Mythology and Rites of The British Druids
Mythology and Rites of The British Druids
Mythology and Rites of The British Druids
3Bnttos,
ASCERTAINED BY
NATIONAL DOCUMENTS;
AND COMPARED WITH THE
GENERAL TRADITIONS AND CUSTOMS OF HEATHENISM, AS ILLUSTRATED BY THE MOST EMINENT ANTIQUARIES OF OUR AGE.
WITH AH
APPENDIX,
CONTAINING
COINS.
NOSCENDA ITER INGKEDI, TRANSMITTERS MARE SOLF.MUS, EA SUB OCULIS POSITA NEGLIGIMUS, PLIN. L. VIII. Ep. 20.
BY
EDWARD
ITU
DAVIES,
RECTOR OF BISHOPSTON,
AXD AUTHOR OF
ionium
PRINTED FOR
J.
.-
/.
BARFIILD,
'
noble frankness with which your Lordship grants a favour, encourages me to hope, that you will pardon the liberty I now take, in prefixing your name to an Essay upon the Mythology and Rites of the Heathen Britons. It is with diffidence I lay this subject before a
THE
Lordship's distinguished character; whether in reference to private worth, to reputation, in the world of letters, to rank in society, or to that zeal and ability which you have so successfully displayed in the defence of our holy religion.
J3ut whatever the merits of this Work may be, eagerly embrace the opportunity which it affords me, of acknowledging a debt of gratitude, in the audience of ihe Public.
man of your
of
generosity, which it is impossible for me to enumerate or to forget, pointed me out to your Lordship's notice, under the character of his friend, it was your good pleasure to place me in a respectable station in the Church, and thus confer upon me the comfort of
independence.
is
Your Lordship's manner of bestowing a benefit, a great addition to its value; and ivhilst I am
me
offering my humble tribute of thanks, it emboldens to aspire to the preservation of your good opinion.
DEFIES.
PREFACE.
section of the ensuing Essay, effects the principal objects of a Preface; yet the Author has not the confidence to intrude upon his Reader, withfirst
JL
HE
and conciliate
out premising a few pages, to bespeak his attention, without offering some his esteem for the nature of his subject, and the manapology ner in which it has been treated.
persons, the utility of such a work may not be obvious. What interest It may be asked has the present age, in a view of the errors and
To some
prejudices of the Pagan Britons ? To obviate this, and similar inquiries, I would suggest the reflection, that the history of mankind is, in a great measure, the history of errors and prethat the superstition we have now to conjudices
template, however absurd in itself, affected the general tone of thinking in several districts of Britain that its influence continued to recent times, and has scarcely vanished at the present day. To an age of general inquiry, an investigation of the form
and principles of
this superstition,
must surely be a
spirit of research, which few are so unjust as to impute to idle curiosity, embraces all the regions of the known world: and is our own country the only spot that must be deemed unworthy
of our attention?
Ancient and authentic documents, of the opinions and customs of the old Britons, have been preserved,
though long concealed by the shades of a difficult and obsolete language. And can a dispassionate examination of their contents, which are totally una 3
known
to
the Public,
?
be deemed a subject of no
interest or utility
investigation,
develope a system of religion, which, for many ages, influenced the affairs of the human race, not only in these islands, but also in the adjacent regions of Europe: and are we not to inquire in what this religion consisted, and what hold it took of the mind of man ? Or is it an useless task, to expose the origin of some absurd customs and prejudices, which are still cherished in certain corners of our land? But it will be said The state of society amongst the ancient Britons was rude and unpolished;
and
Be this admitted yet the Britons, with all their barbarism and absurdities, constituted a link in the In addition to this, their great chain of history. derive some importance from their rank affairs amongst our own progenitors, their connection with our native country, and the remains of their monuA prospect ments, which still appear in our fields. of the few advantages which they enjoyed, may fur~ nish no unpleasant subject of comparison with our own times. A candid exposure of that mass of error under which they groaned, may inspire us
:
with more lively gratitude for the knowledge of the true religion, and, perhaps, suggest a seasonable caution against the indulgence of vain speculation upon sacred subjects a weakness to which the hu-
man mind
is prone in every age. the whole, then, I humbly conceive, that an Upon examination of our national reliques has been hitherto a desideratum in British literature ; that the
individual
who has now attempted to draw them out of obscurity, is entitled to the candid attention of the Public; and that the time of the Reader, who
vu
may honour
this volume with a candid perusal, will not have been spent in vain. BUT of the manner in which this examination is conducted in the following Essay, I must speak with
less
confidence.
As
far as I
has been my object. ancestors, the light in which I view their ancient Touching superstition, I must confess that I have not been the first in representing the druidical, as having had some connection with the patriarchal religion ; but I know of no work already before the Public, which
our
misguided
has unravelled the very slender threads by which that connection was maintained.
This difficult task I have attempted, by the aid of those Bards who were professed votaries of Druidism ; and the undertaking was greatly facilitated by the labours of Mr. Bryant, which present a
master-key to the mythology of the ancient world. I cannot give my assent to the whole of this great man's opinion, has been already acknowledged:* but whilst I allow myself to object against the slipper, I contemplate the masterly outlines of the statue, with respect and admiration.
That
It
is
to be regretted,
of Druidism, preserved in this country. Had they been open to his^ investigation, he would have exhibited them to peculiar advantage, and he would have found them as strong in support of his general principles, as any remains of antiquity whatsoever.
jection.
I must here endeavour to obviate another obIn the British poems, which treat of heathenish superstition, a sentence is often inserted,
the name of Christ, or some allusion to his religion, and having no connection with the matter which or follows. Some of
containing
precedes
Vlll
these sentences I have omitted, for obvious reasons. I have been not a little puzzled to account for their admission into the text but as all our remaining poems were composed or altered, subsequent to the
:
first
St.
introduction of Christianity, it is probable that Augustin supplies us with the true reason of such
admixture.
" "
ligaturas, per precantationeg, per machinamenta inimici, inserunt praecantationiu bus suis nomen Christi quia jam non possunt " seducere ut dent verienum, addunt Christianos, " mellis aliquantum, ut per id quod dulce est, la:
" teat quod amarum est, et bibatur ad perniciem."* In the selection of matter, the author has endeavoured to observe a medium, between that fastidious abruptness, which leaves many of the great outlines of a subject unmarked, and a minute prolixity, which scrutinizes every obscure corner of heathen
abomination.
To future inquiry he leaves an open field, where some more handfuls may be gleaned, and approaches
the reader with a consciousness, that as far as he
has
proceeded,
his
steps
have
been
guided
by
integrity.
subject of this volume having an intimate connection with that of the Celtic Researches, a short Index of that book is introduced. It is also to be had separate, and respectfully offered to my Subscribers, as a small tribute of gratitude for their liberal support, and as an acknowledgement of the
The
favourable opinion with which I have been honoured, by some of the most distinguished characters, in that
illustrious catalogue
are
acknowledged,
4u.
respected.
,
IX
As to the animadversions of professed critics, some But their elaborate of them were avowedly hostile. which is no mark of contempt, affords prolixity, some consolation for the malignity of their efforts. The work, and the strictures which it occasioned, are To this before the Public, which is of no party. and competent judge I appeal, with humble upright
submission, neither vainly pleading an immunity from just censure, nor dreading the effects of those sarcasms, which arose from gross misrepresentation of my opinions, and perversion of my principles.
Upon one solitary occasion, I must beg leave to The passage which I am defend my own cause. about to quote, is not singled out as unworthy of the learning or candour of its author, but as involving a point, in which the Public may want an It also affords me an opportunity of interpreter. stating my reasons, for understanding the works of Taliesin somewhat differently from the Critical Reviewer.
Let us now," says the crific, " compare this " description of the Aborigines of Britain with that " of Taliesin, a name before which every Welshman " must bow; who was himself a Bard, perhaps a Druid, but converted from his Druidical idolatry " to Christianity, and who is reported to have flou" rished in the sixth century of the Christian aera ; " about six hundred years before these consequently, " Triads were ever attempted to be collected.* The " we cite from is denominated the Pacification poem
(
1
" of Lludd."
The
critic
ing translation
" A numerous race, and fierce, as fame reports them, " Were first colonists, Britain, chief of isles : thy
I
stands.
totally at a loss to conjecture upon what ground this assertion had mentioned some copyists of the Triads in the twelfth century t never supposed them to have been the original collectors.
I
'
am
but I
" unknown, That was mother to this progeny, these warlike adven" turers on the sea. " Clad in their long dress, who could equal them ? " Celebrated is their skill were the dread
**
:
people said to
have been
"
they
Of
Europe."
" " instead of Here," adds the triumphant critic, " men of quiet dispositions, aad abhorrent of " being war, they are expressly declared to have been " fierce and warlike adventurers unequalled, and the dread of Europe : instead of coming from " and crossing the German haze, or " Constantinople, ocean, they are said to have wandered from the
'
Gafis, in Asia.
Is
it
possible to imagine
The contrast, as here drawn, is strong enough but I must take the liberty to hint, that the critic, or his prompter, has perverted the whole of this vaunted passage, in consequence of having mistaken the meaning of a single word Dygorescynan, which he renders were the first colonists, simply implies,
will again invade, or, according to Mr. Owen, will subjugate, or overcome : so that the Bard does not describe the Aborigines of Britain, but a hostile race, who invaded or subdued the country.
The title of the poem, Pacification of Lludd, and a line, which informs us it was the pacification of Lludd and Llefelis, may furnish a clue to the aera of these invaders. Lludd and Llefelis are represented, by the Welsh chronicles, as brothers of Cassivellaunus, who fought with Caesar, though it is pretty clear that, in simple fact, they were no otner than those princes of the Trinobantes, whom the
Roman
historian mentions by the names of Imanuentius and Mandubrasius. Hence it appears, that
of Britain arrived
in the age of
In try to identify this warlike race. the passage quoted by the critic, they are said to have sprung from a country in Asia, and the region of Gafis,
or rather Gqfys.
translate
Let us now
Taliesin, must be fully aware, that it is the genius of that language to change c Let us then replace the oriinto g, and p into f. and we shall have the region of Capys, ginal letters,
enough
to
a Trojan prince, who was the father of Anchises, and reputed ancestor of the Romans. Hence it may be conjectured, that these were the very people whom the Bard describes as having invaded Britain, in the time of Lludd and Llefelis ; that is, in the age of Julius Caesar.
