the farmer who owned the land carried off this great
-grey stone to use as a drinking trough for his cattle. But not
-long after all the cattle grew sick, and then all the children
-sickened, so the farmer said there was ill luck in the business, and
-he carried back the stone to its old place, on which all the household
-recovered their health. Thereupon the farmer began to
-think there must be something wonderful and mysterious in the
-locality, so he had the marsh thoroughly drained, after which
-process they came upon an ancient stone circle, and in the midst
-was a well of beautiful fresh water. Some people said there was
-writing on the stones, and strange carvings; but it was generally
-believed to be a Druid temple and oracle, for there was a tradition
-that a woman called the <i>Ban-na-Naomha</i> (the nymph of the well)
-had once lived there—and that she had the gift of prophecy, and
-uttered oracles to those who sought her at the shrine by the well;
-and there was a little wooden image of her, also, that used to
-speak to the people—so it was said and believed. It is certain,
-however, that a pagan temple once existed there, for which reason
-St. Patrick cursed the land and turned it into a marsh, and the
-well was hidden for a thousand years, according to St. Patrick’s
-word.</p>
-
-<p>On the discovery of the well the whole country flocked to it for
-cures. Tents were erected and a pattern was organized, which
-went on for some years with great success, and many authentic
-instances are recorded of marvellous miracles performed there.</p>
-
-<p>The ritual observed was very strict at the beginning, three
-draughts of water were taken by the pilgrims, the number of
-drinks three, the number of rounds on their knees were three, thus
-making the circuit of the well nine times. After each round the
-pilgrim laid a stone on the ancient altar in the Druid circle, called
-“the well of the sun,” and these stones, named in Irish “the
-stones of the sun,” are generally pure white, and about the size of
-a pigeon’s egg. They have a beautiful appearance after rain when
-the sun shines on them, and were doubtless held sacred to the sun
-in pagan times. The angels will reckon these stones at the last
-day, but each particular saint will take charge of his own votaries
-and see that the stones are properly counted, for each man will
-receive forgiveness according to their number.</p>
-
-<p>But gradually the revelry at the pattern gave occasion for so
-much scandal, that the priest denounced the well from the altar,
-along with all the wickedness it fostered and encouraged. Still
-the people would not give up the pattern, and the drinking, and
-dancing, and gambling, and fighting went on worse than ever,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">243</span>
-until one day a man was killed. After this a curse seemed to
-have fallen on the place. The well lost all its miraculous powers,
-no cures were effected; the maimed, the halt, and the blind prayed
-before it, and went the rounds, and piled the stones as usual, but
-no help came, and worst sign of all, a great pagan stone on which
-a cross had been erected, fell down of its own accord, and the
-cross lay shattered on the ground. Then all the people knew that
-the curse of blood and of St. Patrick was indeed over the well; so
-it was deserted, and the tents were struck, and no pattern was
-ever held there any more, for the virtue of healing had gone from
-“the fountain of the sun,” and never has come back to it through
-all the years.</p>
-
-<p>Even the <i>Ban-Naomha</i>, the nymph of the fountain, who used
-to manifest herself occasionally to the regenerate under the form
-of a trout, disappeared at the same time, and though she may be
-heard of at other sacred wells, was never again seen by the devout
-pilgrims who watched for her appearance at the <i>Tober-kil-na-Greina</i>.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_WELL_OF_WORSHIP">THE WELL OF WORSHIP.</h3>
-
-
-<p>At <i>Tober Mire</i>, the well of the field of worship, County Cork,
-there are also many pagan monuments, and it is evident that the
-vicinity was one of the strongholds of the Druids in ancient times,
-where they had a temple, a burial-ground, and stones for sacrifice:
-a much larger population existed also round the temple than can
-now be numbered in the same locality.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_BRIDES_WELL">THE BRIDE’S WELL.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Near the last-named well is the Bride’s Well, <i>Tober Breda</i> (the
-holy well of St. Bridget). There is a stone oratory here of
-fabulous antiquity, with a doorway fashioned after the Egyptian
-model, sloping towards the top; also an ancient white-thorn
-covered with votive offerings, amongst which one may see many a
-long lock of the splendid dark hair of the Irish southern women,
-who adopt this antique traditional symbol of self-sacrifice to show
-their gratitude to the patron saint.</p>
-
-<p>St. Bridget took the name of the pagan goddess Brighita in
-order to destroy and obliterate the idolatrous rites and transfer
-the devotion of the people to the Christian ceremonies, and <i>Tober-Breda</i>
-is now considered of the highest sanctity, being under the
-special patronage of St. Bridget.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">244</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="THE_IRISH_FAKIR">THE IRISH FAKIR.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Many of the professional prayer-men, or Fakirs, resort to the
-<i>Tober-Breda</i> during the pattern, and manage to obtain gifts and
-contributions and all sorts of excellent things in exchange for
-their prayers from the rich farmers and young girls, to whom they
-promise good luck, and perhaps also a lover who will be handsome
-and young.</p>
-
-<p>These Irish Fakirs, or sacred fraternity of beggars, lead a
-pleasant, thoroughly idle life. They carry a wallet and a staff,
-and being looked on as holy men endowed with strange spiritual
-gifts, they are entirely supported by the voluntary gifts of the
-people, who firmly believe in the mysterious efficacy of their
-prayers and blessings and prognostics of luck.</p>
-
-<p>One of these Fakirs towards the end of his life was glad to find
-shelter in the poor-house. He was then eighty years of age, but
-a tall, erect old man, with flowing white beard and hair, keen
-eyes, and of the most venerable aspect.</p>
-
-<p>A gentleman who saw him there, being much struck with his
-dignified and remarkable appearance, induced him to tell the
-story of his life, which was marked by several strange and curious
-incidents.</p>
-
-<p>He said he was a farmer’s son, but from his earliest youth hated
-work, and only liked to spend the long summer day lying on the
-grass gazing up into the clouds dreaming and thinking where they
-were all sailing to, and longing to float away with them to other
-lands.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile his father raged and swore and beat him, often
-cruelly, because he would not work. But all the same, he could
-not bring himself to be digging from morning to night, and herding
-cattle, and keeping company only with labourers.</p>
-
-<p>So when he was about twenty he formed a plan to run away;
-for, he thought, if the stupid old Fakirs who are lame and blind
-and deaf find people ready to support them, all for nothing, might
-not he have a better chance for getting board and lodging without
-work, since he had youth and health and could tell them stories
-to no end of the great old ancient times.</p>
-
-<p>So one night he quitted his father’s house secretly, and went
-forth on his travels into the wide world, only to meet bitter disappointment
-and rude repulse, for the farmers would have nothing
-to say to him, nor the farmers’ wives. Every one eyed him with
-suspicion. “Why,” they said, “should a great stalwart young
-fellow over six feet high go about the country begging? He
-was a tramp and meant no good.” And they chased him away
-from their grounds.</p>
-
-<p>Then he thought he would disguise himself as a regular Fakir;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">245</span>
-so he got a long cloak, and took a wallet and a staff, and hid his
-raven black hair under a close skull cap, and tried to look as old
-as he could.</p>
-
-<p>But the regular Fakirs soon found him out, and their spite and
-rage was great, for all of them were either lame of a leg or blind
-of an eye, and they said; “Why should this great broad-shouldered
-young fellow with the black eyes come and take away
-our chances of living, when he ought to be able to work and earn
-enough to keep himself without robbing us of our just rights?”
-And they grumbled and snarled at him like so many dogs, and set
-people to spy on him and watch him.</p>
-
-<p>Still he was determined to try his luck on every side: so he
-went to all the stations round about and prayed louder and faster
-than any pilgrim or Fakir amongst the whole lot.</p>
-
-<p>But wherever he went he saw a horrible old hag for ever following
-him. Her head was wrapped up in an old red shawl, and
-nothing was seen of her face except two eyes, that glared on him
-like coals of fire whichever way he turned. And now, in truth,
-his life became miserable to him because of this loathsome hag.
-So he went from station to station to escape her; but still she
-followed him, and the sound of her stick on the ground was ever
-after him like the hammering of a nail into his coffin, for he felt
-sure he would die of the torment and horror.</p>
-
-<p>At last he thought he would try <i>Tobar-Breda</i> for his next
-station, as it was several miles off and she might not be able to
-follow him so far. So he went, and not a sign of her was to be
-seen upon the road. This rejoiced his heart, and he kneeled down
-at the well and was saying his prayers louder and faster than
-ever when he looked up, and there, kneeling right opposite to him
-at the other side of the road, was the detestable old witch. But
-she took no notice of him, only went on saying her prayers and
-telling her beads as if no one were by.</p>
-
-<p>Presently, however, she stooped down to wash her face in the
-well, and, as she threw up the water with her hands, she let the
-red shawl slip down over her shoulders, and then the young man
-beheld to his astonishment a beautiful young girl before him with
-a complexion like the lily and the rose, and soft brown hair falling
-in showers of curls over her snow-white neck.</p>
-
-<p>He had only a glimpse for a moment while she cast the water
-in her face, and then she drew the red shawl again over her head
-and shoulders and was the old hag once more that had filled him
-with horror. But that one glimpse was enough to make his heart
-faint with love; and now for the first time she turned her burning
-eyes full on him, and kept them fixed until he seemed to swoon away
-in an ecstacy of happiness, and knew nothing more till he found her
-seated beside him, holding his hand in hers, and still looking
-intently on his face with her glittering eyes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">246</span></p>
-
-<p>“Come away,” she whispered; “follow me. We must leave
-this crowd of pilgrims. I have much to say to you.”</p>
-
-<p>So he rose up, and they went away together to a secluded spot,
-far from the noise and tumult of the station. Then she threw off
-the shawl, and took the bandage from her face, and said, “Look
-on me. Can you love me? I have followed you day by day for
-love of you. Can you love me in return, and join your fate to
-mine? I have money enough for both, and I’ll teach you the
-mysteries by which we can gain more.”</p>
-
-<p>And from that day forth they two travelled together all over
-the country; and they practised many strange mysteries and
-charms, for Elaine, his wife, was learned in all the secrets of herb
-lore. And the people paid them well for their help and knowledge,
-so that they never wanted anything, and lived like princes,
-though never an evil act was done by their hands, nor did a word
-of strife ever pass between them.</p>
-
-<p>Thus they lived happily for many years, till an evil day came
-when Elaine was struck by sickness, and she died.</p>
-
-<p>Then the soul of the man seemed to die with her, and all his
-knowledge left him, and sad and weary, and tired of all things, he
-finally came to end his days in the poor-house, old, poor, and
-broken-hearted. Yet still he had the bearing of one born for a
-higher destiny, and the noble dignity as of a discrowned king.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the strange story told to the gentleman by the aged
-Fakir in the poor-house, a short time before his death.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="SACRED_TREES">SACRED TREES.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The large old hawthorns, growing singly in a field or by an
-ancient well, are considered very sacred; and no one would venture
-to cut them down, for the fairies dance under the branches at
-night, and would resent being interfered with.</p>
-
-<p>There is a Holy Stone in an island of the Shannon, called St.
-Patrick’s Stone. It is shadowed by an aged hawthorn, the perfume
-of which can be scented far off on the mainland in the
-flowering season. At the top of this stone is a large hollow,
-always filled with water by the rain or the dew, which is kept
-from evaporation by the heavy shadows of the branching hawthorn.
-It is believed that the water of this hollow has great
-healing power, and sometimes when a patient is brought from a
-distance, a rude stone shed is built under the tree, and there he is
-laid till the cure is completed by the water of the Holy Stone.
-On leaving he ties a votive offering to the tree, which is always
-covered with these memorials of gratitude.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">247</span></p>
-
-<p>In autumn the people go to bewail the dead at St. Patrick’s
-Stone; and the mournful Irish chant may be often heard rising
-up in the still evening air with weird and solemn effect.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="TOBER-NA-DARA">TOBER-NA-DARA.</h3>
-
-
-<p><i>Tober-na-Dara</i> (the well of tears) was so called because it overflowed
-one time for a mile round, from the tears of the Irish wives
-and mothers who came there to weep for their fallen kindred, who
-had been slain in a battle, fighting against Cromwell’s troopers of
-the English army.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="LOUGH_NEAGH">LOUGH NEAGH.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Wonderful tales are related about the formation of Lough
-Neagh; and the whole country round abounds with traditions.
-One of them affirms that the great Fionn Ma-Coul being in a rage
-one day, took up a handful of earth and flung it into the sea; and
-the handful was of such a size that where it fell it formed the
-Isle of Man, and the hollow caused by its removal became the
-basin of the present Lough Neagh.</p>
-
-<p>Another legend is that a holy well once existed in the locality,
-blessed and sanctified by a saint with wonderful miraculous powers
-of healing; provided that every patient on leaving, after cure,
-carefully closed the wicket-gate that shut in the well. But once,
-however, a woman having forgotten this information, left the
-gate open, when instantly the indignant waters sprang from
-their bed and pursued the offender, who fled in terror before the
-advancing waves, until at last she sank down exhausted, when the
-waters closed over her, and she was no more seen. But along the
-track of her flight the waters remained, and formed the great lake
-now existing, which is exactly the length the woman traversed in
-her flight from the angry spirit of the lake.</p>
-
-<p>Mysterious influences still haunt the locality all round Lough
-Neagh; for it is the most ancient dwelling-place of the fairies,
-and when they pass at night, from one island to another, soft
-music is heard floating by, and then the boatmen know that the
-fairies are out for a pleasure trip; and one man even averred that
-he saw them going by in the track of the moonbeam, a crowd of
-little men all dressed in green with red caps, and the ladies in
-silver gossamer. And he liked these pretty creatures, and always
-left a little <i>poteen</i> for them in the bottle when he was on the
-island. In return for which attention they gave him the best of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">248</span>
-good luck in fishing and in everything else; for never a gauger came
-next or nigh his place while the fairies protected him, and many
-a time they led the gauger into a bog, and otherwise discomfited
-him, when he and his men were after a still.</p>
-
-<p>So the fisherman loved his little friends, and they took great
-care of him; for even in the troublous times of ’98, when the
-wreckers were all over the country, they did him no harm; though
-indeed the same wreckers knew where to find a good glass of
-something when they came his way, and he always gave it to
-them with a heart and a half; for didn’t they tell him they were
-going to free Ireland from the Sassenach tyranny.</p>
-
-<p>Down deep, under the waters of Lough Neagh, can still be seen,
-by those who have the gift of fairy vision, the columns and walls
-of the beautiful palaces once inhabited by the fairy race when
-they were the gods of the earth; and this tradition of a buried
-town beneath the waves has been prevalent for centuries amongst
-the people.</p>
-
-<p>Giraldus Cambrensis states, that in his time the tops of towers,
-“built after the fashion of the country,” were distinctly visible in
-calm, clear weather, under the surface of the lake; and still the
-fairies haunt the ruins of their former splendour, and hold festivals
-beneath the waters when the full moon is shining; for the boatmen,
-coming home late at night, have often heard sweet music rising up
-from beneath the waves and the sound of laughter, and seen
-glimmering lights far down under the water, where the ancient
-fairy palaces are supposed to be.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_DOCTOR_AND_THE_FAIRY_PRINCESS">THE DOCTOR AND THE FAIRY PRINCESS.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Late one night, so the story goes, a great doctor, who lived near
-Lough Neagh, was awoke by the sound of a carriage driving up
-to his door, followed by a loud ring. Hastily throwing on his
-clothes, the doctor ran down, when he saw a little sprite of a page
-standing at the carriage door, and a grand gentleman inside.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, doctor, make haste and come with me,” exclaimed the
-gentleman. “Lose no time, for a great lady has been taken ill,
-and she will have no one to attend her but you. So come along
-with me at once in the carriage.”</p>
-
-<p>On this the doctor ran up again to finish his dressing, and to put
-up all that might be wanted, and was down again in a moment.</p>
-
-<p>“Now quick,” said the gentleman, “you are an excellent good
-fellow. Sit down here beside me, and do not be alarmed at
-anything you may see.”</p>
-
-<p>So on they drove like mad—and when they came to the ferry,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">249</span>
-the doctor thought they would wake up the ferryman and take
-the boat; but no, in they plunged, carriage and horses, and all,
-and were at the other side in no time without a drop of water
-touching them.</p>
-
-<p>Now the doctor began to suspect the company he was in; but
-he held his peace, and they went on up Shane’s Hill, till they
-stopped at a long, low, black house, which they entered, and passed
-along a narrow dark passage, groping their way, till, all at once,
-a bright light lit up the walls, and some attendants having opened
-a door, the doctor found himself in a gorgeous chamber all hung
-with silk and gold; and on a silken couch lay a beautiful lady,
-who exclaimed with the most friendly greeting—</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, doctor, I am so glad to see you. How good of you to
-come.”</p>
-
-<p>“Many thanks, my lady,” said the doctor, “I am at your
-ladyship’s service.”</p>
-
-<p>And he stayed with her till a male child was born; but when
-he looked round there was no nurse, so he wrapped it in swaddling
-clothes and laid it by the mother.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said the lady, “mind what I tell you. They will try
-to put a spell on you to keep you here; but take my advice, eat
-no food and drink no wine, and you will be safe; and mind, also,
-that you express no surprise at anything you see; and take no
-more than five golden guineas, though you may be offered fifty
-or a hundred, as your fee.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, madam,” said the doctor, “I shall obey you in all
-things.”</p>
-
-<p>With this the gentleman came into the room, grand and noble
-as a prince, and then he took up the child, looked at it and laid it
-again on the bed.</p>
-
-<p>Now there was a large fire in the room, and the gentleman took
-the fire shovel and drew all the burning coal to the front, leaving
-a great space at the back of the grate; then he took up the child
-again and laid it in the hollow at the back of the fire and drew all
-the coal over it till it was covered; but, mindful of the lady’s
-advice, the doctor said never a word. Then the room suddenly
-changed to another still more beautiful, where a grand feast was
-laid out, of all sorts of meats and fair fruits and bright red wine
-in cups of sparkling crystal.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, doctor,” said the gentleman, “sit down with us and take
-what best pleases you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sir,” said the doctor, “I have made a vow neither to eat nor
-drink till I reach my home again. So please let me return without
-further delay.”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly,” said the gentleman, “but first let me pay you for
-your trouble,” and he laid down a bag of gold on the table and
-poured out a quantity of bright pieces.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">250</span></p>
-
-<p>“I shall only take what is my right and no more,” said the
-doctor, and he drew over five golden guineas, and placed them in
-his purse. “And now, may I have the carriage to convey me
-back, for it is growing late?”</p>
-
-<p>On this the gentleman laughed. “You have been learning
-secrets from my lady,” he said. “However, you have behaved
-right well, and you shall be brought back safely.”</p>
-
-<p>So the carriage came, and the doctor took his cane, and was
-carried back as the first time through the water—horses, carriage,
-and all—and so on till he reached his home all right just before
-daybreak. But when he opened his purse to take out the golden
-guineas, there he saw a splendid diamond ring along with them in
-the purse worth a king’s ransom, and when he examined it he found
-the two letters of his own name carved inside. So he knew it
-was meant for him, a present from the fairy prince himself.</p>
-
-<p>All this happened a hundred years ago, but the ring still
-remains in the doctor’s family, handed down from father to son,
-and it is remarked, that whoever wears it as the owner for the
-time has good luck and honour and wealth all the days of his life.</p>
-
-<p>“And by the light that shines, this story is true,” added the
-narrator of the tale, using the strong form of asseveration by which
-the Irish-speaking peasants emphasize the truth of their words.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="A_HOLY_WELL">A HOLY WELL.</h3>
-
-
-<p>On the north side of Lough Neagh there is still a holy well of
-great power and sanctity. Three ancient white-thorn trees overshadow
-it, and about a mile distant is the fragmentary ruin of a
-wooden cross, erected in the olden time to mark the limit of the
-sacred ground.</p>
-
-<p>It was the custom up to a recent date for the pilgrims to go
-round this well thirteen times barefoot on the 27th of June, drink
-of the water, wash in it, and then, holding themselves freed from
-all past sin, return to the old worldly life, and begin again after
-the usual fashion the old routine of business or pleasure, or reckless
-folly, conscious that they could come once more the following
-year and clear off all the accumulated stains of an ill life by a
-lavation in the holy well.</p>
-
-<p>A number of yellow crystals are found near, which the people
-say grow in the rocks in one night upon Midsummer Eve. And
-these crystals have power to avert all evil and bring luck and
-blessing to a house and family, and certain words are said while
-gathering them, known only to the adepts. The crystals are,
-however, very plentiful, and are found scattered for a space of two<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">251</span>
-miles round the well, and in the crannies of the rocks. When
-burned in a crucible they become pure lime in one hour, and the
-powder ferments with spirits of vitriol; yet the waters of the well
-when analyzed present no appearance of lime.</p>
-
-<p>At one time an effort was made to change the name of Lough
-Neagh to Lough Chichester, in honour of the Lord Deputy, Sir
-Arthur Chichester, but the Irish would not accept the new
-baptism, and the old name still remains unchanged.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="A_SACRED_ISLAND">A SACRED ISLAND.</h3>
-
-
-<p>At Toome Island there is the ruin of an ancient church, where
-the dead walk on November Eve. It is a solemn and sacred
-place, and nothing is allowed to be taken from it; neither stone
-nor branch of the shadowing trees, for fear of angering the spirits.
-One day three men who were on the island cut down some branches
-of an elder-tree that grew there to repair a private still, and carried
-them off in their boat; but when just close to the shore a
-violent gust of wind upset the boat, and the men were drowned.
-The wood, however, floated back to the island, and a cross was
-made of it which was erected on the beach, to commemorate the
-fate of the doomed men.</p>
-
-<p>It is recorded, also, that a certain stone having been taken away
-by some masons from the ancient ruin, to build into the wall of
-the parish church, which they were erecting in the place, the
-water in the town well suddenly began to diminish, and at last
-dried up, to the great consternation and terror of the inhabitants,
-who were at their wits’ end to know the cause; when luckily an
-old woman of the place dreamed a dream about the abduction of
-the stone, which gave the solution of the mystery.</p>
-
-<p>At once the people took the matter into their own hands, and
-they went in a body and cast down the wall till they came on the
-stone, which was then placed in a boat, and carried back with
-solemn ceremonial to the island, where it was replaced in its
-original site, and, immediately after, the water flowed back again
-into the well, and the supply became even more copious than ever.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_LAKE_OF_REVENGE">THE LAKE OF REVENGE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Near the great mountain of Croagh-Patrick there is a lake called
-<i>Clonvencagh</i>, or the Lake of Revenge, to which evil-disposed per<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">252</span>sons
-used to resort in order to imprecate maledictions on their
-enemies. It was the custom also to erect monuments round the
-well by placing on end a long flagstone, and heaping round it a
-pyramid of sand in order to keep it fixed firmly in its place. Over
-these pillar-stones certain mystic rites were then performed by
-the pilgrims, and prayers were said which took the form of the
-most terrible imprecations. It was therefore with awe and terror
-that one man said of another, “He has been cursed by the stone.”</p>
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="SCENES_AT_A_HOLY_WELL">SCENES AT A HOLY WELL.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Scenes of holy faith, of tender love, and human pity are, however,
-happily more frequent amongst the devotees at the holy
-wells of Ireland than the fierce mutterings of malediction. At
-these sacred places may be seen the mother praying for her child,
-the girl for her lover, the wife for her husband; going the rounds
-on their bare knees, with the crucifix in their clasped hands and
-their eyes raised to heaven in silent prayer, with a divine faith
-that this prayer will be answered; and who can say but that the
-fervour of the supplication has often brought down the blessing
-of healing for the sick, or comfort for the sorrowing? The picturesque
-grouping round the holy well, the background of purple
-mountains, the antique stone cross at which the pilgrims kneel,
-the costumes and often the beautiful faces of the praying women,
-with their long dark hair and purple Irish eyes, form a scene of
-wonderful poetic and dramatic interest, which has been immortalized
-by Sir Frederick Burton in his great national picture, <i>The
-Blind Girl at the Holy Well</i>—a work that at once made the
-young painter famous, and laid the foundation of the subsequent
-career of this distinguished and perfect artist.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="LOUGH_FOYLE">LOUGH FOYLE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Lough Foyle means the borrowed lake, for in old times there
-were two weird sisters dwelling beyond the Shannon, who were
-skilled in necromancy. And the elder sister said to the younger—</p>
-
-<p>“Give me the loan of your silver lake, for I have none; and I
-promise to restore it to you next Monday.”</p>
-
-<p>So the younger, being good-natured, rolled up the lake in a
-sheet and despatched it over hills and dales to her sister. But
-when the time came for return, the elder sister, being deceitful
-and cunning, made answer to the messenger sent for it—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">253</span></p>
-
-<p>“Truly, I said Monday, but I meant the Day of Judgment.
-So I shall keep the lake till then.”</p>
-
-<p>And the lake therefore remains in her country to this day,
-while the great hollow whence it was taken can still be seen in
-Connaught, bare and barren, waiting for the waters that never
-will return.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_HENS_CASTLE">THE HEN’S CASTLE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>At the head of Lough Corrib, deep in the water about a gunshot
-from the land, stands the ancient castle of <i>Caisleen-na-Cearca</i>,
-said to have been built in one night by a cock and a hen, but in
-reality it was founded by the ill-fated Roderick O’Connor, the last
-king of Ireland. Strange lights are sometimes seen flitting
-through it, and on some particular midnight a crowd of boats
-gather round it, filled with men dressed in green with red sashes.
-And they row about till the cock crows, when they suddenly
-vanish and the cries of children are heard in the air. Then the
-people know that there has been a death somewhere in the region,
-and that the Sidhe have been stealing the young mortal children,
-and leaving some ill-favoured brat in the cradle in place of the
-true child.</p>
-
-<p>The old castle has many historic memories; the celebrated
-<i>Graina Uaile</i>, the great chieftainess of the West, made it her
-abode for some time, and carried thither the young heir of Howth,
-whom she had abducted from Howth Castle, when on one of her
-piratical expeditions. Afterwards, during the Wars of Elizabeth,
-a distinguished lady of the sept of the O’Flaherties, Bevinda
-O’Flahertie, shut herself up there with her only daughter and
-heiress, and a following of twenty resolute men. But further to
-ensure her safety, she wrote to the Queen, requesting permission
-to arm the guard; Queen Elizabeth in return sent an autograph
-letter granting the request, but addressed to “her good friend,
-Captain Bevan O’Flahertie,” evidently thinking that the custodian
-of such a castle must certainly be a man.</p>
-
-<p>In the solemn solitude of this picturesque and stately <i>Caisleen-na-Cearca</i>,
-the great lake fortress of Lough Corrib, with its
-rampart of purple mountains and its water pathway fifty miles
-long, the young heiress grew up tall and beautiful, the pride of
-the west. And in due time she married Blake of Menlo Castle.
-And from this historic pair is descended the present baronet and
-owner of the property, Sir John Blake of Menlo.</p>
-
-<p>Cromwell ruthlessly dismantled the castle, and it has remained
-a ruin ever since; but the massive walls, and the beautiful twelfth
-century ornamentation of doors and windows still attest the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">254</span>
-ancient grandeur of the edifice, before “the curse of Cromwell”
-fell upon it, and upon the country and on the people of Ireland.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="SLIABH-MISH_COUNTY_KERRY">SLIABH-MISH, COUNTY KERRY.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Every one knows that Sliabh-Mish, County Kerry, is haunted.
-The figure of a man, accompanied by a huge black dog, is frequently
-seen standing on a high crag, but as the traveller
-approaches, the forms disappear, although they rise up again
-before him on another crag, and so continue appearing and disappearing
-as he journeys on. Many travellers have seen them,
-but no one has ever yet been able to meet the man and the dog
-face to face on the mountain side, for they seem to melt away in
-the mist, and are seen no more on reaching the spot. It happened,
-once upon a time, that a man journeying alone over the mountain
-path, took out his snuff-box to solace himself with a pinch, and
-was putting it up again in his waistcoat pocket, when he heard a
-voice near him saying, “Not yet! not yet! I am near you, wait.”</p>
-
-<p>He looked-round, but not a soul was to be seen. However, he
-thought it right to be friendly, so he shook some snuff from the
-box in the palm of his hand and held it out in the air. But his
-hair stood on end, and he trembled with fright, when he felt
-invisible fingers on his hand picking up the snuff, and when he
-drew it back the snuff had disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>“God and the saints between us and harm!” exclaimed the
-poor man, ready to drop down from terror.</p>
-
-<p>“Amen,” responded the clear voice of some invisible speaker
-close beside him.</p>
-
-<p>Then the man quickly made the sign of the cross over the hand
-touched by the spirit, and so went on his way unharmed.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_SKELLIGS_OF_KERRY">THE SKELLIGS OF KERRY.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The Skellig Rocks are situated about eleven miles from the
-mainland, and are considered of great sanctity. In the Middle
-Ages, during the penitential weeks of Lent, the monks used to
-leave the adjacent convent and retire to the Skelligs Rocks for
-silence, prayer, and abstinence. Several ancient stone-roofed cells
-are still in existence at the top of the rock, showing where they
-dwelt. These cells are of the most ancient cyclopean order of
-building known in Ireland, and are far older than the church near
-them, which does not date earlier than the seventh century.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">255</span></p>
-
-<p>Certainly no place more awful in its loneliness and desolation
-could be imagined than the summit of the bleak rock, reached
-only by a narrow way, almost inaccessible, even to those accustomed
-to climb precipitous paths, but which makes the ordinary
-traveller giddy with fear and dread.</p>
-
-<p>As marriages were not allowed in Lent, it became a custom for
-the young people of both sexes to make a pilgrimage to the
-Skellig Rocks during the last Lenten week. A procession was
-formed of the young girls and bachelors, and tar-barrels were
-lighted to guide them on the dangerous paths. The idea was to
-spend the week in prayer, penance, and lamentation; the girls
-praying for good husbands, the bachelors repenting of their sins.
-But the proceedings gradually degenerated into such a mad
-carnival of dancing, drinking, and fun, that the priests denounced
-the pilgrimage, and forbade the annual migration to the Skelligs.
-Still the practice was continued until the police had orders to
-clear the rocks. Thus ended the ancient custom of “going to the
-Skelligs:” for the mayor having pronounced judgment over the
-usage as “subversive of all morality and decorum,” it was entirely
-discontinued; and the wild fun and frolic of the Skelligs is now
-but a tradition preserved in the memory of the oldest inhabitant.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">256</span></p>
-
-
-<h2><a name="POPULAR_NOTIONS_CONCERNING" id="POPULAR_NOTIONS_CONCERNING">POPULAR NOTIONS CONCERNING
-THE SIDHE RACE.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>From the earliest ages the world has believed in the existence of
-a race midway between the angel and man, gifted with power to
-exercise a strange mysterious influence over human destiny. The
-Persians called this mystic race Peris; the Egyptians and the Greeks
-named them demons, not as evil, but as mysterious allies of man,
-invisible though ever present; capable of kind acts but implacable
-if offended.</p>
-
-<p>The Irish called them the Sidhe, or spirit-race, or the <i>Feadh-Ree</i>,
-a modification of the word Peri. Their country is the <i>Tir-na-oge</i>,
-the land of perpetual youth, where they live a life of joy
-and beauty, never knowing disease or death, which is not to come
-on them till the judgment day, when they are fated to pass into
-annihilation, to perish utterly and be seen no more. They can
-assume any form and they make horses out of bits of straw, on
-which they ride over the country, and to Scotland and back.
