Imágenes de páginas
PDF
EPUB

in the rock so deeply and firmly, that to this day the foot-prints of men and hounds, and the hoof-tracks of steeds remain visible to all, insomuch that the place has ever since been called Bothar leanta na mias—that is, the road of the hunters of dishes; which name it retains even to the present day.-(Acta S. S. Hib. v. 1, p. 246.)

Now, how trifling soever this story may appear, it must be admitted that it most probably took its rise from natural appearances; and whether the peculiar marks on the rocks of Bothar leanta na mias have arisen from a freak of nature, or from an artifice of man, or from the actual impression of footprints on the rock, when in an unconsolidated state, they are undoubtedly worthy the inquiry and attention of the next scientific traveller in that district. Proceeding with these lives, it is almost impossible to procure any arrangement capable of being adapted to the multiform and multitudinous miracles with which the active imagination of their writers has stuffed them. A few other specimens may conclude the personal class. The fingers of Patrick served occasionally for candles (Evin. c. 75). His teeth were so bright, that when one of them fell into the Callan river, it was discovered by the luminous rays it emitted. The place from that event took its name of Clonfeacle an appellation which it retains to the present day (Jocelyn, c. 78.) The feet of St. Bridget had a clarifying quality, which purified the kennels in which she trod. The head of St. Columba was commonly surmounted by a luminous halo or glory, and he had such a voice that his preaching could be heard eight miles off (Adamn. c. 38, 10,) &c. Among the saints' personals may be reckoned their clothes, which have furnished materials for several legends. Thus, St. Bridget having got wet while tending her sheep, hangs up her dripping garments to dry on a ray of the sun, which she mistakes for a cord stretched across her apartment. The shaft of light supports its burthen like any other drying line, and remains so occupied till after midnight. (Cogitosus, and Ultan, in Triad.) This, however, was a feat by no means uncommon among both Irish and continental saints, and is appropriately accounted for by the writer of the life of St. Deicola, who observes, in annotating on a similar passage, that such an event was by no means improbable, inasmuch as a ray of light is nothing

more, "juxta definitionem philosophorum," than a thickening, as it were, of the atmosphere. St. Goar, St. Florentius, and St. Amabilis are recorded to have used luminous clothes-horses of the same description.-(See 6th July, 7th Nov., and 19th Oct. in the general Acta.)

The cowl of Columba deserves mention. It was possessed of expansive powers so great, that when necessary it could be made to cover an acre of ground; as on one occasion in the isle of Arran, it is said by a royal Irish writer to have done. The plot of ground so covered has been called ever since Gort an chochail, in commémoration.—(O'Donnell. vit. Columb. c. 106.) His cloak, however, as being the larger garment, possessed this property in a much higher degree, for with it we are told he once covered the whole of Tory island.-(c. 73.) This, however, with many other stories of the same kind, seem rather to belong to the class of fables of suggestion, for they are all evidently derived from the old Byrsic stratagem of the bull hide.

It would be tedious to dwell upon the virtues of holy staffs, sandals, gloves, and other articles of saintly attire. One anecdote, however, is worthy of insertion. Columba having deposited his garden gloves on a stone at the door of the monastery of Louvain, while at refection, the raven which had escaped from Noah's ark pounces upon the right hand glove, and bears it off. This venerable bird, however, restores the spoil, on being threatened by the saint if he did not make restitution, with a failure of his next hatching.—(Adamnan vit. Columb. c. 13.)

To proceed from the immediate personals of the saints to the legends connected with their worldly affairs. The dairy naturally occupies the first place in the attention of a pastoral people; and here we find miraculous agencies at work from the milk-pail to the churn-dash. And yet there seems to have been little need for any utensils of the sort, when all the products of the dairy could be procured by the owners, ex quovis ligno. Thus Patrick makes milk out of stones, and butter and cheese out of snow balls (Trias, pp. 27, 99, 199.) Bridget boasts a milch cow in every fountain, and an unfailing supply of butter in the stalks of nettles. (Trias, pp. 528, 541.) And St. Mocheus possesses the rare secret of making one pound of butter last for four years in constant consumption,

and without diminution.(Acta, i. p. 730.) Elated with their power of procuring the produce of the dairy from so many sources, they seem to scorn the commonplace methods of the milk-maid. Bulls, wolves, stags, and bucephalae are the favoured contributors to the holy pail; and when these run dry, rather than have recourse to secular methods, they milk the clouds of heaven. (See Life of Columba, Trias, 354; Life of Fechin, Acta v. i. p. 136; and Lives of Egidius, Ailbus, and Macharius, in the Bollandists.)