But Critics must not be supposed to dom, without some knowledge of their
write at ransubject.
As
they claim respect from the Public, they must reAnd as our author has spect their own characters. his warlike race the first copositively pronounced lonists of Britain, it may be presumed, that his assertion has some adequate support in other parts In order to determine this point, I of the poem. shall exhibit the whole, for it is not long, with a
translation as close
of
it,
as that
and as faithful, to say the least which we have in the preceding critique.
YMARWAR LLUDD.
Bychani
Yn enw Duw Trindawd, cardawd cyfrwys ! Llwyth lliaws, anuavvs eu henwerys, Dygorescynnan Prydain, prif fan ynys ; Gwyr gwlad yr Asia, a gwlad Gafys ;
* The romantic chronicles of Archdeacon Walter, and Geoffry of Monmouth, and, after them, some late annotators on the Triads, say, that the a Belgic tribe, arrived in the age of Lludd. This is Coranied, evidently erroneous. The reader will see presently, that the Bard mean* the Romans, and other people. BO
Xll
eu
tir ni
wys
gorwyreis herwydd maris. Amlaes eu peisseu ; pwy ei hefelis ? phwyllad dyvyner, ober efnis,
:
Famen
Europin, Arafin, Arafanis. Cristiawn difryt, diryd dilis, Cya yraarwar Lludd a Llefelis.
Dysgogettawr perchen y
Wen
:
Ynys,
echrys.
cein
ei
Rytalas
Grat, rwyf ei areith. rhyvel ar geith. Pryderaf, pwyllaf pwy y hymdeith Brythonig yniwis rydderchefis.
mab
Cymry yn danhyal
PACIFICATION OF LLUDD
A numerous
Little song.
!
In the name of the God Trinity,* exhibit thy charity race, of ungentle manners, Repeat their invasion of Britain, chief of isles :f Men from a country in Asia, and the region of Capys ; ^ people of iniquitous design: the land is not known That was their mother They made a devious course by sea. In their flowing garments,)) who can equal them ? With design are they called in,^[ with their short spears,**
those foes
The Bard addresses himself
f
to a Christian.
subject of the poem is Caesar's second invasion. composition, conveys the sense of iteration.
The
The
particle dy, in
The
district
When
the oracle
origin.
Dardanidae duri, quae vos a stirpe parentum tulit tellus, eadcm vos ubere laeto Accipiet reduces: antiquam exquirite Matrem
Prima
Virg. Mn. ill. V. 93. not where to find this parent region, and consequently wandered through various seal in search of it. To this tale the Bard evidently alludes.
We
knew
The Roman
toga, or gown.
learn from Caesar, as well as from the British Triads and chronicles, that the Romans were invited into this island by the princes of the Trinobantes, who were at war with Cassivellaunus.
5f
We
Such was the formidable pilum, as appears from a variety of coins and sculptures.
Roman
Xlll
the Europeans, the Aramites, and Armenians.* Christian, there was oppressive toil, Before the pacification of Lludd and Llefelis,*)The proprietor of the fair island J is ronsed Against the Roman leader, splendid and terrible.
Of
O thoughtless
The King
speech
is
he directs with
his
(Having seen all the foreigners that were to he seen), That the quadrangular swamp should be set in order, by
j|
wayfaring torches, Against the arrogant leader, in whose presence there was a spreading flame.^[ The son of Graid,** with his voice, directs the retaliation. The Cymry burst into a flame there is war upon the
slaves .ff
With
made
them decamp.
It was the great exaltation
of British energy.%+
* The Romans had carried their arms, not only over the best part of Europe, but also into Aram, or Syria and Armenia, before they invaded Britain. + These reputed brothers of Cassivellaunus, were the princes of the Tri. nobantes, who deserted the general cause of their .country, and sent ambassadors to Julius Cesar.
$ The reader will see hereafter, that the ancient Bards conferred this title upon the solar divinity, and his chief minister. That is Cassivellauaus, whose abilities and prudence are acknowledged by the Roman commander. The fortress or town of Cassivellaunus, Sitvis paludibusque munitum. De Bell. Gall. L. V. c. 21.
||
H Relinquebatur
retur, et
ut neqne longius ab agmine legionum disced! Caesar patetantum in agris vastandis, incendiisque faciendis, hostibus noceretur.
is
Ib. c. 19.
is
** Grad, or Graid, the tun. Cassivellaunus another name of that deified luminary.
ft
Those British
tribes
who
and on
whom
departure.
tt
The Bard,
in a
Romans
strain of venial patriotism, ascribes the departure of to the prowess of his countrymen. Other Bards have
to the
same purpose.
Lucau says
And
Pope, with
less asperity
?
Ask why, from Britain Caesar would retreat Caesar himself might whisper I wat beat.
XIV
By
critic.
little
He
poem
will agree with me in thinking, that this relates only to the invasion of Britain by
Julius Caesar ; and that it contains not the most The strong condistant hint of its Jirst colonists. trast has changed its position but I abstain from farther remarks.
:
Criticism
goes
its
may be useful to the author who underTo chastisement, as well as to the Public.
the censor whose representation is just, whose reproof is liberal, who so far respects himself, as to preserve the character of a scholar and a gentleman, But if any proI shall attend with due regard. fessed judge of books can descend so low, as wilfully to pervert my words and meaning, to twist them into absurdity, and extract silly witticisms from his own conceits, I must be allowed to consider his strictures as foreign to myself and my work, and as little calculated to influence those readers whom I wish
to engage.
THE
THE
CONTENTS,
SECTION
I.
PRELIMINARY OBSERVATIONS ON THE WRITTEN MONUMENTS OF THE EARLY BRITONS THEIR AUTHENTICITY PROVED, BY THE TEST OF CLASSICAL ANTIQUITY
----------SECTION
II.
Page
84
GENERAL VIEW OF DRUIDICAL THEOLOGY CHARACTER AND RITES OF HU, THE HELIO-ARKITE GOD THE BACCHUS OF THE HEATHEN BRITONS, Page 85 182
SECTION
III.
THE CHARACTER, CONNEXIONS, AND MYSTICAL RITES OF KED, OR CERIDWEN, THE ARKITE GODDESS OF THE DRUIDS ;HER IDENTITY WITH THE CERES OF
ANTIQUITY,
-
-----IV.
Page
183290
SECTION
THE DESIGN OF THE CIRCULAR TEMPLES AND CROMLECHS OF THE DRUIDS ORIGINAL DOCUMENTS RELATIVE TO THE CELEBRATED STRUCTURE OF STONEHENGE,
----------
Page
383.)
291410
V.
326
SECTION
Xvi
CONTENTS.
SECTION
V.
TRADITIONS RELATING TO THE PROGRESS, REVOLUTIONS, AND SUPPRESSION OF TH-E BRITISH SUPERSTITION,
-
-------
Page 411
500
APPENDIX, CONSISTING
EXTRACTS,
---------
OF
589624
642
INDEX,
ERBATA,
Page 625
-----------
Page 642
TUB
THE
MYTHOLOGY AND
OF THE
RITES
SECTION
I.
classical Antiquity.
a retrospect of the state of society, which formerly prevailed in our country, the contemplative mind is not more agreeably, than usefully employed. Hence many
1
writers, of distinguished
cidate
early
modes of thinking, and the customs of the Britons, together with their religious opinions and
the
rites.
superstitious
Upon
this
subject,
scattered
ing.
and appreciated with ingenuity. But here the research of our antiquaries has been checked, "by the compass of their
tion,
by the defect of other existing whereas, upon a topic that claims investigaevery pertinent document ought to be considered and
rather than
;
especially, those
to a
more intimate
What
has
hinted, in a
volume which
I lately published,
liberal patronage.
which are preserved in the Welsh language, contain many new and curious particulars relative to the ancient religion and customs of Britain ; and that, in
certain ancient writings,
this point of view,
At
is
that time, I
I
gation; but
had no thoughts of pursuing the investihave since taken up a fresh resolution, and it
my
employ an introductory section, in out the particular writings of the Britons, upon pointing which I ground my opinion ; in shewing that those writings
this end, I shall
To
The British documents, to which I principally refer, are the poems of Taliesin, Aneurin, and Merddin the Caledonian, Bards who lived in the sixth century of the Christian
must also take notice of the objections of some of my since the publication of the Celtic Researches, have industriously spread a report, that I do not produce the genuine traditions of the Welsh Bards. However little concern I might feel, for the mere accident of thinking differently from these men, yet, as T have made my opinion public, I deem it a duty which I owe to my own character, as well as to the generous
this Section, I
* In
patrons of my book, to shew, that I am competent to judge of the genuine remains of the Welsh ; and that my representations of them have been fairly made, and from the best authorities that can be produced.
My
own
vindication will call for a few remarks, upon the grounds of the opinion; but I hope to vindicate myself with temper.
3
aera.
