Gods and Fighting Men eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 602 pages of information about Gods and Fighting Men.

Gods and Fighting Men eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 602 pages of information about Gods and Fighting Men.

HOW DIARMUID GOT HIS LOVE-SPOT.—­
  Hyde, Sgealuidhe Gaedhealach.

DAUGHTER OF KING UNDER-WAVE.—­
  Campbell’s Popular Tales.

THE HARD SERVANT.—­
  Silva Gaedelica.

HOUSE OF THE QUICKEN TREES.—­
  MSS. in Royal Irish Academy, and in Dr Hyde’s possession.

DIARMUID AND GRANIA.—­
  Text Published by S. Hayes O’Grady,
      Proc.  Ossianic Society,
      and re-edited by N. O’Duffey for
      Society for Preservation of the Irish Language;
   Kuno Meyer, Revue Celtique, and Four Songs;
   Leabhar na Feinne;
   Campbell’s Popular Tales;
   Kilkenny Arch.  Journal;
   Folk Lore, vol. vii., 1896;
   Dean of Lismore;
   Nutt, Waifs and Strays of Celtic Tradition.

CNOC-AN-AIR, ETC.—­
  Proc.  Ossianic Society.

WEARING AWAY OF THE FIANNA.—­
  Silva Gaedelica;
  Dean of Lismore;
  Leabhar na Feinne;
  Campbell’s Popular Tales;
  Proc.  Ossianic Society;
  O’Curry;
  Waifs and Strays of Celtic Tradition;
  Stokes, Irische Texte.

THE END OF THE FIANNA.—­
  Hyde, Sgealuidhe Gaedhealach;
  Proc.  Ossianic Society;
  Silva Gaedelica;
  Miss Brooke’s Reliques;
  Annals of the Four Masters;
  Celtic Magazine.

OISIN AND PATRICK, AND OISIN’S LAMENTS.—­
  Proc.  Ossianic Society;
  Dean of Lismore;
  Kilkenny Arch, fournal;
  Curtin’s Tales.

I have taken Grania’s sleepy song, and the description of Finn’s shield and of Cumhal’s treasure-bag, and the fact of Finn’s descent from Ethlinn, from Duanaire Finn, now being edited for the Irish Texts Society by Mr John MacNeill, the proofs of which I have been kindly allowed to see.  And I have used sometimes parts of stories, or comments on them gathered directly from the people, who have kept these heroes so much in mind.  The story of Caoilte coming to the help of the King of Ireland in a dark wood is the only one I have given without either a literary or a folk ancestry.  It was heard or read by Mr Yeats, he cannot remember where, but he had, with it in his mind, written of “Caoilte’s burning hair” in one of his poems.

I and my readers owe special thanks to those good workers in the discovery of Irish literature, Professor Kuno Meyer and Mr Whitley Stokes, translators of so many manuscripts; and to my friend and kinsman Standish Hayes O’Grady, for what I have taken from that wonderful treasure-house, his Silva Gaedelica.

IV.  THE PRONUNCIATION

This is the approximate pronunciation of some of the more difficult names: 

Adhnuall Ai-noo-al. 
Ailbhe.  Alva. 
Almhuin All-oon, or Alvin. 
Aobh Aev, or Eev. 
Aodh Ae (rhyming to “day"). 
Aoibhill Evill. 
Aoife Eefa.

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Gods and Fighting Men from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.