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Authors: Robert Graves

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The clue to the arrangement of this alphabet is found in Amergin’s reference to the dolmen; it is an alphabet that best explains itself when built up as a dolmen of consonants with a threshold of vowels. Dolmens are closely connected with the calendar in the legend of the flight of Grainne and Diarmuid from Finn Mac Cool. The flight lasted for a year and a day, and the lovers bedded together beside a fresh dolmen every night. Numerous ‘Beds of Diarmuid and Grainne’ are shown in Cork, Kerry, Limerick, Tipperary and the West, each of them marked by a dolmen. So this alphabet dolmen will also serve as a calendar, with one post for Spring, the other for Autumn, the lintel for Summer, the threshold for New Year’s Day. Thus:

 

At once one sees the reference to S as a hawk, or griffon, on the cliff; and to M as the hill of poetry or inspiration – a hill rooted in the death letters R and I and surmounted by the C of wisdom. So the text of the first part of Amergin’s song may be expanded as follows:

God
speaks
and
says:

I
am
a
stag
of
seven
tines.

Over
the
flooded
world

I
am
borne
by
the
wind.

I
descend
in
tears
like
dew,
I
lie
glittering,

I
fly
aloft
like
a
griffon
to
my
nest
on
the
cliff,

I
bloom
among
the
loveliest
flowers,

I
am
both
the
oak
and
the
lightning
that
blasts
it.

 

I
embolden
the
spearman,

I
teach
the
councillors
their
wisdom,

I
inspire
the
poets,

I
rove
the
hills
like
a
conquering
boar,

I
roar
like
the
winter
sea,

I
return
like
the
receding
wave.

Who
but
I
can
unfold
the
secrets
of
the
unhewn
dolmen?

 
 

For if the poem really consists of two stanzas, each of two triads, ending with a single authoritative statement, then the first ‘Who but I?’ (which does not match the other five) is the conclusion of the second stanza, and is uttered by the New Year God. This Child is represented by the sacred threshold of the dolmen, the central triad of vowels, namely O.U.E. But one must read O.U.E. backwards, the way of the sun, to make sense of it. It is the sacred name of Dionysus, EUO, which in English is usually written ‘EVOE’.

It is clear that ‘God’ is Celestial Hercules again, and that the child-poet Taliesin is a more appropriate person to utter the song than Amergin, the leader of the Milesians, unless Amergin is speaking as a mouth-piece of Hercules.

There is a mystery connected with the line ‘I am a shining tear of the sun’, because Deorgreine, ‘tear of the Sun’, is the name of Niamh of the Golden Hair, the lovely goddess mentioned in the myth of Laegaire mac Crimthainne. Celestial Hercules when he passes into the month F, the month of Bran’s alder, becomes a maiden. This recalls the stories of such sun-heroes as Achilles
1
, Hercules and Dionysus who lived for a time
disguised as girls in the women’s quarters of a palace and plied the distaff. It also explains the ‘I have been a maiden’, in a series corresponding with the Amergin cycle, ascribed to Empedocles the fifth-century
BC
. mystical philosopher. The sense is that the Sun is still under female tutelage for half of this month – Cretan boys not yet old enough to bear arms were called
Scotioi
,
members of the women’s quarters – then, like Achilles, he is given arms and flies off royally like a griffon or hawk to its nest.

But why a dolmen? A dolmen is a burial chamber, a ‘womb of Earth’, consisting of a cap-stone supported on two or more uprights, in which a dead hero is buried in a crouched position like a foetus in the womb, awaiting rebirth. In spiral Castle (passage-burial), the entrance to the inner chamber is always narrow and low in representation of the entrance to the womb. But dolmens are used in Melanesia (according to Prof. W. H. R. Rivers) as sacred doors through which the totem-clan initiate crawls in a ceremony of rebirth; if, as seems likely, they were used for the same purpose in ancient Britain, Gwion is both recounting the phases of his past existence and announcing the phases of his future existence. There is a regular row of dolmens on Slieve Mis. They stand between two baetyls with Ogham markings, traditionally sacred to the Milesian Goddess Scota who is said to be buried there; alternatively, in the account preserved by Borlase in his
Dolmens
of
Ireland,
to ‘Bera a queen who came from Spain’. But Bera and Scota seem to be the same person, since the Milesians came from Spain. Bera is otherwise known as the Hag Of Beara.