'
With
these works,
my
I have possessed a
good
I
collated
volume of the
Wales, in 1801.
the primitive Bards, I add the historical and mytho*. logical notices, called Triads, published in the second vo-
To
lume of the same work; and though their compilers are not known, I shall use them freely, as far as I find their
authority supported
scripts,
by general
tradition,
ancient
manu-
and
internal evidence.
having suggested some doubts as to the genuineness of the works ascribed to our ancient Bards, it
Modern
criticism
may be expected, that I should offer something in their defence upon this score. But from the greatest part ol ibis task I may fairly excuse myself, by a general reference to
the Vindication, lately published by the learned and accurate
in
answer to
all
their adversaries,
;
namely,
" That there are poems, now existing in the Welsh, or " ancient British language, w hich were written by Aneurin. " Talitsin, Llywarch Hen, and Merddin, who flourished between the years 50O and 600.'*
r
This subject, the able advocate of our Bards has not handled slightly, or superficially. He carries them through every question of external and internal evidence, refutes all
the main objections which have been urged against the works of the Bards, and concludes his Vindication by
is
nothing extraordinary
hi the fact,
* 2
is
directed
poems are
lief;
attested
origin.*
the Anglo-Saxon history, being interested in the credit of the historical poems of these Bards, only
The author of
has directed his Vindication, principally, to the support of their cause ; but as my subject leads me, more immediately,
to
their mythological
examine certain pieces of another kind, which, from and mysterious allusions, have obtained
the general appellation of mystical poems, candour requires, that I should state this gentleman's opinion of the latter,
in their defence,
where he seems to
these mystical pieces, Mr. Turner thus declares his sentiments. " Some (of Taliesin's poems) are unintelligible,
Of
" because
full
And
" "
" and Bardic imagery, they are worth attention, because " some parts may be illustrated, and made intelligible." J
I
Taliesin's poetry, we may say, in ge-r that his historical pieces are valuable ; his others neral, are obscure : but, as they contain much old mythology,
again
" Of
my
have quoted these passages, at length, in order to shew reader, that the author's censure is not directed against
the pretensions of these poems to genuineness, or authen* Vindication of the- Genuinentss of the Ancient British Bards* 8vo. London, See p. 16 to 20. t Ibid. p. 14. $ Ibid. p. 250.
1803.
5
ticity,
but merely, against that degree of obscurity which they must, necessarily, present to every man who has not
studied their subjects.
And Mr. Turner's declared opinion, that they are worth attention, as containing much old mythology, certainly supposes, that they are ancient and
authentic; I
mean
of British mythology.
That a critic, so candid, and so well informed, shou!4 have pronounced these poems, which peculiarly treat of Druidism, absolutely unintelligible; and especially, as h^
men who
acknowledges the assistance of Mr. Owen and Mr. Williams, claim an exclusive acquaintance with the whole
:
system of Bardic
but lore, may seem rather extraordinary the wonder will cease, when we shall have seen, that the information of these ingenious writers is drawn from another source; from a
document which
will
many
Mr. Turner's
censure, as '
we have
obscurity of the mystical poems: but as it is possible, that the candid zeal of criticism may mistake obscure, for spurious, it may be proper to produce some farther evidence
in their favour.
was the
first critic,
And here I may remark, that Mr. Turner who made a public distinction between, mystical, and the historical poems. The
in favour
external evidence,
of both,
is
They
same manuscripts
and an unva-
ried stream of national belief ascribes them, without distinction, to the authors
bear.
Here
might
till
they
j,*rove their
course of
Essay; did I not deem it requisite, to adduce some testimonies of the real existence of Druidism, amongst
my
the Welsh, in the times of the native princes. These testimonies are collected from a series of Bards, who wrote
in succession,
fourteenth century.
from before the twelfth, to the middle of the The genuineness of their works has
never been disputed; and they, pointedly, allude to the mystical strains of Taliesin, and establish their credit, as
derived from the source of Druidism.
MEUGANT,
writes thus.
a Bard
who
Cred
Dduw
Pan
torrer
Dm Breon
" Trust in God, that those are no Druids, who prophesy, " that the privilege of Din Breon will be violated."
the Hill of Legislature, was the sacred where the Bards, the ancient judges of the land, mount,
assembled,
to decide causes.
Din Breon)
alludes to
certain predictions, that the privilege of this court would be violated ; but, at the same time, suggests a hope, that the,
their
prophets were not real Druids, and, consequently, that forebodings might never be accomplished. This,
surely, supposes, that
in the days of
oracles of truth.
Druidical predictions were known, Meugant, and that they were regarded as
W.
Archaiol. p. 161.
GOLYDDAN,
existence of Druidical prophecies, and considers the desin their sentence. tiny of Britain, as absolutely involved
O O
Dysgogan Derwyddon maint a ddervydd Vynaw hyd Lydaw yn eu Haw a vydd Ddyved hyd Ddanet huz biduvydd, &c.*
: :
:
" Druids vaticinate a multitude shall arrive from Me" nevia to Armorica shall be in their hand from Dernetia " to shall
:
Thanet
they possess."
Such passages bear testimony to the existence of certain, pretended, vaticinations, which were expressly ascribed to the Druids; and which the Britons, of the seventh century, contemplated with respect.
It is also
worthy of note,
in the list
of
Dysgogan Merddin
"
It is
cy vervydd hyn
this will
Merddin who
predicts
come
to pass !"
Let us
less
hear the acknowledgment of a Bard, who was favourable to the Druidical straiijt; or who, at least,
now
it
meet
to be
employed
in
a Christian's ad-
wrote, according to the table of the Welsh Archaiology, in the latter part of the eighth century .f
CUHELYN
W.
Archaiol. p. 158.
to
t I think Mr. Owen has, more accurately, ascribed this work Caw, a Bard of the sixth century, Cam. Biog.
Cuhelyn ab
V. Cuhtlun.
8
religious ode,
this
following passage
fiat!
Rymibyddad.
Amhad anaw
areith awyrllaw
Y Caw ceiniad,
Cuhelyn Bardd Cymraeg hardd
Cyd wrthodiad
Certh cymmwynas,
Ked
cyweithas,
Ni
vaintimacf.
Clutawd
f
attad,
"
God
!
my
genius!
Amen
be
it
prosperous song of praise, a fruitful discourse, " I obtain. For the venerated song of Ceridwtn, the, may t( Goddess of various seeds, of various seeds^of Genius, the
" done
"
"
eloquence of the airy hand of the chaunter of Caw, Cuhelyn, the elegant Welsh Bard would utterly reject.
" The awful enjoyment of the society of Ked could not be " maintained. A of direct of unmixed
song " has been offered to thee."*
course,
praise,
* There is another poem of Cuhelyn, which details some curious particulars of Bardic lore. It is introduced in the fourth section of this Essav.
9
The songs of Ceridwcn of the chaunters of Caw, and of the society of Ked, as I shall make appear, are precisely the mystical strains ascribed to Taliesin, and the lore of the
British Druids.
And
the Bard,
imitating this kind of poetry, in his address to the Creator, furnishes an undeniable evidence, that such composition
was known
his
in his time
;
that
it
was
in
countrymen
unsuitable to the
Thus we
those
din.
Welsh
Princes.
The works of
several Bards,
who
flourished in
Wales
during the interval, from the beginning of the twelfth, to the close of the fourteenth century, have been well preserved. They are now printed in the first volume of the
Welsh Archaiology.
So
far
was Druidism from being either forgotten or one of the most curious subwhich present themselves upon the
perusal of these works, is the constant allusion to certain ancient and genuine remains of the Druids, which had descended to the times of the respective authors. The principals
They
assert their
own
pretensions to the honour of the Druidical character, upon the plea of an accurate institution into the mysteries, and discipline, of those ancient sages; or upon a, direct
10
descent from their venerated blood.
The
MEILYR, a distinguished Bard, who flourished between the years 1120 and 1 160, composed an elegy upon the death of two princes of his country, the first line of which runs
thus.
myself to
my
sovereign, the
King of the
Air."
This
is
first line
of the Chair
O Sovereign of the of Ceridzven Rheen rym Awyr-\ " power of the Air." This piece, therefore, which is one of the principal of Taliesin's mystical poems, was known to
Meilyr the Bard.
the son of Meilyr, wrote between the years
"
GWALCHMAI,
1150 and 1190.
Gorwyn
W.
Archaiol. p. 192.
Ibid. p. 66.
J Ibid. p. 193.
11
**
tree,
supporting blossoms,
declares
"
Och Duw na
Dydd
rhy vel
Would to God the day of doom were arrived, since " Druids are come, attending the outcry The gleaming " spears of war have eradicated Powys"
report of the fall of his Prince ; it might be only a false rumour, till the news was brought by Druids. Here, then, we find the existence of Druids, in the middle of the twelfth century, posi-
but he hoped
tively asserted.
CYNDDELW,
the same fact.
contemporary, has
many remarkable
In
his
Gwynedd, we
panegyric upon the celebrated Prince, Owen find the Bardic and the Druidical character
thus united, and our author himself placed at the head of the order.
am
ragor :
* W.'ArchBiol. p 202,
12
Ath
volant Veirddion,
Derwyddon Dor
o bedeir 6r.
O bedeiriaith dyvyn,
"
first
In his elegy upon the death of the same Prince, Cynddehv mentions a prophecy of Gwron, whom the Triad* represent as one of the first founders of Druidism.
" Of
41
the golden protector, the most courteous Prince of Mona, no vain prophecy did Gwron deliver."
The same Cynddelw maintained a poetic contest for the Bardic chair of Madawc, Prince of Powys, against another Bard, named Seisyll, who asserts his claim to the honour,
in virtue of his direct descent from the primitive Bards, or Druids of Britain, a distinction which his adversary
Mi
O iawnllin o iawnllwyth Culvardd A h^n Cynddelw vawr, cawr cyrdd, O hon ni henyw beirdd.*
*
Archaiol. p. 210,
13
*'
"
right to be master of song being in a direct line, of the true tribe, a Bard of the inclosure ; but CynIt is
my
"
Bards."
to
was acknowledged be distinguished by the discipline, the education, and the spirit of a primitive Bard.
Notwithstanding
this,
we
find,
by a poem addressed
to
the same Prince, that he was ready to allow -the superior dignity of the Druidical line and he speaks of this illus:
trious order as
still
in being.
Duw
a dewinion
byd,
"
*f
These
billozvi, as it will
The
Madawc, assimilates the character of this Prince to that; of Menw, or Menyw, recorded in the Triads as one of the first instructors and legislators of the Cymry. Here we
f W,
Aretaiol. p. 21ft
14
have
also a discrimination of
Agored
Eithyd
ei lys
i
cerddorion
esborthion.
byd
esbyd
Gorwyddon tuthvawr
tu hir gleision.*
" His hall was open for the benefit of the singers of the " land for his guests he made provision. Whilst Memo " the memorials of Bards were in whilst he
:
lived,
"
lived,
it
was his
fleet coursers,
In a poem addressed to Owen Cyveiliawg, Prince of Powys, who was himself a distinguished Bard, Cynddelw makes repeated mention of the Druids, and their cerdd
that
is,
the mystical
The
csgar,
Cyd
" "
"
It is
voliant
gwr gormant
gorineisiad.