-They have no religion, but a great dread of the <i>Scapular</i> (Latin
-words from the Gospels written by a priest and hung round the
-neck). Their power is great over unbaptized children, and such
-generally grow up evil and have the evil eye, and bring ill luck,
-unless the name of God is instantly invoked when they look at
-any one fixedly and in silence.</p>
-
-<p>All over Ireland the fairies have the reputation of being very
-beautiful, with long yellow hair sweeping the ground, and lithe
-light forms. They love milk and honey, and sip the nectar from
-the cups of the flowers, which is their fairy wine.</p>
-
-<p>Underneath the lakes, and deep down in the heart of the hills,
-they have their fairy palaces of pearl and gold, where they live in
-splendour and luxury, with music and song and dancing and
-laughter and all joyous things as befits the gods of the earth. If
-our eyes were touched by a fairy salve we could see them dancing
-on the hill in the moonlight. They are served on vessels of gold,
-and each fairy chief, to mark his rank, wears a circlet of gold
-round his head.</p>
-
-<p>The Sidhe race were once angels in heaven, but were cast out as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">257</span>
-a punishment for their pride. Some fell to earth, others were
-cast into the sea, while many were seized by demons and carried
-down to hell, whence they issue as evil spirits, to tempt men to
-destruction under various disguises; chiefly, however, as beautiful
-young maidens, endowed with the power of song and gifted with
-the most enchanting wiles. Under the influence of these beautiful
-sirens a man will commit any and every crime. Then when his
-soul is utterly black they carry him down to hell, where he remains
-for ever tortured by the demons to whom he sold himself.</p>
-
-<p>The fairies are very numerous, more numerous than the human
-race. In their palaces underneath the hills and in the lakes and
-the sea they hide away much treasure. All the treasure of
-wrecked ships is theirs; and all the gold that men have hidden
-and buried in the earth when danger was on them, and then died
-and left no sign of the place to their descendants. And all the
-gold of the mine and the jewels of the rocks belong to them; and
-in the Sifra, or fairy-house, the walls are silver and the pavement
-is gold, and the banquet-hall is lit by the glitter of the diamonds
-that stud the rocks.</p>
-
-<p>If you walk nine times round a fairy rath at the full of the
-moon, you will find the entrance to the Sifra; but if you enter,
-beware of eating the fairy food or drinking the fairy wine. The
-Sidhe will, indeed, wile and draw many a young man into the
-fairy dance, for the fairy women are beautiful, so beautiful that a
-man’s eyes grow dazzled who looks on them, with their long hair
-floating like the ripe golden corn and their robes of silver
-gossamer; they have perfect forms, and their dancing is beyond
-all expression graceful; but if a man is tempted to kiss a <i>Sigh-oge</i>,
-or young fairy spirit, in the dance, he is lost for ever—the
-madness of love will fall on him, and he will never again be able
-to return to earth or to leave the enchanted fairy palace. He is
-dead to his kindred and race for ever more.</p>
-
-<p>On Fridays the fairies have special power over all things, and
-chiefly on that day they select and carry off the young mortal
-girls as brides for the fairy chiefs. But after seven years, when
-the girls grow old and ugly, they send them back to their kindred,
-giving them, however, as compensation, a knowledge of herbs and
-philtres and secret spells, by which they can kill or cure, and have
-power over men both for good and evil.</p>
-
-<p>It is in this way the wise women and fairy doctors have
-acquired their knowledge of the mysteries and the magic of herbs.
-But the fairies do not always keep the mortal women in a seven
-years’ bondage. They sometimes only take away young girls for
-a dance in the moonlight, and then leave them back in their own
-home lulled in a sweet sleep. But the vision of the night was so
-beautiful that the young girls long to dream again and be made
-happy with the soft enchantments of the music and dance.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">258</span></p>
-
-<p>The fairies are passionately fond of music; it is therefore
-dangerous for a young girl to sing when she is all alone by the
-lake, for the spirits will draw her down to them to sing to them
-in the fairy palace under the waves, and her people will see her no
-more. Yet sometimes when the moonlight is on the water, and
-the waves break against the crystal columns of the fairy palace
-far down in the depths, they can hear her voice, and they know
-that she is singing to the fairies in the spirit land beneath the
-waters of the lake.</p>
-
-<p>There was a girl in one of the villages that could see things no
-one else saw, and hear music no one else heard, for the fairies loved
-her and used to carry her away by night in a dream to dance with
-the fairy chiefs and princes. But, above all, she was loved by
-Finvarra the king, and used to dance with him all night till sunrise
-though her form seemed to be lying asleep on the bed.</p>
-
-<p>One day she told some of her young companions that she was
-going that night to a great fairy dance on the rath, and if they
-chose she would bring them and put a salve on their eyes so that
-they would see wonders.</p>
-
-<p>The young girls went with her, and on coming to the rath she
-said—</p>
-
-<p>“Now put your foot on my foot and look over my left shoulder,
-and you will see the king and queen and all the beautiful lords and
-ladies with gold bands round their heads dancing on the grass. But
-take care when you see them to make no sign of the cross, nor
-speak the name of God, or they will vanish away, and perhaps
-even your life would be in danger.”</p>
-
-<p>On hearing this the girls ran away in fear and terror without
-ever using the spell or seeing the fairies. But the other remained,
-and told her friends next day that she had danced all night to the
-fairy music, and had heard the sweetest singing, so that she longed
-to go back and live for ever with the spirits on the hill.</p>
-
-<p>And her wish was granted, for she died soon after, and on the
-night of her death soft music was heard floating round the house,
-though no one was visible. And it was said also that beautiful
-flowers grew on her grave, though no hand planted them there,
-and shadowy forms used to gather in the moonlight and sing a low
-chant over the place where she was laid.</p>
-
-<p>The fairies can assume all forms when they have special ends in
-view, such as to carry off a handsome girl to Fairyland. For this
-purpose they sometimes appear at the village festivities as tall,
-dark, noble-looking gentlemen, and they wile away the young
-girls as partners in the dance by their grand air and the grace of
-their dancing. And ever after the young girl who has danced
-with them moves and dances with a special fairy grace, though
-sometimes she pines away and seems to die, but every one knows
-that her soul has been carried off to the <i>Tir-na-oge</i>, where she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">259</span>
-will be made the bride of the fairy king and live in luxury and
-splendour evermore.</p>
-
-<p>Yet, though the fairies are fond of pleasure, they are temperate
-in their mode of living, and are besides honest in their
-dealings and faithful to their promises. If they borrow wine from
-the gentry they always repay it in blessings, and never indulge
-much in eating or drinking. But they have no objection to
-offer to mortals the subtle red wine at the fairy banquets, which
-lulls the soul to sleep and makes the reason powerless. The
-young men that they beguile into their fairy palaces become their
-bond-slaves, and are set to hard tasks. One man said he had
-marched with Finvarra’s men all the way from Mayo to Cork, but
-there they had to leave him as they were going to Spain and
-could not take him across the sea on their white horses.</p>
-
-<p>They also much desire the aid of a powerful mortal hand to
-assist them in their fairy wars, for they have often disputes and
-battles amongst themselves for the possession of some coveted
-rath or dancing ground.</p>
-
-<p>Once a fairy prince came to a great chieftain of Connaught,
-one of the Kirwans, and begged for aid against a hostile fairy
-tribe that had invaded his territories. The required aid being
-given, the fairies and their mortal auxiliaries plunged into the
-lake and fought the enemy and conquered; after which the Connaught
-men returned to shore laden with rich presents of silver
-and gold and crystal wine-cups as the expression of gratitude from
-the fairy prince.</p>
-
-<p>It is said that Kirwan of Castle Hackett, the great Connaught
-chief, also received a beautiful fairy bride on that occasion, and it
-is certain that all the female descendants of the family are noted
-for their beauty, their grace in dancing, and their sweet voices in
-speaking. Lady Cloncurry, mother of the present Lord Cloncurry,
-was of this race, and in her youth was the acknowledged leading
-beauty of the Irish Court and celebrated for the rare fascination
-of her manner and voice.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_HURLING_MATCH">THE HURLING MATCH.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The fairies, with their true artistic love of all the gentle graces
-of life, greatly dislike coarse and violent gestures, and all athletic
-sports, such as hurling and wrestling; and they often try to put
-an end to them by some evil turn.</p>
-
-<p>One day a great cloud of dust came along the road during
-a hurling match and stopped the game. On this the people
-grew alarmed, for they said the fairies are out hunting and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">260</span>
-will do us harm by blinding us; and thousands of the Sidhe
-swept by, raising a terrific dust, though no mortal eye could see
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Then one man, a good player and musician, ran for his fiddle
-and began to play some vigorous dance tunes, “for now,” said he,
-“the fairies will begin to dance and forget us, and they will be
-off in no time to hold a revel on the rath to the music of their
-own fairy pipes.”</p>
-
-<p>And so it was, for at once the whirlwind of dust swept on to
-the hill of the fairy rath, and the hurling ground was left clear
-for the game to go on again in safety.</p>
-
-<p>It must be acknowledged that the fairies are a little selfish, or
-they would not have interfered with the great national sport of
-hurling, which is the favourite amusement of the country, and
-used to be held as a high festival, and arranged with all the ceremonial
-of a tournament; at least before the bad times destroyed
-all the fun and frolic of the peasant life.</p>
-
-<p>The prettiest girl of the village was chosen as the hurling
-girl—the <i>Colleen-a-bhailia</i>. Dressed in white, and accompanied
-by her maidens, she proceeded to the hurling ground, the piper
-and fiddlers going before her playing gay dance tunes.</p>
-
-<p>There she was met by the procession of the young men surrounding
-the chief hurler—always a stalwart youth of over six feet. And
-the youth and the maiden joined hands and began the dance—all
-the people cheering.</p>
-
-<p>This was called the opening of the hurling. And for the next
-match another pair would be selected, each village girl anxiously
-hoping to be the <i>Colleen-a-bhailia</i> chosen to lead the ceremonial
-dance for the second or following games. Naturally the hurling
-tournament ended with a festive supper, much love-making, and
-many subsequent marriages between the pretty colleens and
-stalwart young hurlers, despite all the envy and jealousy of
-the fairies, who maliciously tried to mar the pleasures of the
-festival.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_RIDE_WITH_THE_FAIRIES">THE RIDE WITH THE FAIRIES.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The fairies take great delight in horsemanship, and are splendid
-riders. Many fine young men are enticed to ride with them,
-when they dash along with the fairies like the wind, Finvarra
-himself leading, on his great black horse with the red nostrils,
-that look like flames of fire. And ever after the young men are
-the most fearless riders in the country, so the people know at once
-that they have hunted with the fairies. And after the hunt some
-favourite of the party is taken to a magnificent supper in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">261</span>
-fairy palace, and when he has drunk of the bright red wine
-they lull him to sleep with soft music. But never again can
-he find the fairy palace, and he looks in vain for the handsome
-horseman on his fine black steed, with all the gay young huntsmen
-in their green velvet dresses, who rushed over the field with
-him, like a flash of the storm wind. They have passed away for
-ever from his vision, like a dream of the night.</p>
-
-<p>Once on a time a gentleman, also one of the Kirwans of Galway,
-was riding by the fairy hill—where all the fairies of the West
-hold their councils and meetings, under the rule of Finvarra the
-king—when a strange horseman, mounted on a fiery black steed,
-suddenly appeared. But as the stranger bid him the time of day
-with distinguished grace, Mr. Kirwan returned his greeting
-courteously, and they rode on together side by side, discoursing
-pleasantly—for the stranger seemed to know every one and everything,
-though Mr. Kirwan could not remember ever having seen
-him before.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said the black horseman, “I know that you are to be at
-the races to-morrow, so just let me give you a hint: if you wish
-to be certain of winning, allow me to send you my man to ride
-your horse. He never failed in a race yet, and he shall be with
-you early, before the start.”</p>
-
-<p>With that, at a turn of the road, the stranger disappeared; for
-he was no other than Finvarra himself, who had a friendly liking
-for the tribe of the Kirwans, because all the men were generous
-who came of the blood, and all the women handsome.</p>
-
-<p>Next morning, as Mr. Kirwan was setting out for the race, his
-groom told him that a young jockey was waiting to see him. He
-was the strangest looking little imp, Mr. Kirwan thought, he had
-ever set eyes on, but he felt compelled to give him all the rights
-and power that was necessary for the race, and the young imp
-was off in a moment, like a flash of lightning.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Kirwan knew no more—he seemed like one in a dream—till
-the silver cup was handed to him as winner of the race, and
-congratulations poured down on him, and every one asked eagerly
-where he got the wonderful jockey who seemed to make the horse
-fly like the spirit of the wind itself. But the jockey by this time
-had disappeared. However, the stranger on the black horse was
-there, and he constrained Mr. Kirwan to come with him to
-dinner; and they rode on pleasantly, as before, till they reached
-a grand, beautiful house, with a crowd of gorgeous servants
-waiting on the steps to receive the lord and master and his
-guest.</p>
-
-<p>One of them led Mr. Kirwan to his room to dress for dinner,
-and there he found a costly suit of violet velvet ready, in which
-the valet arrayed him. Then he entered the dining-hall. It was
-all lit up splendidly, and there were garlands of flowers twining<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">262</span>
-round crystal columns, and golden cups set with jewels for the
-wine, and golden dishes.</p>
-
-<p>The host seemed an accomplished man of the world, and did
-the honours with perfect grace. Conversation flowed freely,
-while soft music was heard at intervals from invisible players,
-and Mr. Kirwan could not resist the charm and beauty of the
-scene, nor the bright red wine that his host poured out for him
-into the jewelled cups.</p>
-
-<p>Then, when the banquet was over, a great crowd of ladies and
-gentlemen came in and danced to sweet low music, and they
-circled round the guest and tried to draw him into the dance.
-But when he looked at them it seemed to him that they were
-all the dead he had once known; for his own brother was there,
-that had been drowned in the lake a year before; and a man who
-had been killed by a fall when hunting; and others whose faces
-he knew well. And they were all pale as death, but their eyes
-burned like coals of fire.</p>
-
-<p>And as he looked and wondered, a lovely lady came over to
-him, wearing a necklace of pearls. And she clasped his wrist
-with her little hand, and tried to draw him into the circle.</p>
-
-<p>“Dance with me,” she whispered, “dance with me again. Look
-at me, for you once loved me.”</p>
-
-<p>And when he looked at her he knew that she was dead, and the
-clasp of her hand was like a ring of fire round his wrist; and he
-drew back in terror, for he saw that she was a beautiful girl he had
-loved in his youth, and to whom he had given a necklace of
-pearls, but who died before he could make her his bride.</p>
-
-<p>Then his heart sank with fear and dread, and he said to his host—</p>
-
-<p>“Take me from this place. I know the dancers; they are dead.
-Why have you brought them up from their graves?”</p>
-
-<p>But the host only laughed and said, “You must take more
-wine to keep up your courage.” And he poured him out a goblet
-of wine redder than rubies.</p>
-
-<p>And when he drank it, all the pageant and the music and the
-crowd faded away from before his eyes, and he fell into a profound
-sleep, and knew no more till he found himself at home,
-laid on his bed. And the servant told him that a strange horseman
-had accompanied him to the door late in the night, who had
-charged them to lay the master gently in his bed and by no
-means to awake him till noon next day, for he was weary after
-the race; and he bade them take the hunter to the stables and
-tend him carefully, for the animal was covered with foam, and all
-trembling.</p>
-
-<p>At noon Mr. Kirwan awoke, and rose up as well as ever: but of
-all the fairy revels nothing remained to him but the mark round
-his wrist of the clasp of a woman’s hand, that seemed burned into
-his flesh.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">263</span></p>
-
-<p>So he knew the night’s adventure was no mere dream of the fancy,
-and the mark of the dead hand remained with him to his last
-hour, and the form of the young girl with her necklace of pearls
-often came before him in a vision of the night; but he never
-again visited the fairy palace, and never saw the dark horseman
-any more. As to the silver cup, he flung it into the lake, for he
-thought it had come to him by devil’s magic and would bring no
-good luck to him or to his race. So it sank beneath the waves, and
-the silver cup was seen no more.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_FAIRY_SPY">THE FAIRY SPY.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Sometimes the fairies appear like old men and women, and thus
-gain admission to houses that they may watch and spy, and
-bewitch the butter, and abduct the children, and carry off the
-young girls for fairy brides.</p>
-
-<p>There was a man in the west who was bedridden for seven
-years, and could do no work and had to be lifted by others when
-he moved. Yet the amount of food he consumed was enormous,
-and as every one pitied him, people were constantly bringing him
-all sorts of good things; and he ate up everything but grew no
-stronger.</p>
-
-<p>Now on Sundays when the family went to mass, they locked
-him up, but left him plenty of food, for there was no one in the
-house to help him. One Sunday, however, they left chapel earlier
-than usual, and as they were going by the shore they saw a great
-crowd of strangers hurling, and in the midst of them, hurling and
-running and leaping, was the sick man, as well and jolly as ever a
-man could be. They called out to him, on which he turned round
-to face them, but that instant he disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>So the family hastened home, unlocked the door, and went
-straight up to the room, where they found the man in bed as
-usual, thin and weak and unable to move; but he had eaten up all
-the food and was now crying out for more. On this the family
-grew very angry and cried, “You have been deceiving us. You
-are in league with the witch-folk; but we’ll soon see what you
-really are, for if you don’t get up out of that bed at once, we’ll
-make down a fire and lay you on it, and make you walk.”</p>
-
-<p>Then he cried and roared: but they seized him to drag him to
-the fire. So when he saw they were in earnest he jumped up and
-rushed to the door, and before they could touch him he had
-disappeared, and was seen no more.</p>
-
-<p>Now, indeed, they knew that he was in league with the devil,
-and they burned his bed and everything belonging to him, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">264</span>
-poured holy water on the room. And when all was burned,
-nothing remained but a black stone with strange signs on it. And
-by this, no doubt, he performed his enchantments. And the
-people were afraid of it and gave it to the priest, who has it to
-this day, so there can be no doubt as to the truth of the story.</p>
-
-<p>And the priest knows the hidden meaning of the strange signs
-which give power to the stone; but will reveal the secret to no
-one, lest the people might try to work devil’s magic with it, and
-unlawful spells by the power of the stone and the power of the
-signs.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_DARK_HORSEMAN">THE DARK HORSEMAN.</h3>
-
-
-<p>One day a fine, handsome young fellow, called Jemmy Nowlan,
-set off to walk to the fair at Slane, whither some cattle of his had
-been sent off for sale that same morning early. And he was
-dressed in his best clothes, spruce and neat; and not one in all the
-county round could equal Jemmy Nowlan for height, strength, or
-good looks. So he went along quite gay and merry in himself, till
-he came to a lonely bit of the road where never a soul was to be
-seen; but just then the sky became black-dark, as if thunder were
-in the air, and suddenly he heard the tramp of a horse behind
-him. On turning round he saw a very dark, elegant looking
-gentleman, mounted on a black horse, riding swiftly towards him.</p>
-
-<p>“Jemmy Nowlan,” said the dark horseman, “I have been looking
-for you all along the road. Get up now, quickly, behind me, and I’ll
-carry you in no time to the great fair of Slane; for, indeed, I am
-going there myself, and it would be very pleasant to have your
-company.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank your honour kindly,” said Jemmy; “but it’s not for
-the likes of me to ride with your lordship; so I would rather
-walk, if it’s pleasing to your honour; but thanks all the same.”</p>
-
-<p>Truth to tell, Jemmy in his own mind had a fear of the strange
-gentleman and his black horse, and distrusted them both, for had
-he not heard the people tell strange stories of how young men had
-been carried off by the fairies, and held prisoners by their enchantments
-down deep in the heart of the hill under the earth,
-where never a mortal could see them again or know their fate;
-and they were only allowed to come up and see their kindred on
-the nights the dead walked, and then they walked with them as
-they rose from the graves? So again he began to make his
-excuses, and meanwhile kept looking round for some path by
-which he could escape if possible.</p>
-
-<p>“Come now,” said the dark horseman,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">265</span> “this is all nonsense,
-Jemmy Nowlan; you really must come with me.”</p>
-
-<p>And with that he stooped down and touched him lightly on the
-shoulder with his whip, and in an instant Jemmy found himself
-seated on the horse, and galloping away like the wind with the
-dark horseman; and they never stopped nor stayed till they came
-to a great castle in a wood, where a whole set of servants in green
-and gold were waiting on the steps to receive them. And they
-were the smallest people Jemmy had ever seen in his life; but he
-made no remark, for they were very civil, and crowded round to
-know what they could do for him.</p>
-
-<p>“Take him to a room and let him dress,” said the gentleman,
-who appeared to own the castle. And in the room Jemmy found
-a beautiful suit of velvet, and a cap and feather. And when the
-little servants had dressed him they led him to the large hall that
-was all lit up and hung with garlands of flowers; and music and
-dancing were going on, and many lovely ladies were present, but
-not one in the hall was handsomer than Jemmy Nowlan in his
-velvet suit and cap and feather.</p>
-
-<p>“Will you dance with me, Jemmy Nowlan?” said one lovely
-lady.</p>
-
-<p>“No, Jemmy: you must dance with me,” said another.</p>
-
-<p>And they all fought for him, so he danced with them all, one
-after the other, the whole night through, till he was dead tired
-and longed to lie down and sleep.</p>
-
-<p>“Take Jemmy Nowlan to his room, and put him to bed,” said
-the gentleman to a red-haired man; “but first he must tell me a
-story.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have no story, your honour,” said Jemmy, “for I am not
-book-learned; but I am very tired, let me lie down and sleep.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sleep, indeed,” said the gentleman; “not if I can help it.
-Here, Davy”—and he called the red-haired man—“take Jemmy
-Nowlan and put him out; he can tell no story. I will have no
-one here who can’t tell me a story. Put him out, he is not worth
-his supper.”</p>
-
-<p>So the red-haired man thrust Jemmy out at the castle gate, and
-he was just settling himself to sleep on a bench outside, when
-three men came by bearing a coffin.</p>
-
-<p>“Oho, Jemmy Nowlan,” they said, “you are welcome. We just
-wanted a fourth man to carry the coffin.”</p>
-
-<p>And they made him get under it with them, and away they
-marched over hedge and ditch, and field and bog, through briars
-and thorns, till they reached the old churchyard in the valley, and
-then they stopped.</p>
-
-<p>“Who will dig a grave?” said one.</p>
-
-<p>“Let us draw lots,” said another.</p>
-
-<p>And the lot fell on Jemmy. So they gave him a spade, and he
-worked and worked till the grave was dug broad and deep.</p>
-
-<p>“This is not the right place at all for a grave,” said the leader<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">266</span>
-of the party when the grave was finished. “I’ll have no one
-buried in this spot, for the bones of my father rest here.”</p>
-
-<p>So they had to take up the coffin again, and carry it on over field
-and bog till they reached another churchward, where Jemmy was
-obliged to dig a second grave; and when it was finished, the
-leader cried out—</p>
-
-<p>“Who shall we place in the coffin?”</p>
-
-<p>And another voice answered—</p>
-
-<p>“We need draw no lots; lay Jemmy Nowlan in the coffin!”</p>
-
-<p>And the men seized hold of him and tried to cast him to the
-ground. But Jemmy was strong and powerful, and fought them
-all. Still they would not let go their hold, though he dealt them
-such blows as would have killed any other men. And at last he
-felt faint, for he had no weapon to fight with, and his strength
-was going.</p>
-
-<p>Then he saw that the leader carried a hazel switch in his hand,
-and he knew that a hazel switch brought luck; so he made a
-sudden spring and seized it, and whirled it three times round his
-head, and struck right and left at his assailants, when a strange
-and wondrous thing happened; for the three men who were ready
-to kill him, fell down at once to the ground, and remained there
-still as the dead. And the coffin stood white in the moonlight by
-itself, and no hand touched it, and no voice spoke.</p>
-
-<p>But Jemmy never waited to look or think, for the fear of the
-men was on him, lest they should rise up again; so he fled away,
-still holding the hazel twig in his hand, and ran on over field and
-bog, through briars and thorns, till he found himself again at the
-castle gate. Then all the grand servants came out, and the little
-men, and they said—</p>
-
-<p>“You are welcome, Jemmy Nowlan. Come in; his lordship is
-waiting for you.”</p>
-
-<p>And they brought him to a room where the lord was lying on a
-velvet couch, and he said—</p>
-
-<p>“Now, young man, tell me a story, for no one in my castle is
-allowed to eat, drink, or sleep till they have related something
-wonderful that has happened to them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then, my lord,” said Jemmy, “I can tell you the most
-wonderful of stories; and very proud I am to be able to amuse
-your lordship.”</p>
-
-<p>So he told him the story of the three men and the coffin, and
-the lord was so pleased that he ordered the servants to bring the
-youth a fine supper, and the best of wine, and Jemmy ate like a
-prince from gold dishes, and drank from crystal cups of the wine,
-and had the best of everything; but after the supper he felt
-rather queer and dazed-like, and fell down on the ground asleep
-like one dead.</p>
-
-<p>After that he knew nothing till he awoke next morning, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">267</span>
-found himself lying under a haystack in his own field, and all his
-beautiful clothes were gone—the velvet suit and cap and feather
-that he had looked so handsome in at the dance, when all the fine
-ladies fell in love with him. Nothing was left to him of all the
-night’s adventure save the hazel twig, which he still held firmly
-in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>And a very sad and down-hearted man was Jemmy Nowlan
-that day, especially when the herd came to tell him that none of
-the cattle were sold at the fair, for the men were waiting for the
-master, and wondering why he did not come to look after his
-money, while all the other farmers were selling their stock at the
-finest prices.</p>
-
-<p>And Jemmy Nowlan has never yet made out why the fairies
-played him such a malicious and ill turn as to prevent him selling
-his cattle. But if ever again he meets that dark stranger on
-the black horse, he is determined to try the strength of his shillelagh
-on his head, were he ever such a grand man among the
-fairies. For at least he might have left him the velvet suit;
-and it was a shabby thing to take it away just when he couldn’t
-help himself, and had fallen down from fair weakness and exhaustion
-after all the dancing, and the wine he drank at supper, when
-the lovely ladies poured it out for him with their little hands
-covered with jewels.</p>
-
-<p>It was truly a bad and shabby trick, as Jemmy said to himself
-that May morning, when he stood up from under the hay-rick;
-and just shows us never to trust the fairies, for with all their
-sweet words and pleasant ways and bright red wine, they are full
-of malice and envy and deceit, and are always ready to ruin
-a poor fellow and then laugh at him, just for fun, and for the
-spite and jealousy they have against the human race.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="SHEELA-NA-SKEAN">SHEELA-NA-SKEAN.</h3>
-
-
-<p>There is an old ruin of a farmhouse in the County Cork, near
-Fermoy, that has an evil reputation, and no one would build it up
-or inhabit it.</p>
-
-<p>Years and years ago a rich farmer lived there, who was reputed
-to have hoards of gold hid away in his sleeping-room. Some
-said he never slept without the sack of gold being laid under his
-pillow. However, one night he was found cruelly murdered, and
-all the gold in the house was missing except a few pieces stained
-with blood, that had evidently been dropped by the murderers in
-their flight.</p>
-
-<p>The old man at the time was living quite alone. His wife was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">268</span>
-dead, and his only son was away in a distant part of the country.
-But on news of the murder the son returned, and a close investigation
-was made. Suspicion finally fell on the housekeeper and
-a lover she used to bring to the house. They were arrested in
-consequence and brought to trial. The housekeeper, <i>Sheela-na-Skean</i>,
-or Sheela of the Knife, as she was called afterwards, was a
-dark, fierce, powerful woman, noted for her violent and vindictive
-temper. The lover was a weak, cowardly fellow, who at the last
-turned evidence to save his life. He had taken no part, he said,
-in the actual murder, though he had helped Sheela to remove
-and bury the gold. According to his story, Sheela entered the
-old man’s room at night, and taking a sharp short sword that
-always hung at the head of his bed, she stabbed him fiercely over
-and over till not a breath of life was left. Then, calling her
-lover, they ransacked the room, and found quantities of golden
-guineas, which they put in a bag and carried out to the field,
-where they buried it in a safe spot, known only to themselves;
-but this place neither Sheela nor the lover would reveal unless
-they received a pardon.</p>
-
-<p>The murder, however, was too atrocious for pardon, and Sheela
-was hung amid the howlings and execrations of the people. But
-she remained fierce and defiant to the last, still refusing obstinately
-to reveal the place where the money was buried.</p>
-
-<p>The lover, meanwhile, had died in prison from fright, for after
-sentence was pronounced, he fell down in a fit, from which he
-never recovered. So the secret of the gold died with them.</p>
-
-<p>After this the son came to live in the place; and the tradition
-of the hidden gold was still kept alive in the family, but all
-efforts to find it proved useless.</p>
-
-<p>Now a strange thing happened. The farmer dreamed for three
-nights in succession that if he went at midnight to an old ruined
-castle in the neighbourhood, he would hear words that might tell
-him the secret of the gold; but he must go alone. So after the
-third dream the farmer resolved to do as he was ordered, and he
-went forth at midnight to the place indicated. His two sons,
-grown-up young men, anxiously awaited his return. And about
-an hour after midnight the father came home pale as a ghost,
-haggard and trembling. They helped him to his bed, and after a
-little he was able to tell them his adventures. He said, on reaching
-the old ruin he leaned up straight against the wall, and waited
-for the promised words in silence. Then a breath seemed to pass
-over his face, and he heard a low voice whispering in his ear—</p>
-
-<p>“If you want to find the bag of gold, take out the third
-stone.”</p>
-
-<p>“But here,” said the farmer mournfully,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">269</span> “the voice stopped
-before the place was named where the gold lay; for at that
-instant a terrific screech was heard, and the ghost of Sheela
-appeared gigantic and terrible; her hands dripping with blood,
-and her eyes flaming fire; and she rushed to attack me, brandishing
-a short, sharp sword round her head, the very same, perhaps,
-with which she had committed the murder. At sight of this
-awful apparition I fled homeward, Sheela still pursuing me with
-leaps and yells till I reached the boundary of the castle grounds,
-when she sank into the earth and disappeared. But,” continued
-the farmer, “I am certain, from the voice, that the bag of gold
-lies hid under the third stone in——”</p>
-
-<p>He could say no more, for at that instant the door of the bedroom
-was violently flung open, as if by a strong storm wind, the
-candle was blown out, and the unfortunate man was lifted from
-his bed by invisible hands, and dashed upon the floor with a terrible
-crash. In the darkness the young men could hear the groans,
-but they saw no one.</p>
-
-<p>When the candle was relit they went over to help their father,
-but found he was already dead, with a black mark round his
-throat as if from strangulation by a powerful hand. So the secret
-of the gold remained still undiscovered.</p>
-
-<p>After the funeral was over, and all affairs settled, the brothers
-agreed that they would still search for the gold in the old ruins
-of the castle, undeterred by the apparition of the terrible Sheela.