The five remaining questions correspond with the five vowels, yet they are not uttered by the Five-fold Goddess of the white ivy-leaf, as one would expect. They must have been substituted for an original text telling of Birth, Initiation, Love, Repose, Death, and can be assigned to a later bardic period. In fact, they correspond closely with the
envoi
to the first section of the tenth-century Irish
Saltair
No
Rann,
which seems to be a Christianized version of a pagan epigram.

For
each
day
five
items
of
knowledge

Are
required
of
every
understanding
person –

From
everyone,
without
appearance
of
boasting,

Who
is
in
holy
orders.

 

The
day
of
the
solar
month;
the
age
of
the
moon;

The
state
of
the
sea-tide,
without
error;

The
day
of
the
week;
the
calendar
of
the
feasts
of
the
perfect
saints

In
just
clarity
with
their
variations.

 
 

For ‘perfect saints’ read ‘blessed deities’ and no further alteration is needed. Compare this with Amergin’s:

Who
but
myself
knows
where
the
sun
shall
set?

Who
foretells
the
ages
of
the
moon?

Who
brings
the
cattle
from
the
house
of Tethra
and
segregates
them?

On
whom
do
the
cattle
of Tethra
smile?

Who
shapes
weapons
from
hill
to
hill,
wave
to
wave,

letter
to
letter,
point
to
point?

 
 

The first two questions in the
Song
of Amergin
,
about the day of the solar month and the ages of the moon, coincide with the first two items of knowledge in the
S
alt
air:
‘Who knows when the Sun shall set?’ means both ‘who knows the length of the hours of daylight at any given day of the year?’ – a problem worked out in exhaustive detail by the author of
The
Book
of
Enoch

and ‘Who knows on any given day how long the particular solar month in which it occurs will last?’

The third question is ‘Who brings the cattle of Tethra (the heavenly bodies) out of the ocean and puts each in his due place?’ This assumes a knowledge: of the five planets, Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, Saturn, which, with the Sun and Moon, had days of the week allotted to them in Babylonian astronomy, and still keep them in all European languages. Thus it corresponds with ‘the day of the week’.

The fourth question, as the glossarist explains, amounts to ‘Who is lucky in fishing?’ This corresponds with ‘the state of the sea tide’; for a fisherman who does not know what tide to expect will have no fishing luck.

The fifth question, read in the light of its gloss, amounts to: ‘Who orders the calendar from the advancing wave B to the receding wave R; from one calendar month to the next; from one season of the year to the next?’ (The three seasons of Spring, Summer and Autumn are separated by points, or angles, of the dolmen.) So it corresponds with ‘the calendar of the feasts of the perfect saints.’

Another version of the poem found in
The
Book
of
Leacon
and
The
Book
of
the
O’Clerys,
runs as follows when restored to its proper order. The glosses are similar in both books, though the O’Clerys’ are the more verbose.

 
B
I am seven battalions
or
I am an ox in strength –
for
strength
 
L
I am a flood on a plain –
for
extent
 
N
I am a wind on the sea –
for
depth
 
F
I am a ray of the sun –
for
purity
 
S
I am a bird of prey on a cliff –
for
cunning
 
H
I am a shrewd navigator –
 
D
I am gods in the power of transformation –
I
am
a
god,
a
druid,
and
a
man
who
creates
fire
from
magical
smoke
for
the
destruction
of
all,
and
makes
magic
on
the
tops
of
hills
 
T
I am a giant with a sharp sword, hewing down an army –
in
taking
vengeance
 
C
I am a salmon in a river
or
pool –
for
power
 
G
I am a fierce boar –
for
powers
of
chieftain-like
valour
 
NG
I am the roaring of the sea –
for
terror
 
R
I am a wave of the sea –
for
might
 
BOOK: The White Goddess
11.26Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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