/
commanded by Druids of
let
flowing robes
W.
Archaiol. p. 220.
15
ment and corresponding sound, the harmonious
the hero,
praise of
who
In the next page, we find the Bard imitating the of Taliesin, and repre-
senting his hero as having made no contemptible progress in the circle of transmigration.
Mynw
Mwyn Ovydd
Yn
rhith rhyn
veirdd
vaith goelvain
cein.
ran
ysgwyd
Yn rhith Hew rhag llyw goradain Yn rhith llavyn anwar llachar llain Yn rhith cleddyv claer clod ysgain yn Yn aroloedd cyngrain Yn rhith draig rhag dragon Prydain Yn rhith blaidd blaengar vu Ywain.
; ; ; j
aer
" This
" wark, round the meadhorns of the rulers of Mechain, as " a gentle ovate to the bards of the ample lot, imparts the
ft
"
" In the form of a vibrating shield, before the tumult, borne aloft on the shoulder of the leader
lion, before the chief
rising
in the
" form of a
*'
with the mighty wings in the form of a terrible spear, with a glittering
in the
" blade
ff
tlje
conflict,
form of a bright sword, spreading fame in in and overwhelming the levelled ranks
16
"
the form of a dragon, before the sovereign of Britain " and in the form of a daring wolf, has Owen appeared."
After a few more sentences, the Bard presents us with curious glimpse of the mystic dance of the Druids.
" Rapidly moving, in the course of the sky, in, circles, " in uneven numbers, Druids and Bards unite, in cele" the leader."
brating
The passages already cited, abundantly prove, not only that there were avowed professors of Druidism in North Wales and Powys, during the twelfth century, and that
they regarded the same mystical lore, which is ascribed to Taliesin, as the standard of their system; but also, that
their profession
was
tolerated,
That the case was nearly the same in South Wales, appears from several passages ; and particularly, from a conciliatory address to
Rhys, the Prince of that country; in which Cynddelw makes a general intercession for the cause, the mysteries, and the worship of the primitive Bards. He
a,
even introduces the sacred cauldron, which makes cipal figure in the mystical strains of Taliesin.
prin-
17
v,
riv,
O thou, consolidator of the comely tribe! since I am " returned home into thy dominion, to celebrate thee under " heaven O thou, with the golden, protecting spear, hear " let us taste the cauldron Bardic In
" of Prydain. Tranquillity round the sanctuary of the " uneven It (the number, with sovereign power extend " Bardic sanctuary) loves not vehement loquacity; it is no " cherisher of useless sloth; it opposes no precious, con" cealed mysteries (Christianity): disgrace alone is ex" eluded from Bardic It is the guardian bulwark worship. " of the breaker of shields. It is wise and zealous for " the defence of the and for decent manners a
'
"
my
petition!
peace,
country,
" foe to
in battle."
In the elegy on the death of Rhiryd, as well as in the passage just cited, Cynddelw seems disposed to reconcile
the mystical fables and heathen rites of Druidism, with the invoprofession of Christianity ; for, immediately after an
cation of the Trinity, he proceeds thus.
Mor wyv hygleu vardd o veird Ogyrven Mor wyv gwyn gyvrwyv nidwyv gyvyrwen
!
18
Mor Mor
"
oecld gyvrin fyrdd eisiau eu
How strictly conformable a Bard am I, with the Bards " of the but no immystic Goddess! How just a director, " the songs of peder How mysterious were the ways of
!
to understand
them
in their
songs, which deduce their-origin from the cauldron of Ceridwen, and which the Bard regards as the standard of his
own
them
fanatical system.
He
professes
to
have understood
works of
Taliesin,
is
and that they were the genuine declared in the same poem.
O
"
fc
From
be
mouth of Taliesin
;
is
the
"
my
direction,
set at large."
Ovum Anguinum
is
sufficiently
known
but
it
may
Cynddclw, that the angues, or serpents, which produced these eggs, were the Druids themselves.
Tysiliaw tenvyn gywrysed Parth a'm nawdd adrawdd adrysedd
Peris ]Ser 6r m'ver nadredd,
Prat'
W.
Arcliaiol. p. "30.
Ibid. p. i>43.
19
tc
*'
ardent in controversy, respecting^ my sane-* Ner (the God of the ocean) tuary, declares too much. out oj the number of vipers, one huge produced, vipert
Tysilio,
excess
of windings.
of Brochwel, Prince of Powys, in
It is probable,
the,
which
is
now
lost.
from
an explanation and exposure of Druidical mythology, constituted part of his subject; and that the story of the huge serpent, was one of the fables which he ascribed to them.
These specimens may suffice to ascertain Cynddelw's opinion of the Druids, and their mystical lore. It is clear, this great Bard was, in profession, half a Pagan, and so he
was regarded.
sent
him
him
tality
when dead.*
LLYWARCH
ab Llywelyn, was another cathedral Bard, the years 1160 and 1220. He thus
office,
Vy nhavawd yn
vrawd ar Vrython
vor
Mi
i'm deddv
My tongue
W.
Archaiol. p. 263.
t Ibid. p. 283.
c a
20
w the British channel to the Irish sea. By my institute, I " am an enemy to contention of the order of the primi"
tive
my
early companions."
He
power and
efficacy
of the
mystical
cauldron.
Awen
ber
God, the Ruler, gives me a ray of melodious song, it were from the cauldron of Ceridwen"
as
again, in his address to Llywelyn, the son of lorwerth, he acknowledges Taliesin as the publisher of the
And
mystical train.
Yn Yn
"
dull Taliesin
yn dillwng Elphin,
dyllest
"
'
in
the
manner of
Taliesin,
when
vatici-r
known
in his time.
W.
Archaiol. p. 290.
Translation.
+ Mr. Turner's
Dywawd Derwyddon
dadeni haelon,
O
c<
hil
eryron o Eryri.
" "
Cymry nation, out of the oppressed. Druids have declared, that liberal ones should be born anew, from the
the
progeny of
the eagles
of Snowdon."
i
the testimony of this venerable Bard, as to the genuineness of those mystical poems, which bore the name
is
Such
lore of the
ELIDYR SAIS, the contemporary of Llywarch, deduces the melody of his lines from the mystic cauldron, which had been the source of inspiration to Merddin, as well as to
Merddia
Llethrid
a.
" Flowing is my bardic lay, after the model of Merd" din: a smoothness produced from the cauldron of the " Awen.
years 1200 and 1250. This author, alluding to a dispute^ in which he had been engaged with certain pretended
W.
Atchaiol. p. 250,
Bards, or mere poets, in the court of Rhys, Prince of South Wales, thus expresses his sentiments.
Veirdd ;
:
Ac nid i'r goveirdd yd gy verchid Ac am y gadair honno heddiw bei heiddid Bod se ynt herwydd gvvir a braint yd ymbrovid
Byddynt Derwyddon pruddion Prydain ; Nis gwaew yn adain nid attygid.*
" The
Maelgwn was
was
"
and not
if,
to poetasters
it
"
chair, they would be proved, by truth and privilege, to " be what they really are: the grate Druids of Britain " would be there; nor could these attain the honour, though " their wing should ach with fluttering."
The
chair of
Maelgwn,
and
it
mystical Taliesin;
the
known, was filled by the Bard declares, that grave was to determine the merit of
is
poem, he
ridicules
asserts
still in In the same being. the dignity of the Druidical order, and
some popular
means
of subsistence.
Ar y
lien
valchwen ni vylchid
y braint
Yd
Rhwng y
A'r
fynawn,
Nid oedd
ar irgrawn
Yd
*
ymborthid.
W.
Archaiol. p. 377.
23
" Of the proud white garment "
(the Druidical robe)
which
separated the elders from the youth, the privilege might " not be Between the fruit-bearing tree, and infringed.
" the
"
three
primary fountains,
they subsisted."
it
ries that
tree was the same as the arbor fruof Tacitus, and Merddin's Avalltn Beren the gifera means of divining by lots, as will be seen hereafter. The
The fruit-bearing
theme of
Taliesin,
in
poem which
treats of the
The
Bard, therefore, implies, that religious mystery, and the profession of physiology, were sources from which the
HYWEL VOEL
ode, addressed to
In an
Owen, the son of Gruffudd, he compare* his hero to Gwron, one of the three founders of Druidism,
and acknowledges him as protector of the
nity of Sards.
city,
or
commu~
Gwraidd
Dinam
"
"
"
sprung
tokens (the mystical sprigs or lots) liberal, of the race of eagles, undoubted
W.
Archaittl, p. 393,
24
We
shall find, that eagles
MADAWG DWYGRAIG
Welsh government was
his patron,
lived
at
the period
when
the
finally
He
Gruffudd ab Madawg.
y gwys gwaisg ddygnedd, Hyw, llin teyrnedd Balch y beirdd, bobl heirdd harddedd HU ysgwr Bryn, hynavwalch gwr brenhineidd wedd.
llys
Yn
nhair
Nad byw
llun teyrnaidd
Yn Yn
nhrevgoed
i'n
rhoed anrhydedd
Digeirdd
Ystrad.*
Ym,
ac virein veirdd
am
overedd,
halls is felt the oppression of anguish, that he the chief of princely form, of the royal and *' proud line of the Bards, a dignified race, the ornament " of Hu, darting on the mount, most ancient of heroes.,
" In three
lives not,
"
" of kingly presence. In the dwelling of the wood (the " sacred honour was awarded to us: whilst uninstigrove)
" "
tuted,
though elegant
Bards,
were
pursuing
vanity
swifter than the sudden gale, that skims over the sloping
shore."
