IRISH BARDS.
The BARDS proper occupied a high position in Ireland. The Ollamhs had
colleges at Clogher, Armagh, Lismore, and Tamar. On this, Walker's
Historical Memoirs, 1786, observes that "all the eminent schools,
delectably situated, which were established by the Christian clergy in the
fifth century, were erected on the ruins of those colleges." They studied
for twelve years to gain the barred cap and title of Ollamh or teacher.
They were Ollamhain Re-dan, or Filidhe, poets. They acted as
heralds, knowing the genealogy of their chiefs. With white robe, harp in
hand, they encouraged warriors in battle Their power of satire was
dreaded; and their praise, desired.
There is a story of the Ard Ollamh, or Archdruid, sending to Italy
after a book Of skins, containing various chosen compositions, as the
Cuilmeun, &c. As heralds they were called Seanachies. As Bards
they sang in a hundred different kinds of verse. One Ollamh Fodhla was the
Solon of Ireland; Amergin, the singer, lived 500 B.C.; Torna Egeas, was
last of the paean bards. Long after, they were patriots of the tribes--
"With uncouth
harps, in many-colour'd vest,
Their matted hair With boughs fantastic crown'd"
The Statutes of Kilkenny (Edward III.) made it penal to
entertain any Irish Bard; but Munster Bards continued to hold their annual
Sessions to the early part of last century. Carolan, the old blind harper,
called last of the Bards, died in 1738.
Bards sang in the Hall of Shells: shells being then the cups. There
were hereditary bards, as the O'Shiels, the O'Canvans, &c., paid to sing
the deeds of family heroes. A lament for Dallan ran--
"A fine host
and brave was he, master of and Governor,
Ulla! Ullalu
We, thrice fifty Bards, we confessed him chief in song and war--
Ulla! Ullalu!"
In the far-famed Trinity College Library is The Dialogue of the Two
Sages, in the Irish Fenian dialect, giving the qualifications of a
true Ollamh. Among the famous bards were, Lughar, "acute poet, Druid of
Meidhbh"; Olioll, King of Munster; Oisin, son of Cormac, King of Tara, now
nearly unintelligible to Irish readers; Fergus finbel of the Dinn
Senchus; Oisin, the Fenian singer; Larghaire, whose poem to the sun
was famous; Lughaidh, whose poem of the death of his wife Fail is of great
antiquity; Adhna, once chief poet of Ireland; Corothruadh, Fingin, &c.
Fergus Finbheoil, fair lips, was a Fenian Bard.
Ireland's Mirror, 1804, speaks of Henessey, a living seer, as
the Orpheus of his country. Amergin, brother of Heber, was the earliest of
Milesian poets. Sir Philip Sydney praised the Irish Bards three centuries
ago. One, in Munster, stopped by his power the corn's growth; and the
satire of another caused a shortness of life. Such rhymes were not to be
patronized by the Anglo-Normans, in the Statute of 1367. One Bard directed
his harp, a shell of wine, and his ancestor's shield to be buried with
him. In rhapsody, some would see the images of coming events pass before
them, and so declare them in song. He was surely useful who rhymed
susceptible rats to death.
The Irish war odes were called Rosg-catha, the Eye of Battle.
Was it for such songs that Irish-Danes were cruel to Bards? O'Reilly had a
chronological account of 400 Irish writers. As Froude truly remarks, "Each
celebrated minstrel sang his stories in his own way, adding to them,
shaping them, colouring them, as suited his peculiar genius." It was
Heeren who said of the early Greek bards, "The gift of song came to them
from the gods." Villemarque held that Irish Bards were "really the
historians of the race."
Walker's Irish Bards affirms that the "Order of the Bards
continued for many succeeding ages invariably the same." Even Buchanan
found "many of their ancient customs yet remain; yea, there is almost
nothing changed of them in Ireland, but only ceremonies and rites of
religion." Borlase wrote, "The last place we read of them in the British
dominions is Ireland." Blair added, "Long after the Order of the Druids
was extinct, and the national religion changed, the Bards continued to
flourish, exercising the same functions as of old in Ireland." But Walker
claimed the Fingalians as originally Irish. Sir I. Ferguson, in his
Lays of the Western Gael, says, "The exactions of the Bards were so
intolerable that the early Irish more than once endeavoured to rid
themselves of the Order." Their arrogance had procured their occasional
banishment. Higgins, in Celtic Druids, had no exalted opinion of
them, saying, "The Irish histories have been most of them filled with lies
and nonsense by their bards." Assuredly a great proportion of their works
were destroyed by the priests, as they had been in England, Germany,
France, &c.
The harp, according to Bede, was common in the seventh century. St.
Columba played upon the harp. Meagor says of the first James of Scotland,
"On the harp he excelled the Irish or the Highland Scots, who are esteemed
the best performers on that instrument." Ireland was the school of music
for Welsh and Scotch. Irish harpers were the most celebrated up to the
last century. Ledwich thought the harp came in from Saxons and Danes. The
Britons, some say, had it from the Romans. The old German harp had
eighteen strings; the old Irish, twenty-eight; the modern Irish,
thirty-three. Henry VIII. gave Ireland the harp for an armorial bearing,
being a great admirer of Irish music; but James I. quartered it with the
arms of France and England. St. Bernard gives Archbishop Malachy, 1134,
the credit of introducing music into the Church service of Ireland.
