Cuchulain slays the hound of Culain, by Stephen Reid.

Cuchulain slays the hound of Culain. Stephen Reid. 1904.

 

The char­ac­ter of Cuchulain has always fas­ci­nated me, ever since I first read his adven­tures at the age of nine. Discovering him along with the Iliad and the Odyssey proved to be one of the key for­ma­tive events in my life. It led to a life­time of read­ing mythol­ogy, of dig­ging deeply into the sources for those myths, and how sub­se­quent cen­turies of lit­er­a­ture use myth to deepen and broaden fic­tion, poetry and drama.

My chief source as a young lad was Lady Gregory’s Cuchulain of Muirthemne (1902), sup­ple­mented by her Gods and Fighting Men (1904). Bulfinch’s Mythology added to the mix, as did Yeats’ poetry and plays about “The Hound of Ulster.” In fact, it was Yeats’ use of Irish Mythology that first drew me to him. Later, the genius of the work itself …

Cuchulain follows the shining wheel, by Stephen Reid.

Cuchulain fol­lows the shin­ing wheel, by Stephen Reid. 1904.

Yeats and Lady Gregory were fas­ci­nated by the idea of an Irish national lit­er­a­ture, with reviv­ing it, with ensur­ing its sur­vival. While they were some­times mocked for their per­haps too roman­tic view of the past, of cer­tain misty cor­ners of Ireland and its his­tory, they did man­age to gather and dis­sem­i­nate a host of beau­ti­ful myths and leg­ends, new ver­sions of those myths and leg­ends, and new poetry about that misty past.

Ferdia falls by the hand of Cuchulain

Ferdia falls by the hand of Cuchulain, by Stepen Reid. 1904

 

While Greek and Roman myths still receive the lion’s share of focus, Irish myth con­tains aspects unknown to both those ancient mytholo­gies … a deeper, more per­son­al­ized, liv­ing sense of indi­vid­ual tragedy and suf­fer­ing, a greater degree of raw emo­tion and sen­ti­ment, per­haps a more pow­er­ful swing of those emo­tions. It is also closer to many of us in theme, ter­rain, and reper­cus­sions. Studying Shakespeare, for instance, is greatly enhanced if one knows Irish sources. Reading Athurian leg­end is also enlivened when one knows its Irish (and more gen­er­ally, Celtic) roots.

Cuchulain in battle. 1911. Illustrator unknown

Cuchulain in bat­tle, from T.W. Rolleston’s Myths and Legends of the Celtic Race. 1911.

Of course, myths and leg­ends across the globe, in all cul­tures, in all geo­gra­phies, deserve increased atten­tion and study. Such pio­neers in that field as Jane Harrison, Jessie L. Weston, Mircea Eliade, Joseph Campbell and, more recently, Roberto Calasso pro­vide excel­lent guides. Jessie L. Weston’s From Ritual to Romance (1920), for exam­ple, is one of the finest entrees to the world of the Fisher King and Holy Grail sto­ries. It is also a key to under­stand­ing T.S. Eliot’s The Waste Land.

Perhaps the bot­tom line for me is this: These myths and leg­ends, espe­cially those of Irish prove­nance, kick the imag­i­na­tion into high gear again and again, and send us in a thou­sand new direc­tions, chas­ing down mys­ter­ies of the human expe­ri­ence. They send us both inside and out­side those mys­ter­ies.
 

 

 

 

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