It will
were devoted
be seen hereafter that Hu, to whom the Bards in their hallowed wood, was the great damon
British Druids.
god of the
to the age of
Edward the
First>
Archaiol. p, 481.
the reputed assassinator of the Bards, the tale of whose cruelty has been immortalized by the pen of Grey.
But
King;
record,
here,
for
fame has certainly calumniated the English there is not the name of a single Bard upon
suffered, either
who
His
real
act
by his hand, or by his orders. was the removal of that patronage, under
which the Bards had hitherto cherished the heathenish superstition of their ancestors, to the disgrace of our native
Princes.
threefold addition to such extracts as the preceding, might easily be made from the writers of this period; but,
trust, what is here produced, will be deemed an ample foundation for the following inferences
1. That the ancient superstition of Druidism, or, at least, some part of it, was considered as having been preserved in Wales without interruption, and cherished by the Bards, to
the very
2.
last
period of the
Welsh
Princes.
superstitition, that,
far from discouraging this on the contrary, they honoured its pro-
S.
especially those
filled
who enjoyed the rank of Bardd Cadair, or the chair of presidency, avowed themselves true disciples of the ancient Druids.
4. That they professed to have derived their knowledge of Druidical lore, from the works of certain ancient and
primitive Bards,
which constituted
their
principal study,
5. That amongst'these masters, they mention, with eminent respect, the names of Taliesin and Merddin; and
That they describe the matter contained in poems, as precisely the same which we still
6.
their sacred
find in
the
mystical pieces, preserved under the names of Taliesin and Merddin ; so that there can be no doubt as to the identity
of those pieces.
That upon the subject of genuine British tradition, they specifically refer to no writers which are now extant, as of higher authority than Taliesin and Merddin.
And,
7-
therefore
cenclude,
that the
Bards, here specified, however their value, as composition, may be appreciated, are to be ranked amongst the most
authentic documents which the
Subject of British Druidism.
Welsh
possess,
upon the
will
enable us to bring forward some other ancient documents, which have been drawn up in a concise and singular form,
for the purpose of assisting the
,
memory; which
are evi-
The documents
strictly
lately
much
af-
of the Triads, appear, upon a superficial view, to be either absurd or trifling ; and it may be inferred, from one or two
others, that the
relinquished this
mode of
composition,
It
is
MSS. which
ho higher than
But
tile
some modern
critics in
;
the assertion, that the Triads are altogether futhat they are modern ; that there is no proof of their
containing genuine Welsh tradition ; and that they were never collected in writing before the date of those MSS.
Hardy
assertion
find
many
comes
to his conclusion.
28
I
know of no
more
tions
prevalent, or
to higher anr
make
ternary arrangements
one thing under three distinct heads, or to bring three distinct objects under one point of view*
This feature presents
litical
schemes.
The
and these were united in one body, by the proper Concilium totius Gallice, in which we find that the members
of each confederacy had equally their seat.*
Again
we
the Druida, the Equites, and the Plebes ; and that the priesthood was subdivided into Druids, Bards,
into three ranks
and Ovates,
The
Britons,
in like
Lloeger, Cymru ag Alban : and when they were shut up in Wales, that district, without regard to the actual number
of their reigning Princes, constituted three regions, called Gwynedd, Pywys a Deheubarth; and each of these was
distributed into
Trevs.
a ^number
of Cantrevs,
Cwmmteds, and
ternary classification pervaded the have already shewn from ancient authoDruidical school, I rity; which presents us with the only maxims of the.
this
That
humour of
Welsh
Triads.
I.
c.
30.
L. VI.
c.
29
The
ancient
Welsh
laws,
Dda
with a long book of Triads, and these are called Trioedd Forenses* by way of distinction from the Cyvraith, Triades
Will
it
be
had
and was afterwards renewed by the Welsh of the tenth century ? Or, if a dashing critic were
to
how
is
he to support
it?
a genuine composition of the sixth century. But so fond were the Britons of the ternary arrangement, in the
days of Aneurin, that in one single page of that work, he distinctly recites the titles of ten Triads, and that merely
in the description of an army.
contemporary of this Bard, is full of allusion to Triads, which had existed from remote antiquity, and which he cites with respect, by way of authority.
Taliesin, the
For example.
1.
Tair fynawn
2.
3.
W. Archaiol.
p. 35.
p. 20,
4. Tri
5. Tri lloneid
Prydwen,
p. 48.
p. 45.
6. Tri
wyr nod,
7. Tair
so
9. Tair llyngcs
yn aches.
10. Tri
11.
12.
13. Tri
14. Tri
chyvarwydd,
p. 65,
&c. &c.
and
That Triads were perfectly familiar to the age of Aneurin Taliesin, is a fact which needs no farther proof: and I
to surmise,
know of no reason
committed
that they
Some of
Bards, are
by the
oldest
preserved not possess a complete collection * of these scraps of antiquity. The respectable antiquary, Thomas Jones, of Tre-<
We do
garon, informs us, that in the year 1 601, he could recover only 126 out of THE TIIREEHUNDRED, a definite number of
As
respect,
fairly
by the most ancient Bards now extant, we may infer, that the matter contained in them was analo-
gous to the doctrine of those Bards, and that it is the genuine remains of more ancient Bards, who had professed
the same religion. I shall make it appear, in the course of the Essay, that such was the real state of the affair.
* The term Collection has offended some minute critics. They ask for the of Triads, and the name of the author. They might as well ask for the Book of adages, and the name of the author. Every Triad is a whole in itBiiofc
self;
as
many
W.
p.
75.
31
the catalogue of Triads, I shall therefore only strike out about half a dozen, which refer to more recent
facts in history, or else betray a tincture of the cloister;
Out of
when occasion
requires,
and Merddin, as genuine repositories of British tradition and to these I shall add some mythological tales, which appear, from internal
in conjunction with Taliesin, Aneurin,
:
From the general persuasion of the Welsh, and the known state of literature in the country, I had formed an
opinion, that no documents, materially differing from those already mentioned, could have an equal cjaim to authenticity, as
Cambro-British tradition
Other records, however, in some respects irreconcileablc with "the former, have been pointed out of late years by
Mr.
and Mr.
poems.
Mr. Owen's
edition of Llywarch
Hen
appeared in the
year 1792.
introduction contains a long account of Bardism, drawn up by the assistance of Mr. Williams, and
his
The
from
communications.
This account
states,
that the
British constitution of Bardism, or Druidism, having continued in Wales, without interruption, to the dissolution
of the Cambro-British government, was, in consequence of that event, in danger of becoming extinct. But that
within twenty years after the death of the last Llewelyn, certain members of the order established a chair, a kind of
Bardic
college, in
this day.
Glamorganshire, which has continued to catalogue is given of the presidents and mem-
first
1300,
down
Mr.
Ed. Williams.
that certain
members,
in the sixteenth
and
traditions
seventeenth century ; and that they are received as the fundamental rules of the society.*
From the passages to which I refer, it appears, that Mr. Owen derives his information from Mr. Williams and the
;
latter
from the
Glamorgan, as
acts, traditions, and usages of the Chair of contained in their ratified documents of the
seventeenth century.
It
may
fairly
See Mr. Owen's Introd. to LI. Hen. pp. 60, 61, 62.
II.
p. 94.
See also Mr. Turner's Vindication, p. 226, and a circumstantial note, communicated by Mr. Owen, p. 227, &c.
33
deprivation of the
Welsh
;
and which has continued, without hundred years, must contain many curelative to this ancient
national order of
and
But a
if
not of absolute forgery ; and, consequently, suggest the necessity of great caution in admitting its traditions.
1. Trahaearn Brydydd Mawr is recorded as having presided in the year 1300;* and several of his successors, between that date and 1370, are also mentioned. But the
learned antiquary, Ed. Llwyd, gives the area of the same Trahaearn, An. 1380 ;f and this from the Red Book of Her~
gest, a
MS.
tury,
when
known.
He
the age of our Bard must have been accurately could not, therefore, have presided in the year
G.
But
in whatever
manner
cord a schism r which dissolved the union of the order, and occasioned the chair of Glamorgan to separate from that of
Carmarthen, in the middle 'of the fifteenth century. J It would therefore become a question, which party preserved
Owen's Introd.
Brit.
p. 62.
t Archzcol.
p. 264.
34
the genuine usages of their predecessors; for in such dissentions, the right cause is always pleaded by both sides.
3.
The
celebrity
will
cause.
and respectable support of the chair of go but a little way in the assertion of its
its
Welsh
nation, far
from receiving its acts as the genuine tradition of the country, had scarcely any knowledge or tradition of the existence of such a society. The few rustics by whom the members were noticed in their fanatical meetings, generally
supposed them to be
tvhat.*
infidels,
conjurors,
and
zve
know not
from their own profession, nor from the research of Llwyd, and other antiquaries, that this
4. It does not appear,
not begun writing and digesting their own laws and institutes, till more than two centuries and a half after the pretended aera of their establishment.
The
the }*ear 1560, and repeatedly altered, from that time to the year 1681, together with the avowed obscurity of the society in preceding times,
all
may
their reach,
;
however
for these
of primitive Hards,
And
stance where
we
should, least of
all,
it.
II. p. 161.
35
Trahaearn
or the
first
brought forward as the founder of the chair, president ; and yet the members have neither
is
document nor certain tradition, by which they can identify the genuine composition qf this father of the society. He
only supposed to be the same person, z&ho distinguished himself under the assumed name of Casnodyn.*
is
5.
But most of
all,
Mr. Owen
itself,
ad-
society.
" In
" departed from, their original traditions, only according " to the evidence that might be acquired, from time to time, " in their search after truth."
Bards adhered
to,
or
And
again
" depend upon the promulgation of certain articles of " but upon its separate principles of social compact."