-So on a certain midnight they set forth with spades and big sticks
-for defence, and proceeded to examine every third stone in the
-huge walls, to the height of a man from the ground, seeking some
-secret mark or sign by which, perhaps, the true stone might be
-discovered. But as they worked, a thin blue light suddenly appeared
-at some distance in the inner court of the castle, and by it
-stood the ghost of their father, pointing with his outstretched
-hand to a certain stone in the wall. Now, they thought, that
-must certainly be the spot where the gold is hid; and they rushed
-on; but before they could reach the place, the terrible form of
-Sheela appeared, more awful than words could describe, clothed
-in white, and with a circle of flame round her head. And she
-seized the ghost with her gory hands, and dragged him away with
-horrible yells and imprecations. And far off in the darkness
-they could hear the fight going on, and the yells of Sheela as she
-pursued the ghost.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said the young men, “let us work while they are
-fighting;” and they worked away at the third stone from the
-end, where the blue light had rested—a large flat stone, but easily
-lifted; and when they had rolled it away from the place, there
-underneath lay a huge bag of bright golden guineas. And as
-they raised it up from the earth, a terrific unearthly din was
-heard in the distance, and a shrill scream rang on the air. Then
-a rush of the wind came by them and the blue light vanished,
-but they heeded nothing, only lifted the bag from the clay, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">270</span>
-carried it away with them through the darkness and storm. And
-the yells seemed to pursue them till they reached the boundary
-of the castle grounds, then all was still; and they traversed the
-rest of the way in peace, and reached home safely.</p>
-
-<p>From that time the ghost of <i>Sheela-na-Skean</i> ceased to haunt
-the castle, but lamenting and cries used sometimes to be heard at
-night in and around the old farmhouse; so the brothers pulled it
-down and left it a ruin, and built a handsome residence with
-some of their treasure; for now they had plenty of gold, and they
-lived happily and prospered ever after, with all their family and
-possessions. And on the spot where the gold was found they
-erected a cross, in memory of their father, to whom they owed all
-their wealth, and through whom this prosperity had come; for by
-him the evil spirit of <i>Sheela-na-Skean</i> was conquered at last, and
-the gold restored to the family of the murdered farmer.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="CAPTAIN_WEBB_THE_ROBBER_CHIEF">CAPTAIN WEBB, THE ROBBER CHIEF.</h3>
-
-
-<p>About a hundred years ago a most notorious robber, called
-Captain Webb, used to make the County Mayo his headquarters;
-and dreadful tales are still current amongst the people of his
-deeds of violence and cruelty.</p>
-
-<p>Many beautiful young girls he carried off by force or fraud;
-and when he grew tired of them it was his practice to strip the
-unhappy victims naked, and plunge them down a deep hole near
-Lough Corrib, which is still known throughout the county as
-“Captain Webb’s Hole.”</p>
-
-<p>One day, however, fate worked out a revenge on the audacious
-highwayman by the hands of a woman.</p>
-
-<p>He had committed a daring robbery on the highroad—plundered
-a carriage, shot the horses, and carried off a noble and
-lovely girl, who was returning home with her mother from an
-entertainment, which had been given by a great lord in the
-vicinity. Consequently, as the robber knew, the ladies were
-dressed magnificently, and wore the most costly jewels. After
-stripping the mother of all her ornaments, he left her half dead
-upon the highway; but wrapping a cloak round the young lady,
-Captain Webb flung her on the horse before him and galloped off
-to one of the many hiding-places he had through the country.</p>
-
-<p>For some time he gave up all his other favourites for the sake
-of the beautiful girl, and carried her about with him on all his
-wild expeditions, so great was the madness of his love for her.</p>
-
-<p>But at length he grew tired even of her beauty, and resolved to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">271</span>
-get rid of her, in the same way as he had got rid of the others,
-by a cruel and sudden death.</p>
-
-<p>So one day, when she was out riding beside him, as he always
-forced her to do, he brought her to the fatal hole where so many
-of his victims had perished, intending to cast her down headlong
-as he had done to so many others; but first he told her to dismount
-and to take off all her rich garments of silk and gold and her
-jewels, for she would need them no longer.</p>
-
-<p>“For pity, then,” she said, “do not look on me while I undress,
-for it is not seemly or right to look on a woman undressing; but
-turn your back and I shall unclasp my robe and fling it off.”</p>
-
-<p>So the captain turned his back as she desired him, for he could
-not refuse her last request; but still he kept close to the edge of
-the hole ready to throw her in; when suddenly she sprang upon
-him, and placing both hands on his shoulders, pushed him over
-the edge down into the fathomless gulf, from which no mortal
-ever rose alive, and in this manner the country was freed for evermore
-from the terrible robber fiend, by the courage of a brave
-and beautiful girl.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3><a name="THE_MAYO_ROBBER_AND_FEENISH_THE" id="THE_MAYO_ROBBER_AND_FEENISH_THE">THE MAYO ROBBER AND FEENISH THE
-MARE.</a></h3>
-
-
-<p>Another desperate character that made an evil reputation in the
-same county was Captain Macnamara. Though a man of family
-and good means and of splendid appearance, he led a life of the
-wildest excess, and stopped at no crime so as he could gratify the
-passion or the caprice of the moment, or find money to spend on
-his pleasures, with the reckless, senseless, foolish extravagance of
-an evil, dissolute nature; for he had early squandered away all
-his own patrimony, and now only lived by fraud, lying, and insolent
-contempt of the rights and claims of others.</p>
-
-<p>Just at the time when his finances were at the lowest, he was
-summoned to attend his trial at the county assizes for some malpractices
-concerning land and stock belonging to a wealthy widow
-lady, who had a fine place in the neighbourhood, though she
-seldom lived there, being constantly abroad, in Paris or Rome,
-with her only son, a young lad, the heir of the property. It happened,
-however, that she returned home just in time for the trial,
-which interested her, as it concerned an audacious appropriation
-of some of her best land from which the stock had been drawn off
-and sold by Macnamara. Highly indignant at the insult offered
-to her, the wealthy widow appeared in court resolved on vengeance;
-and was received by all the officials with the utmost<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">272</span>
-distinction and deference. The defendant was put through a
-most torturing examination, in which all his evil practices were
-laid bare with ruthless severity. But the widow heeded
-nothing of the record of wicked deeds; she only saw before her a
-splendid stalwart man in the prime of life, with a magnificent
-presence, flashing eyes, and raven hair. At once she was subjugated,
-as if by magic, by the handsome prisoner in the dock, and
-calling over her counsel, she gave orders that the suit should be
-stopped and no damages claimed. After this, as was natural, a
-warm intimacy sprang up between plaintiff and defendant, which
-ended in a short time by the marriage of the rich widow and the
-spendthrift captain; the widow’s only son and heir to the estate
-being brought home from school to live with them, for, as the
-captain observed, it was necessary that the boy should be early instructed
-in the management of the property.</p>
-
-<p>One evening, however, Macnamara set a rope across a lonely
-part of the road where he knew the lad must pass when riding
-home. In consequence the horse stumbled, and threw the rider;
-and at night when the servants and people went out with torches
-to look for the young heir, he was found lying quite dead by the
-roadside.</p>
-
-<p>The whole property now devolved to the widow, who gave up
-the management entirely to Macnamara; and he lost no time in
-making good use of the large sums of money that came under his
-control, by constantly plunging into renewed courses of dissolute
-extravagance. How the home life went on no one knew, for little
-was seen of the wife while the husband carried on his orgies; but
-after a year had passed by, the country heard with surprise of the
-death of the rich widow, as she was still called—suddenly, it was
-said, by a fit, a stroke. She was found lying dead in her bed one
-morning, and her husband was in the greatest grief—this was the
-orthodox narrative. But strange whispers at the same time went
-through the neighbourhood, that round the neck of the poor dear
-lady was found a black mark, and many had grave suspicions
-of foul play, though they feared to take any measures against
-the captain, so great was the terror he inspired.</p>
-
-<p>Meantime, he consoled himself with another wife, a young girl
-who had been a favourite of his long before his first wife’s death.
-And they led a reckless life together till all the widow’s money
-was gambled away or spent in dissolute frolics. Then he joined a
-wild band of sharpers and desperadoes who fought and cheated
-every one at the fairs and races, and were the terror of the whole
-country. But, especially they warred upon the Big Joyces of
-Connemara, who thereupon swore to be revenged.</p>
-
-<p>Now the captain had a famous mare called <i>Feenish</i>, who could
-fly like the wind and live for days without food. And he taught
-her all sorts of strange tricks—to stand on her hind legs, to go in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">273</span>
-at a window and to walk upstairs; and the way the robber chief
-got the secret of power over men and animals was in this wise.</p>
-
-<p>There was an old raven lived near him up in a big tree, and one
-day Macnamara stole the eggs, took them home, boiled them and
-then set them back again in the nest, to see what the old bird
-would do. Now he saw the wisdom of the raven, for she flew off
-at once to a neighbouring mountain, and having found a certain
-stone of magic virtue carried it back in her beak to the nest.
-With this stone she rubbed the eggs all over, till the life came
-back into them; and in due time the young ravens were flying
-about as strong and joyous as the rest.</p>
-
-<p>Macnamara having observed this process, watched his opportunity,
-and one day when the raven was absent, he stole the
-magic stone from the nest. His first trial of the power was to
-rub himself all over, as he had seen the raven do with the eggs;
-and with a very remarkable result, for he at once became
-possessed of marvellous gifts. He could foresee events, and force
-people to do his will: he knew when danger was near, and what
-path to take to avoid his enemies when they were on his track.
-Then he rubbed Feenish, the mare, all over, and instantly she became
-as wise as a Christian, and knew every word that was said
-to her.</p>
-
-<p>So Macnamara, armed with all these new powers, went on with
-his wild wicked life, and robbed and plundered worse than ever;
-and the blood of many a man, besides, was on his hands.</p>
-
-<p>At last the Joyce faction resolved to make an end of the
-audacious robber, and all the Big Joyces of Connemara gathered
-in force and pursued him from place to place and over bog and
-mountain through half the country. At one time Macnamara
-plunged into a bog; where Feenish lost her four shoes; then he
-made her swim the river at Cong after a hard day’s ride through
-mountain passes; but when the poor mare got to the other side
-she fell down dead, to the great grief of the robber chief, who had
-her buried on an island in Lough Corrib that still bears her
-name—Innis-Feenish. However, when he had laid his faithful
-friend in the clay, all energy forsook him, and all his good luck
-departed—his riches melted away, his children squandered his
-property, and his two sons met a violent death; finally, broken in
-spirit, beggared, and alone in the world, the last of his race, he
-found himself with nothing left of his ill-gotten gains except an
-old grey pony. On this animal he rode to Cork, where he took his
-passage in an emigrant ship to America, and sailed away from the
-old country, laden with the curses of all who had ever known
-him; and from that hour he was heard of no more. So ended the
-wicked career of the spendthrift and gambler and the suspected
-murderer of many victims.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">274</span></p>
-
-
-<h2><a name="SKETCHES_OF_THE_IRISH" id="SKETCHES_OF_THE_IRISH">SKETCHES OF THE IRISH
-PAST.</a></h2>
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_BARDIC_RACE">THE BARDIC RACE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The magi, the Sephoe, the gymnosophists, and the Irish adepts,
-held much the same creed and the same dogmas with regard to
-the conduct of life necessary to heighten the spiritual power.
-They all abstained from animal food at such times as the rush of
-inspiration was on them and the madness of prophetic rage; and
-at all times they favoured solitude, living apart in the House of
-Learning or Bardic College, where they admitted no obtrusive intimacies
-with lower intellects to disturb their lofty and exalted
-moods of thought. The means, also, by which they obtained
-mastery over diseases and the minds of men, with the strange and
-subtle use they made of herbs, were all kept secret amongst themselves;
-for they held that the prying eyes of shallow unbelievers
-should never be suffered to intrude upon the sacred mysteries.
-And it is certain that the bards possessed strange and mystic
-powers of wisdom beyond and above all other men. It was therefore
-very dangerous to offend a poet. If any one refused him a
-request he would take the lobe of the person’s ear and grind it between
-his fingers, and the man would die. Yet the bards were
-capable of much human emotion, and were the sweet singers of
-sympathy when sorrow touched a household.</p>
-
-<p>The following elegy from the Irish, written about two hundred
-years ago by the Ard-Filé, or chief poet of the tribe, has many
-natural, pathetic touches, and when chanted in Irish to the harp
-had power to melt the hearts of all the hearers to tears.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center">AN ELEGY.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">O Boyne, once famed for battles, sports, and conflicts,</div>
- <div class="verse">And great heroes of the race of Conn,</div>
- <div class="verse">Art thou grey after all thy blooms?</div>
- <div class="verse">O aged old woman of grey-green pools,</div>
- <div class="verse">O wretched Boyne of many tears.</div><span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">275</span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">Where is the glory of thy sires?</div>
- <div class="verse">The glory of Art with the swift arrow;</div>
- <div class="verse">Of Meiltan, with the swift-darting spears</div>
- <div class="verse">Of the lordly race of the O’Neil?</div>
- <div class="verse">To thee belonged red victory,</div>
- <div class="verse">When the Fenian wrath was kindled,</div>
- <div class="verse">And the heroes in thousands rode to war,</div>
- <div class="verse">And the bridles clanked on the steeds.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">O river of kings and the sons of kings,</div>
- <div class="verse">Of the swift bark and the silver fish,</div>
- <div class="verse">I lay my blessing on thee with my tears,</div>
- <div class="verse">For thou art the watcher by a grave—</div>
- <div class="verse">My treasures lie in the earth at thy side—</div>
- <div class="verse">O Boyne of many tears.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">My sons lie there in their strength,</div>
- <div class="verse">My little daughter in her beauty—</div>
- <div class="verse">Rory, and Brian, and Rose—</div>
- <div class="verse">These have I given against my will,</div>
- <div class="verse">My blood, my heart, my bone and kin,</div>
- <div class="verse">My love and my life, to the grave.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">The blessing of men was on them,</div>
- <div class="verse">The blessings of thousands that loved them,</div>
- <div class="verse">From Kells of the Crosses to Drogheda—</div>
- <div class="verse">Eight thousand blessings to Dowth of the Trees.</div>
- <div class="verse">Peace be on the earth where they lie!</div>
- <div class="verse">By the royal stream of the kings,</div>
- <div class="verse">In the land of the great O’Neil.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>The Bardic song amongst all nations was the first expression of
-the human soul, with all its strong, passionate emotions and heroic
-impulses. It is remarkable that, although several invasions of
-Ireland are on record, yet but one language seems to have existed
-there from the earliest times down to the coming of the Anglo-Normans
-in the twelfth century. The Bards held it as their peculiar
-duty to raise this language to the highest perfection, and the
-laws of Celtic poetry, especially, were most elaborate and the
-structure of the verse exceedingly difficult. Ten years of study
-were allowed the students at the Druids’ College to gain perfection
-in the art, and also to practise the memory; for at the
-royal festivals the Ard-Filé was expected to recite fully and perfectly
-whatever heroic tale might be called for by the king at the
-banquet. On great occasions also, when the meeting was held in
-the open air, the chiefs sat round in a circle on mounds of turf,
-to the accompaniment of the harp, the chorus joining in the
-while the bards, standing in the centre, recited the heroic narrative
-lyrical portions at intervals, and a circle of harpists at the outermost
-ring of the assemblage introduced occasional symphonies of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">276</span>
-pure instrumental music to give the bards time for rest between
-the parts of the recitation.</p>
-
-<p>There were three chief measures in music in use amongst the
-poets—“the Sorrowful,” or the chant for the dead; “the Delightful,”
-reserved for dances and festivities; and “the Reposing,”
-devoted entirely to love sonnets and the plaintive softness of
-lyrical expression. But the <i>Ross-Catha</i>, or battle-hymn, was
-the great war-song to which the warriors marched to battle, and
-which inspired them with the heroic madness that braved death
-for victory.</p>
-
-<p>Everything connected with the bards is interesting. They
-were so gifted, so learned, and so beautiful. For even genius
-was not considered enough, without beauty, to warrant a young
-man being enrolled in the ranks of the poets. A noble, stately
-presence was indispensable, and the poet was required not only to
-be gifted, but to be handsome. Then he was promoted through
-all the grades until he reached the last and highest, called “The
-Wisdom of the Gods,” but the knowledge then acquired by the
-initiated was kept sacred from the crowd, and the adept swore by
-the sun, the stars, and the hosts of heaven never to reveal the
-mysteries acquired by his initiation, to the profane.</p>
-
-<p>The high-born maidens amongst the noble families were also
-trained by the Druids in poetry and music, and in the exercise of
-the chase, such as archery and throwing the lance, to give their
-bodies health, vigour and beauty, while those endowed with
-peculiar intellect were admitted into the bardic orders, and
-became the priestess, prophetess, or poetess of the tribe; who
-inspired men by her eloquence and had power by her incantations
-over the deep mysteries of life. Such was Eodain, the chief
-poetess of Erin, the guide and inspirer of Eugene, the king of the
-South, the prophetess of her nation, who saved him and his kingdom
-from ruin by her wisdom, and redeemed him by her counsels
-from his dissolute and evil life.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_ANCIENT_RACE">THE ANCIENT RACE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>But thousands of years ago, long before kings, bards, and Druids,
-with all their learning and comparative civilization, flourished in
-Ireland, and before the traditions of a beautiful fairy race were
-brought from the far East by a people accustomed to the sight of
-beauty, grace and splendour, an ancient race existed in the world—a
-mysterious, primitive wave of human life that spread over all
-Europe, perhaps over all the earth, and even surged upon the
-shores of our own Western island; possibly a pre-Adamic race,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">277</span>
-inferior in all points, physical as well as mental, to the Adamic
-race that succeeded them.</p>
-
-<p>They have left no name or history, yet evidences of their
-nature, habits, intellect, and modes of life can be scientifically
-deduced from the abundant strange and curious antiquarian
-remains to be seen in the Museum of the Royal Irish Academy,
-of which Sir William Wilde in his illustrated catalogue has
-given such a perfect and comprehensive description. Records of
-a period so remote that the use of metals even was unknown; yet
-these ancient records reveal the story of the rude half-developed,
-early humanity of the world in as clear a symbol to the expert and
-the archæologist, as if written in alphabetical letters on monoliths,
-like those of Babylon.</p>
-
-<p>Without, therefore, being forced into shadowy theory or nebular
-hypothesis, we may readily construct the whole life of the primitive
-man, his mode of being and doing, of dressing and of eating,
-of living, dying and sepulture, simply from the rude implements
-fashioned by his hand that cover the walls of the Academy, and
-are the letters in which an eternal page of human history is
-written.</p>
-
-<p>But, this first pre-Adamic rudimental humanity was not wholly
-extirpated by the subsequent Adamic race. Representatives of
-them still remained throughout the world, and are yet existing,
-though these half-souled specimens of an early, inferior humanity,
-are gradually dying out and disappearing before the advance of
-the higher Adamic race, the destined lords and rulers of earth.</p>
-
-<p>In Ireland the inferior primitive tribes became the bond-slaves
-for the higher humanity—the Tuatha-de-Dananns and Milesians
-that succeeded them; and specimens of this slave people can still
-be seen in remote districts in Ireland along the coast-line of the
-West, and in the secluded mountain passes. They are held in
-much contempt by the descendants of the nobler race, and are
-stigmatized even now as “the slave people,” and the bondsmen of
-their forefathers.</p>
-
-<p>It seems, then, an incontrovertible truth that the early inhabitants
-of Ireland, as of all Europe—in fact, the whole pre-Adamite
-humanity of the world—lived and died throughout how many
-ages we know not in a state little higher than the animal
-creation, without the knowledge of even the simplest elements
-of civilization, which all the Adamic races possess, from their
-higher organization and intellect, and which they seem to have
-had from the date of their earliest appearance on earth.</p>
-
-<p>The clothing of the primitive man was of the skins of animals
-fastened with thongs, or tunics made of rushes, such as were
-found some years ago in Spain, on the skeleton forms of pre-historic
-date buried in a cave of the Sierra Nevada. Their only
-weapons and tools were of stone, manufactured by another stone.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">278</span>
-Their ornaments were of shells and fish-bones; and their dwellings
-such only as instinct has suggested to all animals.</p>
-
-<p>There are abundant evidences in our National Museum to prove
-the existence of this primary stratum of barbarism underlying all
-the culture of modern Europe; and we might almost hesitate to
-link so low a type of humanity with our own if we did not recognize
-in it also the characteristic instinct of man, entirely
-wanting in the animals—an irrepressible tendency towards progression
-and improvement, and, above all, to ornamentation,
-which is a distinctive human quality.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="THE_ANTIQUITIES_OF_IRELAND">THE ANTIQUITIES OF IRELAND.</h3>
-
-
-<p>We commence the study of this early race with the first rude
-stone implement with which a savage man killed an animal
-scarcely more savage. Then, simple designs of ornamentation
-are discernible—the first twilight dawning of soul through
-matter. The rude stone implement becomes decorated, more
-symmetrical in form, more adapted to its uses. There is evidence
-of a growing sense of beauty, and heightened reasoning
-powers. After the introduction of metals, we trace the original
-stone forms reproduced first in simple unalloyed copper, afterwards
-in that perfect and beautiful bronze of a ruddy yellow,
-like gold, which no modern bronze has ever equalled. There is
-no violent disruption of ideas, as if the new incoming race had
-entirely vanquished and crushed the earlier and elder; but on the
-contrary, a gradual and continuous development of the original
-ideas of this elder race itself, always co-working with whatever
-new influences may have come to it from without.</p>
-
-<p>Many writers have held the belief that the first colonists of
-Ireland were a highly-civilized people, clothed with Tyrian silk,
-fine linen of Egypt, and adorned with costly ornaments of gold.
-But stern facts refute this theory. The same primitive race who
-used only stone weapons were unacquainted with the art of
-weaving, and knew of no other garment than the untanned skin
-of the animal they killed for food. Theorists might still, however,
-argue, doubt, and disbelieve, if one of the ancient race had not himself
-risen, as it were, from the grave, after a sleep of thousands of
-years, to give his testimony concerning his people. In 1821 this
-primitive Irishman, clad completely in skins laced with thongs,
-was found in a peat bog, ten feet below the surface. The teeth,
-long dark hair and beard, were perfect. Portions of this dress
-have been preserved in the Museum of the Royal Irish Academy.
-The material used in sewing was fine gut, and the regularity and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">279</span>
-closeness of the stitching are most remarkable. Specimens of the
-antique skin mocassins and skin caps have been also found at
-various times in the peat bogs, and secured for the Museum, so
-that we have the dress of the ancient Irishman complete.</p>
-
-<p>Long after this period of barbarism, but still at a time so
-distant that it is anterior to all historic record, we find that the
-Irish had attained some knowledge of metals and the art of
-weaving. The Museum contains numerous highly-finished illustrations
-of the beautifully-formed, slender, leaf-shaped swords
-and daggers of bronze, which began gradually to supersede the
-use of the primitive celt. Many of these swords are of the pure
-Grecian type, formed apparently on the model of the leaf of the
-aloe or the agave. One sword found on an ancient battle-field is
-curved like a Turkish yataghan; and in “The Book of Rights”
-“curved swords of battle” are frequently referred to. But the
-specimens of the broad scythe-shaped sword, “which is especially
-and peculiarly Irish,” are the most numerous, as many as forty-one
-of these heavy, thick, round-pointed battle-axe swords being
-in the Museum.</p>
-
-<p>The same progress of artistic development is observable in the
-ancient swords as was noticed in the primitive celt—as the art
-advanced, the manufacturer began to exercise his artistic faculties
-in fanciful and costly decoration. The blade was adorned with
-either cast or engraved ornamentation, and the hilt inlaid or
-studded with gold. Thus, Brian Boroimhe is described as carrying
-a gold-hilted sword in his right hand at the battle of Clontarf.</p>
-
-<p>It is very remarkable that, throughout the whole series, from
-the rudest to the most highly finished, a peculiar idea is traceable
-in the ornamentation, by which they can at once be recognized as
-Irish; and this idea seems to have travelled from Irish Paganism
-to Irish Christianism. The ornamentation on the sepulchral
-stones of New Grange is repeated on the stone celts; it is carried
-on into the age of Bronze; it decorated the swords and spears of
-the kings, as well as their costly diadems and ornaments of gold,
-and still continued to be traced, with a kind of loving fidelity to
-the ancient symbols, upon the manuscripts illuminated by priestly
-hands, so late as the tenth and eleventh centuries.</p>
-
-<p>For the illustration of the costume of the early Irish, after it
-passed from primitive helpless barbarism to comparative civilization,
-by the aid of the knowledge of metals and the art of
-weaving, fortunately we are not left to mere theories; for, by a
-singular chance, the representative of the advanced period, like
-him of the barbaric age, arises also from the grave of the Past to
-bear witness for himself.</p>
-
-<p>In 1824, a male body, completely clad in woollen antique
-garments, was found in a bog near Sligo, six feet below the
-surface; and so perfect was the body when first discovered, that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">280</span>
-a magistrate was called upon to hold an inquest on it. The
-garments also were in such complete preservation, that a photograph
-was made of a person clad in this antique suit, with the
-exception of the shoes, which were too small for an adult of our
-day, and a drawing from this photograph is one of the best and
-most beautifully executed illustrations of the Museum catalogue.
-The costume of this ancient Irish gentleman is exceedingly
-picturesque, consisting of trews of a plaid pattern, made wide
-above, like Turkish trousers, but fitting close to the leg and ankle;
-over them was a tunic of soft cloth, most elaborately gored and
-gussetted, showing high perfection in the tailoring art. The skirt
-of the tunic, which extends to the knee, is set on full, and
-measures eight feet in circumference at the bottom. The sleeves
-are tight, and open to the elbow, like an Albanian jacket; and
-over all was thrown the immemorial Irish mantle, so invariably
-worn, so indispensable a portion of Irish costume that it passed
-into a proverb among our neighbours, the Welsh, “like an Irishman
-for the cloak.”</p>
-
-<p>This graceful garment, as found upon the hero of the bog, and
-now visible in our Museum, is composed of brown, soft cloth,
-made straight on the upper edge, which is nine feet long, but cut
-nearly into the segment of a circle on the lower. The form
-resembles closely that worn by the Calabrian peasant at this day.
-These cloaks were often of great value; kings were paid tribute of
-them. They were made of various colours, each colour being a
-symbol to denote the rank of the wearer. The number of colours
-also in a dress had a significant value, and was regulated by law.
-Thus, one colour only was allowed to slaves; two for soldiers;
-three for goodly heroes, or young lords; six for the learned men;
-five for a poetess; and seven was the regal number for kings and
-queens.</p>
-
-<p>In the “Book of Rights,” the earliest accessible authority on the
-subject of costume prior to the Norman Invasion, we read of cloaks
-of various colours presented in tribute to the kings—cloaks of
-purple, red cloaks, green, white, black; in fact, cloaks of all colours.
-Some are mentioned as bordered with gold. The tunic is also
-described frequently, “with golden borders—with gold ornaments—with
-golden hems.” Another form of cloak was fashioned with
-a hood like the Arab bornous, and was bordered with a deep
-fringe of goat’s hairs.</p>
-
-<p>Irish costume seems, in fact, to have been half-Oriental, half-Northern,
-like the compound race that peopled the island. The
-trews were the same as the Germanic <i>braccœ</i>; while the tunic was
-Albanian, and the mantle Eastern; as well as the high, conical
-head-dress, which is identical in form with the Persian cap of the
-present day. On this subject Sir William Wilde remarks—</p>
-
-<p>“Every day’s observation and research bring to light new<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">281</span>
-affinities with early Irish costume. In the great French work,
-‘Herculaneum et Pompeii,’ there is a battle scene, copied from a
-mosaic at Pompeii, in which the arms and dress of the combatants
-are almost identical with those of ancient Ireland. The
-vanquished wear tight-fitting trousers, close tunics, several of
-which are plaided, and cloaks with the hood coming over the head
-precisely like the Irish cochall. The chief figures wear torques
-round the neck, and bracelets on the wrists, and the hood is retained
-in its place by a narrow frontlet, apparently of gold. The
-colours of the garments are also peculiarly Irish. In some, the
-cloak is yellow; the mantle, dark red; and the tunic, purple
-bordered with white; the latter spangled with triple stars of gold,
-precisely after the fashion figured in the ‘Book of Kells.’ The
-chariot in which the principal figure stands resembles some figured
-on our ancient crosses, and the charioteer wears a pointed cap,
-green tunic, and tartan vest. All the vanquished wear beards, and
-their hoods envelop their chins.”</p>
-
-<p>The study of ancient costume has especial interest for the
-historian, as the culture, civilization, and commercial relations of
-a people can be readily deduced from it; and in the numerous and
-curious illustrations of the catalogue, taken from ancient records,
-illuminated manuscripts, and the ancient crosses and sepulchral
-monuments of the country, everything has been brought together
-that could throw light on this obscure subject. One most
-remarkable illustration is a full-length portrait of Dermot
-M’Morrough, king of Leinster, taken from an illuminated copy of
-Giraldus Cambrensis in the possession of Sir Thomas Philips,
-which portrait was very probably drawn from the life.</p>
-
-<p>From all that is known on the subject, it would appear that
-linen and cloth of every degree of fineness, according to the rank
-of the wearer, were the principal materials used in ancient Irish
-dress. No remains of silk garments have been discovered; nor do
-the historical records, as far as we are aware, make any mention
-of silk being employed in personal wear. It is remarkable also,
-that while a traditional belief exists that linen has been known
-from time immemorial to Ireland, yet the Academy does not possess
-a single specimen of ancient linen. The linen shirts worn at the
-time of the Norman Invasion are said to have been of immense
-size, and dyed a saffron colour. But there is undeniable proof,
-that the tartan, or cloth of divers colours, which we are accustomed
-to associate only with Scotland, was worn universally in Ireland
-in ancient times. Portions of tartans are preserved in the
-Museum, and probably each grade of rank and clan possessed a
-characteristic plaid as well as a special dress. A love of variegated
-and glowing colours, and a tendency to gorgeous decoration, seem
-to have been always instinctive to the Irish nature.</p>
-
-<p>The female dress of Ireland at a period subsequent to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">282</span>
-barbaric age is also illustrated not from conjecture, but from actual
-observation; for in 1843 a complete female antique dress was discovered
-many feet below the surface in a bog (these museums of
-Nature, where she stores up and preserves her specimens of antique
-life with a care and perfection that no mortal curator can ever
-hope to equal), and is now to be seen in the Academy’s museum.</p>
-
-<p>It consists of a boddice with a long waist, open in front, and
-attached to a full plaited skirt; which, like the Albanian fustanell,
-consists of several narrow gored breadths, gathered into small
-plaits at top, and spreading into a broad quilling at the bottom;
-each plait being stitched on the inside to preserve the form.</p>
-
-<p>The bottom of the skirt measures twenty-two and a half feet in
-circumference, and there are ninety-two plaits, most elaborately
-arranged, so that the joining of each of the narrow breadths should
-fall within a plait. The material is of a brown woollen cloth.</p>
-
-<p>No pictorial representations exist of female costume earlier
-than the fourteenth or fifteenth centuries but from the sculptured
-effigies on tombs, we find it consisted of either a flowing robe and
-veil, or of the plaited skirt and tight boddice already described,
-while the head-dress varied according to the fashion of the day.</p>
-
-<p>The subject of personal decoration is perfectly illustrated in the
-Museum; the Academy possessing one of the largest collections in
-Europe, beginning at the first rude effort at adornment of the
-barbaric age, up to the rich golden ornaments of a later, though
-still pre-historic period.</p>
-
-<p>It is not pleasant to national pride, after feeding on the gorgeous
-fables of our earliest annalists, to contemplate the primitive Irishman
-fastening his mantle of untanned deerskin with a fish-bone
-or a thorn, as we know the Germans did in the time of Tacitus;
-yet, unhappily, antiquarian research will not allow us to doubt the
-fact of the simple savageness of the first colonists. But when the
-intellect of the rude man stirred within him, he began to carve the
-bones of the animals he killed into articles of ornament and use.
-Thus the slender bones of fowls were fashioned into cloak pins,
-especially the leg bone, where the natural enlargement at one end
-suggested the form, and afforded surface for artistic display.
-From this first rude essay of the child-man can be traced the continuous
-development of his ideas in decorative art, from the carving
-of bones to the casting of metal, up to the most elaborate working
-in enamel, gold, and precious stones. Our Museum is rich in these
-objects, containing more than five hundred specimens. Pins,
-fibulæ,<a id="FNanchor_10_10" href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">10</a> and brooches having been discovered in Ireland in immense<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">283</span>
-quantities and variety, some of which are unsurpassed for beauty
-of design and workmanship.</p>
-
-<p>“In these articles,” Sir William remarks, “the process of
-development is displayed in a most remarkable manner; for, from
-the simple unadorned pin or spike of copper, bronze or brass (the
-metallic representation of the thorn), to the most elaborately
-wrought ring-brooch of precious metal, the patterns of which are
-now used by our modern jewellers—every stage of art, both in
-form and handicraft, is clearly defined, not one single link is wanting.
-In the first stage all the artist’s powers were lavished on the
-decoration of the pin itself, or in the development of the head,
-which was enlarged and decorated into every possible shape and
-conceivable pattern. When it was almost impossible to improve
-the head, a ring or loop was added, passed through a hole in the
-neck. In the next stage, the ring was doubled, or many rings
-added. Finally, the ring was enlarged, flattened out, decorated,
-enamelled, covered with filigree, and jewelled, until, in those
-magnificent specimens of silver and gold found in Ireland of late
-years, it reached a degree of perfection which modern art can with
-difficulty imitate.”</p>
-
-<p>The forms of many of the Irish brooches, pins, and fibulæ, are
-identical with numbers found in Scandinavia, but the peculiar
-ornamentation—a curiously involved spiral or serpent coil, which
-can be traced back through all ages of Irish art to the most
-remote antiquity—is met nowhere else; neither in Etruscan nor
-Teutonic art, though some assert its origin can be traced to
-Assyria and Egypt. However, this <i>Opus Hibernicum</i>, as it was
-termed by the learned Kemble, is one of the tests by which an
-antiquary can distinguish national from imported work. It is
-also remarkable that the ornaments of like form found so
-copiously in Scandinavia are all of bronze, while the Irish are of
-gold, a metal which, there is every reason to believe, existed in
-Ireland abundantly in former times, and is still found in small
-quantities. That it was used for ornament, even coeval with the
-stone celt, is also probable, as the rudest savage can make the
-ductile metal assume any form by simply flattening it between
-two stones.</p>
-
-<p>Many centuries before the Christian era, according to the
-annals, gold was smelted in Wicklow, to the east of the Liffey.
