CELTIC MYTHOLOGY (Illustrated Edition). T. W. Rolleston

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CELTIC MYTHOLOGY (Illustrated Edition) - T. W. Rolleston


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rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_e9762d70-0933-53cc-8248-7d339913cde6">499. Miss Faraday, Folk-Lore, xvii. 398 f.

      Primitive Nature Worship

       Table of Contents

      "I invoke the land of Ireland!

       Shining, shining sea!

       Fertile, fertile mountain!

       Wooded vale!

       Abundant river, abundant in waters!

       Fish abounding lake!

       Fish abounding sea!

       Fertile earth!

       Irruption of fish! Fish there!

       Bird under wave! Great fish!

       Crab hole! Irruption of fish!

      A similar formula was spoken after the destruction of Da Derga's Hostel by MacCecht on his finding water. He bathed in it and sang—

      "Cold fountain! Surface of strand ...

       Sea of lake, water of Gara, stream of river;

      Much of this is probably pre-Celtic as well as Celtic, but it held its ground because it was dear to the Celts themselves. They upheld the aboriginal cults resembling those which, in the lands whence they came, had been native and local with themselves. Such cults are as old as the world, and when Christianity expelled the worship of the greater gods, younger in growth, the ancient nature worship, dowered with immortal youth,

      "bowed low before the blast

       In patient deep disdain,"

      to rise again in vigour. Preachers, councils, and laws inveighed against it. The old rites continued to be practised, or survived under a Christian dress and colouring. They are found in Breton villages, in Highland glens, in Welsh and Cornish valleys, in Irish townships, and only the spread of school-board education, with its materialism and uninviting common sense, is forcing them at last to yield.


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