This
x
surely a very compliant system, tql/aEy different from the idea which I had formed of the primitive Bards or -^c___; ^_^^ Druids, as sticklers for invetefa*^Q|>inion9J and superstitious rites. must not ask the chair'oFSsrlamorgan,
is
>
We
what were the opinions of ike Bards a tb^yisad~years ago ; but what opinions do they choose toi^fopt at present?
pretended search offer truth leads men into the inextrimazes of new philosophy and new politics, as well as of nejv religions, just as they are conducted by the various
* Owen's Cam. Biog. V. Trahaearn.
t Introd. to Ll.
"cable
Hen.
p. 28.
D 2
by
their
own
and
if
a society
avowedly departs from its original principles, to pursue one new path, I see no reason why it should be incapable of
doing the same, to follow another.
It may be wise for men to despise exploded errors, and addict themselves to a candid search after truth ; but if, at
tend to be the
the same time that they take this salutary course, they presole and infallible repositories of ancient tra-
and ancient
usages, they
may
surely
have now
stated, I
must take
the liberty to search after facts, rather than adopt, with implicit confidence, the dogmas of this newly-discovered
society.
sole surviving
Mr. Williams, whether lie styles himself president, or member, values himself highly upon his Whatever he superior collection of Welsh manuscripts.
has, that can bear the light, I should be glad to see it produced to the Public ; and I would cheerfully contribute
mite to facilitate its appearance. But he has no copy of a single British writer, more ancient, or better accredited, than those which I adduce in the course of my in-
my
quiry, and
which the
certainly misrepresented.
I therefore appeal,
known
for ages to
exist
to every
man who
under-
and which, as I have already shewn, have been regarded as authentically derived from the Drustands the language
idical school.
credit
In order to ascertain, as nearly as I can, that degree of which is due to the ancient Bards, it is part of my
to the candour of my proceeding, if, occasionally, I bring the dogmas of his society to the same impartial test. The result I shall submit, without hesitation, to the judgment of the reader.
\
In the first place, then, it is well known, that amongst the subjects in which the Druids were conversant, the profession of magic made a prominent figure. Dr. Borlase
has a whole chapter, well supported with authorities ""Of " their divinations, charms, and incantations;" and another
"
" Of the great resemblance betwixt the Druid and Persian * of the calls the the
superstition."
Pliny
Druids,
Magi
Gauls and Britons 'f and of our island he says/expressly " Britannia hodie earn tantis attonite
:
(sc.
Magiam)
eetebrat,.
"
Such
Bards, as
reached
tification for
magical
lots.
regarded as a sufficient jushaving denominated the lots of the Druids But this, it seems, has given umbrage to the
my
ear, I
Why
Druids? In the many " thousands of ancient still extant, there is not a poems " syllable that mentions, or even alludes to any such thing."
^pute magic
Antiq. of Cornwall,,
* L. 29. c. 1.
B.
38
This assertion, coming from a man who has, for many in the mysteries of Bardism tcko posyears, been an adept
sesses
the principality
and has read more Welsh MSS.' than any other man in and has made the works of the Bards his ;
particular study for more than Jiffy years, seems to bear hard, not only upon the propriety of my expression, but
of the twelfth and thirteenth century, ascribe to Taliesin ; and in vain shall he acknowledge the Druidical character.
But the precipitate use which this writer occasionally makes of his extensive information, emboldens me to examine his accuracy in the present instance.
I find
it is
a settled
maxim with
that the British Bards were no conjurors. In a note upon hrs Poems,* which were published in the year 1794, the President having stated, upon the authority of Edmund
Prys, that Meugant lived about the close of the fourth century, and was preceptor to the celebrated Merlin, subjoins the following information, as from himself:
t
still
"as of
"
clearly perceive that they were neither prophets nor con" jurors, though said to have been such, by some who were
"
certainly no great conjurors themselves they were honest " Welsh who recorded, in verse, the occurrences Bards, " of their own with
:
times, never
troubling themselves
"
futurity."
* V. II. p. 5.
39
of Meugant and Merlin (or Merddin), it may be observed, that there are no remains of the former, but an elegy upon the death of Cynddylan, a Prince of
to the aeras
As
Powys,
and another
little
piece,
which
mentions Cadvan,
died about the year 630.* The only or Merddin, of whom any thing is extant, was Merlin,
who
at the
Arderydd, near the dose of the sixth century, and survived that event by many years.
And how
themselves
to
have troubled
with futurity? The first of Meugant's poems " The opens in the high prophetic style Dydd dyvydd day will come;'' and speaks of the Druids as true prophets.
any ma-
finations.
So much
if
And,
the recollection of the President deserted him, upon a subject so notorious, may we not surmise the possibility of
a few passages, which contain some allusion to magic, having escaped his memory.
I adduce proofs of the fact here suggested, I must that I do not understand the term magic, when premise, applied to the Druids and their disciples, as restricted to
Before
the profession of necromancy, or conjuring ; but as including the practice of mysterious rites, under pretence of producing extraordinary effects, from natural causes. Such, I
W.
p
ArchaioK
p. 259, 260.
apprehend, was the magic of Britain, which Pliny contem-c plated *vith astonishment. If, therefore, it be true, that
the ancient British Bards neither mentioned nor alluded to
rites, in this
magical
or
any other
sense, it
is
an unansweiv
able objection to the authenticity of their pretensions, as But this is by no means the preservers of Druidicai Iqre.
case.
In the passages which I have extracted, from the Bards of the middle centuries, we have had frequent mention of
the mystical cauldron, which was viewed as the source of
inspiration.
Taliesin acknowledges the same cauldron as the fountain of his genius; a-.jd, in a mythological tale, describing the initiation of that Bard, we find the Goddess Ceridwen pre-
paring the water of this sacred vase, which contained a decoction of potent herbs, collected with due observation, of the planetary hours. So efficacious was this medicated
water, that no sooner had three drops of it touched the lips of the Bard, than all futurity was displayed to his view.*
As
I shall
this cu-
rious tale, I shall not enlarge upon it at present, or upon Taliesin's account of the various ingredients of the caul-
dron, in the
reader's
poem
I only
submit to the
judgment, that
magic, as understood
W.
Archaiol. p. IT.
principles, have, in ail ages, been referred to inspiration, or asserted " derived from heaven, under the denomination of Awen."
to
bo
$5f
Introd. to LI.
Hen,
p.
41
by the
ancients.
But
lest this
should not
come up
to the
idea which has been conceived of the mysterious art, I must endeavour to produce allusions to something that looks
more
like conjuring,
is
a remarkable song
atreis tros
vordwy.
Py
bren a vo
arn
Nid vu
mwy noc
mwy, gwawr gwyr Goronwy, gwypwy; hudlath Vathonwy, Ynghoed pan dyvwy frwythau mwy Cymrwy Ar Ian Gwyllionwy Kynan a'i cafwy
Odid
a'i
:
May
the heavenly
!
flowing
The
first
God
" sea beach. A greater tree than he, Taronwy, there has " not to afford us a sanctuary, round the proud celesbeen,
tial circle.
a greater secret, the dawn of the men of Goronwy, though known to few the magic wand of Ma^ " thonwy, which grows in the wood, with more exuberant
is
" There
"
'*
fruit,
*'
on the bank of
it
the river
of
spectres
Kynan
shall
obtain
at the time
when he
governs.'*
W. ArcbaioL
p,
42
This wand surely carries some allusion to the profession of magic, an art which is openly avowed in the Incantation
of Cynvelyn.*
But
puted,
lest
the accuracy of
my
translation should
be dis-
shall exhibit
poem,
in
" Were
compose the
strain
were I to sing
magic
"
spells
would spring,
like those
produced by the
circle
and
"
"
sprites
the guar-
dian
spell
Jwhom
blessings flow."
spell
of Cynvelyn
" dodin
shall it
Such are the poems, in which it has been asserted, " there is not a syllable that mentions magic, or even alludes " to any such thing." And such is the candid translation, with which our ingenious lexicographer gratified the curious,
before he published his Llyvarch Hen, and announced the principles of the cHair of Gla-
morgan.
*
W.
Arcbaiol. p. 158.
43
Thus
Bards
is
it
appears, that the Druidical profession of the not discredited by an abhorrence of magic, an art
which antiquity positively ascribes to their predecessors, both in Gaul and Britain. Let the recent code make good
its
own
assertions.
by the testimony of Pliny, who that they exhibited the Fervain in the exercise of that says,
superstitious rite.
It
may
tallies,
or sprigs, cut from a fruit-bearing tree, which Tacitus ascribes to the Germans, was probably common to them with
we
still
same sub-
In
my
late
me
;
the
and
connected the
letters,
which are
called Coel-
breni, Omensticks,
Lots, or Tallies,
thought, was innocent at least ; but it produced from Mr. Williams a severe philippic, together with
I
My opinion,
an exposition of some curious mythology, upon the origin of letters and language, which is not to be found in any
ancient British writer.
best friends
:
but
shall
This was put into the hands of my not take farther notice of manuI
when
I see it in print,
now go on
With what success tlie philosophers. avowed preceptors, cultivated the study of nature, and what system of physiology they taught to their disciples, may be matter of curious inquiry, which I must But as to the fact, that they addicted leave to others.
Bards, as natural
Druids, their
* " Ea divinationum
quidem gen-
est
ipse Divitiacum
:
Aeduum, hospitera
nature rationem,
esse
qui et
quam
physiologiam
appellant, notam
sibi
pro-
Upon
this
passage
speak from vague report he declares the profession of a man who was personally known to him, who had been, his
guest,
and with
whom
He
Aeduus
It
must be
recollected,
that this
* " This methnd of divination has not been neglected even amongst barbaFor there are Druids in Gaul, with one of whom I was acrous nations. " of yous quainted, namely, Divitiacus Aeduus, who enjoyed the hospitality ' house, and spoke of you with admiration. This man not only professed an " intimate knowledge of the system of nature, which the Greeks call fhytiebgyt " but also foretold future eveiits, partly by augury, and partly by conjecture."
"
Cic,
de PivinaUone, L.
I,.
45
and that he enjoyed the confidence of that great man, at the very time he drew up his valuable account of the Druids.