-Goblets and brooches were covered with it, and the artificer’s
-name was Ucadan; but no further mention of native gold occurs
-throughout our ancient histories. However, two thousand years
-after, the story of the old annalist was singularly confirmed; for,
-in the year 1796, in the same part of Wicklow, perhaps on the
-very site of the furnace of Ucadan, upwards of £10,000 worth of
-native gold was obtained in about two months, and small
-quantities have been gathered there from time to time ever since.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">284</span></p>
-
-<p>The subject of the gold antiquities is one full of interest, and
-even of mystery. The quantity of antique manufactured gold
-ornaments dug up in Ireland, even in recent times, has been
-estimated as exceeding half a million of money. As much
-more may be lying beneath our feet, for, every year, as new
-cuttings are made for railroads, or bogs are drained, deposits of
-gold ornaments come to light. Two or three years ago a deposit
-of massive gold bracelets, in value nearly £5,000, as bright and
-beautiful as if just finished, was dug up in Carlow; and, still
-more recently, several antique golden frontlets were found by a
-labourer while working in a field, who, utterly unconscious of
-their value, threw them to his children, and the author of the
-Catalogue actually discovered, one day, the son of the man cutting
-them up into nose-rings for his pigs. They were happily rescued,
-and are now in the Academy. The form is beautiful and classic;
-it is a half-moon diadem, resembling accurately some seen in
-Etruscan sculpture.</p>
-
-<p>What inestimable treasures may have been thus lost! not
-merely from ignorance, but also from cupidity; for numbers of
-gold articles have disappeared in the smelting-pot of the jewellers,
-who bought them from the country people at perhaps a fractional
-part of their value. The very small annual sum allowed to the
-Academy by Government is another cause why the work of
-destruction still goes on. Valuable gold ornaments are frequently
-offered there for sale—too valuable, unhappily, for the Academy
-to purchase, and with an indignant regret that is almost like
-a sense of shame, the members are obliged to leave them to their
-fate. Of course legislation could remedy all this, as it has done
-in Denmark, where the State has secured the possession of all
-antiquities found in the country for the National Museum,
-without any wrong being done to the finder, who is paid the
-full value of all he brings. But in Denmark there is a strong
-national pride in the subject, and the peasant, who is early
-taught by the local authorities the value of such things, would
-as soon think of destroying an antiquity as of burning his
-Bible.</p>
-
-<p>It is still a question among the learned whether this enormous
-amount of manufactured gold, far exceeding all yet discovered in
-England and Scandinavia, was altogether native, or to some
-extent imported. An analysis of some of the gold has been made,
-to test the identity of its constituents with the gold of Wicklow,
-and in the instance selected the gold was found similar. This fact
-and the ornamentation are proofs to uphold the native theory:
-while opponents state that they came in the way of commerce
-from the Carthaginians who traded here. Ornaments identical
-with the Irish in form—the twisted torques, the bracelets, the
-diadems, and frontlets, having been found in the interior of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">285</span>
-Africa, and along the Gold Coast; in India, Barbary, Spain, and
-the islands of the Mediterranean.</p>
-
-<p>Several ancient Irish musical instruments, the chief of which
-were the harp and trumpet, and numerous fragments of harps
-have been found also in the oldest crannoges, proving how ancient
-was the knowledge and the practice of music in Ireland—a fact
-confirmed by the Welsh Annals, which state that the Irish
-surpassed all nations in their proficiency on the harp.</p>
-
-<p>The Museum possesses sixteen antique bronze trumpets, one of
-which—the finest specimen yet found in Europe—measures about
-eight feet in length, and the joining is curiously riveted with
-metal studs, a fact proving its antiquity, as it must have been
-formed in an age unacquainted with the art of soldering. With
-regard to coins, Sir William Wilde utterly denies that bronze
-ring-money was ever used in Ireland, as stated by Sir William
-Betham, who borrowed his idea from Vallancy: for all the
-articles hitherto described as ring-money, are now proved undeniably
-to belong to chain-dress or armour. The ancient medium
-of barter seems to have been so many head of cattle, or so many
-ounces of gold. A native coinage was utterly unknown. The
-amount of bronze discovered in Ireland is enormous, and proves
-the long duration of a period when it was in general use, before
-iron was known. Specimens of every object necessary to a
-people’s life have been found fabricated of it—weapons, tools,
-armour, swords, and spears; culinary vessels, caldrons, spoons,
-and other minor requisites; hair-pins for the flowing locks of the
-women; brooches for the graceful mantles of the chiefs, but not
-of the dark, dingy, modern compound that bears the name.
-Irish antique bronze was a metal of bright, glowing, golden
-beauty, and the effect of an army marching with spears of this
-metal in the flashing sunlight, we can imagine to have been truly
-magnificent.</p>
-
-<p>The people of this remote age must have attained considerable
-skill in the manufacturing arts—must have had laws, religion,
-and social culture—yet how little would have been known of them
-if these mute witnesses of a past humanity had not been interpreted
-by science. Archæology and philology are the only
-solvents of the past; and no theory can henceforth be tolerated
-that will not stand the test of being assayed by them. The
-philologist traces the origin and affinities of our people in the
-roots of the Irish language; while their habits, modes of life,
-their position in the scale of civilization throughout the long
-duration of the unwritten age, can only be read in the letters of
-stone, bronze, and gold upon the walls of our Academy.</p>
-
-<p>Irish manuscripts, though the oldest in North-western Europe,
-date back scarcely further than the fifth or sixth century. Beyond
-that period we enter a region of darkness, through which no<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">286</span>
-literature or letters radiate their light; yet, unassisted by either,
-the archæologist can reconstruct the primitive world and the
-primitive man with greater truth and certainty than if he
-possessed both; for the facts of a museum are changeless and
-enduring, and can suffer no mutation from prejudice or ignorance,
-yet we must remember that it is science alone that gives value to
-these facts. Without its aid a museum would be only an
-aggregate of curious lumber. The archæologist must combine, in
-a synthetic and comprehensive view—must arrange in their proper
-sequence—must elucidate by a world-wide learning, these sibyline
-fragments of the past; or this writing on the wall, though it
-express the most irrefragable truths of history, will remain an
-undeciphered hieroglyphic, as useless and unprofitable to the
-student as the alphabet of an unknown language, which he is
-unable to form into intelligible words. All this Sir William
-Wilde accomplished for the Museum of the Academy, and in his
-clear and well-arranged volumes we can read the stone pages of
-our history by the light of all the learning and antiquarian
-research of the past and present age gathered to one focus.</p>
-
-<p>The conclusion to be drawn from the facts laid before us is,
-that in an age of remote antiquity (M. Boucher de Perthes, the
-well-known French author and antiquarian, has written a book to
-prove that it was prior to the Deluge) the entire face of the earth
-was covered by a nomad people, speaking the one language, and
-living after the same rude fashion, with no other weapons than
-sharpened stone. This race passed away, and no research has ever
-yet discovered their name, their language, their religion, or the
-era of their existence. Not an inscription, not a word, not a
-letter graven on any stone have they left to allay the torturing
-curiosity of the inquirer. Yet traces of them have been found
-from Mexico to Japan; from the steppes of Tartary to the
-Pampas; round the shores of every European sea, and along the
-coasts of the two oceans. Wherever man’s foot has trodden within
-historic times, they trod before all history. Even in this outlying
-isle of ours vestiges of this people are strewn so thickly that the
-very soil seems made of their remains. Then another race swept
-across Europe—a comparatively cultured race, bearing with them
-the chief element of civilization—a knowledge of metals. They
-spread over both sides of the Danube; left their footprints in
-Italy and on the shores of the Baltic; overran Switzerland,
-France, and Belgium, giving names to the rivers they passed, the
-mountains they crossed, and the towns they founded, which
-names cling to them even to this day. From Belgium they spread
-to Britain, and from thence, or by the seacoast of Spain, they
-reached Ireland, where they founded the existing Irish race, and
-brought with them the knowledge of metals, the art of music and
-poetry, and the still existing Irish language. Historians name<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">287</span>
-these people the Celts. On the Continent they were gradually
-crushed down beneath the Roman and Gothic races, and in Britain
-also by successive conquests. But Ireland suffered no conquest.
-Here the old Celtic race lived and flourished, and here alone their
-language, which everywhere else melted into a compound with
-the Gothic and Latin, maintained its distinct existence. The
-English language is the gradually formed product and result of
-the successive conquests of England. But no invading people
-ever gained sufficient strength in Ireland to influence the original
-language. It exists still amongst us, living and spoken the same
-as when thousands of years ago the Celtic people first crossed the
-Danube and gave it the name it now bears. For this reason all
-the archæologists of Europe turn their eyes to our sacred isle, as
-to the one great museum of the Celtic race. Thus, Professor
-Keller, of Zurich, anxiously studies the formation of Irish crannoges,
-to compare them with the Swiss; and the learned Pictet,
-of Geneva, demands the long-deferred completion of the Irish
-Dictionary, with an ardour that puts to shame our own apathy,
-as without it comparative philology wants its chief corner-stone.
-The great facts of our Museum, illustrated, described, and laid
-before the learned of Europe in a comprehensive form, will go far
-to correct the crude, imperfect notions of Continental writers
-concerning Irish antiquities. For instance, Professor Lindenschmidt,
-of Mayence, asserted in one of his earlier published
-works, that all the ancient bronze articles found on this side of
-the Alps were imported from Etruria, as a people so barbarous as
-the Irish could never have produced them. The fact being, that
-the largest, most varied, most highly decorated collection of
-bronze celts existing is to be found in our Museum, along with
-numerous specimens of the moulds in which they were cast,
-discovered on the very spot where the ancient workman had lit
-his furnace. This universal interest and demand for information
-are enough to stimulate our learned men to exertion, seeing that
-they are, in a measure, answerable to Europe for the proper
-preservation of our antiquities, the very rudest of which can tell
-some tale of the past, as the mere furrows along the streets of the
-dead Pompeii show that life once passed there.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="EARLY_IRISH_ART">EARLY IRISH ART.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Early Irish art illustrates in a very remarkable manner those
-distinctive qualities of Irish nature, which we know from the
-legendary traditions have characterized our people from the
-earliest times. The earnest religious faith, the love of gorgeous<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">288</span>
-colouring, the tendency to express ideas by symbol, and the vivid
-imagination that delights in the strange and unusual, often
-fantastic and grotesque, in place of the absolute and real, combined
-with the patient and minute elaboration of details, so truly
-Oriental in its spirit, specially mark Irish ornamentation. All
-these reverential, artistic, fanciful, and subtle evidences of the
-peculiar Celtic spirit find a full and significant expression in the
-wonderful splendours of early Irish art, as seen chiefly in the
-ancient illuminated manuscripts.</p>
-
-<p>The reputation of Irish artists for excellence in these costly
-productions became so extended throughout Christian Europe in
-the early ages, that at the request of many nations Ireland sent
-forth numbers of her most cultured artists as teachers and scribes
-to the great foreign schools and colleges; and numerous examples
-of skilled Irish work are still existing in Continental Libraries,
-where they are held as amongst the most sacred of the national
-treasures. For a full and comprehensive illustration of this subject
-it would be impossible to over-estimate the artistic and historic
-value of Mr. Westwood’s magnificent book on Anglo-Saxon and
-Irish Manuscripts. The volume contains <i>facsimiles</i> from all the
-principal illuminated Celtic manuscripts of Europe, executed with
-the most scrupulous care, chiefly by Mr. Westwood himself, the
-majority of them with the aid of a magnifying glass, so minute
-and delicate are the lines of ornamentation to be represented. In
-fact, for accuracy of information and richness of illustration, the
-volume surpasses anything yet published on Celtic art in the
-United Kingdom, and may claim equality with the grand, but
-enormously expensive work of Count Bastard, on early French
-Manuscripts. Mr. Westwood, in a learned preliminary dissertation,
-gives his views on the origin and development of Hiberno-Saxon
-art during the first thousand years of the Christian era, and finds
-in the ornamentation, as observed by Kemble and others, a distinct
-<i>Opus Hibernicum</i> and an <i>Opus Anglicum</i>, but the Irish the more
-perfect of the two, and wholly different from Continental art of
-the same era.</p>
-
-<p>The earliest manuscripts of Greece and Rome show nothing like
-this distinctive Celtic art; nor the Italian mosaics, nor the wall
-paintings of Herculaneum or Pompeii—beautiful as are the representations
-of the human figure found there; nor does Byzantine
-art afford any similar types. From whence, then, did the Irish,
-the acknowledged founders of Celtic art in Europe, derive their
-ideas of ornamentation? This is one of the historical mysteries
-which, like the origin of the Round Towers, still awaits solution.
-One must travel a long way, even to the far East, before finding in
-the decorations of the ancient Hindoo temples anything approaching
-to the typical idea that runs through all Irish ornamentation.
-It is, however, an incontrovertible fact, and one proved<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">289</span>
-to demonstration by Mr. Westwood’s learning, labour, and researches,
-that a time when the pictorial art was almost extinct in
-Italy and Greece, and indeed scarcely existed in other parts of
-Europe—namely, from the fifth to the end of the eighth century—a
-style of art had been originated, cultivated, and brought into
-a most marvellous state of perfection in Ireland absolutely distinct
-from that of any other part of the civilized world; and which
-being carried abroad by Irish and Saxon missionaries was adopted
-and imitated in the schools of Charlemagne, and in all the other
-great schools and monasteries founded by them upon the
-Continent.</p>
-
-<p>In the middle of the ninth century the influence of the artists
-of Germany reacted on the productions of England, and in consequence
-of the more frequent communications of learned men
-with Rome, classical models began to be adopted, floral decorations
-were introduced, and figures in the Byzantine style. With
-these the Irish ornamentation was combined, principally in the
-framework of the design. Then it gradually disappeared from
-England, where it was replaced by Franco-Saxon and Teutonic
-art; so that after the tenth century Mr. Westwood has not found
-any Anglo-Saxon manuscript executed in the Lindisfarne or Irish
-style. But it remained for several centuries longer in use in
-Ireland, though the ornamental details exhibit little of the extreme
-delicacy of the earlier productions. With reference to these,
-Mr. Digby Wyatt observes that, in delicacy of handling and
-minute but faultless execution, the whole range of palæography
-offers nothing comparable to the early Irish manuscripts, especially
-“The Book of Kells,” the most marvellous of them all. One
-cannot wonder, therefore, that Giraldus Cambrensis, when over in
-Ireland in the reign of Henry II., on being shown an illuminated
-Irish manuscript, exclaimed, “This is more like the work of
-angels than of men!”</p>
-
-<p>The peculiarities which characterize true Celtic art, whether in
-stone, metal work, or manuscript illumination, consist in the excessive
-and minute elaborations of intricate ornamental details,
-such as the spirals, the interlaced ribands, and the entwined
-serpents and other animal forms, so familiar to the students of our
-national art treasures in the museum of the Royal Irish Academy.
-These forms are invariably found in all Irish decoration. The
-initial letters and ornamentations of the ancient manuscripts are
-reproduced in the gigantic stone crosses and the more delicate
-metal work of the shrines and reliquaries; and from this identity
-of ornamentation the age can be determined of all art monuments
-or remains, and objects readily classified as cotemporaneous. The
-Irish adhered with wonderful fidelity to their peculiar art ideas for
-at least eight hundred years; and while the Saxons coquetted
-with Frankish art, and finally gave themselves up wholly to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">290</span>
-Norman influence, the Irish continued their exclusive devotion to
-the ancient and national Celtic type. Intensely national, indeed,
-were those early artists; they gave ideas to the world, but
-received none in exchange. In their pictures Goliath appears as
-an Irish warrior, and David bears an Irish harp in his hands
-while our Lord Himself, in one of the Irish sculptures, is represented
-wearing the Irish dress. When the nation fell under
-Norman sway in the twelfth century, Norman ideas naturally
-became triumphant; but everything that is most beautiful and
-interesting in antique Irish art belongs to the pre-Norman period—the
-gold ornaments, the gorgeous manuscripts, such as the
-Gospels of Durrow and of Kells; the grandest of the sculptured
-crosses, Cormac’s Chapel, that architectural gem of Western
-Europe; the richly decorated shrines, such as that of St. Monchan,
-“the most important ancient shrine now in existence in these
-islands,” Mr. Westwood states; and specially interesting to us
-Irish, from the recorded fact that it was covered with pure gold
-by Roderick O’Connor, the last king of Ireland, and was, as the
-Annals state, the most beautiful piece of art ever made in Erin.
-All these evidences of high cultivation and artistic skill were in
-existence long before the Norman adventurers set foot on our
-shores. Irish art, however, died out with Irish Nationality; and
-in two centuries or so, after the Norman Conquest, it ceased to
-exist, and was replaced by the pseudo-Roman or Irish Romanesque
-style. Irish art can be easily traced throughout the Continent by
-the peculiar ornamentation which characterized it; and wherever,
-amongst the early manuscripts in foreign libraries, one is found
-surpassing all the rest in the singular beauty and firmness of the
-writing, and the exquisite delicacy of the minute and elaborate
-illuminations, there at once an Irish hand is recognized as worker,
-or an Irish intellect as teacher. The same symbols and ideas run
-through all of them—there are the same strange, elongated, contorted,
-intertwined figures; the same rich mosaics of interlaced
-lines—so minute, so delicate, so rich in brilliant colours, that the
-border of the page seems powdered with crushed jewels. There
-is something almost melancholy in this devotion to a species of
-art in which there was nothing to stimulate the feelings or to
-warm the heart. No representation of nature’s glories in tree or
-flower, or the splendour of human beauty; the artist’s aim being
-rather, it would seem, to kill the human in him, by forcing his
-genius to work only on the cold abstractions of spirals and curves,
-and endless geometrical involutions, and the infinite monotony
-of those interlaced lines, still coiling on, for ever and ever, through
-the centuries, like the windings of the serpent of evil, which they
-were meant to symbolize, through the successive generations of
-our fated humanity. Truly, these artists offered up the sacrifice
-of love. Their lives and the labour of their lives were given<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">291</span>
-humbly, silently, reverently to God, and the glory of God’s Word.
-They had no other aim in life, and when the work was done, a
-work so beautiful that even now the world cannot equal it, there
-was no vainglorious boast of himself came from the lips of the
-artist worker, but the manuscript ends with some simple devotional
-words, his name, and the desire to be remembered as the writer,
-like the <i>orate pro me</i> on the ancient tombstones; this was all he
-asked or hoped for in return for the years of youth and life he
-had incarnated in the illuminated pages of the Gospels. For in
-those early ages art had no existence save in union with religion.
-Humanity brought together all its most precious ointments to
-pour upon the feet of Jesus. In Ireland especially—the Island of
-Saints—whatever genius could devise or the hand of the artist
-could execute was lavished upon some work that would recall
-the presence of God to the people, stimulate His worship, or
-make known His word; upon the Psalters, the Gospels, the
-crosses, the costly shrines, the jewelled cases for a saint’s relics,
-the golden covers for the holy books. But nothing of that period
-has come down to us that shows a luxury in domestic life. The
-Word of God was shrined in gold, made rich with gems and
-enamels, but the people lived their old simple life in their old
-rude huts; and even the kings gave their wealth, not to erect
-palaces, but to build churches, to endow abbeys, to help the
-cause of God, and speed the holy men who were His ministers,
-in their crusade against evil, ignorance and darkness.</p>
-
-<p>It is no idle boast to say that the Irish were the teachers of
-Europe from the seventh to the tenth century in art and religion.
-Mr. Westwood has visited all the great libraries of England and
-the Continent and found abundant evidence that Irish art, or
-Hiberno-Saxon art, was diffused over Europe during that period.
-The Greek and Latin manuscripts are not illuminated, but are
-adorned with intercalated pictures; Irish art differs from them
-in many respects—amongst others, in having the figures and rich
-ornamentations printed on the leaves and borders of the book
-itself. He has given <i>facsimiles</i> from Irish manuscripts now
-existing in the libraries of Oxford, Cambridge, Durham, Lichfield,
-Salisbury, Lambeth, the British Museum, and other places; and,
-passing to the Continent, has laid under contribution the great
-libraries of Paris, Rouen, Boulogne, St. Gall, Milan, Rome,
-Munich, Darmstadt, Stockholm, Copenhagen, and even St. Petersburg,
-and thus proved the excellence to which Irish artists, or
-Saxon artists educated in Irish schools, attained more than a
-thousand years ago. Nor is it strange that Ireland should have
-been the teacher, considering its early Christianity, which had
-made some progress amongst the people even in St. Jerome’s time;
-a little later amongst the Britons; but at the end of the sixth
-century Augustine and his monks found the stolid Anglo-Saxons<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">292</span>
-still in the bonds of their ancient paganism and Wodenism. The
-Celtic race received the Christian faith gladly as early as the
-fourth century, but it was a difficult matter to bring light to the
-Saxon soul. It has at all times proved itself rather opaque in
-nature. The Saxon tribes of Germany did not renounce their
-idols till forced to it by the strong coercive power and keen sword
-of Charlemagne, in the latter half of the eighth century.</p>
-
-<p>With Christianity came to Ireland the knowledge of letters;
-at least no older inscription has been found than that on the pillar
-stone of Lugnadon, St. Patrick’s nephew, which may still be seen
-beside the ruin of St. Patrick’s oratory in one of the beautiful
-islands of Lough Corrib;<a id="FNanchor_11_11" href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">11</a> and the oldest manuscript existing in
-Ireland is the Book of Armagh, a copy of St. Jerome’s Latin
-version of the Gospels written in the old Roman letters, and very
-valuable for the beauty of the writing and the various drawings
-it contains. Learning was at once consecrated to the service of
-God in those early days, and to multiply copies of the Gospels was
-the praiseworthy and devout task of the first great teachers and
-missionaries. The Book of Durrow and the Book of Kells, both
-of the early part of the sixth century, are believed to be the work
-of St. Columba himself. The latter, the Book of Kells, has filled
-all critics with wonder and admiration. It is more decorated than
-any existing copy of the Gospels, and is pronounced by learned
-authorities to be “the most beautiful manuscript in existence of
-so early a date, and the most magnificent specimen of penmanship
-and illumination in the Western World.” They are both written
-in the Latin uncial character, common to Europe at the time;
-and here it may be noticed, in passing, that the so-called Irish
-alphabet is simply the Latin alphabet modified by the first
-missionaries to suit the Irish sounds, as Ulphila, the apostle of the
-Goths, invented an alphabet of mingled Greek and Latin
-characters, in order to enable him to make his translation of the
-Gospels into Gothic; and as the Greek missionaries invented the
-Russian alphabet, which is a modified form of the Greek, for a
-like purpose. That the Irish should retain the old form of the
-Latin letters, while most of the other nations of Europe have
-discarded it, is to be regretted, as nothing would facilitate the
-study of Irish so much at the present day, when one has so
-little leisure to spell out with much painful endeavour the
-barbarous symbols of a bygone age, as the adoption of the modern
-English alphabet. The first Irish book that was ever printed
-appeared in 1571, and is now in the Bodleian Library. It is a
-catechism of Irish grammar, and the Irish alphabet has suffered
-no modification or improvement since. It was about the end of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">293</span>
-the sixth century that the fame of Irish learning and the skill of
-Irish artists began to extend to England, and from thence to the
-Continent; and Irish scribes were employed to make copies of the
-Gospels and teach the splendid art of illumination in the English
-monasteries. From that period till the end of the ninth century
-the Irish were a power in Europe from their learning and piety—eminent
-in Greek as well as Latin, and the great teachers of
-scholastic theology to the Christian world. The Gospels of
-Lindisfarne, executed by monks of Iona in the seventh century,
-and now “the glory of the British Museum,” form a most
-important element in the early history of Celtic art, as this book
-seems to have been the principal model for succeeding artists.</p>
-
-<p>In the splendid folio copy of the Gospels at Copenhagen of the
-tenth century, supposed to have been brought to Denmark by
-King Canute, the figure of St. Matthew seated, while another
-saint draws back a curtain, is copied from the Gospels of Lindisfarne,
-while the border is in the tenth century style. The Gospels
-of St. Chad, now in Lichfield Library, are in the Irish style of
-the eighth century, and are very noticeable as having marginal
-notes in Latin, Anglo-Saxon, and ancient British, the latter being
-the oldest specimen of the ancient British language now in
-existence. The illuminations also are copied from the Lindisfarne
-book. St. Chad, it is known, was educated in Ireland, in the
-school of St. Finian. There are Irish Gospels at Durham of the
-eighth century. The Gospels of Mac-Regal are at Oxford, and
-the Gospels of Mac-Duran, the smallest and most beautiful known,
-are in the Archbishop’s palace at Lambeth. As Saxon art
-progressed and became influenced by Roman models, the Irish
-scribes were chiefly employed wherever elegance, harmony of
-colour, and extreme delicacy of touch were particularly requisite,
-as in the borders and initial letters. Thus, the Psalter of St.
-Augustine, said to be from Rome, and which resembles in style
-the manuscript Virgil of the fifth century, in the Vatican, is
-framed in pure Celtic art. On the Continent, also, the borders of
-the great manuscripts were generally confined to Irish hands. A
-Latin copy of the Gospels at Treves, evidently produced by one
-of the establishments founded by the Irish upon the Rhine, is
-remarkable for a combination of Celtic, Teutonic, and Franco-Byzantine
-art. The borders are Irish while the figures are
-Byzantine. These illuminated borders have the glitter and
-radiance of a setting of jewels, and are thus admirably suited to
-fulfil the true object of all ornamentation, which Mr. Ruskin
-defines as being “beautiful in its place, and perfect in its adaptation
-to the purpose for which it was employed.”</p>
-
-<p>In the sixth century St. Gall, born in Ireland, accompanied St.
-Columbanus to the Continent, and founded the monastery in
-Switzerland that bears his name. Here many interesting manu<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">294</span>scripts
-and fragments are still preserved, remarkable for the old
-Irish marginal notes to the Latin text. Those are considered by
-philologists of such importance that thirteen quarto plates and
-<i>facsimiles</i> from them are given by Dr. Ferdinand Keller in the
-Zurich Society’s Transactions. An interesting relic of an Irish
-saint is also preserved in the Cathedral of Wurtzburg—a copy of
-the Gospels of St. Kilian, martyred in 689, and which was found
-stained with his blood on opening his tomb about fifty years after.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, the Irish can be tracked, as it were, across Europe by
-their illuminated footsteps. They were emphatically the witnesses
-of God, the light-bearers through the dark ages, and above all,
-the faithful guardians and preservers of God’s sacred Word. A
-hundred years before Alfred came to Ireland to be educated, and
-went back to civilize his native country by the knowledge he had
-acquired there, the Christian schools of Germany, under the
-direction of Irishmen, had been founded by Charlemagne. Through
-France, along the Rhine, through Switzerland, Italy, and Spain,
-the Irish missionaries taught and worked, founding schools and
-monasteries, and illuminating by their learning the darkest pages
-of European history. One of the great treasures of the Imperial
-Library of Paris is a beautiful Irish copy of the Latin Gospels.
-The College of St. Isidore, at Rome, possesses many Irish manuscripts—one
-of them is a Psalter, folio size, written throughout
-in letters a quarter of an inch long, and which is considered to be
-the finest of the later works of the Irish school. The celebrated
-Golden Gospels of Stockholm are of Hiberno-Saxon art of the
-ninth century. This book has a singular history. It was stolen
-from England, and disappeared for ages, but finally was discovered
-at Mantua in the seventeenth century, and purchased for the
-Royal Library at Stockholm. St. Petersburg also possesses a
-highly illuminated copy of the Gospels, which was taken from
-France at the time of the great Revolution, and found its way to
-the far North. It is a perfect and beautiful specimen of the Irish
-style of the eight century, and the initial letters can only be
-compared to those of the Book of Kells. All these Irish manuscript
-Gospels are, without exception, copies of St. Jerome’s Latin
-version. No Irish translation of the Gospels has ever been found.
-Learning was evidently considered a sacred thing, indispensable
-for the priesthood, but not necessary for the masses; yet it seems
-strange that while the learned and pious Irish saints and missionaries
-were devoting their lives to multiplying copies of the
-Gospels for other nations, and disseminating them over Europe,
-they never thought of giving the people of their own land the
-Word of God to read in their own native tongue. The leading
-Teutonic races, on the contrary, with their free spirit, were not
-satisfied with accepting the doctrines of the faith, simply as an
-act of obedience to their teachers. They demanded the right of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">295</span>
-private judgment, the exercise of individual reason, and the
-Gospels were translated into Gothic as early as the fourth century
-by Bishop Ulphila for the use of the Gothic nation.</p>
-
-<p>This remarkable book, called the “Codex Argenteus,” is now in
-the Royal Library of Upsala, having, after many dangers and
-vicissitudes, at last found its way to the people who hold themselves
-the true descendants of the Goths, and whose king still
-bears the proud title of “King of the Swedes, Goths, and
-Vandals;” and an edition of it, with annotations, has been published
-by the learned Professor Andreas Uppstrom, of Upsala.</p>
-
-<p>Towards the close of the tenth century the Frankish style of
-ornamentation, a blending of the classical and the Byzantine, had
-almost entirely superseded the beautiful and delicate Celtic art
-both in England and on the Continent, and about the fifteenth
-century it disappeared even from our own Ireland, the country of
-its origin. The gorgeous missals and illuminated Gospels, instinct
-with life, genius, holy reverence, and patient love, were destined
-to be replaced soon after by the dull mechanism of print; while
-Protestantism used all its new-found strength to destroy that
-innate tendency of our nature which seeks to manifest religious
-fervour, faith, and zeal by costly offerings and sacrifices. The
-golden-bordered holy books, the sculptured crosses, the jewelled
-shrines were crushed under the heel of Cromwell’s troopers; the
-majestic and beautiful abbeys were desecrated and cast down to
-ruin, while beside them rose the mean and ugly structures of the
-Reformed faith, as if the annihilation of all beauty were then
-considered to be the most acceptable homage which man could
-offer to the God who created all beauty, and fitted the human
-soul to enjoy and manifest the spiritual, mystic, and eternal loveliness
-of form, and colour, and symmetry.</p>
-
-<p>Since that mournful period when the conquering iconoclasts
-cast down the temples and crushed the spirit of our people, there
-has been no revival of art in Ireland. It is not wonderful, therefore,
-that we cling with so much of fond, though sad, admiration
-to the beautiful memorials of the past, and welcome with warm
-appreciation the efforts of able, learned and distinguished men to
-illustrate and preserve them, as in this splendid and costly book
-which Mr. Westwood has contributed to Celtic art.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="small" />
-<h3 id="OUR_ANCIENT_CAPITAL">OUR ANCIENT CAPITAL.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The history of Dublin, so admirably narrated by Mr. Gilbert in
-his learned and instructive volumes,<a id="FNanchor_12_12" href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">12</a> begins the modern period of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">296</span>
-Irish history when Ireland became indissolubly united with the
-British Empire—the greatest empire of the world—and legendary
-lore, like all the ancient usages and superstitions, began to fade
-and perish before advancing civilization, as the luxurious undergrowth
-of a primeval forest before advancing culture.</p>
-
-<p>A sketch of the rise of the capital of Ireland, with all the
-changes produced in Irish life by the new modes of thought and
-action introduced by Norman influence, forms therefore a fitting
-close to the legendary and early-historic period, so full of poetry
-and charm for the imagination, with its splendour of kings and
-bards, its shadowy romance and mist-woven dreams, and its ideal
-fairy world of beauty and grace, of music and song; when the
-people lived the free, joyous life of the childhood of humanity
-under their native princes, and the terrible struggle of a crushed
-and oppressed nation against a foreign master had not yet begun;
-the struggle that has lasted for seven centuries, and still goes on
-with exhaustless force and fervour.</p>
-
-<p>The history of cities is the history of nations—the most perfect
-index of the social altitude, mental development, physical perfection,
-and political freedom, which at any given period a people
-may have attained. Every stone within a city is a hieroglyphic
-of the century that saw it raised. By it we trace human progression
-through all its phases; from the first rude fisher’s hut,
-the altar of the primitive priest, the mound of the first nomad
-warrior, the stone fortalice or simple fane of the early Christian
-race, up to the stately and beautiful temples and palaces which
-evidence the luxury and refinement of a people in its proudest
-excess, or human genius in its climax of manifestation.</p>
-
-<p>Thus Babylon, Thebes, Rome, Jerusalem, are words that express
-nations. The ever-during interest of the world circles round
-them, for their ruins are true and eternal pages of human history.
-Every fallen column is a fragment of a past ritual, or a symbol of
-a dynasty. The very dust is vital with great memories, and a
-philosopher, like the comparative anatomist, might construct the
-entire life of a people—its religion, literature, and laws—from
-these fragments of extinct generations—these fossil paleographs
-of man.</p>
-
-<p>Statue and column, mausoleum and shrine, are trophies of a
-nation’s triumphs or its tragedies. The young children, as they
-gaze on them, learn the story of the native heroes, poets, saints,
-and martyrs, leaders and lawgivers, who have flung their own
-glory as a regal mantle over their country. Spirits of the past,
-from the phantom-land, dwell in the midst of them. We feel
-their presence, and hear their words of inspiration or warning,
-alike in the grandeur or decadence of an ancient city.</p>
-
-<p>Modern capitals represent also, not only the history of the past,
-but the living concentrated will of the entire nation. Thus is it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">297</span>
-with London, Berlin, and Vienna, while Paris, the <i>cité verbe</i>, as
-Victor Hugo calls her, represents not only the tendencies of France,
-but of Europe.</p>
-
-<p>Dublin, however, differs from all other capitals, past or present,
-in this wise—that by its history we trace, not the progress of the
-native race, but the triumphs of its enemies; and that the concentrated
-will of Dublin has always been in antagonism to the
-feelings of a large portion of the nation.</p>
-
-<p>The truth is, that though our chief city of Ireland has an
-historical existence older than Christianity, yet this fair <i>Ath-Cliath</i>
-has no pretension to be called our ancient mother. From
-first to last, from a thousand years ago till now, Dublin has held
-the position of a foreign fortress within the kingdom; and its
-history has no other emblazonment beyond that of unceasing hostility
-or indifference to the native race.</p>
-
-<p>“The inhabitants are mere English, though of Irish birth,”
-wrote Hooker, three hundred years ago. “The citizens,” says
-Holingshed, “have from time to time so galled the Irish, that
-even to this day the Irish fear a ragged and jagged black standard
-that the citizens have, though almost worn to the stumps.” Up
-to Henry the Seventh’s reign, an Englishman of Dublin was not
-punished for killing an Irishman, nor were Irishmen admitted to
-any office within the city that concerned the government either of
-the souls or bodies of the citizens. The Viceroys, the Archbishops,
-the Judges, the Mayors, the Corporations, were all and always
-English, down to the very guild of tailors, of whom it stands on
-record that they would allow no Irishman to be of their fraternity.