After milk, the most important article is meal; but this does not appear to have been obtained with any thing like the same facility. The only interposition of miraculous agency is in the grinding. Thus the mill of St. Fechin of Fore, the mill-dam of which was formed by the saint boring the mountain with his staff, would grind no stolen grain. St. Fintan's mill at Kilmaige () possessed the same discriminating property, and in addition, would grind, if necessary without either wind or water. The mill of St. Luchern, in addition to a like quality, would grind no grain on Sundays. St. Senanus had an angel to turn his mill in Enniscattery. The mill of St. Berachus at Mullin-eland, ground two sorts of grain at once, yet kept the produce separate, &c. &c. —(See Colgan, v. i. pp. 132, 12, 532, 345; and Girald Cambr. topog.)

The affairs of the cellar are but cursorily alluded to. The most remarkable legend on this subject is that told by Jonas of the keg of beer which the cellarer of Columbanus left unspiled, in his haste to obey some orders of the saint. The vessel not only miraculously retained the running liquor, but, keeping full, was found on the cellarer's return to be increased to double its former capacity-præclarum obedientiæ miraculum.-(Jonas, c. 15.)

A book of miraculous Georgics might be written on their agricultural pursuits. Columba sows after midsummer, and reaps in August. Columbanus's ridge remains unharmed, while all the other corn in the field is, lodged by a thunder-shower; the sickle of Brigid obtains a similar favor. Columbanus has a wonderful pea, which needs not to be sown, but annually reproduces itself from the hard rock. The same saint fills his barn with corn by the mere force of prayer, &c. &c. (See Colgan and Messingham).

The travelling equipage of these

1

powerful individuals was, at might be expected, equally extraordinary. St. Maidoc's chariot would run where the most active footman could not walk. St. Aed's ran equally well with whole or broken wheels (Colgan v. i. p. 209, 309.) St. Columba's, in like manner, with or without linchpins; as also the chariot of one Coulaid, blessed by St. Brigid; and Patrick had four chariots sent him out of heaven, which may be supposed to have possessed still more excellent qualities (Triad. pp. 632, 532, 101.) But the journeys of the saints by water were much more extraordinary. A leaf serves St. Hya to navigate on as far as the coast of Cornwall (Messingham, Lives of the 782 Irish martyrs.) St. Fechin crosses Loch Contra in Galway on a stone (Colgan, v. i. p. 105.) The stone on which St. Maidoc was born serves afterwards for a ferry-boat (do. p. 225.). And Brigid sends a house to St. Senanus down the Shannon in an ozier basket, and receives a present of cheese and salt by the same conveyance in return. (Triad. p. 536.)

43

Such were their lives; and death was but the beginning of a new exercise of supernatural power in their relicts. The revenues of many monasteries arose in great part from offerings made at shrines in which these were kept. To get possession of the body of a saint after death, was on this account (independently of the natural wish for such memorials) an object of much greater importance to a fraternity, than to have the charge of his maintenance, and the experience of his discipline while alive. The legends illustrative of this obser vation are among the most interesting portions of the Acta. The following account of the death of Abban, which is taken nearly literally from his life in Colgan, would furnish the grounds of a striking romance.

The provost of Monastereven, to which St. Abban had retired in his old days, was a Meath man, who had a strong affection for his native town of Killabban, founded by this saint in the same county. Abban being forewarned of the day and hour of his own death, had confided the prediction to this friend alone, concealing news so disagreeable (as he thought) from the rest of the brethren. Now, when the provost began to consider what an advantage it would be to his native town to have the relics of so holy a man, he conceived in his own mind a project for making away with the body as soon

as the breath should be out of it. To this end he dispatched messengers to his people, desiring them to raise the men of North Leinster, and come to meet him on a certain day by the road which his messengers would point out. The Meath men joyfully perform his commands ; and the provost, on the appointed night, sets about his preparations by yoking two oxen "which were very monks for docility and tameness," to a waggon which he had in readiness in the court-yard. Then ordering all the brethren to retire to rest, with the exception of some of his own immediate friends, to whom he divulged his purpose, they watched by the saint till the angels came according to prediction, and bore his spirit away from earth. Incontinently they place the body on the waggon, and the bullocks, conscious of their burthen, set forth, an army of exulting angels attending their footsteps, and light from heaven guiding them in their pious journey till morning. But before it was yet day the brethren were up in Monasterevan, and searching in vain through dormitory and hall for the precious invalid. But, dead or alive, the blessed body was gone, the provost's bed had not been slept in, and all the other Killabban men of the monastery were missing. The truth burst on them like a flash of lightning. They flew to their bell-ropes, and jangled forth such a peal of alarm as shortly raised the country, and brought the men of Kildare by hundreds to their gates. Here they found the good brotherhood weeping, lamenting, rending their garments, and deploring in piteous accents the loss of so much divine favour and secular good as they had confidently reckoned on from the possession of the stolen saint. The indignation of the hearers knew no bounds: they vowed to get back their holy man, or die in the pious quarrel; and ere the sun was well up, a goodly clump of spears, well flanked by croziers and crucifixes, was scouring the borders of Kildare, hot upon the track of the fugitives. The pious thieves are overtaken on the borders of Meath. Negociation is useless. "He died among us," cries the one party:

66

66

[ocr errors]

"would you rob us of the clay that parted with its last breath under our very roof?" He was born, and he lived among us," reply the others; we will die sooner than ye shall touch a limb of our townsman.' It is clearly no place for men of peace: the monks draw to one side, and reluctantly give the word to charge-when, lo! the waggon, with its precious burthen, is miraculously divided, so that no man can distinguish the one appearance from the other. One yoke of bullocks take their way towards Killabban, fol. lowed by the satisfied Meathmen; the other return towards Monasterevan, accompanied by the exulting army of Kildare. Thus each party leaves the field contented and integris cutibus. But alas for the fallacy of human hopes! no sooner did the phantom bullocks, which had lured away the rescuers from the pursuit of the true relicts, reach a ford in a certain river on their return, than they vanished from before their eyes, together with the semblance of a body which they seemed to carry, and left the brotherhood of Monasterevan to return to the dishonored banks of the Barrow empty and disappointed alike of profit and revenge. To determine on what principle the preference was given in this instance to the thieves, would be a good exercise for the ingenuity of a casuist. but to return to the bullocks. The ford in which they vanished retained the name of Ath dain chielt, or the ford of the hiding steers, down to the time of the writer, who lived, however, very shortly after (Vit. Abbani, c. 40, 41, 42, apud Colgan.) No doubt we are indebted to the ingenuity of the monks of Killabban (although the place itself is now unknown, except perhaps to Mr. O'Donovan, who is a greater Irish topographer than Colgan himself,) for many of the wondrous tales which afterwards must have rendered these relicts a cheap purchase even at the risk of bloodshed; and doubtless many an ounce of gold has been hung up at the shrine in Meath, which, but for the pious fraud of the provost of Monasterevan, would have adorned the altars of the latter town.*

Instances of similar contentions for

In speaking of ounces of gold being hung up as offerings, we refer to the ring money which was at that time generally in use in Ireland. The late investigation of this subject by Sir William Betham has been attended by one of the most extraordinary ex post facto confirmations of inductive sagacity on record.

On the 23rd May and 27th June last, Sir William Betham read before the Royal

the bodies of departed saints, are of frequent occurrence in Irish ecclesias tical history. The people of Down and Armagh fought for possession of the relicts of Patrick, until the sea rose and separated them at Drumbo, near the present town of Belfast. The battle was nevertheless renewed, until at length the miracle of a duplicate waggon put an end to the fray, as in the case of Abban. The phantom bullocks, after leading the Armagh men aз far as the borders of their own country, disappeared in the river Cabcanna, (probably the Newry water,) while the veritable body was borne by the true beasts to Downpatrick. (Jocelyn. vit. Pat. c. 195.) In like manner Clodowic, king of France, and a neighbouring potentate, were prevented from spilling one another's blood, for the possession of the body of Fursey; but, in this case the dispute was left to the arbitration of the

bullocks, which found in favour of Franks. (Vit. Furs. c. 11.) He who would see more on this subject, let him look to the life of St. Anthony of Padua, in the Bollandists.

Ireland's claim to her title of the Isle of Saints seems now effectually established. The ecclesiastical records of no other country of Christendom, can furnish such a farrago of the stuff that superstition is made of. The forty-eight folios of the general Acta of the saints of all nations, contain nothing to surpass, and few things to compare with, the Irish specimens. Still it must not be forgotten that, such as they were, these legends were for ages the chief vehicles of letters; their composition exercised the literary powers, as well as the invention of their authors, and the efforts to make the style wor thy of the matter, must have kept up a classic emulation among men, who otherwise would have cared little for

Irish Academy, a paper in which he argued that all those annular and semi-annular articles in gold and brass which have been dug up in such vast quantities in Ireland, and have furnished such a fruitful topic of dispute to our antiquaries—some contending that they were double pateræ for libations, others that they were fibulæ, and others that they were some peculiar ensigns of the mysteries of druidism-are nothing more than so many varieties of the primitive species of ring money, which was well-known to have been generally in use in Britain in the time of Cæsar.