It
is
this
for
the senate of
embassy to and the acknowledgment of the preRome, eminent rank of his countrymen, the Aedui. From hence
I would infer, that Caesar had procured the most accurate information upon the subject of the Druids, and consequently, that every circumstance in his memorial has a claim
This competent historian, therefore, having stated the tradition, that the discipline of these ancient priests had
and the fact, that at the time when he wrote, those who wished to be more accurately instructed in the Druid lore, generally went into
been
first
established in Britain
We
Druids aspired to the character of natural philosophers : and it would be reasonable to demand of the Bards, their
professed disciples,
The poems
may
of Taliesin furnish several passages, which be classed under this head. Of these, the following
cosmography
may be
They
struct the
youth
and
in-
t De
Bell. Gall. L.
VI,
c. 14.
46
Os ywch briv veirddion Cyrwyv celvyddon,
Traethwch orchuddion
Or
T
Mundi maon
pryv atgas,
Ymae
Nys gorvydd angau Haw na llavnau. Mae llwyth naw can maen Yn rhawn dwy bawen
:
Un
Hygad yn
ei
ben
Gwyrdd
Yn
ei
Mor
Bu
A noviant tnvyddaw
laith
bualawn
Henwau'r
tair
fynawn
Un
edryd
lliant
Yr
ail
yn ddinam
A ddygwydd arnam
47
Pan.vo'r glaw. allan
Drwy awyr
ddylan.
Y drydedd a ddawedd
Trwy wythi mynyddedd
Val
callestig
wledd
If ye are primitive Bards, According to the discipline of qualified instructors, Relate the great secrets
Of
we
inhabit.
There
is
a formidable animal,
" From the ci_ty_of Satan, " Which has made an inroad
" Between the deep and the -" His mouth is as wide " As the mountain of
shallows.
" Neither death can vanquish him, " Nor hand, nor swords. " There is a load of nine hundred rocks *' Between his two paws
:
Mynnau
" There is one eye in his head, " Vivid as the blue ice. " Three fountains there " In his
receptacles
;
are,
" So thick about him, " And flowing through him/ " Have been the moistening horns " Of Deivr Donwy, the giver of waters.
W. Archaiol,
p. 90.
4S
" The names of
**
From
the middle
of the deep.
salt
" One
is
the increase of
water,
" When it mounts aloft, " Over the fluctuating seas, " To the streams.
replenish
is
"
" The third is ttiat which springs " Through the veins of the mountains, " As a banquet from the flinty rock,
" Furnished by the King of Kings,"
the Bard has introduced the foreign terms, Satanas, Mundi, and Rex, yet it is evident, that he intends
Though
the doctrine contained in this passage, as a select piece of Druidical lore : hence he proposes the question, as a touchstone, to prove the qualifications of those
who
professed
The
evil principle.
the British
touched upon in another passage, name of this evil principle was Gtearthawn.
Yssid
teir
fynawn
:
Ym mynydd Fuawn
deep."
had
it
might have compared another passage with the above, not been for the want of curiosity in the transcribers
of our old manuscripts. Mr. Morris has consigned great " it contained part of an ancient poem to oblivion, because
and springs."
The absurd and monstrous idea of the formation of the world, which we have been now considering, is certainly
from the very lowest school of heathenism. It is utterly irfcconcilable with Mr. Williams's new British Mythology,
and with
his story of
Enigat
the
much
The
reader
may
twnes Druidica, as proposed by the same Taliesin. The Bard has not, indeed, added the solutions of his problems,
but they may serve to point out the subjects of his study, and his ambition to be esteemed a general physiologist.
W.
Archaiol. p. 3*.
t Ibid. p. 47.
50
Py
dadvvrith
Pyd
"
echenis
mwg mwg
What is it which decomposes smoke " And from what element does smoke arise I"
;
What fountain is that, which " Over the covert of darkness, " When the reed is
white,
bursts forth,
is
illuminated
'*
Knowest thou what thou art, " In the hour of sleep " A mere body a mere soul " Or a secret retreat of r"
light
Eilewydd celvydd,
Py'r na'm dyweid
?
dydd
A wyddosti arwydd
Pet deilen y sydd
?
51
Py
gynneil
magwyr
Pwy
"
"
gwelas ev
Pwy gwyr ?
" Before the convulsion of elements " Or what supports the fabric " Of the habitable earth ?
" "
" Knowest thou where the night awaits " For the passing of the day ? " Knowest thou the token (mark or character) " Of leaf which grows ? every " What is it which heaves up the mountain
?
Who is the illuminator of the soul Who has seen- -who know? him!"
upon the
teachers
The
of another system.
hadnau
;
:
haelodau
;
"
"
*r
What
" Of what form are its members " In what part, and when, it takes up " By what wind, or what stream it is
2
its
abode;
supplied."
beginning in the Celtic Researches, we have several questions of the same kind proposed ; as,
" At what time, and to what extent, will land be pro" ductive r" " What is the extent and diameter of the " earth?" Who is the Regulator, between heaven and " earth ?" " What forth the clear
" from
gem (glain) brings the working of stones ?" " Where do the cuckoos, " which visit us in the summer, retire during the winter ?"
" From the deep
"
specified
I
I
let
a river be
know
qualities
when,
it
ebbs or flows,
"
swells or subsides."
"
know what
their
" mark
Osgor.
counterparts,
each in
its
sloping
plane"
"
"
Who
what
j
carried the measuring line of the Lord of causes' scale was used, when the heavens were reared
"
aloft
"
the skies
and a multitude of similar questions, Taliesin In his professes, that he could teach the true solution. own opinion, therefore, he was as great a physiologist as
these,
Of
Divitiacus Aeduus, or
grove.
Amongst
astronomy and geography ; but the remaining works of the Bards scarcely afford us an opportunity of judging, as to
their proficiency in these sciences.
The great song If the poem called Canu y byd mawr, " of the world," contains any thing of Druidism, we must acknowledge at least, that it is mixed with a large proportion of foreign matter.
"
The
be
subject is man and the universe. seated in the head of man, who is
The
soul
is
said to
composed of seven
Water, Air, Vapour, Blossom (the and the zcind of purposes (q. whether fructifying principle), the soul or the passions?) He is endowed with seven senses,
appetite
Hence, perhaps, the vulgar phrase, of being frightened out of one's seven senses. There are seven skies or spheres
over the head of the diviner.
sea,
answering to the
number of
far, for
shores.
aught I know, the Bard may have drawn from the source of Druidism but he proceeds to reckoa
;
Thus
up the seven planets, by names which are borrowed or coi> rupted from the Latin Sola, Luna, Marca, Marcantcia,
Venus,
SEVERUS,
Saturnus,
i
Of
is
hot
54
radise,
and the
fifth is
In the
little
national system, differing from that which was taught by the Bards of the world, or the instructors of other nations. This little piece deserves attention. It is not mythological,
but philosophical, and seems, in some respects, to correspond with the system of Pythagoras, who had many ideas
with the Druids, and is expressly recorded to have studied in the Gaulish school.
in
common
Pryd
na'in
dy weid
Na
syrth
yn unwedd.
odid
sethrid.
Byd mor yw
Mor vawr yd
"
Though
I will sing
of the world
W.
Archaiol. p. 25.
55
* " " " " " " " " "
one day more much will I reason and meditate. I will demand of the Bards of the world why will they not
:
answer
upholds the world, that it. falls not, destitute of support: or, if it were to fall, which way
!
me
What
would
derer
it
is
it
go
Who
!
would sustain
it
How How
great a wan-
is
the world
Whilst
it
still
within
it
its
hollow orbit.
wonderful
its
frame, that
does not fall off in one direction ! How that it is not disturbed by the multitude of strange,
tramplings
!"
Some
four
spirit:
idle
Rhymer
of the
but Giraldus Cambrensis complains, that in his age the simple works of the Bards had been disfigured by such
modern and
ill-placed flourishes.
Bards as natural philosophers, and have shewn, that they were not less ambitious of the character, than their venerated preceptors, the Druids, are recorded to have been.
Hence
of inquiry, the chair of Glamorgan kindly offers its torch of direction. One of the leading maxims of its Druidical
code, as announced to the Public,
is
a political principle,
frequently touched upon, both by Mr. Williams and Mr. Owen, but more fully detailed by the latter.
"
is
56
" Goi, can possibly be
entitled to
;
for the
"
"
existence to
all,
is
A man
" over another for if he may over one, hy the same rea" son he rule over a million, or over a world. All men may " are in their natural the four
necessarily equal
:
elements,
"
state,
by
art,
is
the
The
not
is
it ia
my
have nothing to do
with
it, any farther than as it purports to be a principle drawn from the source of Druidism, through the channel
when this book first appeared, I was not a novice in the remaining accounts of the Druids, absolutely or in the works of the British Bards ; yet I must own, that
the time
At
was perfectly new to me. I am now, upon farther acquaintance with the works of our Cambrian progenitors,
all this
any such
thing.
I would therefore advise the partisans of the oracular chair, to reconsider this code of laws, and search, whether
this doctrine
is
which was
which
wus
during the great rebellion in the middle of the seventeenth. And if it be found only
revised, rectified, ratified
and
in the
age
of Cromwell
Perhaps
wrong
that age.
Introd. to LI.
Hen.
p. 54,
57
The
principles here announced,
the levellers
seem
to
strongly of a Druidism which originated in Gaul, and was from thence transplanted into some corners of 'Britain, not
many
who
when
were
the memorial of
well, if the sages
appearance. prepared that memorial, would revise their extracts, and recal any accidental inaccuracy, that might otherwise
Bardism made
It
mislead future antiquaries. They must know, as well as I do, that this is not the Druidism of history, nor of the British
Bards,
Let us hear Caesar's testimony. The Druids of Gaul, with whom he was intimately acquainted, were supreme
judges in
Every thing bent sacred order, therefore, possessed a pre-eminence, of autJiority over the people, whom they did not acknowledge as their necessary equals. Nor were the
all
to their decree.