-As the American colonists treated the red man, as the Spaniards
-of Cortez treated the Mexicans, as the English colony of India
-treated the ancient Indian princes, tribes, and people, so the
-English race of Dublin treated the Irish nation. They were a
-people to be crushed, ruined, persecuted, tormented, extirpated;
-and the Irish race, it must be confessed, retorted the hatred with
-as bitter an animosity. The rising of 1641 was like all Irish
-attempts—a wild, helpless, disorganized effort at revenge; and
-seven years later we read that Owen Roe O’Neil burned the
-country about Dublin, so that from one steeple there two hundred
-fires could be seen at once.</p>
-
-<p>This being the position of a country and its capital, it is evident
-that no effort for national independence could gain nourishment in
-Dublin. Our metropolis is associated with no glorious moment of
-a nation’s career, while in all the dark tragedies of our gloomy
-history its name and influence predominate. Dublin is connected
-with Irish patriotism only by the scaffold and the gallows. Statue
-and column do indeed rise there, but not to honour the sons of the
-soil. The public idols are foreign potentates and foreign heroes.
-Macaulay says eloquently on this subject, “The Irish people are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">298</span>
-doomed to see in every place the monuments of their subjugation;
-before the senate-house, the statue of their conqueror—within,
-the walls tapestried with the defeats of their fathers.”</p>
-
-<p>No public statue of an illustrious Irishman until recently ever
-graced the Irish capital. No monument exists to which the gaze
-of the young Irish children can be directed, while their fathers
-tell them, “This was to the glory of your countrymen.” Even
-the lustre Dublin borrowed from her great Norman colonists has
-passed away. Her nobility are remembered only as we note the
-desecration of their palaces; the most beautiful of all our metropolitan
-buildings but reminds us that there the last remnant of
-political independence was sold; the stately Custom-house, that
-Dublin has no trade; the regal pile of Dublin Castle, that it was
-reared by foreign hands to “curb and awe the city.”</p>
-
-<p>It is in truth a gloomy task to awaken the memories of Dublin,
-even of this century. There, in that obscure house of Thomas
-Street, visions rise of a ghastly night-scene, where the young,
-passionate-hearted Geraldine was struggling vainly in death-agony
-with his betrayers and captors. Pass on through the same street,
-and close by St. Catherine’s Church you can trace the spot where
-the gallows was erected for Robert Emmet. Before that sombre
-prison pile two young brothers, handsome, educated, and well-born,
-and many a fair young form after them, expiated by death
-their fatal aspirations for Irish freedom. Look at that magnificent
-portal, leading now to the tables of the money-changers;
-through it, not a century ago, men, entrusted with the nation’s
-rights, entered to sell them, and came forth, not branded traitors,
-but decorated, enriched, and rewarded with titles, pensions, and
-honours.</p>
-
-<p>Yet the anomalous relation between our country and its capital
-springs naturally from the antecedents of both. Dublin was
-neither built by the Irish nor peopled by the Irish; it is a Scandinavian
-settlement in the midst of a southern nation. Long even
-before the Norman invasion two races existed in Ireland, as different
-as the lines of migration by which each had reached it;
-and though ages have rolled away since Scythian and Southern
-first met in this distant land, yet the elemental distinctions have
-never been lost: the races have never blended into one homogeneous
-nationality. Other nations, like the English, have blended
-with their conquerors, and progression and a higher civilization
-have been the result. Roman, Saxon, Dane, and Norman, each
-left their impress on the primitive Briton; and from Roman
-courage, Saxon thrift, and Norman pride has been evolved the
-strong, wise, proud island-nation that rules the world—the Ocean-Rome.
-A similar blending of opposite elements, but in different
-proportions, has produced Scotch national character—grave, wise,
-learned, provident, industrious, and unconquerably independent.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">299</span>
-But the Irish race remains distinct from all others, as Jew or
-Zincali. It has no elective affinities, enters into no new combinations,
-forms no new results, attracts to itself no Scythian qualities
-of stern self-reliance and the indomitable pride of independence,
-but still retains all the old virtues and vices of their semi-oriental
-nature, which make the history of Ireland so sad a record of
-mere passionate impulses ending mostly in failure and despair.
-The English, slow in speech and repellent in manner, are yet able
-not only to rule themselves well and ably, but to rule the world;
-while the Irish, so fascinating, eloquent, brave, and gifted, have
-never yet achieved a distinctive place in the political system of
-Europe. We had even the advantage of an earlier education;
-we taught England her letters, Christianized her people, sheltered
-her saints, educated her princes; we give her the best generals,
-the best statesmen, the best armies; yet, withal, we have never
-yet found the strength to govern our own kingdom. Ethnologists
-will tell you this comes of race. It may be so. Let us then sail
-up the stream of time to Ararat, and try to find our ancestry
-amongst the children of the eight primal gods, as the ancients
-termed them, who there stepped forth from their ocean prison to
-people the newly baptized world.</p>
-
-<p>A very clever German advises all reviewers to begin from the
-Deluge, so that by no possibility can a single fact, direct or collateral,
-escape notice connected with the matter in hand. When
-treating of Ireland this rule becomes a necessity. Our nation
-dates from the dispersion, and our faults and failings, our features
-and our speech, have an authentic hereditary descent of four thousand
-years. Other primitive nations have been lost by migration,
-annihilated by war, swallowed up in empires, overwhelmed by
-barbarians: thus it was that the old kingdoms of Europe changed
-masters, and that the old nations and tongues passed away. Here
-only, in this island prison of the Atlantic, can the old race of
-primitive Europe be still found existing as a nation, speaking the
-same tongue as the early tribes that first wandered westward,
-when Europe itself was an unpeopled wilderness.</p>
-
-<p>We learn from sacred record that the first migrations of the
-human family, with “one language and one speech,” were <i>from</i>
-the East; and every successive wave of population has still flowed
-from the rising towards the setting sun. The progression of intellect
-and science is ever westward. The march of humanity is
-opposed to the path of the planet. Life moves contrary to matter.
-A metaphor, it may be, of our spirit exile—this travelling “daily
-further from the East;” yet, when at the farthest limit, we are
-but approaching the glory of the East again.</p>
-
-<p>Gradually, along the waters of the Mediterranean, the beautiful
-islands on its bosom serving as resting-places for the wanderers,
-or bridges for the tribes to pass over, the primal families of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">300</span>
-Japhetian race reached in succession the three great Peninsulas of
-the Great Sea, in each leaving the germ of a mighty nation. Still
-onward, led by the providence of God, they passed the portals of
-the Atlantic, coasted the shores of the vine-clad France, and so
-reached at length the “Isles of the Setting Sun,” upon the very
-verge of Western Europe.</p>
-
-<p>But many centuries may have elapsed during the slow progression
-of these maritime colonies, who have left their names
-indelibly stamped on the earth’s surface, from Ionia to the Tartessus
-of Spain; and Miriam may have chanted the death-song of
-Pharaoh, and Moses led forth the people of God, before the
-descendants of the first navigators landed amidst the verdant
-solitudes of Ireland.</p>
-
-<p>The earliest tribes that reached our island, though removed so
-far from the centre of light and wisdom, must still have been
-familiar with all science necessary to preserve existence, and to
-organize a new country into a human habitation. They cleared
-the forests, worked the mines, built chambers for the dead, after
-the manner of their kindred left in Tyre and Greece, wrought
-arms, defensive and offensive, such as the heroes of Marathon
-used against the long-haired Persians; they raised altars and
-pillar-stones, still standing amongst us, mysterious and eternal
-symbols of a simple primitive creed; they had bards, priests, and
-lawgivers, the old tongue of Shinar, the dress of Nineveh, and the
-ancient faith whose ritual was prayer and sacrifice.</p>
-
-<p>The kindred races who remained stationary, built cities and
-temples, still a world’s wonder, and arts flourished amongst them
-impossible to the nomads of the plains, or the wanderers by the
-ocean islands; but the destiny of dispersion was still on the race,
-and from these central points of civilization, tribes and families
-constantly went forth to achieve new conquests over the yet
-untamed earth.</p>
-
-<p>Whatever wisdom the early island colonizers had brought with
-them, would have died out for want of nourishment, had not
-these new tribes, from countries where civilization had become
-developed and permanent, constantly given fresh impulses to progress.
-With stronger and more powerful arts and arms, they, in
-succession, gained dominion over their weaker predecessors, and
-by commerce, laws, arts, and learning, they organized families
-into nations, enlightening while they subjugated.</p>
-
-<p>The conquest of Canaan gave the second great impetus to
-the human tides ever flowing westward. Irish tradition has
-even, in a confused manner, preserved the names of two amongst
-the leaders of the Sidonian fugitives who landed in Ireland.
-Partholan, with his wife Elga, and Gadelius, with his wife Scota.</p>
-
-<p>“This Gadelius,” say the legends,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">301</span> “was a noble gentleman,
-right wise, valiant, and well spoken, who, after Pharaoh was
-drowned, sailed for Spain, and from thence to Ireland, with a
-colony of Greeks and Egyptians, and his wife Scota, a daughter
-of Pharaoh’s; and he taught letters to the Irish, and warlike
-feats after the Greek and Egyptian manner.”</p>
-
-<p>These later tribes brought with them the Syrian arts and civilization,
-such as dyeing and weaving, working in gold, silver, and
-brass, besides the written characters, the same that Cadmus afterwards
-gave to Greece, and which remained in use amongst the
-Irish, it is said, until modified by Saint Patrick into their present
-form, to assimilate them to the Latin.</p>
-
-<p>Continued intercourse with their Syrian kindred soon filled
-Ireland with the refinement of a luxurious civilization. From
-various sources, we learn that in those ancient times, the native
-dress was costly and picturesque, and the habits and modes of
-living of the chiefs and kings splendid and Oriental. The high-born
-and the wealthy wore tunics of fine linen of immense width,
-girdled with gold and with flowing sleeves after the Eastern
-fashion. The fringed cloak, or <i>cuchula</i>, with a hood, after the
-Arab mode, was clasped on the shoulders with a golden brooch.
-Golden circlets, of beautiful and classic form, confined their long,
-flowing hair, and, crowned with their diadems, the chiefs sat at
-the banquet, or went forth to war. Sandals upon the feet, and
-bracelets and signet rings, of rich and curious workmanship, completed
-the costume. The ladies wore the silken robes and flowing
-veils of Persia, or rolls of linen wound round the head like the
-Egyptian Isis, the hair curiously plaited down the back and fastened
-with gold or silver bodkins, while the neck and arms were
-profusely covered with jewels.<a id="FNanchor_13_13" href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">13</a></p>
-
-<p>For successive centuries, this race, half Tyrian and half Greek,
-held undisputed possession of Ireland, maintaining, it is said, constant
-intercourse with the parent state, and, when Tyre fell,
-commercial relations were continued with Carthage. Communication
-between such distant lands was nothing to Phœnician enterprise.
-Phœnicians in the service of an Egyptian king had
-sailed round Africa and doubled the Cape of Good Hope two
-thousand years before the Portuguese. The same people built
-the navy of King Solomon a thousand years before Christ; and
-led the fleet to India for the gold necessary for the Temple.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">302</span>
-They cast the brazen vessels for the altar, employing for the purpose
-the tin which their merchants must have brought from the
-British Isles. Thus, to use the words of Humboldt, there can be
-no doubt that three thousand years ago “the Tyrian flag waved
-from Britain to the Indian Ocean.”</p>
-
-<p>A king of the race, long before Romulus founded Rome, erected
-a college at Tara, where the Druids taught the wisdom of Egypt,
-the mysteries of Samothrace, and the religion of Tyre. Then it
-was that Ireland was known as <i>Innis-Alga</i>—the Holy Island—held
-sacred by the Tyrian mariners as the “Temple of the Setting
-Sun:” the last limit of Europe, from whence they could watch
-his descent into the mysterious western ocean.</p>
-
-<p>But onward still came the waves of human life, unceasing,
-unresting. Driven forth from Carthage, Spain, and Gaul, the
-ancient race fled to the limits of the coast, then surged back,
-fought and refought the battle, conquering and yielding by turns,
-till at length the Syrian and the Latin elements blended into a
-new compound, which laid the foundation of modern Europe.
-But some tribes, disdaining such a union, fled from Spain to
-Ireland, and thus a new race, but of the old kindred, was flung on
-our shores by destiny.</p>
-
-<p>The leaders, brave, warlike, and of royal blood, speedily
-assumed kingly sway, and all the subsequent monarchs of Ireland,
-the O’Briens, the O’Connors, the O’Neils, the O’Donnels, and
-other noble races, claim descent from them; and very proud, even
-to this day, are the families amongst the Irish who can trace back
-their pedigree to these princely Spaniards.</p>
-
-<p>We have spoken hitherto but of the maritime colonists—that
-portion of the primal race who launched their ships on the
-Mediterranean to found colonies and kingdoms along its shores;
-then passing out through the ocean straits, the human tides
-surged upon the western limits of Europe, till the last wave found
-a rest on the green sward of ancient Erin. The habits of these
-first colonists were agricultural, commercial, and unwarlike; and
-ancient historians have left us a record of their temperament;
-volatile and fickle; passionate in joy and grief, with quick vivid
-natures prone to sudden excesses; religious and superstitious; a
-small, dark-eyed race, lithe of limb and light of heart; the eternal
-children of humanity.</p>
-
-<p>For illustrations we need not here refer to the Royal Irish
-Academy, for as they looked and lived three thousand years ago,
-they may be seen to this day in the mountains of Connemara and
-Kerry.</p>
-
-<p>While this race travelled westward to the ocean by the great
-southern sea, other families of the Japhetian tribes were pressing
-westward also, but by the great northern plains. From Western
-India, by the Caspian and the Caucasus, past the shores of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">303</span>
-Euxine, and still westward along the great rivers of Central
-Europe, up to the rude coasts of the Baltic, could be tracked “the
-westward marches of the unknown crowded nations,” carrying with
-them fragments of the early Japhetian wisdom, and memories of
-the ancient primal tongue brought from the far East; but, as they
-removed further from the great lines of human intercourse, and
-were subjected to the influence of rigorous climates and
-nomadic habits, gradually becoming a rude, fierce people of
-warriors and hunters, predatory and cruel, living by the chase,
-warring with the wild wolves for their prey, and with each other
-for the best pasture-grounds. Driven by the severity of the
-seasons to perpetual migration, they built no cities and raised no
-monuments, save the sepulchral mound, which can be traced from
-Tartary to the German Ocean.</p>
-
-<p>Without the civilizing aids of commerce or literature, their
-language degenerated into barbarous dialects; their clothing was
-the skin of wild beasts; their religion, confused relics of ancient
-creeds, contributed by the wandering colonies of Egypt, Media,
-Greece, and Tyre, which occasionally blended with the Scythian
-hordes, wherein Isis, Mercury, and Hercules, the symbols of wisdom,
-eloquence, and courage, were the objects worshipped, though
-deteriorated by savage and sanguinary rites, whose sacrifices were
-human victims, and whose best votary was he who had slain most
-men.</p>
-
-<p>From long wandering through the gloomy regions where the
-sun is darkened by perpetual clouds, they called themselves the
-“Children of the Night,” and looked on her as the primal mother
-of all things.</p>
-
-<p>Their pastimes symbolized the fierce daring of their lives. At
-their banquets they quaffed mead from the skulls of the slain, and
-chanted war-songs to the music of their clashing bucklers, while
-their dances were amid the points of their unsheathed swords.</p>
-
-<p>From the influence of climate, and from constant intermarriage
-amongst themselves, certain physical and mental types became
-permanently fixed, and the gigantic frame, the fair hair and “stern
-blue eyes”<a id="FNanchor_14_14" href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">14</a> of the Scythian tribes, along with their bold, free,
-warlike, independent spirit, are still the marked characteristic of
-their descendants. For amidst these rude races of lion-hearted
-men, who cleared the forests of Central Europe for future empires,
-there were great and noble virtues born of their peculiar mode of
-life: a love of freedom, a lofty sense of individual dignity, bold
-defiance of tyranny, a fortitude and courage that rose to heroism—the
-spirit that brooks no fetter either on the mind or frame.
-We see that such men were destined for world-rulers. To them
-Europe is indebted for her free political systems; the chivalry<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">304</span>
-that ennobled warfare and elevated women, and the religious
-reformation that freed Christianity from superstition. Every
-charter of human freedom dates from the Scythian forests.</p>
-
-<p>The great northern concourse of fierce, wild tribes, comprehended
-originally under the name of Scythians, or Wanderers,
-having spread themselves over the north to the very kingdom of
-the Frost-Giants, amidst frozen seas and drifting glaciers, turned
-southward, tempted by softer climes and richer lands, and under
-the names of Goth, Vandal, Frank, and Norman, devastating
-tribes of the Scythian warriors poured their rude masses upon the
-early and refined civilization of the Mediterranean nations, conquering
-wherever they appeared and holding bravely whatever
-they conquered.</p>
-
-<p>The Roman empire trembled and vanished before the terrible
-might of the long-haired Goths. They sacked Rome and
-threatened Constantinople: Africa, Italy, Spain, France, and
-Germany yielded to the barbaric power. Before the fifth century
-the Scythians had conquered the world, and every kingdom
-in Europe is ruled by them to this hour.</p>
-
-<p>How strangely contrasted the destinies of the two great
-Japhetian races! What vicissitudes of fortune! The refined,
-lettered, oriental light-bringers to Europe—the founders of all
-kingdoms, the first teachers of all knowledge, the race that
-peopled Tyre, Carthage, Greece, Italy, Spain, and Gaul, degraded,
-humbled, and almost annihilated; the last poor remnant of them
-crushed up in the remote fastnesses of the hills along the coast-line
-of Europe; step by step driven backwards to the Atlantic, as
-the red man of America had been driven to the Pacific, till, over
-the whole earth they can be found nowhere as a nation, save only
-in Ireland, while the rude, fierce Scandinavian hordes have risen
-up to be the mightiest of the earth. Greece subdued Asia, and
-Rome subdued Greece, but Scythia conquered Rome! The
-children of night and of the dark forests rule the kingdoms that
-rule the world.</p>
-
-<p>They have given language and laws to modern empires, and at
-the present day are at the head of all that is most powerful, most
-thoughtful, most enterprising, and most learned throughout the
-entire globe.</p>
-
-<p>The story of how the Scythian first came to the British Islands,
-has been preserved in the Welsh annals, which date back three
-thousand years. The legend runs that their ancestors, the nation
-of the Cimbri, wandered long over Europe, forgetting God’s
-name, and the early wisdom. At length they crossed “the hazy
-sea” (the German Ocean) from the country of the pools (Belgium)
-and came to Britain, the sea-girt land, called by them Cambria,<a id="FNanchor_15_15" href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">15</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">305</span>
-or, first mother; and they were the first who trod the soil of
-Britain. There their poets and bards recovered the lost name of
-God, the sacred I.A.O., and the primal letters their forefathers
-had known, called the ten signs. And ever since they have possessed
-religion and literature, though the bards kept the signs
-secret for many ages, so that all learning might be limited to
-themselves.</p>
-
-<p>The paramount monarch of the Cimbri nation reigned at London,
-and a state of poetry and peace long continued, till the
-Dragon-Aliens appeared on their coasts. The ancient Cimbri retreated
-into Wales, where they have ever since remained. The
-Picts seized on Caledonia, and the Saxons on England, until, in
-their turn, they were conquered by the Danes.</p>
-
-<p>Ireland at that period was the most learned and powerful island
-of the West. Through all changes of European dynasties she
-retained her independence. From the Milesian to the Norman,
-no conqueror had trod her soil.<a id="FNanchor_16_16" href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">16</a></p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile England, who never yet successfully resisted an
-invading enemy, passed under many a foreign yoke. For five
-hundred years the Romans held her as a province to supply their
-legions with recruits, and the abject submission of the natives
-called forth the bitter sarcasm, that “the good of his country was
-the only cause in which a Briton had forgot to die.”</p>
-
-<p>The acquisition of Ireland was eagerly coveted by the imperial
-race, but though Agricola boasted he would conquer it with a
-single legion, and even went so far towards the completion of his
-design as to line all the opposite coasts of Wales with his troops,
-yet no Roman soldier ever set foot on Irish soil.</p>
-
-<p>Rome had enough of work on hand just then, for Alaric the
-Goth is at her gates, and Attila, the scourge of God, is ravaging
-her fairest provinces. The imperial mother of Colonies can no
-longer hold her own or aid her children; England is abandoned to
-her fate, and the Irish from the west, the Scythian from the
-north, the Saxon from the east, assault, and desolate, and despoil
-her.</p>
-
-<p>The Scythian Picts pour down on her cities, “killing, burning,
-and destroying.” The Irish land in swarms from their <i>corrahs</i>,
-and “with fiery outrage and cruelty, carry, harry, and make
-havoc of all.” Thus bandied between two insolent enemies, the
-English sent ambassadors to Rome “with their garments rent,
-and sand upon their heads,” bearing that most mournful appeal of
-an humbled people—“to Ætius, thrice Consul: the groans of the
-Britons. The barbarians drive us to the sea, the sea drives us
-back to the barbarians; thus, between two kinds of death, we are
-either slaughtered or drowned.”</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">306</span></p>
-<p>But no help comes, for Rome herself is devastated by Hun and
-Vandal, and the empire is falling like a shattered world.</p>
-
-<p>Thus England passed helplessly under the Saxon yoke, and so
-rested some hundred years; Ireland the while remaining as free
-from Saxon thrall as she had been from Roman rule.</p>
-
-<p>Through all these centuries the current of human life still flowed
-westward from the unknown mysterious regions of Central Asia.</p>
-
-<p>It was about the close of the eighth century, when the Scythian
-Charlemagne was crowned Emperor of Rome in the city of the
-Cæsars, that the fierce children of Thor and Odin, after having
-swept across Northern Europe to the limit of the land, flung their
-fortunes to the stormy seas, and began to earn that terrible yet
-romantic renown with which history and saga have invested the
-deeds of the Scandinavian sea kings. The raven on their black
-banner was the dreaded symbol of havoc and devastation all along
-the sea coasts and islands of the Atlantic. In England, Saxon
-rule fell helplessly before the power of the new invaders, as wave
-after wave of the ruthless sea-ravagers dashed upon the sluggish
-masses of the heptarchy.</p>
-
-<p>After two hundred years of protracted agony and strife, Saxon
-sway was annihilated for ever, and Canute the Dane reigned in
-England.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, the well-appointed fleets of Norsemen and Danes
-were prowling about the cost of Ireland, trying to obtain a footing
-on her yet unconquered soil.</p>
-
-<p>When these pagan pirates first appeared on our shores, Ireland
-had enjoyed a Christian civilization of four centuries. The light
-of the true faith had been there long before it shone upon rude
-Saxon England. The Irish of that early era excelled in music,
-poetry, and many arts. They had a literature, colleges for the
-learned, an organized and independent hierarchy, churches and
-abbeys, whose ruins still attest the sense of the beautiful, as well
-as the piety which must have existed in the founders. Their
-manuscripts, dating from this period, are older than those of any
-other nation of Northern Europe; their music was distinguished
-by its pathetic beauty, and the ballads of their bards emulated in
-force of expression those of ancient Homer. At the time that
-the Scots were totally ignorant of letters, and that the princes of
-the heptarchy had to resort to Irish colleges for instruction in the
-liberal sciences, Ireland held the proud title of the “Island of
-Saints and Scholars;” and learned men went forth from her
-shores to evangelize Europe.</p>
-
-<p>One Irish priest founded an abbey at Iona; another was the
-friend and counsellor of Charlemagne; a third, of equal celebrity,
-founded monasteries both in France and England. The Irish of
-eleven centuries ago were the apostles of Europe!</p>
-
-<p>The Norsemen, or “white strangers,” as the Irish called them<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">307</span>
-who swept like a hurricane over this early civilization, were
-fierce pagans, who respected neither God nor man. Not till three
-centuries after their arrival in Ireland were they converted to the
-Christian faith. They pillaged towns, burned churches, destroyed
-manuscripts of the past which no future can restore, plundered
-abbeys of all that learning, sanctity and civilization had accumulated
-of the sacred, the costly, and the beautiful, and gave the
-Irish nothing in return but lessons of their own barbarous ferocity.
-Then it was we hear how Irish mothers gave their infants food on
-the point of their father’s sword, and at the baptism left the right
-arms of their babes unchristened that they might strike the more
-relentlessly. The Syrian and the Scythian, the children of the
-one Japhetian race, met at last in this <i>ultima thule</i> of Europe,
-after a three thousand years’ divergence; and even then, though
-they met with fierce animosity and inextinguishable hatred, yet
-lingerings of a far-off ancient identity in the language, the
-traditions, and the superstitions of each, could still be traced in
-these children of the one mighty father.</p>
-
-<p>Great consternation must have been in Ireland when the
-report spread that a fleet of sixty strange sail was in the Boyne,
-and that another of equal number was sailing up the Liffey. The
-foreigners leaped from their ships to conquest. Daring brought
-success; they sacked, burned, pillaged, murdered; put a captive
-king to death in his own gyves at their ships; drove the Irish
-before them from the ocean to the Shannon; till, with roused
-spirit and gathered force, the confederate kings of Ireland in
-return drove back the white foreigners from the Shannon to the
-ocean. But they had gained a footing, and inroads, with plunder
-and devastation, never ceased from that time till the whole eastern
-sea-border of Ireland was their own. There they established
-themselves for four centuries, holding their first conquests, but
-never gaining more, until they were finally expelled by the
-Normans.</p>
-
-<p>To these red-haired pirates and marauders Dublin owes its
-existence as a city. The <i>Ath-Cliath</i> of the Irish, though of
-ancient fame, was but an aggregate of huts by the side of the
-Liffey, which was crossed by a bridge of hurdles. The kings of
-Ireland never made it a royal residence, even after Tara was
-cursed by St. Rodan. Their palaces were in the interior of the
-island; but no doubt exists that <i>Ath-Cliath</i>, the Eblana of
-Ptolemy, was a well-known port, the resort of merchantmen from
-the most ancient times. There were received the Spanish wines,
-the Syrian silks, the Indian gold, destined for the princes and
-nobles; and from thence the costly merchandize was transported
-to the interior.</p>
-
-<p>But Dublin, with its fine plain watered by the Liffey, its noble
-bay, guarded by the sentinel hills, at once attracted the special<span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">308</span>
-notice of the bold Vikings. Their chiefs fixed their residence
-there, and assumed the title of Kings of Dublin, or Kings of the
-Dark Water, as the word may be translated. They erected a
-fortress on the very spot where the Norman Castle now rules the
-city, and, after their conversion, a cathedral, still standing amongst
-us, venerable with the memories of eight hundred years.</p>
-
-<p>Their descendants are with us to this day, and many families
-might trace back their lineage to the Danish leaders, whose names
-have been preserved in Irish history. Amongst sundry of “these
-great and valiant captains” are named Swanchean, Griffin, Albert
-Roe, Torbert Duff, Goslyn, Walter English, Awley, King of
-Denmark, from whom descend the Macaulays, made more illustrious
-by the modern historian of their race than by the ancient
-pirate king. There are also named Randal O’Himer, Algot,
-Ottarduff Earl, Fyn Crossagh, Torkill, Fox Wasbagg, Trevan,
-Baron Robert, and others; names interesting, no doubt, to those
-who can claim them for their ancestry.</p>
-
-<p>The Norsemen having walled and fortified Dublin, though
-including but a mile within its circumference—whereas now the
-city includes ten—proceeded to fortify Dunleary, now Kingstown,
-in order to secure free passage to their ships. Then, from their
-stronghold of Dublin, they made incessant inroads upon the broad
-rich plains of the interior. They spread all along Meath, which
-received its name from them, of “Fingall” (the land of the white
-stranger); they devastated as far north as Armagh, as far west as
-the Shannon; Wexford, Waterford, and Limerick became half
-Danish cities. Everywhere their course was marked by barbaric
-spoliation. At one time it is noticed that they carried off a
-“great prey of women”—thus the Romans woo’d their Sabine
-brides; indeed the accounts in the Irish annals of the shrines they
-burned, the royal graves they plundered, the treasures they
-pillaged, the ferocities they perpetrated, are as interminable as
-they are revolting.</p>
-
-<p>When beaten back by the Irish princes they crouched within
-their walled city of Dublin, till an opportunity offered for some
-fresh exercise of murderous cunning, some act of audacious rapine.
-Thus the contest was carried on for four centuries between the
-colonists and the nation; mutual hatred ever increasing; the
-Irish kings of Leinster still claiming the rights of feudal lords
-over the Danes; the Danes resisting every effort made to dislodge
-them, though they were not unfrequently forced to pay
-tribute.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes the Irish kings hired them as mercenaries to assist
-in the civil wars which raged perennially amongst them. Sometimes
-there were intermarriages between the warring foes—the
-daughter of Brian Boro’ wedded Sitric, King of the Danes of
-Dublin. Occasionally the Irish kings got possession of Dublin,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">309</span>
-and ravaged and pillaged in return. Once the Danes were driven
-forth completely from the city, and forced to take refuge upon
-“Ireland’s Eye,” the lone sea rock, since made memorable by
-a tragic history. Malachy, King of Meath, besieged Dublin
-for three days and three nights, burned the fortress, and carried
-off the Danish regalia; hence the allusion in Moore’s song to
-“The Collar of Gold which he won from the proud invader.”
-But the most terrible defeat the Danes ever sustained was at
-Clontarf, when ten thousand men in coats of mail were opposed
-to King Brian; but “the ten thousand in armour were cut
-in pieces, and three thousand warriors slain besides.” Even the
-Irish children fought against the invader. The grandchild of
-King Brian, a youth of fifteen, was found dead with his hand fast
-bound in the hair of a Dane’s head, whom the child had dragged
-to the sea.<a id="FNanchor_17_17" href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">17</a></p>
-
-<p>Still the Danish colony was not uprooted, though after this
-defeat they grew more humble, kept within their city of Dublin,
-and paid tribute to the kings of Leinster, and to the paramount
-monarch of Ireland.</p>
-
-<p>Up to this period, therefore, we see that the Irish race had no
-relationship whatever with their capital city; they never saw
-the inside of their metropolis unless they were carried there as
-prisoners, or that they entered with fire and sword; and, stranger
-still, during the many centuries of the existence of Dublin as a
-city, up to the present time, the Irish race have never ruled there,
-or held possession of the fortress of their capital.</p>
-
-<p>But the time of judgment upon the Danes was approaching,
-though it did not come by Irish hands. As the Saxons in England
-fell before the Danes, so the Danes had fallen before the
-Normans. The Normans, a Scythian race likewise, but more
-beautiful, more brave, more chivalrous, courtly, and polished,
-than any race that had preceded them, came triumphant from
-Italy and France to achieve the conquest of England, which
-yielded almost without a struggle. One great battle, and then no
-more. William the Norman, or rather the Scythian Frenchman,
-ascends the throne of Alfred. Dane and Saxon fall helplessly beneath
-his feet, and his tyrannies, his robberies, his confiscations,
-are submitted to by the subjugated nation without an effort at
-resistance.</p>
-
-<p>His handful of Norman nobles seized upon the lands, the wealth,
-the honours, the estates of the kingdom, and retain them to this
-hour. And justly; so noble a race as the Norman knights were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">310</span>
-made for masters. The Saxons sank at once to the level of serfs,
-of traders and menials, from which they have never risen, leaving
-England divided into a Norman aristocracy who have all the
-land, and a Saxon people who have all the toil; crushed by
-the final conquerors, they sank to be the sediment of the
-kingdom.</p>
-
-<p>The Irish had a different destiny; for five hundred years they
-fought the battle for independence with the Normans, nor did
-their chiefs sink to be the pariahs of the kingdom, as the Saxons
-of England, but retain their princely pretensions to this day.
-The O’Connors, the O’Briens, O’Neils, Kavanaghs, O’Donnels,
-yield to no family in Europe in pride of blood and ancestral
-honours; while, by intermarriage with the Norman lords, a race
-was founded of Norman Irish—perhaps the finest specimens of
-aristocracy that Europe produced—the Geraldines at their head,
-loving Ireland, and of whom Ireland may be proud.</p>
-
-<p>A hundred years passed by after the Norman conquest of England.
-Three kings of the Norman race had reigned and died, and
-still the conquest of Ireland was unattempted; no Norman knight
-had set foot on Irish soil.</p>
-
-<p>The story of their coming begins with just such a domestic
-drama as Homer had turned into an epic two thousand years
-before. A fair and faithless woman, a king’s daughter, fled from
-her husband to the arms of a lover. All Ireland is outraged
-at the act. The kings assemble in conclave and denounce vengeance
-upon the crowned seducer, Dermot, King of Leinster.</p>
-
-<p>He leagues with the Danes of Dublin, the abhorred of his
-countrymen, but the only allies he can find in his great need.