The Irish cruit was the Welsh crwdd or crwth. Hugh
Rose relates, that "a certain string was selected as the most suitable for
each song." Diodorus Siculus recorded that "the bards of Gaul sang to
instruments like lyres." The cymbals were not Bardic, but bell cymbals of
the Church. They were hollow spheres, holding loose bits of metal for
rattling, and connected by a flexible shank. The corn was a metallic horn;
the drum, or tiompan, was a tabor; the piob-mela, or
bagpipes, were borrowed from the far East; the bellows to the bag thereof
were not seen till the sixteenth century. The Irish used foghair,
or whole tones, and foghair-beg, or semi-tones. The cor, or
harmony, was chruisich, treble, and cronan, base. The names
of clefs were from the Latin. In most ancient languages the same word is
used for Bard and Sage. Lönnrot found not a parish among the Karelians
without several Bards. Quatrefages speaks of Bardic contests thus: "The
two bards start strophe after strophe, each repeating at first that which
the other had said. The song only stops with the learning of one of the
two."
Walker ungallantly wrote, "We cannot find that the Irish had female
Bards," while admitting that females cried the Caoine over the
dead. Yet in Cathluina we read, "The daughter of Moran seized the
harp, and her voice of music praised the strangers. Their souls melted at
the song, like the wreath of snow before the eye of the sun."
The Court Bards were required, says Dr. O'Donovan, to have ready seven
times fifty chief stories, and twice fifty sub-stories, to repeat before
the Irish King and his chiefs. Conor Mac Neasa, King of Ulster, had three
thousand Bards, gathered from persecuting neighbouring chiefs.
"Musician,
herald, bard, thrice may'st thou be renowned,
And with three several wreaths immortally be crowned."
Brehons.--Breitheamhain - were legislative Bards; and,
said Walker, in 1786, they "promulgated the laws in a kind of recitative,
or monotonous chant, seated on an eminence in the open air." According to
McCurtin, the Irish Bards of the sixth century wore long, flowing
garments, fringed and Ornamented with needlework. in a Life of Columba,
1827, it is written, "The Bards and Sennachees retained their office, and
some degree of their former estimation among the nobility of Caledonia and
Ireland, till the accession of the House of Hanover."
"Nothing can prove," says O'Beirne Crowe, "the late introduction of
Druidism into our country more satisfactorily than the utter contempt in
which the name bard is held in all our records.--After the
introduction of our irregular system of Druidism, which must have been
about the second century of the Christian era, the Filis (bard) had
to fall into something like the position of the British Bards-- hence we
see them, down to a late period--practising incantations like the Magi of
the continent, and in religious matters holding extensive sway."
Ossianic literature had a higher opinion of the Bards; as, "Such were
the words of the Bards in the days of the Song; when the King heard the
music of harps and the tales of other times. The chiefs gathered from all
their hills, and heard the lovely sound.. They praised the voice of Cona,
the first among a thousand bards." Again, "Sit thou on the heath, O Bard!
and let us hear thy voice. It is pleasant as the gale of the spring, that
sighs on the hunter's ear, when he wakens from dreams of joy, and has
heard the music of the spirits of the hill.--The music of Cardil was like
the memory of joys that are past, pleasant, and mournful to the soul. The
ghosts of departed Bards heard it." "My life," exclaimed Fingal, "shall be
one stream of light to Bards of other times." Cathmor cried, "Loose the
Bards. Their voice shall be heard in other ages, when the Kings of Temora
have failed."
Keating, amusingly credulous as an Irish historian records with
gravity the story of an ancient militia numbering nine thousand in time of
peace, who had both sergeants and colonels. Into the ranks of these
Fine Eirion no one was admitted unless proved to be a poetical genius,
well acquainted with the twelve books of poetry.
The Dinn Seanchas has poems by the Irish Bard of the second
century, Finin Mac Luchna; and it asserts that "the people deemed each
other's voices sweeter than the warblings of the melodious harp." On
Toland's authority we learn that, for a long time after the English
Conquest, the judges, Bards, physicians, and harpers held land tenures in
Ireland. The O'Duvegans were hereditary Bards of the O'Kellies; the
O'Shiels were hereditary doctors; the O'Brodins, hereditary antiquaries;
the Maglanchys, hereditary judges. The Bards were Strabo's hymn-makers.
Mrs. Bryant felt that "The Isle of Song was soon to become the Isle of
Saints;" and considered "Ireland of the Bards knew its Druids simply as
men skilled in all magical arts, having no marked relation either to a
system of theology, or to a scheme of ceremonial practice."
The Brehon Law gives little information respecting Druids,
though the Brehons were assumed to have been Originally Druid judges. St.
Patrick has the credit of compiling this record.
These Brehons had a high reputation for justice; and yet it is
confessed that when one was tempted to pass a false sentence, his chain of
office would immediately tighten round his neck most uncomfortably as a
warning. Of the Brehons, it is said by the editors--O'Mahony and Richey
--"The learning of the Brehons became as useless to the public as the most
fantastic discussions of the Schoolmen, and the whole system crystallized
into a form which rendered social progress impossible." Though those old
Irish laws were so oppressive to the common people, and so favourable to
the hereditary chiefs, it was hard indeed to get the people to relinquish
them for English laws.
In 1522, English law existed in only four of the Irish counties; and
Brehons and Ollamhs (teachers) were known to the end of the seventeenth
century. The founding of the book of Brehon Law is thus explained:--"And
when the men of Erin heard--all the power of Patrick since his arrival in
Erin--they bowed themselves down in obedience to the will of God and
Patrick. It was then that all the professors of the sciences (Druids) in
Erin were assembled, and each of them exhibited his art before Patrick, in
the presence of every chief in Erin.--What did not clash with the Word of
God in the written law, and in the New Testament, and with the consciences
of the believers, was confirmed in the laws of the Brehons by Patrick, and
by the ecclesiastics and the chieftains of Erin." |