In support of this hypothesis, there is given a series of wood cuts, representing first a perfect ring, next a ring slightly opened, next a ring somewhat more opened, with the ends slightly flattened, next an article of the shape of a horse shoe, with flattened cusps at either point; in the next specimen the cusps had been hollowed into cups, (to regulate the weight as was supposed), in the next the horseshoe had widened to a semicircle, and the cups were wider and deeper, and so on by gradual changes to the well-known double patera of Vallancey, which exhibits two bowls of gold connected by a short curved stem, and is indeed like anything in the world but money.

That the first three specimens were ring money was admitted on all hands, but with the horseshoe-shaped article there appeared to commence a different set of characteristics; so that, although it was in all probability of the same family with the double patera, it was by no means so clear that it bore any degree of relationship to the varieties of the ring. It thus becomes the middle term, as it were, of the argument, and on the proof of its having been used as money rested the whole value of Sir William's induction regarding the rest. But such a proof seemed impossible to be obtained, and so the essay rested for the present on conjecture.

In the beginning of the winter an outward bound vessel was wrecked on the coast of Cork. Among the goods washed on shore was a heavy box, which was found to contain an immense quantity of nondescript articles in an alloy of iron and copper, for which no imaginable use could be assigned. A specimen was brought to Sir William Betham. But that it was somewhat less worn than the horseshoe shaped article already in his possession, it would have been impossible to have said which was which. Immediate enquiries were made. The vessel was ascertained to have been chartered by Sir John Tobin from Liverpool for some port on the coast of Africa. Sir John Tobin was written to, and his reply contained a piece of intelligence corroborating Sir William's theory in the most conclusive manner. He states (so far as we can collect) that these articles had been manufactured to his order by a house in Birmingham, and were intended for the African market, to which he is in the habit of sending large quantities for barter with the natives of the country of Benin, who have used these articles for money from time immemorial. The conclusion of the king at arms now seems almost irresistible, and probably no theory ever was borne out by so extraordinary a confirmation.-(See Trans. R. I. Academy, vol. 18.

the preservation of the ancient models. To the legend writers of the middle ages we owe the preservation of almost all our classics; some of them have been handed down by men who loved their study, and stored them in their libraries. Some of them have been discovered on the vellum which had been employed by others for the vehicle of their own compositions. In Ireland, whatever history we possess, we have chiefly to thank them for; whatever remnants of the arts are found among us, in architecture, in sculpture in design, are more than half ecclesiastical. However anile the absurdities of their legends, they generally inculcate, at least, an innocent moral. The only remarkable instance to the contrary, is in the life of Brigid, by Cogitosus,* but the offensive paragraph

had been carefully expunged before the beginning of the sevententh century. On the whole, much as these productions conduced to the obstruction of improvement in one respect, they have been of service in forwarding the revival of knowledge in another, and when we reflect, that among the body to whom, as authors, they are to be attributed, were such men as Johannes Erigena, the founder of philosophy in Britain, and Virgil, the anticipator of the system of Copernicus,t it becomes us rather to lament the temptations of the times, than to censure too severely the compliance of men, who, perhaps, were forced too often to go with the tide. But, it is much to be rejoiced at, that the tide now sets in a contrary direction.

• Potentissima enim et ineffabilis fidei fortitudine, aliquam fæminam post votum integritatis fragilitate humana in juvenili voluptatis desiderio lapsam, et habentem peregrinam et tumuscentem vulvam, fideliter benedixit, et evanescente conceptu, sine partu, sine dolore, eam sanam ad pænitentiam restituit. (Cogit. in vit. Brigid. c. x.)

"But," says Colgan, as quoted by Harris, "it doth not appear that the fœtus was animated." (See also Nicholson, p. 89.)

+ He was the apostle and first bishop of Carinthia. His life, written by a scholar of Everhard, bishop of Salsburg, is published by Hen. Canisius. In Usher's Sylloge, p. 49, will be found the evidences of his having being censured by Pope Zachary, for maintaining the doctrine of the sphericity of the earth.

SYLVE. NO. IV.

Passages extracted from a Metrical Address to a Friend, who kindly reproved the author for ceasing to write Poetry, and only re-casting the trifles of his childhood.

I.

Too true, too true! I cannot weave

Those strains that won the smile or sigh

Of brighter hours; alas, I feel

The Fountains of the Heart are dry.

No chilling fear of future pain,

No dread remorse for former crime,
Hath seared their springs of song; 'tis all.
The slow, stern work of Truth and Tine!

Not love of Power, not love of Gain,
Not the dull despotism of Sense;

But nameless, soulless, servitude
To Habit's blind omnipotence!

One of those of whom De Lamartine's beautiful words have spoken

[ocr errors][merged small]
« AnteriorContinuar »