-A battle is fought in which Dermot is defeated, his castle of
-Ferns is burned, his kingdom is taken from him, and he himself
-is solemnly deposed by the confederate kings, and banished beyond
-the seas. Roderick, King of all Ireland, is the inexorable
-and supreme judge. He restores the guilty wife to her husband;
-but the husband disdains to receive her, and she retires to a
-convent, where she expiates her crime and the ruin of her country
-by forty years of penance. The only records of her afterwards
-are of her good deeds. She built a nunnery at Clonmacnoise;
-she gave a chalice of gold to the altar of Mary, and cloth for nine
-altars of the Church; and then Dervorgil, the Helen of our Iliad,
-is heard of no more.</p>
-
-<p>Dermot, her lover, went to England, seeking aid to recover his
-kingdom of Leinster. In a year he returns with a band of
-Welsh mercenaries, and marches to Dublin; but is again defeated
-by the confederate kings, and obliged to pay a hundred
-ounces of gold to O’Rourke of Breffny, “for the wrong he had
-done him respecting his wife,” and to give up as hostage to King
-Roderick his only son. But while parleying with the Irish<span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">311</span>
-kings, Dermot was secretly soliciting English aid, and not unsuccessfully.</p>
-
-<p>Memorable was the year 1170, when the renowned Strongbow,
-Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Pembroke, and his Norman knights,
-landed at Wexford to aid the banished king; and when Dermot
-welcomed his illustrious allies, little he thought that by his hand</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“The emerald gem of the Western world,</div>
- <div class="verse">Was set in the crown of a stranger.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>The compact with the foreigners was sealed with his son’s
-blood. No sooner did King Roderick hear of the Norman landing,
-than he ordered the royal Kavanagh, the hostage of King
-Dermot, to be put to death; and henceforth a doom seemed to be
-on the male heirs of the line of Dermot, as fatal as that which
-rested upon the house of Atrides.</p>
-
-<p>Dermot had an only daughter remaining. He offered her in
-marriage to the Earl of Pembroke, with the whole kingdom of
-Leinster for her dowry, so as he would help him to his revenge.
-After a great battle against the Danes, in which the
-Normans were victorious, the marriage was celebrated at Waterford.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent20">“Sad Eva gazed</div>
- <div class="verse">All round that bridal field of blood, amazed;</div>
- <div class="verse">Spoused to new fortunes.”<a id="FNanchor_18_18" href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">18</a></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>No record remains to us of the beauty of the bride, or in
-what language the Norman knight wooed her to his arms; this
-only we know, that Eva, Queen of Leinster in her own right, and
-Countess of Pembroke by marriage, can number amongst her descendants
-the present Queen of England. Of the bridegroom,
-Cambrensis tells us that he was “ruddy, freckle-faced, grey-eyed,
-his face feminine, his voice small, his neck little, yet of a high
-stature, ready with good words and gentle speeches.”</p>
-
-<p>The same authority describes Dermot from personal observation—“A
-tall man of stature, of a large and great body, a valiant
-and bold warrior, and by reason of his continued hallooing his
-voice was hoarse. He rather chose to be feared than loved.
-Rough and generous, hateful unto strangers, he would be against
-all men and all men against him.”</p>
-
-<p>From Waterford to Dublin was a progress of victory to Dermot
-and his allies, for they marched only through the Danish
-settlements of which Dermot was feudal lord. At Dublin King
-Roderick opposed them with an army. Three days the battle
-raged; then the Danes of Dublin, fearing Dermot’s wrath,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">312</span>
-opened their gates, and offered him gold and silver in abundance
-if he would spare their lives; but, heedless of treaties, the
-Norman knights rushed in, slew the Danes in their own fortress,
-drove the rest to the sea; and thus ended the Danish dynasty
-of four centuries. Never more did they own a foot of ground
-throughout the length or breadth of the land. An Irish army,
-aided by Norman skill, had effected their complete extinction.
-The Kingdom of Leinster was regained for Dermot, and he and
-his allies placed a garrison in Dublin. This was the last triumph
-of the ancient race. The kingdom was lost even at the moment
-it seemed regained. That handful of Scythian warriors, scarcely
-visible amid Dermot’s great Irish army, are destined to place the
-yoke upon the neck of ancient Ireland.</p>
-
-<p>The brave Roderick gathered together another army, and, with
-sixty thousand men, laid siege to Dublin, O’Rourke of Breffny
-aiding him. They were repulsed. O’Rourke was taken prisoner,
-and hanged with his head downwards, then beheaded and the
-head stuck on one of the centre gates of the castle, “a spectacle
-of intense pity to the Irish;” and Roderick retired into Connaught
-to recruit more forces.</p>
-
-<p>There is something heroic and self-devoted in the efforts which,
-for eighteen years, were made by Roderick against the Norman
-power. Brave, learned, just, and enlightened beyond his age, he
-alone of all the Irish princes saw the direful tendency of the
-Norman inroad. All the records of his reign prove that he was
-a wise and powerful monarch. He had a fleet on the Shannon,
-the like of which had never been seen before. He built a royal
-residence in Connaught, the ruins of which are still existing to
-attest its former magnificence, so far beyond all structures of the
-period, that it was known in Ireland as the beautiful house. He
-founded a chair of literature at Armagh, and left an endowment
-in perpetuity, to maintain it for the instruction of the youth of
-Ireland and Scotland. A great warrior, and a fervent patriot, his
-first effort, when he obtained the crown, was to humble the Danish
-power. Dublin was forced to pay him tribute, and he was inaugurated
-there with a grandeur and luxury unknown before.
-When Dermot outraged morality, he deposed and banished him.
-When Dermot further sinned, and traitorously brought over the
-foreigner, Roderick, with stern justice, avenged the father’s treason
-by the son’s life. His own son, the heir of his kingdom, leagued
-with the Normans, and was found fighting in their ranks.
-Roderick, like a second Brutus, unpitying, yet heroically just,
-when the youth was brought a prisoner before him, himself
-ordered his eyes to be put out. His second son also turned
-traitor, and covenanted with the Normans to deprive his father of
-the kingdom. Then Roderick, surrounded by foreign foes and
-domestic treachery, quitted Connaught, and went through the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">313</span>
-provinces of Ireland, seeking to stir up a spirit as heroic as his
-own in the hearts of his countrymen. Soon after his unworthy
-son was killed in some broil, and Roderick resumed the kingly
-functions; but while all the other Irish princes took the oath of
-fealty to King Henry, he kept aloof beyond the Shannon, equally
-disdaining treachery or submission. His last son, the only one
-worthy of him, being defeated in a battle by the Normans, slew
-himself in despair.</p>
-
-<p>The male line of his house was now extinct; the independence
-of his country was threatened; Norman power was growing strong
-in the land, and his continued efforts for eighteen years to arouse
-the Irish princes to a sense of their danger was unavailing.
-Wearied, disgusted, heartbroken, it may be, he voluntarily laid
-down the sceptre and the crown, and retired to the monastery of
-Cong, where he became a monk, and thus, in penance and seclusion,
-passed ten years—the weary ending of a fated life.</p>
-
-<p>He died there, twenty-eight years after the Norman invasion,
-“after exemplary penance, victorious over the world and the
-devil;” and the chroniclers record his title upon his grave where
-he is laid—</p>
-
-<p>
-“Roderick O’Connor,<br />
-King of all Ireland, both of the Irish and English.”<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>Seven centuries have passed since then, yet even now, which of
-us could enter the beautiful ruins of that ancient abbey, wander
-through the arched aisles tapestried by ivy, or tread the lonely
-silent chapel, once vocal with prayer and praise, without sad
-thoughts of sympathy for the fate of the last monarch of Ireland,
-and perchance grave thoughts likewise over the destiny of a people
-who, on that grave of native monarchy, independence, and
-nationality, have as yet written no <span class="smcap">Resurgam</span>.</p>
-
-<p>Exactly ten months after the Normans took possession of Dublin,
-King Dermot, “by whom a trembling sod was made of all Ireland,
-died of an insufferable and unknown disease—for he became putrid
-while living—without a will, without penance, without the body
-of Christ, without unction, as his evil deeds deserved.”</p>
-
-<p>Immediately the Earl of Pembroke assumed the title of King of
-Leinster in right of his wife Eva. Whereupon Henry of England
-grew alarmed at the independence of his nobility, and hastened
-over to assert his claims as lord paramount. To his remonstrances
-Strongbow answered, “What I won was with the sword; what
-was given me I give you.” An agreement was then made by which
-Strongbow retained Dublin, while Henry appointed what nobles
-he chose over the other provinces of Leinster.</p>
-
-<p>When the first Norman monarch landed amongst us, the
-memorable 18th day of October, 1172, no resistance was offered by
-any party; no battle was fought. The Irish chiefs were so elated<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">314</span>
-at the Danish overthrow, that they even volunteered oaths of
-fealty to the foreign prince who had been in some sort their
-deliverer. Calmly, as in a state pageant, Henry proceeded from
-Wexford to Dublin; his route lay only through the conquered
-Danish possessions, now the property of the Countess Eva; there
-was no fear therefore of opposition. On reaching the city, “he
-caused a royal palace to be built, very curiously contrived of
-smooth wattels, after the manner of the country, and there, with
-the kings and princes of Ireland, did keep Christmas with great
-solemnity,” on the very spot where now stands St. Andrew’s
-Church.</p>
-
-<p>King Henry remained six months in Ireland, the longest period
-which a foreign monarch has ever passed amongst us, and during
-that time he never thought of fighting a battle with the Irish. As
-yet, the whole result of Norman victories was the downfall of the
-Danes, in which object the Irish had gladly assisted. Strongbow
-and Eva reigned peacefully in our capital. Henry placed
-governors over the other Danish cities, and in order that Dublin,
-from which the Danes had been expelled, might be repeopled, he
-made a present of our fair city to the good people of Bristol.</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly a colony from that town, famed for deficiency in
-personal attractions, came over and settled here; but thirty years
-after, the Irish, whose instincts of beauty were no doubt offended
-by the rising generation of Bristolians, poured down from the
-Wicklow hills upon the ill-favoured colony, and made a quick
-ending of them by a general massacre.</p>
-
-<p>In a fit of penitence, also, for the murdered À Becket, Henry
-founded the Abbey of Thomas Court, from which Thomas Street
-derives its name, and then the excommunicated king quitted
-Ireland, leaving it unchanged, save that Henry the Norman held
-the possessions of Torkil the Dane, and Dublin, from a Danish, had
-become a Norman city. Five hundred years more had to elapse
-before English jurisdiction extended beyond the ancient Danish
-pale, and a Cromwell or a William of Nassau was needed for the
-final conquest of Ireland, as well as for the redemption of England.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing can be more absurd than to talk of a Saxon conquest of
-Ireland. The Saxons, an ignorant, rude, inferior race, could not
-even maintain their ascendency in England. They fell before the
-superior power, intelligence, and ability of the Norman, and the
-provinces of Ireland that fell to the first Norman nobles were in
-reality not gained by battles, but by the intermarriage of Norman
-lords with the daughters of Irish kings. Hence it was that in right
-of their wives the Norman nobles early set up claims independent
-of the English crown, and the hereditary rights, being transmitted
-through each generation, were perpetually tempting the Norman
-aristocracy into rebellion. English supremacy was as uneasily
-borne by the De Lacys, the Geraldines, the Butlers, and others<span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">315</span>
-of the Norman stock, as by the O’Connors, the Kavanaghs, the
-O’Neils, or the O’Briens. The great Richard de Burgho married
-Odierna, grand-daughter of Cathal Crovdearg, king of Connaught.
-Hence the De Burghos assumed the title of Lords of Connaught.</p>
-
-<p>King Roderick, as we have said, left no male issue. His
-kingdom descended to his daughter, who married the Norman
-knight, Hugo de Lacy. Immediately De Lacy set up a claim as
-independent prince in right of his wife, assumed legal state, took
-the title of King of Meath, and appeared in public with a golden
-crown upon his head, and so early as twenty-five years after the
-invasion, John de Courcy and the son of this De Lacy marched
-<i>against</i> the English of Leinster and Munster. Many a romance
-could be woven of the destiny and vicissitudes of this great race,
-half Irish, half Norman; independent princes by the one side, and
-English subjects by the other.</p>
-
-<p>The great Earl of Pembroke lived but a few years after his
-capture of Dublin. The Irish legends say that St. Bridget killed
-him. However, he and Eva had no male heir, and only one
-daughter, named Isabel, after the Earl’s mother, who was also
-aunt to the reigning king of Scotland.</p>
-
-<p>This young girl was sole heiress of Leinster and of her father’s
-Welsh estates. Richard Cœur de Lion took her to his court at
-London, and she became his ward. In due time she married
-William Marshall, called the great Earl, hereditary Earl Marshal
-of England, and Earl of Pembroke and Leinster, in right of his
-wife. High in office and favour with the king, we read that he
-carried the sword of state before Richard at his coronation, and as
-a monument of his piety, he left Tintern Abbey, in the County
-Wexford, erected by him on his wife’s property.</p>
-
-<p>Isabel and Earl William had five sons and five daughters.
-The five sons, William, Walter, Gilbert, Anselm, and Richard
-(Isabel called no son of hers after the royal traitor Dermot,
-her grandfather) inherited the title in succession, and all died
-childless. We have said there was a doom upon Dermot’s male
-posterity.</p>
-
-<p>The inheritance was then divided between the five daughters,
-each of whom received a province for a dower. Carlow, Kilkenny,
-the Queen’s County, Wexford, and Kildare were the five portions.
-Maud, the eldest, married the Earl of Norfolk, who became Earl
-Marshal of England in right of his wife.</p>
-
-<p>Isabel, the second, married the Earl of Gloucester, and her
-granddaughter, Isabel also, was mother to the great Robert
-Bruce, who was therefore great-great-great-grandson of Eva and
-Strongbow. Eva, the third daughter, married the Lord de Breos,
-and from a daughter of hers, named Eva likewise, descended
-Edward the Fourth, King of England, through whose granddaughter
-Margaret Queen of Scotland, daughter of Henry the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">316</span>
-Seventh, the present reigning family of England claim their right
-to the throne. Through two lines, therefore, our Most Gracious
-Majesty can trace back her pedigree to Eva the Irish princess.</p>
-
-<p>Joan, whose portions were Wexford, married Lord Valentia,
-half-brother to King Henry the Third, and the male line failing,
-the inheritance was divided between two daughters, from one of
-whom the Talbots, Earls of Shrewsbury, inherit their Wexford
-estates.</p>
-
-<p>From Sybil, the youngest, who married the Earl of Ferrars and
-Derby, descended the Earls of Winchester, the Lords Mortimer,
-and other noble races. She had seven daughters, who all married
-Norman lords, so that scarcely a family could be named of the
-high and ancient English nobility, whose wealth has not been
-increased by the estates of Eva, the daughter of King Dermot;
-and thus it came to pass that Leinster fell by marriage and inheritance,
-not by conquest, into the possession of the great
-Norman families, who, of course, acknowledged the King of
-England as their sovereign; and the English monarchs assumed
-thenceforth the title of Lords of Ireland—a claim which they
-afterwards enforced over the whole country.</p>
-
-<p>The destiny of the descendants of De Lacy and King Roderick’s
-daughter was equally remarkable. They had two sons, Hugh and
-Walter, who, before they were twenty-one, threw off English
-allegiance, and set up as independent princes. To avoid the wrath
-of King John they fled to France, and took refuge in an abbey,
-where, disguised as menials, the two young noblemen found employment
-in garden-digging, preparing mud and bricks, and
-similar work. By some chance the abbot suspected the disguise,
-and finally detected the princes in the supposed peasants. He
-used his knowledge of their secret to obtain their pardon from King
-John, and Hugh De Lacy was created Earl of Ulster. He left an
-only daughter, his sole heir. She married a De Burgho, who, in
-right of his wife, became Earl of Ulster, and from them descended
-Ellen, wife of Robert Bruce, King of Scotland. It is singular
-that the mother of Robert Bruce should have been descended
-from Eva, and his wife from King Roderick’s daughter. The
-granddaughter of Robert Bruce, the Princess Margery, married
-the Lord High Steward of Scotland, and through her the Stuarts
-claimed the crown. From thence it is easy to trace how the
-royal blood of the three kingdoms meet in the reigning family of
-England. Another descendant of the Earls of Ulster (an only
-daughter likewise) married Lionel, Duke of Clarence, son of
-Edward the Third, who, in the right of his wife, became Earl of
-Ulster and Lord of Connaught, and these titles finally merged in
-the English crown in the person of Edward the Fourth. From
-all these genealogies one fact may be clearly deduced, that the
-present representative of the royal Irish races of Eva and Roderick,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">317</span>
-and the lineal heiress of their rights, is Her Majesty Queen
-Victoria.</p>
-
-<p>The proud and handsome race of Norman Irish, that claimed
-descent from these intermarriages, were the nobles, of whom it
-was said, “They were more Irish than the Irish themselves.”
-The disposition to become independent of England was constantly
-manifested in them. They publicly asserted their rights, renounced
-the English dress and language, and adopted Irish names.
-Thus Sir Ulick Burke, ancestor of Lord Clanricarde, became
-MacWilliam Oughter (or upper), and Sir Edmond Albanagh,
-progenitor of the Earl of Mayo, became MacWilliam Eighter (or
-lower). Richard, son of the Earl of Norfolk, and grandson of
-Eva, set up a claim to be independent King of Leinster, and was
-slain by the English. We have seen that Walter and Hugh De
-Lacy, grandsons of Roderick, were in open rebellion against King
-John. A hundred years later, two of the same race, named
-Walter and Hugh likewise, were proclaimed traitors for aiding
-the army of Robert Bruce, who claimed the crown of Ireland for
-his brother Edward, and the two De Lacys were found dead by
-the side of Edward Bruce at the great battle of Dundalk, where
-the Scotch forces were overthrown.</p>
-
-<p>Once, even the Geraldines and the Fitzmaurices took prisoner
-the Justiciary of Dublin, as the Lord-Lieutenant of that day was
-named. Meanwhile the Irish princes of the West retained their
-independence; sometimes at feud, sometimes in amity with the
-English of the Eastern coast. We read that “the English of
-Dublin invited Hugh, King of Connaught, to a conference, and
-began to deal treacherously with him; but William Mareschall,
-his friend, coming in with his forces, rescued him, in despite of
-the English, from the middle of the Court, and escorted him to
-Connaught.” Both races were equally averse to the domination
-of the English crown. The Geraldines and Butlers, the De
-Burghos and De Lacys, were as intractable as the O’Connors of
-Connaught, or the O’Neils of Tyrone; even more so. The Great
-O’Neil submitted to Elizabeth; but two hundred years later the
-Geraldines had still to add the name of another martyr for
-liberty to the roll of their illustrious ancestors.</p>
-
-<p>Frequently the Normans fought amongst themselves as fiercely
-as if opposed to the Irish. The Earl of Ulster, a De Burgho,
-the same who is recorded to have given the first entertainment
-at Dublin Castle, took his kinsman, Walter Burke, prisoner, and
-had him starved to death in his own castle; a tragedy which
-might have been made as memorable as that of Ugolino in the
-<i>Torre del Fame</i>, had there been a Dante in Ireland to record it.
-For this act the kinsmen of Walter Burke murdered the Earl of
-Ulster on the Lord’s Day, as he was kneeling at his prayers, and
-cleft his head in two with a sword.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">318</span></p>
-
-<p>It was unfortunate for Ireland that her Irish princes were so
-unconquerable, and that her Norman lords should have caught
-the infection of resistance to the crown. Eight hundred years
-ago the Saxons of England peaceably settled down with the
-Normans to form one nation, with interests and objects identical.</p>
-
-<p>The Norman conquerors, better fitted, perhaps, for rulers than
-any other existing in Europe, established at once a strong,
-vigorous government in England. The Kings, as individuals,
-may have been weak or tyrannous, but there was a unity of
-purpose, a sense of justice, and a vigour of will existing in the
-ruling class that brought the ruled speedily under the order and
-discipline of laws. Not a century and a half had elapsed from
-the Conquest before Magna Charta and representation by Parliament
-secured the liberty of the people against the caprices of
-kings; and the Norman temperament which united in a singular
-degree the instincts of loyalty with the love of freedom, became
-the hereditary national characteristic of Englishmen. But
-Ireland never, at any time, comprehended the word nationality.
-From of old it was broken up into fragments, ruled by chiefs
-whose principal aim was mutual destruction. There was no
-unity, therefore no strength.</p>
-
-<p>If, at the time of the Norman invasion, a king of the race had
-settled here as in England, the Irish would gradually have
-become a nation under one ruler, in place of being an aggregate
-of warring tribes; but for want of this chief corner-stone the
-Norman nobles themselves became but isolated chiefs—new petty
-kings added to the old—each for himself, none for the country.
-It was contrary to all natural laws that the proud Irish princes,
-with the traditions of their race going back two thousand years,
-should at once serve with love and loyalty a foreign king whose
-face they never saw and from whom they derived no benefits.
-And thus it was that five hundred years elapsed, from Henry
-Plantagenet to William of Nassau, before Ireland was finally
-adjusted in her subordinate position to the English crown.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the Danish Dublin was fast rising into importance
-as the Norman city, the capital of the English pale. Within
-that circle the English laws, language, manners and religion were
-implicitly adopted; without, there was a fierce, warlike, powerful
-people, the ancient lords of the soil, but with them the citizens of
-Dublin had no affinity; and the object of the English rulers
-was to keep the two races as distinct as possible. Amongst other
-enactments tending to obliterate any feeling of kindred which
-might exist, the inhabitants of the pale were ordered to adopt
-English surnames, derived from everything which by the second
-commandment we are forbidden to worship. Hence arose the
-tribes of fishes—cod, haddock, plaice, salmon, gurnet, gudgeon,
-&amp;c.; and of birds—crow, sparrow, swan, pigeon; and of trades,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">319</span>
-as carpenter, smith, baker, mason; and of colours—the blacks,
-whites, browns, and greens, which in Dublin so copiously
-replace the grand old historic names of the provinces. Determined
-also on annihilating the picturesque, at least in the individual,
-lest the outward symbol might be taken for an inward
-affinity, the long flowing hair and graceful mantle, after the Irish
-fashion, were forbidden to be worn within the pale.</p>
-
-<p>Neither was the Irish language tolerated within the English
-jurisdiction, for which Holingshed gives good reason, after this
-fashion—“And here,” he says, “some snappish carpers will
-snuffingly snib me for debasing the Irish language, but my short
-discourse tendeth only to this drift, that it is not expedient that
-the Irish tongue should be so universally gagled in the English
-pale; for where the country is subdued, there the inhabitants
-should be ruled by the same laws that the conqueror is governed,
-wear the same fashion of attire with which the victor is vested,
-and speak the same language which the victor parleth; and if
-any of these lack, doubtless the conquest limpeth.” The English
-tongue, however, seems to have been held in utter contempt
-and scorn by the Irish allies of the pale. After the submission
-of the Great O’Neil, the last who held the title of king in Ireland,
-which he exchanged for that of Earl of Tyrone, as a mark and
-seal of his allegiance to Queen Elizabeth, “One demanded
-merrilie,” says Holingshed, “why O’Neil would not frame himself
-to speak English? ‘What,’ quoth the other in a rage,
-‘thinkest thou it standeth with O’Neil his honour to writhe his
-mouth in clattering English.’”</p>
-
-<p>As regarded religion, the English commanded the most implicit
-obedience to the Pope, under as strict and severe penalties as, five
-hundred years later, they enacted against those who acknowledged
-his authority. One provision of the ancient oath imposed upon
-the subjugated Irish was—“You acknowledge yourself to be of
-the Mother Church of Rome, now professed by all Christians.”
-But, that the Irish of that era little heeded papal or priestly
-ordinances may be inferred from the fact that, during the wars of
-Edward Bruce, the English complained that their Irish auxiliaries
-were more exhausting than the Scots, as they ate meat all the
-time of Lent; and it is recorded, that in 1133, when the Leinster
-Irish rose against the English, “they set fire to everything, even
-the churches, and burned the church of Dunleary, with eighty
-persons in it, and even when the priest in his sacred vestments,
-and carrying the Host in his hands, tried to get out, they drove
-him back with their spears and burned him. For this they were
-excommunicated by a Papal Bull, and the country was put under
-an interdict. But they despised these things, and again wasted
-the county of Wexford.”<a id="FNanchor_19_19" href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">19</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">320</span></p>
-<p>The energetic and organizing spirit of the Normans was, however,
-evidenced by better deeds than those we have named.
-Courts of law were established in Dublin, a mayor and corporation
-instituted, and Parliaments were convened after the English
-fashion. Within fifty years after the Norman settlement, the
-lordly pile of Dublin Castle rose upon the site of the old Danish
-fortress, built, indeed, to overawe the Irish, as William the Conqueror
-built the Tower of London to overawe the English; yet,
-by Norman hands, the first regal residence was given to our
-metropolis. St. Patrick’s Cathedral was next elected by the
-colonists, and gradually our fair city rose into beauty and importance
-through Norman wealth and Norman skill. From henceforth,
-the whole interest of Irish history centres in the chief city
-of the pale, and the history of Dublin becomes the history of
-English rule in Ireland. For centuries its position was that of a
-besieged city in the midst of a hostile country; for centuries it
-resisted the whole force of the native race; and finally triumphantly
-crushed, annihilated, and revenged every effort made for
-Irish independence.</p>
-
-<p>In truth, Dublin is a right royal city, and never fails in reverential
-respect towards her English mother.</p>
-
-<p>Many great names are associated with the attempt to write a
-history of Dublin. The work in all ages was laborious; there
-were no printed books to consult, and the records of Ireland, as
-Hooker complains three hundred years ago, “were verie slenderlie
-and disorderlie kept.” Whitelaw’s work, though it employed two
-editors ten hours a day for ten years, yet goes no farther than a
-description of the public buildings; but the object of Mr.
-Gilbert’s history is distinct from all that precedes it. It is
-from the decaying streets and houses that he disentombs great
-memories, great fragments of past life. It is not a mere record
-of Ionic pillars, Corinthian capitals, or Doric pediments he gives
-us. Whitelaw has supplied whole catalogues of these; but
-records of the human life, that has throbbed through the ancient
-dwellings of our city century after century; of the vicissitudes of
-families, to be read in their ruined mansions; of the vast political
-events which in some room, in some house, on some particular
-night, branded the stigmata deeper on the country; or the
-tragedies of great hopes crushed, young blood shed, victims hopelessly
-sacrificed, which have made some street, some house, some
-chamber, for ever sacred.</p>
-
-<p>The labours of such an undertaking are manifest; yet none
-can appreciate them fully who has not known what it is to spend
-days, weeks, months buried in decaying parchments, endless pipe-rolls,
-worm-eaten records, dusty deeds and leases, excavating
-some fact, or searching for some link necessary for the completion
-of a tale, or the elucidation of a truth.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">321</span></p>
-
-<p>Mr. Gilbert tells us that twelve hundred statutes and enactments
-of the Anglo-Irish Parliament still remain unpublished.
-From these and such-like decayed and decaying manuscripts,
-ancient records which have become almost hieroglyphics to the
-present age, he has gathered the life-history of an ancient city;
-he has made the stones to speak, and evoked the shadows of the
-past to fill up the outline of a great historical picture.</p>
-
-<p>Fifty, even twenty years hence, the production of such a work
-would be impossible; the ancient records will probably have
-perished; the ancient houses, round which the curious may yet
-gather, will have fallen to the ground; and the ancient race, who
-cherished in their hearts the legends of the past with the fidelity
-of priests, and the fervour of bards, will have almost passed away.</p>
-
-<p>Dublin is fortunate, therefore, in finding a historian endowed
-with the ability, the energetic literary industry, the untiring
-spirit of research, and the vast amount of antiquarian knowledge
-necessary for the production of so valuable a work, before records
-perish, mansions fall, or races vanish.</p>
-
-<p>In a history illustrated by human lives and deeds, and localized
-in the weird old streets, once the proudest, now the meanest of our
-city, many a family will find an ancestral shadow starting suddenly
-to light, trailing long memories with it of departed fashion, grandeur,
-and magnificence.</p>
-
-<p>Few amongst us who tread the Dublin of the present in all its
-beauty, think of the Dublin of the past in all its contrasted insignificance.
-True, the eternal features are the same; the landscape
-setting of the city is coeval with creation. Tyrian, Dane, and
-Norman have looked as we look, and with hearts as responsive to
-Nature’s loveliness, upon the emerald plains, the winding rivers,
-the hills draperied in violet and gold, the mountain gorges,
-thunder-riven, half veiled by the foam of the waterfall, and the
-eternal ocean encircling all; scenes where God said a city should
-arise, and the mountain and the ocean are still, as of old, the magnificent
-heritage of beauty conferred on our metropolis.</p>
-
-<p>But the early races, whether from southern sea or northern
-plain, did little to aid the beauty of nature with the products of
-human intellect. Dublin, under the Danish rule, consisted only
-of a fortress, a church, and one rude street. Under the rule of
-the Normans, those great civilizers of the western world, those
-grand energetic organizers, temple and tower builders, it rose
-gradually into a beautiful capital, the chief city of Ireland, the
-second city of the empire. At first the rudimental metropolis
-gathered round the castle, as nebulæ round a central sun, and
-from this point it radiated westward and southward; the O’Briens
-on the south, the O’Connors on the west, the O’Neils on the north,
-perpetually hovering on the borders, but never able to regain the
-city, never able to dislodge the brave Norman garrison who had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">322</span>
-planted their banners on the castle walls. In that castle, during
-the seven hundred years of its existence, no Irishman of the old
-race has ever held rule for a single hour.</p>
-
-<p>And what a history it has of tragedies and splendours; crowned
-and discrowned monarchs flit across the scene, and tragic destinies,
-likewise, may be recorded of many a viceroy! Piers Gravestone,
-Lord-Lieutenant of King Edward, murdered; Roger Mortimer—“The
-Gentle Mortimer”—hanged at Tyburn; the Lord Deputy
-of King Richard II. murdered by the O’Briens; whereupon the
-King came over to avenge his death, just a year before he himself
-was so ruthlessly murdered at Pomfret Castle. Two viceroys
-died of the plague; how many more were plagued to death,
-history leaves unrecorded; one was beheaded at Drogheda; three
-were beheaded on Tower Hill. Amongst the names of illustrious
-Dublin rulers may be found those of Prince John, the boy Deputy
-of thirteen; Prince Lionel, son of Edward III., who claimed Clare
-in right of his wife, and assumed the title of Clarence from having
-conquered it from the O’Briens.</p>
-
-<p>The great Oliver Cromwell was the Lord-Lieutenant of the
-Parliament, and he in turn appointed his son Henry to succeed
-him. Dire are the memories connected with Cromwell’s reign
-here, both to his own party and to Ireland. Ireton died of the
-plague after the siege of Limerick; General Jones died of the
-plague after the surrender of Dungarvon; a thousand of Cromwell’s
-men died of the plague before Waterford. The climate,
-in its effect upon English constitutions, seems to be the great
-Nemesis of Ireland’s wrongs.</p>
-
-<p>Strange scenes, dark, secret, and cruel, have been enacted in
-that gloomy pile. No one has told the full story yet. It will be
-a Ratcliffe romance of dungeons and treacheries, of swift death
-or slow murder. God and St. Mary were invoked in vain for the
-luckless Irish prince or chieftain that was caught in that Norman
-stronghold; but that was in the old time—long, long ago. Now
-the castle courts are crowded only with loyal and courtly crowds,
-gathered to pay homage to the illustrious successor of a hundred
-viceroys.</p>
-
-<p>The strangest scene, perhaps, in the annals of vice-royalty, was
-when Lord Thomas Fitzgerald (Silken Thomas), son of the Earl
-of Kildare, and Lord-Lieutenant in his father’s absence, took up
-arms for Irish independence. He rode through the city with
-seven score horsemen, in shirts of mail and silken fringes on their
-head-pieces (hence the name Silken Thomas), to St. Mary’s Abbey,
-and there entering the council chamber, he flung down the sword
-of state upon the table, and bade defiance to the king and his
-ministers; then hastening to raise an army, he laid siege to
-Dublin Castle, but with no success. Silken Thomas and his five
-uncles were sent to London, and there executed; and sixteen<span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">323</span>
-Fitzgeralds were hanged and quartered at Dublin. By a singular
-fatality, no plot laid against Dublin Castle ever succeeded; though
-to obtain possession of this foreign fortress was the paramount
-wish of all Irish rebel leaders. This was the object with Lord
-Maguire and his Catholics, with Lord Edward Fitzgerald and
-his republicans, with Emmet and his enthusiasts, with Smith
-O’Brien and his nationalists—yet they all failed. Once only,
-during seven centuries, the green flag waved over Dublin Castle,
-with the motto—“<span class="smcap">Now or Never! Now and for Ever!</span>” It
-was when Tyrconnel held it for King James.</p>
-
-<p>In the ancient stormy times of Norman rule, the nobility naturally
-gathered round the Castle. Skinner’s Row was the “May
-Fair” of mediæval Dublin. Hoey’s Court, Castle Street, Cook
-Street, Fishamble Street, Bridge Street, Werburgh Street, High
-Street, Golden Lane, Back Lane, &amp;c., were the fashionable localities
-inhabited by lords and bishops, chancellors and judges; and
-Thomas Street was the grand prado where viceregal pomp and
-Norman pride were oftenest exhibited. A hundred years ago the
-Lord-Lieutenant was entertained at a ball by Lord Mountjoy in
-Back Lane. Skinner’s Row was distinguished by the residence of
-the great race of the Geraldines, called “Carbrie House,” which
-from them passed to the Dukes of Ormond, and after many vicissitudes,
-the palace from which Silken Thomas went forth to give
-his young life for Irish independence, fell into decay, “and on its
-site now stand the houses known as 6, 7, and 8 Christ Church
-Place, in the lower stories of which still exist some of the old oak
-beams of the Carbrie House.”</p>
-
-<p>In Skinner’s Row also, two hundred years ago, dwelt Sir Robert
-Dixon, Mayor of Dublin, who was knighted at his own house
-there by the Lord-Lieutenant, the afterwards unfortunate Strafford.
