The Coming of Cuculain
CONTENTS
There are three great cycles of Gaelic literature. The first treats of the gods; the second of the Red Branch Knights of Ulster and their contemporaries; the third is the so-called Ossianic. Of the Ossianic, Finn is the chief character; of the Red Branch cycle, Cuculain, the hero of our tale.
Cuculain and his friends are historical characters, seen as it were through mists of love and wonder, whom men could not forget, but for centuries continued to celebrate in countless songs and stories. They were not literary phantoms, but actual existences; imaginary and fictitious characters, mere creatures of idle fancy, do not live and flourish so in the world’s memory. And as to the gigantic stature and superhuman prowess and achievements of those antique heroes, it must not be forgotten that all art magnifies, as if in obedience to some strong law; and so, even in our own times, Grattan, where he stands in artistic bronze, is twice as great as the real Grattan thundering in the Senate. I will therefore ask the reader, remembering the large manner of the antique literature from which our tale is drawn, to forget for a while that there is such a thing as scientific history, to give his imagination a holiday, and follow with kindly interest the singular story of the boyhood of Cuculain, “battle-prop of the valour and torch of the chivalry of the Ultonians.”
I have endeavoured so to tell the story as to give a general idea of the cycle, and of primitive heroic Irish life as reflected in that literature, laying the cycle, so far as accessible, under contribution to furnish forth the tale. Within a short compass I would bring before swift modern readers the more striking aspects of a literature so vast and archaic as to repel all but students.
In this age we read so much that we lay too great a burden on the imagination. It is unable to create images which are the spiritual equivalent of the words on the printed page, and reading becomes for too many an occupation of the eye rather than of the mind. How rarely—out of the multitude of volumes a man reads in his lifetime—can he remember where or when he read any particular book, or with any vividness recall the mood it evoked in him. When I close my eyes, and brood in memory over the books which most profoundly affected me, I find none excited my imagination more than Standish O’Grady’s epical narrative of Cuculain. Whitman said of his Leaves of Grass, “Camerado, this is no book: who touches this touches a man” and O’Grady might have boasted of his Bardic History of Ireland, written with his whole being, that there was more than a man in it, there was the soul of a people, its noblest and most exalted life symbolised in the story of one heroic character.
Standish O'Grady
THE COMING OF CUCULAIN
PREFACE
STANDISH O’GRADY — A TRIBUTE BY A. E.
THE COMING OF CUCULAIN
CHAPTER I. — THE RED BRANCH
CHAPTER II. — THE BOYS OF THE ULTONIANS
CHAPTER III. — DETHCAEN’S NURSLING
CHAPTER IV. — SETANTA RUNS AWAY
CHAPTER V. — THE NEW BOY
CHAPTER VI. — THE SMITH’S SUPPER PARTY
CHAPTER VII. — SETANTA AND THE SMITH’S DOG
CHAPTER VIII. — SETANTA, THE PEACE-MAKER
CHAPTER IX. — THE CHAMPION AND THE KING
CHAPTER X. — DEIRDRE
CHAPTER XI. — THERE WAS WAR IN ULSTER
CHAPTER XII. — THE SACRED CHARIOT
CHAPTER XIII. — THE WEIRD HORSES
CHAPTER XIV. — THE KNIGHTING OF CUCULAIN
CHAPTER XV. — ACROSS THE MEARINGS AND AWAY
CHAPTER XVI. — THE RETURN OF CUCULAIN