-The house has fallen to ruins, but the vast property conferred
-on him by Charles I. for his good services, has descended
-to the family of Sir Kildare Burrowes, of Kildare. In those brilliant
-days of Skinner’s Row, it was but seventeen feet wide, and
-the pathways but one foot broad. All its glories have vanished
-now; even the name no longer exists; yet the remains of residences
-once inhabited by the magnificent Geraldines and Butlers
-can still be traced.</p>
-
-<p>Every stone throughout this ancient quarter of Dublin has a
-history. In Cook Street Lord Maguire was arrested at midnight,
-under circumstances very similar to the capture of Lord Edward
-Fitzgerald; and “to commemorate this capture in the parish it
-was the annual custom, down to the year 1829, to toll the bells of
-St. Andrew’s Church at twelve o’clock on the night of the 22nd
-of October.”</p>
-
-<p>In Bridge Street great lords and peers of the realm resided.
-The Marquis of Antrim, the Duke of Marlborough’s father; West<span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">324</span>enra,
-the Dutch merchant who founded the family afterwards
-ennobled, and others. It was the Merrion Square of the day. In
-Bridge Street the rebellion of ’98 was organized at the house of
-Oliver Bond; and one night Major Swan, led by Reynolds the informer,
-seized twelve gentlemen there, all of whom were summarily
-hanged as rebels. Castle Street was the focus of the rebellion
-of 1641; Sir Phelim O’Neill and Lord Maguire had their residences
-there, and concocted together how to seize the Castle,
-destroy all the lords and council, and re-establish Popery in Ireland.
-But a more useful man than either lived there also—Sir
-James Ware, whose indefatigable ardour in the cause of Irish
-literature caused him to collect, with great trouble and expense, a
-vast number of Irish manuscripts, which, after passing through
-many vicissitudes, are now deposited in the British Museum. The
-French family of Latouche came to Castle Street about one hundred
-years ago, and one of them, in 1778, upheld the shattered
-credit of the Government by a loan of £20,000 to the Lord-Lieutenant.
-Fishamble Street has historical and classic memories,
-and traditions of Handel consecrate this now obscure locality.</p>
-
-<p>Handel spent a year in Dublin. His “Messiah” was composed
-there, and first performed for the benefit of Mercer’s Hospital.
-How content he was with his reception is expressed in a letter to
-a friend. “I cannot,” he says, “sufficiently express the kind
-treatment I receive here, but the politeness of this generous
-nation cannot be unknown to you.”</p>
-
-<p>Dublin Quays are likewise illustrated by great names. On
-Usher’s Quay may still be seen the once magnificent Moira House,
-the princely residence of Lord Moira, afterwards Marquis of Hastings,
-Governor-General of India. A hundred years ago it was
-the Holland House of Dublin, sparkling with all the wit, splendour,
-rank, and influence of the metropolis. The decorations
-were unsurpassed in the kingdom for beauty and grandeur. The
-very windows were inlaid with mother-o’-pearl.</p>
-
-<p>After the Union, the family in disgust quitted Ireland; Moira
-house was left tenantless for some years, and then finally was sold
-for the use of the pauper poor of Dublin. The decorations were
-removed, the beautiful gardens turned into offices, the upper story
-of the edifice was taken off, and the entire building pauperized as
-much as possible to suit its inmates and its title—“The Mendicity.”</p>
-
-<p>In the good old times the Lord Mayor treated the Lord-Lieutenant
-to a new play every Christmas, when the Corporation
-acted Mysteries upon the stage in Hoggin Green, where the College
-now stands. The Mysteries were on various subjects. In
-one, the tailors had orders to find Pilate and his wife clothed
-accordingly; the butchers were to supply the tormentors; the
-mariners and vintners represented Noah. At that period the Lord-Lieutenants
-held their court at Kilmainham, or Thomas Court,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">325</span>
-for Dublin Castle was not made a viceregal residence until the
-reign of Elizabeth. The parliaments, too, were ambulatory.
-Sometimes they met in the great aisle of Christ Church, that
-venerable edifice whose echoes have been destined to give back
-such conflicting sounds. What changes in its ritual and its worshippers!
-What scenes have passed before its high altar since
-first erected by the Danish bishop, whose body, in pallium and
-mitre, lay exposed to view but a few years since, after a sleep of
-eight hundred years. Irish kings and Norman conquerors have
-trod the aisles. There Roderick was inaugurated, the last king
-of Ireland; there Strongbow sleeps, first of the Norman conquerors,
-and, until the middle of the last century, all payments were made
-at his tomb, as if in him alone, living or dead, the citizens had
-their strength; there Lambert Simnel was crowned with a crown
-taken from the head of the Virgin Mary; there Cromwell worshipped
-before he went forth to devastate; there the last Stuart
-knelt in prayer before he threw the last stake at the Boyne for an
-empire; and there William of Nassau knelt in gratitude for the
-victory, with the crown upon his head, forgotten by James in his
-ignominious flight.</p>
-
-<p>And how many rituals have risen up to heaven from that ancient
-altar, each <i>anathema maranatha</i> to the other—the solemn chants
-of the early church; the gorgeous ritual of the mass; in Elizabeth’s
-time, the simple liturgy of the English Church in the English
-tongue; this, too, was prohibited in its turn, and for ten years the
-Puritans wailed and howled against kings and liturgies in the
-ancient edifice; there the funeral oration for the death of Cromwell
-was pronounced, entitled, “<i>Threni Hibernici</i>, or Ireland
-sympathizing with England for the loss of their Josiah (Oliver
-Cromwell).” Once again rose the incense of the mass while King
-James was amongst us; but William quenched the lights on the
-altar, and established once more the English Liturgy in its simplicity
-and beauty. But so little, during all these changes, had
-the Irish to do with the cathedral of their capital, that by
-an Act passed in 1380 no Irishman was permitted to hold in it
-any situation or office; and so strictly was the law enforced, that
-Sir John Stevenson was the first Irishman admitted, as even vicar-choral.</p>
-
-<p>Many are the themes of interest to be found in Mr. Gilbert’s
-“History of Dublin,” concerning those ancient times when Sackville
-Street was a marsh, Merrion Square an exhausted quarry,
-the undulations so beautiful in its present verdant state being but
-the accident of excavation; when St. Stephen’s Green, with its
-ten fine Irish acres, was a compound of meadow, quagmire, and
-ditch; when Mountjoy Square was a howling wilderness, and North
-Georges Street and Summer Hill were far away in the country,
-and when the Danes, rudely expelled by Norman swords from the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">326</span>
-south of the Liffey, were stealing over the river to found a settlement
-on the north side.</p>
-
-<p>Our fathers have told us of Dublin in later times, before the
-Union, when a hundred lords and two hundred commoners enriched
-and enlivened our city with their wealth and magnificence.
-Dublin was then at the summit of its glory; but when the colonists
-sold their parliament to England, and the Lords and Commons
-vanished, and their mansions became hospitals and poorhouses,
-and all wealth, power, influence, and magnificence were
-transferred to the loved mother country, then the “City of the
-Dark Water” sank into very pitiable insignificance. The proud
-Norman spirit of independence was broken at last, and there was
-no great principle to replace it. Having no large sympathies
-with the Irish nation, no idea of country, nationality, or any
-other grand word by which is expressed the resolve of self-reliant
-men to be self-governed, the colonists became petty, paltry, and
-selfish in aim; imitative in manners and feelings; apathetic, even
-antagonistic to all national advance; bound to England by helpless
-fear and servile hope; content so as they could rest under her
-great shadow, secure from the mysterious horrors of Popery, preserved
-in the blessing of a church establishment, and allowed to
-worship even the shadow of transcendent Majesty. Then Dublin
-ambition was satisfied and happy; for there is no word so instinctively
-abhorrent, so invincibly opposed to all the prejudices
-of Dublin society, as patriotism.</p>
-
-<p>From this cursory glance over the antecedents of our metropolis,
-the cause of her anti-Irishism is plainly deducible from the fact,
-that at no epoch was Dublin an Irish city. The inhabitants are
-a blended race, descended of Danes, Normans, Saxon settlers, and
-mongrel Irish. The country of their affections is England. They
-have known no other mother. With the proud old princes and
-chiefs of the ancient Irish race they have no more affinity than (to
-use Mr. Macaulay’s illustration) the English of Calcutta with the
-nation of Hindustan, and from this colonial position a certain
-Dublin idiosyncrasy of character has resulted, which makes the
-capital distinct in feeling from the rest of Ireland.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the destiny of the ancient race is working out, not
-in happiness or prosperity, but in stern, severe discipline. Unchanged
-and unchangeable they remain, so far as change is effected
-by impulses arising from within. “Two thousand years,” says
-Moore, “have passed over the hovel of the Irish peasant in vain.”
-Such as they were when the first light of history rested on them,
-they are now; indolent and dreamy, patient and resigned as
-fatalists, fanatical as Bonzees, implacable as Arabs, cunning as
-Greeks, courteous as Spaniards, superstitious as savages, loving as
-children, clinging to the old home and the old sod and the old
-families with a tenderness that is always beautiful, sometimes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">327</span>
-heroic; loving to be ruled, with veneration in excess; ready to
-die like martyrs for a creed, a party, or the idol of the hour, but
-incapable of extending their sympathies beyond the family or the
-clan; content with the lowest place in Europe; stationary amid
-progression; isolated from the European family; without power
-or influence; lazily resting in the past while the nations are
-wrestling in the present for the future. Children of the ocean,
-yet without commerce; idle by thousands, yet without manufactures;
-gifted with quick intellect and passionate hearts, yet
-literature and art die out amongst them for want of aid or
-sympathy; without definite aims, without energy or the earnestness
-which is the vital life of heroic deeds; dark and blind through
-prejudice and ignorance, they can neither resist nobly nor endure
-wisely; chafing in bondage, yet their epileptic fits of liberty are
-marked only by wild excesses, and end only in sullen despair.</p>
-
-<p>Yet it was not in the providence of God that the fine elements
-of humanity in such a people should still continue to waste and
-stagnate during centuries of inaction, while noble countries and
-fruitful lands, lying silent since creation, were waiting the destined
-toilers and workers, who, by the sweat of the brow, shall change
-them to living empires.</p>
-
-<p>Two terrible calamities fell upon Ireland—famine and pestilence;
-and by these two dread ministers of God’s great purposes, the
-Irish race were uprooted and driven forth to fulfil their appointed
-destiny. A million of our people emigrated; a million of our
-people died under these judgments of God. Seventeen millions
-worth of property passed from time-honoured names into the
-hands of strangers. The echoes of the old tongue—call it
-Pelasgian, Phœnician, Celtic, Irish, what you will, still the oldest
-in Europe, is dying out at last along the stony plains of Mayo
-and the wild sea-cliffs of the storm-rent western shore. Scarcely
-a million and a half are left of people too old to emigrate, amidst
-roofless cabins and ruined villages, who speak that language now.
-Exile, confiscation, or death, was the final fate written on the page
-of history for the much-enduring children of Ireland. One day
-they may reassert themselves in the new world, or in other lands.
-Australia, with its skies of beauty and its pavement of gold, may
-be given to them as America to the Saxon, but how low must a
-nation have fallen at home when even famine and plague come to
-be welcomed as the levers of progression and social elevation.
-Some wise purpose of God’s providence lies, no doubt, at the
-reverse side, but we have not yet turned the leaf.</p>
-
-<p>The ancient race who, thousands of years ago, left the cradle of
-the sun to track him to the ocean, are now flung on the coast of
-another hemisphere to begin once more their destined westward
-march; and like the Israelites of old, they, too, might tell in that
-new country:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">328</span> “A Syrian ready to perish was our father!”</p>
-
-<p>They fled across the Atlantic like a drift of autumn leaves—“pestilence-stricken
-multitudes”—and the sea was furrowed by
-the dead as the plague-ships passed along.</p>
-
-<p>One would say a doom had been laid upon our people—the
-wandering Io of humanity—a destiny of weeping and unrest.</p>
-
-<p>Of old the kings at Tara sat throned with their faces to the
-west: was it a symbol or a prophecy of the future of their nation?
-when from every hill in Ireland could be seen—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent6">“The remnant of our people</div>
- <div class="verse">Sweeping westward, wild and woful,</div>
- <div class="verse">Like the cloud-rack of a tempest,</div>
- <div class="verse">Like the withered leaves of autumn.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>From the Atlantic to the Pacific, where the Rocky Mountains bar
-like a portal the land of gold—through the islands of the Southern
-Ocean to the great desolate world of Australia, seeking as it were
-the lost home of their fathers, and doomed to make the circuit of
-the earth—still onward flows the tide of human life—that inexhaustible
-race which has cleared the forests of Canada, built the
-cities and made all the railroads of the States, given thousands to
-the red plains of the Crimea, overran California and peopled Australia—the
-race whose destiny has made them the instruments of
-all civilization, though they have never reaped its benefits.</p>
-
-<p>Yet we cannot believe that the Irish race is doomed for ever to
-work and suffer without the glory of success; for the Celtic
-element is necessary to humanity as a great factor in human progress.
-It is the subtle, spiritual fire that warms and permeates
-the ruder clay of other races, giving them new, vivid, and magnetic
-impulses to growth and expansion.</p>
-
-<p>The children of the early wanderers from the Isles of the Sea
-will still continue to fulfil their mission as world-workers and
-world-movers. Across the breadth of earth they will found new
-nations, each a greater and a stronger Ireland, where they will have
-the certainty of power, station, and reward denied them at home.
-But neither change nor progress nor the severing ocean will
-destroy the electric chain that binds them lovingly to their ancient
-mother in that true sympathy with country and kinship that ever
-burns in the Irish heart.</p>
-
-<p>The new Ireland across the seas, whether in America or in Australia,
-will still cherish with sacred devotion the beautiful legends,
-the pathetic songs, the poetry and history and the heroic traditions
-of the old, well-loved country as eternal verses of the Bible
-of humanity, with all the light and music of the fanciful fairy
-period, such as I have tried to gather into a focus in these volumes,
-along with the holy memories of those martyrs of our race whose
-names are for ever associated with the words Liberty and Nationhood,
-but whose tragic fate has illustrated so many mournful
-pages in the history of the Irish past.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_329">329</span></p>
-
-
-<h2><a name="ON_THE_ANCIENT_RACES" id="ON_THE_ANCIENT_RACES"></a>ON THE ANCIENT RACES
-OF IRELAND.<a id="FNanchor_20_20" href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">20</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>That there was a time—after “the Spirit of God moved on the
-face of the waters, and separated the dry land from the sea”—when
-the present British Isles formed a continuous and integral
-portion of the European Continent is the received opinion of the
-scientific. With that continuity of surface (whether before or
-after the glacial period matters not in the present inquiry) there
-was, we know, a uniform dispersion of vegetable and animal life
-over this portion of the globe; and so long as this country enjoyed
-the temperature and climate it now possesses, it must have been
-an emerald land—humid, green, and fertile, affording pasturage
-and provender for the largest herbivoræ—the mammoth, elephant,
-and musk ox, the reindeer, the wild boar, and perhaps even the
-woolly rhinoceros. The primitive races of horned cattle, possibly
-the red deer, and undoubtedly the largest and noblest of cervine
-creatures, the gigantic Irish deer, or <i>Cervus megaceros</i>, besides the
-wild pig, and smaller mammals, as well as birds and fishes innumerable,
-must then have existed here.</p>
-
-<p>How long that condition of the land known now as Ireland
-existed, what geological revolutions occurred, or what time elapsed
-during its continuance, is but matter of speculation; but a “repeal
-of the union” took place, and Great Britain and Ireland became
-as they now are, and as they are likely to remain, geographically
-separated, although united in interest as well as government. In
-all probability the great pine forests, with some of the yews, the
-oaks, and the birch, had at this time been submerged beneath the
-lowest strata of our bogs.</p>
-
-<p>It was after this epoch, I believe, that man first set foot upon
-the shores of Erin—a country well wooded, abundantly stocked
-with animals, and abounding in all nature’s blessings suited to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">330</span>
-well-being of the human race; with fowls in its woods and on its
-shores; fish in its seas, lakes and rivers; deer and other game in
-its forest glades, oxen on its pastures, fuel in its bogs; and a
-climate, although moist and variable, on the whole mild and
-temperate.</p>
-
-<p>Let us now go back for a moment and take a glance at the map
-of the world. The sacred writings tell us, and the investigations
-of historians, antiquarians, and philologists confirm the statement,
-that the cradle of mankind was somewhere between the Caspian
-Sea and the great River Euphrates. Without entering too
-minutely into the subject, I may state briefly that the human
-family separated in process of time into three great divisions—the
-African, the Asiatic, and the Indo-European. With the latter
-only we have to deal. As population increased, it threw off its
-outshoots; and emigration, the great safeguard of society, and the
-ordained means of peopling as well as cultivating and civilizing
-the earth, began to impel the races and tribes still farther and
-farther from the birthplace of humanity. But in those days the
-process was somewhat slower and more gradual than that which
-now sends an Irish family across 3,500 miles of ocean in a week.</p>
-
-<p>With but the rudest means of transit, hordes of the primitive
-races passed up the banks of the great rivers, the Euphrates, the
-Nile, the Volga, the Danube, and the Rhone; while other tribes,
-in all likelihood more advanced and cultivated, wandered along
-the coasts, peopling as they went the northern shores of the
-Mediterranean and the Black Sea.</p>
-
-<p>That an early and uncultivated people passed up the Danube in
-their immigration, and settled for centuries on its banks, when
-Europe was a tangled wilderness, inhabited by the auroch and the
-gigantic deer, there can be no manner of doubt; for they have left
-memorials of their existence in the unerring and enduring remains
-of their sepulchres, their tools, and weapons, from the
-Black Sea to Switzerland and Savoy. In Switzerland this primitive
-people rested for a considerable period, perhaps for many
-centuries, forming for themselves those peculiar piled lacustrine
-habitations on the shores of its picturesque inland waters, known
-as “Pfaulbauten”—the analogues, and in all probability the
-types, of the crannoges recently discovered in Ireland and Scotland,
-to which countries the scattered fragments of that race
-finally carried this special form of domestic architecture. The
-lowest strata of implements were deposited beneath the sites of
-these pfaulbauten; and in some of the more ancient ones the only
-remains are those of stone, flint, and pottery—the former resembling
-in a remarkable manner the stone tools and weapons of the
-primitive Irish.</p>
-
-<p>What the language of this early Helvetian people was, we have
-no means of ascertaining; but that their exodus was one of haste<span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">331</span>
-and compulsion, and probably the result of invasion by a superior
-and more cultivated race, is almost certain. Driven from their
-mountain homes, they passed down the banks of the Rhine and
-the Elbe, and helped to people North-western Europe, forming
-with those who arrived coastwise the great nation of the Gauls
-and Belgæ. It is not unlikely that this littoral wave of population
-carried with them the metallurgic arts; for we find in their
-tombs and barrows on the coasts of Spain, France, and Brittany,
-bronze celts identical in shape with some of those discovered in
-our own country.</p>
-
-<p>Still passing westwards towards the setting sun, some members
-of this early people stood at length face to face with the white
-cliffs of Kent. Impelled by curiosity and the thirst for knowledge,
-man’s undeviating enterprise soon sent these hardy people across
-the narrow strait that divides Britain from the continent of
-Europe, centuries before the ships of Tarshish voyaged from Tyre
-and Sidon to trade with Britain for the tin of Cornwall, to alloy,
-harden, and beautify into bronze the copper with which Solomon
-decorated the temple of Jerusalem.</p>
-
-<p>To the restless Celt the breadth of this new possession was but
-a slight impediment to his western progress, and once more he
-looked upon the blue waters of the salt sea, and beyond them, to
-the green hills of Erin. A plank—a single-piece canoe—formed
-out of an oak-tree by fire and a sharp stone, or a wicker curragh
-covered with hides, would soon waft him from Portpatrick to
-Donaghadee, or even from Anglesea to Howth.</p>
-
-<p>Here, then, the story of our race begins, and the immediate
-object of this inquiry commences. That man, as he first stood on
-this island, was in a rude, uncultivated state, without a knowledge
-of letters or manufactures—skilled in those arts only by which,
-as a nomad hunter and fisher, he supported life and ministered to
-his simple wants—there can be no manner of doubt. Clad in the
-skins of animals he slew, which were sewn together with their
-sinews or intestines—his weapons and tools formed of flint, stone,
-bone, wood or horn—his personal decoration, shells, amber,
-attractive pebbles collected on the beach, or the teeth of animals
-strung together in a rude necklace, or bound round the wrists and
-arms; and his religion, if any, Pagan, Sun-worship, or Druidism,
-man first stood, in all probability, on the north-eastern shores of
-Erin. It may be unpalatable to our national vanity to learn that
-the early colonists of Ireland did not come here clad in purple and
-gold direct from Phœnicia, in brazen-prowed triremes, with the
-mariner’s compass and the quadrant; or stood for the first time
-upon the shores of Hibernia armed <i>cap-à-pied</i> in glittering
-armour, as Minerva sprang from the front of Jove; but it is,
-nevertheless, indisputably true, that the first people were such as
-I have described them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">332</span></p>
-
-<p>No date can be assigned to the period of the first inhabitation,
-but as evidence of the primitive condition of the race it is
-sufficient to state that human bodies clad in deer-skin have been
-discovered in our bogs; that flint weapons in abundance have
-been found all over Ireland, but especially in the North, where
-that peculiar lithological condition chiefly exists; and that stone
-tools have been dug up in thousands all over the country, but
-more particularly from the beds of our rivers, marking the sites of
-contested fords, which were the scenes of sanguinary conflicts, as
-on the Shannon and the Bann; and that all these are referrible to
-a period when the Irish had no knowledge of metals, and could
-neither spin nor weave.</p>
-
-<p>To Northern archæologists belongs the credit of that theory
-which divides the ages of man according to the material evidences
-of the arts of bygone times, as into those of stone, of copper,
-gold, and bronze, and of iron and silver. While I have no doubt
-that, generally speaking, such was the usual progress of development
-in those particulars, I deny that this division can, as a rule,
-be applied to Ireland, where undoubtedly each period overlapped
-the succeeding, so as to mix the one class of implement with
-another, even as I myself have seen on the great cultivated plain
-of Tyre harrow-pins formed of flints and sharp stones stuck into
-the under surface of a broad board; and on that battle field—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">“Where Persia’s victim hordes</div>
- <div class="verse">First bowed beneath the brunt of Hella’s sword,”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>I have picked up flint and obsidian arrow-heads, although we
-know that the Athenians, whose remains still lie beneath the
-tumulus of Marathon, gave way before the long-handled metallic
-spears of Asia; and the stone missile, in one of its most formidable
-shapes, is not yet abandoned in this country.</p>
-
-<p>I hold it as susceptible of demonstration, that man in similar
-stages of his career all over the world acts alike, so far as is
-compatible with climate, his wants, and the materials that offer
-to his hand, even from the banks of the Niger or Zambesi to the
-islands of the South Sea, or the regions inhabited by the Laps
-and Esquimaux. Thus, whenever man acquires or discovers a
-new art, he first applies it to continue the fashion of its predecessor,
-until accident, necessity, or ingenuity induces him to
-modify the reproduction. The first arrow-head and spear is
-almost the same all over the world, and is the type of that in
-metal; and the stone celt or hatchet formed, as I have proved
-elsewhere, the model for the copper or bronze implement for a
-like use in both ancient Etruria and ancient Ireland.</p>
-
-<p>Discussions may arise as to whether our knowledge of metals
-was a separate, independent discovery of our own, or was acquired<span class="pagenum" id="Page_333">333</span>
-by intercourse with other nations more advanced than ourselves.
-In answer thereto I can only say that we have no evidence or
-authority for the latter supposition; and that, as we possessed
-abundant materials on the one hand, and had sufficient native
-ingenuity on the other, it is most likely that our discovery of
-metals—at least of gold, copper, and tin—was independent of
-extrinsic influence. So far removed from the centres of civilization,
-unconquered by the Roman legion, uninfluenced by Saxon
-or Frankish art, and with undoubted evidences of development
-and styles of art peculiar to ourselves, both in form and decoration,
-it is but fair, until some stronger arguments have been brought
-against it, to believe that we were the discoverers and smelters of
-our minerals, and the fabricators of our metallic weapons, tools,
-and ornaments. That some Grecian influence pervaded the early
-Irish metallurgic art, as exhibited by some of our leaf-shaped
-sword blades, is true; but it is an exceptional instance, and the
-form is common to almost all countries in which bronze sword
-blades have been found.</p>
-
-<p>With regard to the dwellings of the early race we are not left
-to mere conjecture, for not long ago a log hut was discovered
-fourteen feet below the surface of a bog in the county of Donegal.
-This very antique dwelling was twelve feet square, and nine
-high; and consisted of an upper and lower chamber, which were
-probably mere sleeping apartments. The oaken logs of which it
-was constructed are believed to have been hewn with stone
-hatchets, some of which were found on the premises, thus
-identifying it with the pre-metallic period of our history. Man
-soon becomes gregarious, and passes from the hunter and the
-fisher to the shepherd, and thence to the agriculturist. The
-land is cleared of wood; the wild animals either die out, or are
-rendered subservient to his will. The domestication of animals
-in most instances precedes, and always accompanies, the pastoral
-state of existence; and to that condition the patriarchal stage
-ensues, and afterwards that of the monarchical. To such phases
-of development, from the age of escape from the rudest barbarism,
-to the most cultivated condition in government, polite literature,
-art and science, Ireland was, I believe, no exception. Of the
-shepherd state we still possess the most abundant proofs, in the
-numerous earthen raths, lisses, and forts scattered all over the
-country, and from which so many of our townlands and other
-localities take their names; but especially marking the sites of
-the primitive inhabitation on our goodly pastures, although now
-mere grassy, annular elevations, varying in area from a few perches
-to several acres, and in many instances alone preserved by the
-hallowed traditions or popular superstitions of the people.</p>
-
-<p>Such of those landmarks of the past as still remain, out of
-thousands that have been obliterated, show us that in those parts<span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">334</span>
-of Ireland, at least, where they exist, there was once a dense
-population, even during the shepherd stage of its inhabitation.
-And if in the progress of events, uncontrolled by human agency,
-and brought about by influences that we have so recently mourned
-over and still deplore, but could not prevent, we are now again
-becoming a pastoral people, we are only returning to that state of
-existence for which this country is peculiarly adapted, and was,
-I believe, originally intended—that of being the greatest grass and
-green-crop soil and climate in the world.</p>
-
-<p>The pastoral was undoubtedly the normal, one of the oldest,
-and beyond all question, the longest continued state in Ireland;
-and, although changed by internal dissensions, invasion, confiscation,
-and foreign rule, is still remembered by the people among
-whom its influence, slumbering, but not dead, now and then crops
-out in questions of “tenant right.” Years ago I showed, from the
-animal remains found in our forts, bogs, and crannoges, that
-centuries upon centuries before short-horned improved breeds of
-cattle and sheep commanded at our agricultural shows the
-admiration of Europe, we had here breeds of oxen which are not
-now surpassed by the best races of Holland and Great Britain;
-and which are unequalled in the present day even by those on the
-fertile plains of Meath, Limerick, or Roscommon, or throughout
-the golden vale of Tipperary. We were then a cattle-rearing,
-flesh-eating people; our wealth was our cattle; our wars were for
-our cattle; the ransom of our chieftains was in cattle; our taxes
-were paid in cattle; the price paid for our most valuable manuscripts
-was so many cows. Even in comparatively modern times
-our battle cloaks were made of leather; our traffic and barter
-were the Pecuaniæ of our country; and the “Tain-bo-Cuailne,”
-the most famous metrical romance of Europe, after the “Niebelungenlied,”
-is but the recital of a cattle raid from Connaught
-into Louth during the reign of Mave, Queen of Connaught—a
-personage transmitted to us by Shakspeare, as the Queen Mab of
-the “Midsummer Night’s Dream.” And, although the Anglo-Norman
-invasion is usually attributed to the love of an old, one-eyed,
-hoarse-voiced King of Leinster, sixty years of age, for
-Dervorgil (attractive, we must presume, though but little his
-junior in years), and who became the Helen of the Irish Iliad,
-when “the valley lay smiling before her,” she was but an
-insignificant item in the stock abduction from the plains of
-Breffny along the boggy slopes of Shemore.</p>
-
-<p>The Boromean, or cattle tribute, which the King of Tara
-demanded from the Leinstermen, was perhaps the cause of the
-greatest intestinal feud which ever convulsed so small a space of
-European ground for so great a length of time. This triennial
-cattle tax, besides 5,000 ounces of silver, 5,000 cloaks, and 5,000
-brazen vessels, consisted of 15,000 head of cattle of different<span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">335</span>
-descriptions, the value of which, at the present price of stock,
-would amount to about £130,000. The cattle tribute also paid to
-the Prince or petty King of Cashel upwards of a thousand years
-ago was 6,500 cows, 4,500 oxen, 4,500 swine, and 1,200 sheep;
-in all, 16,700, or, at the present value of stock, between £80,000
-and £100,000. In addition to which we read of horses and valuables
-of various descriptions.</p>
-
-<p>Brian O’Kennedy, who drove the Norsemen from the shores of
-Clontarf, derived his cognomen of Borrome from his reimposition
-of this cattle tax. And in the <i>Leabhar-na-Garth</i>, or ancient Book
-of Rights and Privileges of the Kings of Erin, the cattle statistics,
-as they are there set forth, show that the Irish were solely a
-pastoral people; and the whole text and tenor of the Irish annals
-and histories, and the notices of the wars of the Desmonds and of
-O’Neil, confirm this view.</p>
-
-<p>The great raths of Ireland, where the people enclosed their
-cattle by night, have been erroneously termed “Danish forts,”
-but when the shannaghees are pressed for further information as
-to the date of their erection they say, “They were made by them
-ould Danes that came over with Julius Cæsar.” If, however,
-inquiry be made of the old illiterate Irish-speaking population,
-they will tell you that they were made by “the good people,” and
-are inhabited by the fairies. Hence the veneration that has in a
-great measure tended to their preservation; and I have no doubt
-that the ancient indigenous and venerated thorns that still decorate
-their slopes or summits are the veritable descendants of the
-quickset hedges that helped to form the breastworks, or staked
-defences, on their summits.</p>
-
-<p>These forts are almost invariably to be found in the fattest
-pastures; so that if any of my friends were in the present day to
-ask me where they could best invest in land, I would fearlessly
-answer, “Wherever you find most ancient raths remaining;” and
-I know that many of our cattle prizes have been carried off by
-sheep and oxen fed upon the grass lands cleared and fertilized by
-the early Celts more than a thousand years ago, and a sod of
-which has not been turned for centuries. They were not originally
-the gentle slopes that now diversify the surface, but consisted in
-steep ramparts or earthworks, with an external ditch, on which a
-stout paling was erected against man or beast, a form of structure
-still seen in the kraal of the New Zealander. The Irish rath-maker
-was an artificer of skill, and held in high esteem, and
-occupied a dignified position at the great feasts of Tara—second
-only to the ollamh and the physician. That the soil of which
-they were constructed had been not only originally rich, but had
-been subjected to man’s industry, is proved by the fact that it is
-now frequently turned out upon the neighbouring sward as one of
-the best of manures. Within these raths, some of which had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">336</span>
-double, and even treble entrenchments, were erected the dwellings
-of the people and their chiefs, the latter of whom were often
-interred within the mounds, or beneath the cromlechs that still
-exist in their interior, as, for example, in the “Giant’s Ring,” near
-Belfast. In some instances they also contained in their sides and
-centres stone caves, that were probably used as store-houses,
-granaries, or places of security.</p>
-
-<p>The earliest historic race of Ireland was a pastoral people called
-Firbolgs, said to be of Greek or Eastern origin; probably a branch
-of that great Celtic race which, having passed through Europe
-and round its shores, found a resting-place at last in Ireland. Of
-the Fomorians, Nemedians, and other minor invaders, we need not
-speak, as they have left nothing by which to track their footsteps.
-The old annalists bring them direct from the Ark, and in a straight
-line from Japhet. The coming of Pharaoh’s daughter from Egypt
-with her ships may be also considered apocryphal. But the Firbolgs
-begin our authentic history. They had laws and social
-institutions, and established a monarchical government at the far-famed
-Hill of Tara, about which our early centres of civilization
-sprung, and where we have now most of those great pasturelands—those
-plains of Meath that can beat the world for their
-fattening qualities, and which supply neighbouring countries with
-their most admired meats.</p>
-
-<p>I cannot say that the Firbolg was a cultivated man, but I think
-he was a shepherd and an agriculturist. I doubt if he knew anything,
-certainly not much, of metallurgy; but it does not follow
-that he was a mere savage, no more than the Maories of New
-Zealand were when we first came in contact with them.</p>
-
-<p>The Firbolgs were a small, straight-haired, swarthy race, who
-have left a portion of their descendants with us to this very day.
-A genealogist (their own countryman resident in Galway about
-two hundred years ago) described them as dark-haired, talkative,
-guileful, strolling, unsteady, “disturbers of every Council and
-Assembly,” and “promoters of discord.” I believe they, together
-with the next two races about to be described, formed the bulk of
-our so-called Celtic population—combative, nomadic on opportunity,
-enduring, litigious, but feudal and faithful to their chiefs;
-hard-working for a spurt (as in their annual English emigration);
-not thrifty, but, when their immediate wants are supplied, lazy,
-especially during the winter.</p>
-
-<p>To these physical and mental characters described by MacFirbis
-let me add those of the unusual combination of blue or blue-grey
-eyes and dark eyelashes with a swarthy complexion. This peculiarity
-I have only remarked elsewhere in Greece; the mouth and
-upper gum is not good, but the nose is usually straight. In many
-of this and the next following race there was a peculiarity that
-has not been alluded to by writers—the larynx, or, as it used to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">337</span>
-be called, the <i>pomum Adami</i>, was remarkably prominent, and
-became more apparent from the uncovered state of the neck. The
-sediment of this early people still exists in Ireland, along with the
-fair-complexioned Dananns, and forms the bulk of the farm-labourers,
-called in popular phraseology <i>Spalpeens</i>, that yearly
-emigrate to England. In Connaught they now chiefly occupy a
-circle which includes the junction of the counties of Mayo, Galway,
-Roscommon, and Sligo. They, with their fair-faced brothers
-(at present the most numerous), are also to be found in Kerry and
-Donegal; and they nearly all speak Irish.</p>
-
-<p>By statistics procured from our Great Midland Western Railway
-alone I learn that on an average 30,000 of these people, chiefly
-the descendants of the dark Firbolgs and the fair Dananns, emigrate
-annually to England for harvest work, to the great advantage
-of the English farmer and the Irish landlord. The acreage
-of arable land for these people runs from two to six acres.</p>
-
-<p>Connecting this race with the remains of the past, I am of
-opinion that they were the first rath or earthen-mound and
-enclosure makers; that they mostly buried their dead without
-cremation, and, in cases of distinguished personages, beneath the
-cromlech or the tumulus. Their heads were oval or long in the
-anteroposterior diameter, and rather flattened at the sides:
-examples of these I have given and descanted upon when I first
-published my Ethnological Researches, which have been fully
-confirmed by the late Andreas Retzius. It is, however, unnecessary,
-even if space or advisability permitted, for me to allude to
-such matters, as that great work the “Crania Britannica” has
-lithographed typical specimens of this long-headed race.</p>
-
-<p>The next immigration we hear of in the “Annals” is that of
-the <i>Tuatha-de-Dananns</i>, a large, fair-complexioned, and very
-remarkable race; warlike, energetic, progressive, skilled in metal
-work, musical, poetical, acquainted with the healing art, skilled
-in Druidism, and believed to be adepts in necromancy and magic,
-no doubt the result of the popular idea respecting their superior
-knowledge, especially in smelting and in the fabrication of tools,
-weapons, and ornaments. From these two races sprang the Fairy
-Mythology of Ireland.</p>
-
-<p>It is strange that, considering the amount of annals and legends
-transmitted to us, we have so little knowledge of Druidism or
-Paganism in ancient Ireland. However, it may be accounted for
-in this wise: That those who took down the legends from the
-mouths of the bards and annalists, or those who subsequently
-transcribed them, were Christian missionaries whose object was
-to obliterate every vestige of the ancient forms of faith.</p>
-
-<p>The Dananns spoke the same language as their predecessors,
-the Firbolgs. They met and fought for the sovereignty. The
-“man of metal” conquered and drove a great part of the others<span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">338</span>
-into the islands on the coast, where it is said the Firbolg race
-took their last stand. Eventually, however, under the influence
-of a power hostile to them both, these two people coalesced, and
-have to a large extent done so up to the present day. They are
-the true old Irish peasant and small farming class.</p>
-
-<p>The Firbolg was a bagman, so called, according to Irish
-authorities, because he had to carry up clay in earthen bags to
-those terraces in Greece now vine-clad. As regards the other
-race there is more difficulty in the name. Tuath or Tuatha
-means a tribe or tribe-district in Irish. Danann certainly sounds
-very Grecian; and if we consider their remains, we find the
-long, bronze, leaf-shaped sword, so abundant in Ireland, identical
-with weapons of the same class found in Attica and other parts
-of Greece.</p>
-
-<p>Then, on the other hand, their physiognomy, their fair or
-reddish hair, their size, and other circumstances, incline one to
-believe that they came down from Scandinavian regions after
-they had passed up as far as they thought advisable into North-western
-Europe. If the word Dane was known at the time of
-their arrival here, it would account for the designation of many
-of our Irish monuments as applied by Molyneux and others.
-Undoubtedly the Danann tribes presented Scandinavian features,
-but did not bring anything but Grecian art. After the “Stone
-period,” so called, of which Denmark and the south of Sweden offer
-such rich remains, I look upon the great bulk of the metal work of
-the North, especially in the swords in the Copenhagen and Stockholm
-Museums, as Asiatic; while Ireland possesses not only the
-largest native collection of metal weapon-tools, usually denominated
-“celts,” of any country in the world, but the second largest
-amount of swords and battle-axes. And moreover these, and all
-our other metal articles, show a well-defined rise and development
-from the simplest and rudest form in size and use to that of
-the most elaborately constructed and the most beautifully
-adorned.</p>
-
-<p>I believe that these Tuatha-de-Dananns, no matter from whence
-they came, were, in addition to their other acquirements, great
-masons, although not acquainted with the value of cementing
-materials. I think they were the builders of the great stone
-Cahirs, Duns, Cashels, and Caves in Ireland; while their predecessors
-constructed the earthen works, the raths, circles, and forts
-that diversify the fields of Erin. The Dananns anticipated
-Shakespeare’s grave-digger, for they certainly made the most
-lasting sepulchral monuments that exist in Ireland, such, for
-example, as New Grange, Douth, Knowth, and Slieve-na-Calleagh
-and other great cemeteries. Within the interior and around
-these tombs were carved, on unhewn stones, certain archaic
-markings, spires, volutes, convolutes, lozenge-shaped devices,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">339</span>
-straight, zigzag, and curved lines, and incised indentations, and a
-variety of other insignia, which, although not expressing language,
-were symbolical, and had an occult meaning known only to the
-initiated. These markings, as well as those upon the urns, were
-copied in the decorations of the gold and bronze work of a somewhat
-subsequent period. The Dananns conquered the inferior
-tribes in two celebrated pitched battles, those of the Northern
-and Southern Moytura. On these fields we still find the caves,
-the stone circles, the monoliths, and dolmans or cromlechs that
-marked particular events, and the immense cairns that were
-raised in honour of the fallen chieftains.</p>
-
-<p>Although many of the warriors of the Firbolgs fled to their
-island fastnesses on the coasts of Galway and Donegal, no doubt
-a large portion of them remained in the inland parts of the
-country, and in that very locality to which I have adverted,
-which is almost midway between the sites of the two battles, in
-a line stretching between Mayo and Sligo, where in time the two
-races appear to have coalesced by that natural law which brings
-the dark and the fair together.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover it has been recorded that the conquering race sent
-their small dark opponents into Connaught, while they themselves
-took possession of the rich lands further east, and not only established
-themselves at Tara but spread into the south. It is remarkable
-that in time large numbers of the Dananns themselves
-were banished to the West, and likewise that the last forcible
-deportation of the native Irish race (so late as the seventeenth
-century) was when the people of this province got the choice of
-going “to Connaught or Hell,” in the former of which, possibly,
-they joined some of the original stock. The natural beauty of
-the lakes and mountains of Connaught remains as it was thousands
-of years ago; but no doubt if some of the legislators of the
-period to which I have already referred could now behold its fat
-pasture-plains, they might prefer them to the flax lands of
-Ulster.</p>
-
-<p>These Dananns had a globular form of head, of which I have
-already published examples. For the most part I believe they
-burned their dead or sacrificed to their manes, and placed an urn
-with its incinerated contents—human or animal—in the grave,
-where the hero was either stretched at length or crouched in an
-attitude similar to that adopted by the ancient Peruvians, as I
-have elsewhere explained. These Irish urns, which are the
-earliest relics of our ceramic art that have come down to the
-present time, are very graceful in form, and some of them most
-beautifully decorated, as may be seen in our various museums.</p>
-
-<p>Specimens of this Danann race still exist, but have gradually
-mixed with their forerunners to the present day. Here is what
-old MacFirbis wrote of them two hundred years ago:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">340</span> “Every one
-who is fair-haired, vengeful, large, and every plunderer, professors
-of musical and entertaining performances, who are adepts of
-Druidical and magical arts, they are the descendants of the
-Tuatha-de-Dananns.” They were not only fair but sandy in many
-instances, and consequently extensively freckled.</p>
-
-<p>It is affirmed that the Dananns ruled in Ireland for a long time,
-until another inroad was made into the island by the Milesians—said
-to be brave, chivalrous, skilled in war, good navigators,
-proud, boastful, and much superior in outward adornment as well
-as mental culture, but probably not better armed than their
-opponents. They deposed the three last Danann kings and their
-wives, and rose to be, it is said, the dominant race—assuming the
-sovereignty, becoming the aristocracy and landed proprietors of
-the country, and giving origin to those chieftains that afterwards
-rose to the title of petty kings, and from whom some of the best
-families in the land with anything like Irish names claim descent,
-and particularly those with the prefix of the “O” or the “Mac.”
-When this race arrived in Ireland I cannot tell, but it was some
-time prior to the Christian era. It is said they came from the
-coast of Spain, where they had long remained after their Eastern
-emigration.</p>
-
-<p>Upon the site of what is believed to be the ancient Brigantium,
-now the entrance to the united harbours of Corunna and Ferrol,
-stands the great lighthouse known to all ships passing through
-the Bay of Biscay. Within this modern structure still exists the
-celebrated “Pharos of Hercules,” which I investigated and
-described many years ago. That tower, it was said in metaphorical
-language, commanded a view of Ireland, and as such
-became the theme of Irish poems and legends. Certain it is that
-sailing north or north-westward from it the ships of the sons of
-Milesius and their followers could have reached Ireland without
-much coasting. If the story of Breogan’s Tower is true, then it
-must have been erected in the time of lime-and-mortar building,
-and that is during the Roman occupation of Iberia and Gaul. How
-many thousands, rank and file, of these Spanish Milesians came
-here in their six or eight galleys and tried the fortunes of war
-from “the summit of the ninth wave from the shore” and conquered
-the entire Danann, Firbolg, and Fomorian population, I am
-unable to give the slightest inkling of, no more than I can of
-the so-called Phœnician intercourse with this country. Perhaps
-without going into the fanciful descriptions of the “Battle of
-Ventry Harbour,” or the southern conquest of Ireland by the
-Iberian Milesians, we may find some more trustworthy illustrations
-of Spanish dwellings in the architecture of the town of
-Galway, and some picturesque representatives in the lithe upright
-figures and raven-haired, but blue-eyed maidens of the City of
-the Tribes. Here is what old MacFirbis, who, I suppose, claimed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">341</span>
-descent from the sons of Milesius, wrote about them: “Every
-one who is white of skin, brown of hair, bold, honourable, daring,
-prosperous, bountiful in the bestowal of property, and who is not
-afraid of battle or combat, they are the descendants of the sons of
-Milesius in Erin.”</p>
-
-<p>This high panegyric is only equalled by the prose and verse
-compositions of the ancient bards and rhymers and the modern
-historians, who have recorded the deeds of the great warriors,
-Ith, Heber, and Heremon, whose descendants boast to have been
-the rulers of the land. Even Moore, although he wrote such
-beautiful lyrics concerning this race in his early days, yet when
-he came to study history, he felt the same difficulty I do now.
-I do not dispute their origin or supremacy; but I fail to
-distinguish their early customs, their remains, or race from those
-of the Firbolgs or Dananns whom they conquered, and who left
-undoubted monuments peculiar to their time.</p>
-
-<p>Now all these people—the piratical navigator along our coasts,
-the mid-Europe primitive shepherd and cultivator, the Northern
-warrior, and the Iberian ruler—were, according to my view, all
-derived from the one Celtic stock. They spoke the same language,
-and their descendants do so still. When they acquired a knowledge
-of letters they transmitted their history through the Irish
-language. No doubt they fused; but somehow a quick fusion of
-races has not been the general characteristic of the people of this
-country. Unlike the Anglo-Norman in later times, the Milesian
-was a long way from home; the rough sea of the Bay of Biscay
-rolled between him and his previous habitat; and if he became an
-absentee he was not likely to find much of his possessions on his
-return. It is to be regretted that while we have here such a
-quantity of poetical and traditional material respecting the
-Milesian invasion of Ireland, the Spanish annals or traditions
-have given us but very little information on that subject.</p>
-
-<p>It would be most desirable if the Government or some Irish
-authority would send a properly instructed commissioner to
-investigate the Spanish annals, and see whether there is anything
-relating to the Spanish migrations to Ireland remaining in that
-country.</p>
-
-<p>Besides the sparse introduction of Latin by Christian missionaries
-in the fifth century, some occasional Saxon words springing
-from peaceful settlers along our coasts and in commercial
-emporiums, and whatever Danish had crept into our tongue
-around those centres where the Scandinavians chiefly located
-themselves, and which were principally proper names of persons
-and places that became fixed in our vernacular, we find but one
-language among the Irish people until the arrival of the Anglo-Normans
-at the end of the twelfth century.</p>
-
-<p>The linguistic or philological evidence on this subject is clearly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">342</span>
-decisive. The residue of the early races already described spoke
-one language, called Gaelic; so did the Scotch, the Welsh, and
-probably, in early times, the Britons and the Bretons. It was not
-only the popular conversational tongue used in the ordinary
-intercourse of life, but it was also employed in genealogies,
-annals, and other records in a special character, not quite peculiar
-to this country, but then common in Europe. Much has been
-said about the necessity for a glossary of our ancient MSS., such
-as those at Saint Gall, in Trinity College, in the Royal Irish
-Academy, and in Belgian and English libraries; but there are
-very few ancient languages that do not require to be glossed in
-the present day, even as the words of Chaucer do.</p>
-
-<p>The Government are now, under the auspices of our Master of
-the Rolls, and the special direction and supervision of Mr. J. T.
-Gilbert, giving coloured photographs of some of our ancient
-writings, and have promised that some of our remaining
-manuscripts will be translated. I see no occasion now for waiting
-for more elaborated philological dictionaries or glossaries while
-there are still some few Irish scholars in this country capable of
-giving a free but tolerably literal translation of these records
-that do not require any great acumen in rendering them into
-English. Is history to wait upon the final decision of philologists
-respecting a word or two in a manuscript, and to decide as to
-whether it may be of Sanscrit or any other origin?</p>
-
-<p>No doubt some of my hearers may ask, What about the Oghams
-(or Ohams)? do they not show a very early knowledge of an
-alphabet? As yet this is a moot question. A rude pillar-stone,
-having upon it a tolerably straight edge, was in early times notched
-along its angle which served as a stem-line by nicks formed on it,
-and straight or oblique lines, singly or in clusters, proceeding
-from the stem. The decipherers of these inscriptions have, one
-and all, agreed upon the fact that these lines represented letters,
-syllables, or words, and that the language is either Irish or
-Latin. Therefore the persons who made them must have been
-aware of alphabetic writing and grammar. These carved monoliths
-are chiefly found in Kerry and Cork. Upon some of them
-Christian emblems are figured. The incising of the stone has
-evidently been performed by some rude instrument, either a flint
-or metallic pick; and it is remarkable that these pillars present
-scarcely any amount of dressing.</p>
-
-<p>In Connaught, in my youth, the exception in remote districts
-was where the person spoke <i>both</i> English and Irish. In 1851,
-when we first took a census of the Irish-speaking population,
-after the country had lost three-quarters of a million of people,
-chiefly of the Irish race, we had then (to speak in round numbers)
-one and a half millions of Irish-speaking population. In 1861
-they had fallen off by nearly half a million; and upon the taking<span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">343</span>
-of the last census in 1871 the entire Irish-speaking population
-was only 817,865. The percentages, according to the total
-population in our different provinces, were these: in Leinster 1.2,
-in Munster 27.7, in Ulster 4.6, and in Connaught 39.0; for the
-total of Ireland 15.1. Kilkenny and Louth are the counties of
-Leinster where the language is most spoken. In Munster they
-are Kerry, Clare, and Waterford; in Ulster, Donegal, where 28
-per cent. of the population speak Irish; but in Connaught, to
-which I have already alluded as containing the remnant of the
-early Irish races, we have no less than 56 per cent. of Irish-speaking
-population in the counties of Mayo and Galway
-respectively. Of my own knowledge I can attest that a great
-many of these people cannot speak English. We thus see that of
-the population of Ireland, which in the present day might be
-computed at about five and a half millions, there were, at the
-time of taking the census in April, 1871, only 817,865; and I
-think I may prophesy that that is the very largest number that
-in future we will ever have to record. On the causes of this
-decadence it is not my province to descant. These Celts have
-been the great pioneers of civilization, and are now a power in
-the world. Are they not now numerically the dominant race in
-America? and have they not largely peopled Australia and New
-Zealand?</p>
-
-<p>We have now arrived at a period when you might naturally
-expect the native annalist to make some allusion to conquest or
-colonization by the then mistress of the world. Without offering
-any reason for it, I have here only to remark that neither as
-warriors nor colonizers did the Romans ever set foot in Ireland;
-and hence the paucity of any admixture of Roman art amongst us.</p>
-
-<p>To fill up a hiatus which might here occur in our migrations, I
-will mention a remarkable circumstance. A Christian youth of
-Romano-Saxon parentage, and probably of patrician origin, was
-carried off in a raid of Irish marauders, and employed as a swineherd
-in this very Ulster, the country of the Dalaradians, and
-lived here for several years, learning our customs and speaking
-our language. He escaped, however, to Munster, and thence to
-his native land of Britain or Normandy, from whence he returned
-in <span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span> 432 with friends, allies, and missionaries, and passing in
-his galley into the mouth of the Boyne, walked up the banks of
-that famed stream, raised the paschal fire at Slane, and speedily
-introduced Christianity throughout Ireland.</p>
-
-<p>In thus briefly alluding to the labours of St. Patrick, I wish to
-be understood to say that about the time of his mission there was
-much Saxon intercourse with this country, and the great missionary
-had not only many friends but several relatives residing here,
-and some of them on the very banks of the Boyne; and I believe
-that a considerable amount of civilization and some knowledge of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">344</span>
-Christianity had been introduced long previously; so that, although
-old King Laoghaire or Loury and his Druids did not bow the
-knee to the Most High God, nor accept the teaching of the beautiful
-hymn that Patrick and his attendants chanted as they passed
-up the grassy slopes of Tara, still there were many hundred people
-in Ireland ready to receive the glad tidings of the gospel of
-salvation.</p>
-
-<p>Having finished with the Milesians, we now come to the Danes
-(so-called), the Scandinavians or Norsemen—the pagan Sea-Kings
-who made inroads on our coasts, despoiled our churches and monasteries,
-but at the same time, it must be confessed, helped to
-establish the commercial prosperity of some of our cities and
-towns from 795 to the time of the battle of Clontarf, <span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span> 1014,
-when the belligerent portion of the Scandinavians were finally
-expelled the country. During the time I have specified, Dublin,
-Limerick, and Waterford belonged to these Northern people.
-They not only coasted round the island and never lost an opportunity
-of pillage and plunder, but they passed through the interior
-and carried their arms into the very centre of the land. The
-Danes left us very little ornamental work beyond what they
-lavished upon their swords and helmets; but, on the other hand,
-it should be borne in mind that there are no Irish antiquities,
-either social, warlike, or ecclesiastical, in the Scandinavian
-Museums.</p>
-
-<p>Concerning their ethnological characters, I must again refer to
-the “Crania Britannica.” In the records they were designated
-strangers, foreigners, pagans, gentiles, and also white and black
-foreigners, so that there were undoubtedly two races—the dark, and
-the fair or red, like as in the case of the Firbolgs or Dananns.
-They were also styled “Azure Danes,” probably on account of the
-shining hue of their armour.</p>
-
-<p>I believe the fair section of that people to have been of Norwegian
-origin, while the dark race came from Jutland and the
-coast of Sweden; and both by the Orkneys, the coasts of Scotland,
-and the Isle of Man. Their skulls were large and well formed; they
-had a thorough knowledge of metal work, and especially iron; and,
-as I have shown elsewhere, their swords and spears were of great
-size and power, the former wielded as a slashing weapon, while
-those of their early opponents were of bronze, weak, and intended
-for stabbing. In nowhere else in Europe (that I am aware of)
-have these rounded, pointed, or bevelled heavy iron swords been
-found except in Ireland and Norway.</p>
-
-<p>Large quantities of Danish remains have been discovered in
-deep sinkings made in Dublin; and several weapons, tools, and
-ornaments, believed to be of Scandinavian origin, have been found
-within a few inches of the surface on one of the battle-fields on
-the south side of the Liffey, within the last few years. Upon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_345">345</span>
-most of these I have already reported and given illustrations. I
-may mention one circumstance connected with this race. I never
-examined a battle-field of the Danes, nor a collection of Danish
-weapons or implements, that I did not find the well-adjusted
-scales and weights which the Viking had in his pocket for valuing
-the precious metals he procured either by conquest or otherwise.</p>
-
-<p>Although considered hostile, these Scandinavian Vikings must
-have fraternized with the Irish. We know that they intermarried;
-for, among many other instances that might be adduced,
-I may mention that during the battle of Clontarf, when Sitric,
-the Danish king of Dublin, looked on the fight from the walls of
-the city, he was accompanied by his wife, the daughter of the
-aged king known as “Brian the Brave.”</p>
-
-<p>When, however, the Irish chieftains were not fighting with one
-another, they were often engaged in petty wars with the Scandinavians,
-who, in turn, were attacked by their own countrymen,
-the “Black Gentiles,” especially on the plain of Fingall, stretching
-from Dublin to the Boyne, and which the white race chiefly occupied.
-It must not be supposed that the battle of Clontarf ended
-the Danish occupation of Ireland; they still held the cities of
-Dublin, Limerick, and Waterford at least, and largely promoted
-the commercial prosperity in these localities—a prosperity which
-has not quite yet departed. I should like to present you with
-some remains of the Scandinavian language in Ireland, but the
-materials are very scanty.</p>
-
-<p>We are now coming to a later period. The Romans had occupied
-Britain, the Saxons followed; the Danes had partial possession
-for a time; the Heptarchy prevailed until Harold, the last of the
-Saxon kings, fell at Hastings, and England bowed beneath that
-mixture of Norman, Gaulish, Scandinavian, and general Celtic
-blood that William brought with him from the shores of France.
-The Saxon dynasty was at an end, but the Britons of the day accepted
-their fate; and not only the soldiers, but the Norman
-barons fused with the people of that kingdom, and largely contributed
-to make it what it now is. This fusion of races, this
-assimilation of sentiments, this interchange of thought, this
-kindly culture, the higher elevating the lower, among whom they
-permanently reside, must always tend to great and good ends in
-raising a people to a nobler intellectual state.</p>
-
-<p>The Anglo-Normans came here in 1172, a very mixed race, but
-their leaders were chiefly of French or Norman extraction. Why
-they came, or what they did, it is not for me to expatiate upon.
-I wish, however, to correct an assertion commonly made, to the
-effect that the Norman barons of Henry II. <i>then</i> conquered
-Ireland. They occupied some towns, formed a “Pale,” levied
-taxes, sent in soldiery, distributed lands, and introduced a new<span class="pagenum" id="Page_346">346</span>
-language; but the “King’s writ did not run;” the subjugation of
-Ireland did not extend over the country at large, and it remained
-till 1846 and the five or six following years to complete the conquest
-of the Irish race, by the loss of a tuberous esculent and the
-Governmental alteration in the value of a grain of corn. Then
-there went to the workhouse or exile upwards of two millions of
-the Irish race, besides those who died of pestilence. Having
-carefully investigated and reported upon this last great European
-famine, I have come to the conclusion just stated, without
-taking into consideration its political, religious, or national
-aspects.</p>
-
-<p>It appears to me that one of our great difficulties in Ireland
-has been the want of fusion—not only of races, but of opinions
-and sentiments, in what may be called a “give and take” system.
-As regards the intermixture, I think there cannot be a better one
-than the Saxon with the Celt. The Anglo-Normans, however,
-partially fused with the native Irish; for Strongbow married
-Eva the daughter of King Dermot; and from this marriage it
-has been clearly shown that Her Most Gracious Majesty the
-present Queen of Ireland and Great Britain is lineally descended.
-Several of the noble warriors who came over about that period
-have established great and widespread names in Ireland, among
-whom I may mention the Geraldines in Leinster, the De Burgos
-in Connaught, and the Butlers in Munster; and they and their
-descendants became, according to the old Latin adage, “more
-Irish than the Irish themselves.”</p>
-
-<p>Look what the intermixture of races has done for us in Ireland;
-the Firbolg brought us agriculture; the Danann the chemistry
-and mechanics of metal work; the Milesians beauty and governing
-power; the Danes commerce and navigation; the Anglo-Normans
-chivalry and organized government; and, in later times, the
-French emigrants taught us an improved art of weaving.</p>
-
-<p>It would be more political than ethnological were I to enter
-upon the discussion of that subsequent period which would conduct
-us to the days of Cromwell or the Boyne, or, perhaps, to
-later periods, involving questions not pertinent to the present
-subject.</p>
-
-<p>But I must here say a word or two respecting Irish art. In
-architecture, in decorative tone-work, from archaic markings that
-gave a tone and character to all subsequent art, in our beauteous
-crosses, in our early metal work, in gold and bronze, carried on
-from the pagan to the Christian period, and in our gorgeously
-illuminated MS. books, we have got a style of art that is specially
-and peculiarly Irish, and that has no exact parallel elsewhere,
-and was only slightly modified by Norman or Frankish design.</p>
-
-<p>Time passed, and events accumulated; political affairs intermingle,
-but the anthropologist should try and keep clear of them.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_347">347</span>
-At the end of the reign of Elizabeth a considerable immigration
-of English took place into the South of Ireland. Subsequently
-the historic episode of the “Flight of the Earls,” O’Neil and
-O’Donnell, brought matters to a climax; and the early part of the
-reign of the first James is memorable for the “Plantation of Ulster,”
-when a number of Celtic Scots with some Saxons returned to
-their brethren across the water; and about the same time the
-London companies occupied large portions of this fertile province,
-and the early Irish race were transplanted by the Protector to the
-West, as I have already stated. It must not be imagined that
-this was the first immigration. The Picts passed through Ireland,
-and no doubt left a remnant behind them. And in consequence
-of contiguity, the Scottish people must early have settled upon
-our northern coasts. When the adventurous Edward Bruce made
-that marvellous inroad into Ireland at the end of the fourteenth
-century and advanced into the bowels of the land, he carried with
-him a Gaelic population cognate with our own people, and in all
-probability left a residue in Ulster, thus leavening the original
-Firbolgs, Tuatha-de-Danann, and Milesians, with the exception of
-the county of Donegal, which still holds a large Celtic population
-speaking the old Irish tongue, and retaining the special characters
-of that people as I have already described them. This Scotic
-race, as it now exists in Ulster, and of which we have specimens
-before us, I would sum up with three characteristics. That they
-were courageous is proved by their shutting the gates and defending
-the walls of Derry; that they were independent and lovers
-of justice has been shown by their establishment of tenant right;
-and that they were industrious and energetic is manifest by the
-manufacturers of Belfast. Do not, I entreat my brethren of
-Ulster, allow these manufactures to be jeopardized, either by
-masters or men, by any disagreements, which must lead to the
-decay of the fairest and wealthiest province and one of the most
-beautiful cities in this our native land.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><i>Printed in Great Britain by</i> Butler &amp; Tanner <i>Frome and London</i>.</p>
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<h2>FOOTNOTES:</h2>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1_1" href="#FNanchor_1_1" class="label">1</a>
-The terms Dryad and Druid may be compared as containing the same
-root and reference.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2_2" href="#FNanchor_2_2" class="label">2</a>
-Now called Moytura.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3_3" href="#FNanchor_3_3" class="label">3</a>
-There is a strange idea current in Europe at the present time that one
-of the most remarkable potentates now living has this fatal gift and power
-of the Evil Eye.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4_4" href="#FNanchor_4_4" class="label">4</a>
-In Ancient Egypt the ivy was sacred to Osiris, and a safeguard against evil.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_5_5" href="#FNanchor_5_5" class="label">5</a>
-The correct names for these islands are Innis-Erk (the Island of St.
-Erk), and Innis-bo-finn (the Island of the White Cow).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_6_6" href="#FNanchor_6_6" class="label">6</a>
-The fairies have a right to whatever is spilt or falls upon the ground.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_7_7" href="#FNanchor_7_7" class="label">7</a>
-Leprehaun, or <i>Leith Brogan</i>, means the “Artisan of the Brogae.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_8_8" href="#FNanchor_8_8" class="label">8</a>
-The ancient serpent-idol was called in Irish, “The Great Worm.” St.
-Patrick destroyed it, and had it thrown into the sea. There are no serpents
-now to be found in Ireland, not even grass snakes or scorpions.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_9_9" href="#FNanchor_9_9" class="label">9</a>
-Extract from a letter by the Marchioness of Waterford, on the Currahmore
-Crystal.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_10_10" href="#FNanchor_10_10" class="label">10</a>
-This word “fibulæ” is a heathenish and imported term, quite foreign
-to the Irish tongue. There is no other word known in the Irish language
-to designate a brooch, be it of bone or be it of gold, than <i>Dealg</i>, which
-signifies a thorn.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_11_11" href="#FNanchor_11_11" class="label">11</a>
-See Sir William Wilde’s work, “Lough Corrib: its Shores and Islands,”
-where a drawing of this inscription is given.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_12_12" href="#FNanchor_12_12" class="label">12</a>
-“The History of Dublin.” 3 vols. By J. T. Gilbert, M.R.I.A. Dublin.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_13_13" href="#FNanchor_13_13" class="label">13</a>
-These relics of a civilization three thousand years old, may still be
-gazed upon by modern eyes in the splendid and unrivalled antiquarian
-collection of the Royal Irish Academy. The golden circlets, the fibulas,
-torques, bracelets, rings, &amp;c., worn by the ancient race, are not only costly
-in value, but often so singularly beautiful in the working out of minute
-artistic details, that modern art is not merely unable to equal them, but
-unable even to comprehend how the ancient workers in metals could
-accomplish works of such delicate, almost microscopic minuteness of
-finish.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_14_14" href="#FNanchor_14_14" class="label">14</a>
-The expression of Tacitus.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_15_15" href="#FNanchor_15_15" class="label">15</a>
-This is the Latinized form of the original word.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_16_16" href="#FNanchor_16_16" class="label">16</a>
-The Danes were never more than a colony in Ireland.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_17_17" href="#FNanchor_17_17" class="label">17</a>
-Hogan, the great historical sculptor of Ireland, has illustrated this era
-of Irish history by a fine group, heroic and poetical in idea, as well as
-beautiful in execution, like every work that proceeded from the gifted mind
-of this distinguished artist.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_18_18" href="#FNanchor_18_18" class="label">18</a>
-The Irish Celt to the Irish Norman, from “Poems,” by Aubrey de
-Vere.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_19_19" href="#FNanchor_19_19" class="label">19</a>
-Grace’s Annals. Rev. R. Butler’s translation.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_20_20" href="#FNanchor_20_20" class="label">20</a>
-Extracts from the Address to the Anthropological Section of the
-British Association. Belfast, 1874. By Sir <span class="smcap">William Wilde</span>, M.D.,
-M.R.I.A., Chevalier of the Swedish Order of the North Star.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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