The
Druids upon a level amongst themselves * " His omnibus Druidibus told
for
we
are farther
sitmmam
"
Nor
did they
deem
it
Druid, complains of the ingratitude of his brother, Duinthe norix, who had been advanced to great
authority
by
But
as the Druids
rela-
tions, it
may be argued, that they connived at a trifling dereliction of principle in their own families, and contented
* " Over *
thority
all
is
amongst them."
58
themselves with moulding the people into a state of perfect equality which they might have done, had they been so
:
disposed
as the
Here, then,
if
the operation of the great levelling scheme. But here we * " Plebes are farther from the point than ever. pcene " servorum habetur loco, quae, per se, nihil audet, et nullo
" adhibetur
concilia. Plerique cum, aut aere alieno, aut " magnitudine] tributorum, aut injuria potentium premun" sese in servitutem dicant nobilibus. In hos eadem
tur,
in servos. "f
When
had
also
the
Romans came
into Britain,
where Druidism
an establishment, they found the insular tribes to their respective princes, who had authority, not subject only to govern during their lives, but also to bequeath their
dominions.
It
is
therefore evident, that individual authority and pricountenance^ under the auspices of
Druidism.
Bards,
But was
still
this
exist in their works, and to whom the has been imputed? Let us ask Taliesin, levelling system " whose poems (according to Mr. Williams) exhibit a com-
who
"
* " The common people are regarded as nearly upon a level with slaves. " They have no power of their own, and are never admitted into the assemblies " of the states. Many of these, when oppressed by debt, by the weight of *' taxes, or by the injury of the great, devote themselves to the service of the " nobles, who have, in all the same power over them, which masters " have over iheir slaves." respects,
t
De
Bell. Gall. L.
VI.
c.
13.
J Poems, V.
II. p. 7.
59
This
venerable
Prince
of
Reged.*
"
"
superior happiness for the illustrious in fame ; there is superior glory, that Urien and his children exist, and that he reigns supreme,
is
f
?
I select quotations
Who, amongst
the
ancient Bards, was not patronized by princes, whom he has celebrated, not less for the greatness of their power, than for the eminence of their virtues ? If either historical
authority, or the testimony of the Bards, can have any weight in deciding this question, this curious dogma of the
pretended chair has nothing at all to do with Druidism or Bardism. That it is not even countenanced by the ancient
Bards, must be
their works.
known
to every
man who
is
conversant in
It
inform
whether
it
their
code by the
levellers
of the seventeenth century, or fabricated during the late anarchy of France, as a new engine, fit for immediate execution.
I am far from professing myself the general advocate of the Bards, or the Druids ; I only wish to exhibit them in their true colours ; but I find it impossible to write upon
this subject,
imputation, as groundless as
infamous.
* W.
Archaiol. p. 81.
Vindic. p. 187.
60
Another particular in the traditions of the dictatorial chair, which does not perfectly correspond with the testiof the ancients relative to the Druids, or with the sentiments and practice of the Bards, is that inviolable
mony
is
necessary to remark (says Mr. Owen), that Llywarch was not a member of the regular order of Bards, " for the whole tenor of his life militated against the leadIt
is
ft
"
"
ing
maxims of
groundwork of which
was, universal peace, and perfect equality. For a Bard " was not to bear arms, nor even to espouse a came by any
"
" other
active means ; neither was a naked weapon to be " held in his presence he being deemed the sacred cha" racter of a herald of peace. And in any of these cases, " where the rules were transgressed, whether by his own
;
i(
"
by the act of another, against him, he was de* graded, and no longer deemed one of the order,"
will,
or
Here again
not been
I suspect, that
do not recollect to
promulgated by
have seen
any code, before a certain period of the French Revolution, when the meek republicans of Gaul, and their modest
partizans in other countries, joined the indefeasible rightof equality with the inviolable duty of peace, and impressed
subjects of every state; whilst themselves were preparing for every species of inthey
But whencesoever
its rise, it certainly did not belong to the Druids, ciple took or to the Bards, without great limitation.
See
also p. 25,
61
That the former were
is
friends of peace,
a point which must be admitted. But gaged in war, there were occasions, upon which even the Druids deemed
and encouraged their disciples to contemn and act bravely in the field. Caesar observes, that death, an immunity from military service, was amongst the privi-
war
lawful,
and that
it
was
their general
custom
But was this custom to keep aloof from the field of battle. grafted upon an inviolable principle ? Let us hear. Having
historian adds this information.
mentioned the supreme authority of the Arch-Druid, the * " Hoc mortuo, si qui ex
"
reliquis
excellit
dignitate,
succedit.
At
si
sint plures
"
pares, suffragio
Druidum
adlegitur
nonnunquam etiam
number and
gword
If
?
we turn our attention to the British order, we shall find them in the same predicament with their brethren in Gaul. The Druids, who opposed Suetonius on the shores
of Mona, and terrified his soldiers with their direful imprecations, not only endured the sight of naked weapons, but vigorously espoused a cause; and it was the same
cause for which, as
we
is
"
*
succeeds
"
any one of the survivors excels the rest in dignity, he but if several have equal pretensions, the president is chosen by the votes of the Druids. Sometimes, is dishowever, the
'
'
Upon
;
his death, if
supreme dignity
62
to be degraded
;
foreign invaders.
descend to those British Bards, who professed themselves disciples of the Druids, we find a caveat entered
against the aged prince ahove named. acknowledged by the order, because he
in defence of his patrimony.
When we
He
is
not to be
and the
saw a multitude of
Even
"
celebrated his victories, and encouraged his military ardour. So far was he from abhorring the sight of a naked
He
sword,
when he considered
it
as justly
produce a pretty convincing proof in Mr. Owen's own translation, with which he favoured the public
this, I shall
Of
" I saw the fierce contending tumult; where wild de" struction and swift flowing streams of blood ran, raged, " amidst the half surviving ranks I saw men, whose path " was desolation, with their garments entangled with clot**
quick and furious were their thrusts in the maintained conflict ; the rear of the battle had no long " room to fly, when the chief of Reged urged on the purted gore
:
"
"
suit.
am
And
63
this dreadful spectacle? He song, after having witnessed of military glory, even to a lady, recommends the pursuit and declares his resolution to praise the magnanimous
Urien.
" "
for conflict,
Euronwy
And
till
with age, and through cruel fate must die, may I not * " smile with joy, if I sing not the praise of Urien !"
fail
If Cynvelyn's Incantation does not rather belong to Aneurin, the same Bard justifies the destruction of the foe;
nor does he think his hand polluted, either with the cup or the spear, that carries the mark of slaughter.
*'
"
Fury, in a torrent, shall flow against the Angles. Slaughter is just! The raven's due is our heaps of slain!
" Before the man who is naturally endowed with song, " and, hearing woe, he shall light unfolds the mystery " return, his glittering yellow cup, besmeared with gore, " the froth of the mead. Satiated with enhiding
yellow
"
41
terprise, his
heavy
it
he bestowed
on me.
Be
Such
is
the genuine language of the Bards ; and, agreeis the decision of the learned and
candid historian,
their cause.
who
warriors.
Their songs
commemo-
Taliesin's Battle of
t
Gwenystrad.
Mr. Owen's
64
"
rate
" martial."*
But
is it
even in the chair of Glamorgan ? There are circumstances which seem to imply the contrary.
list,
fudd Gr^g,
this
Bard challenges
Gruffudd accepts the chalThen, indeed, but not till lenge, and bids him defiance. the worthy president manifests a disposition for then,
peace. $
If the Bards, according to the code of this chair, were never to espouse even a just cause, what becomes of the " Necessary, but reluctant duty of the Bards of the island
" of "
and
depredatory
Or how can the chair reconcile with its own practice, of bringing
the assault
of -warfare
the sword, calling to against a degraded member, unsheathing him three times, and proclaiming, that the sword was naked
* Mr. Turner's
t Introd. to LI.
Vindic. p. 207.
Hn.
p. 62.
65
against
tile,
him?*
observations upon the novel maxims, and dictatorial tone, of the chair of Glamorgan, which the principle of self-defence
The few
may
supply a
It is
Welsh
antiquities.
not, however,
my
am
they would reflect light upon many subjects which are now obscure, were they brought forward, unmixed with modern
speculation.
selected,
nor countenance amongst the ancient Bards, or their preIt remains for ceptors, the Druids, I have already shewn.
me
is
whether they correspond with the personal character and sentiments of Trahaearn Brydydd Mawr, who
to inquire,
announced
it is
ther
principles.
Under the name of this bold and turbulent genius, we have only two pieces preserved but they are highly cha-* racteristical, and furnish us with some important anecdotes.
:
Trahaearn appears to have been a free guest in the mansion of Jfowel of Llan Dingad, in the vale of Towy, about
*
Introd. to LI.
Ho
p. 51.
66
a hundred years after Wales had finally submitted to the English government. HoweL's peace establishment, as described
by the muse of
his Bard,
was much
in the style of
he
made some
when such
visit to Cadwgan, Llan Gynog, where, it seems, he met with a scanty and very homely entertainment. His resentment dictated a furious lampoon upon the vicar, his daughter and
vicar of
if the house " were burnt it would be a upon the eve of the new year, " riddance and any shabby wretch might perform a good " meritorious act, by killing the alien son-in-law with the
his son-in-law
in
sword."
Such an outrage might have been treated with merited contempt, had not the vicar's house been actually burnt, and his son-in-law killed upon that very new-year's eve.
Tbis, I presume, was the notorious circumstance which
marked die
sera of our
Bard
Whether
Trahaearu himself was, or was not, personally engaged in clear this atrocious act, docs not appear but his efforts to
:
least,
the exist-
In just abhorrence of his conduct, the incendiary and assassin was disowned by the family of Llan Dingad, and
During
of
season of disgrace,
if ever,
he presided
in the chair
(Glamoran.
67
In the following poem, we find him labouring to effect a reconciliation with the grandsons of his patron but with
;
what
dori
success,
is
unknown
at present.
The
giving a translation of the whole piece, as it constitutes no unfavourable specimen of the Bardism of the
my
fourteenth century.
.
SUNG, by Trahaearn
Howel
l.f
dauntless leader in the conflict, the very energy of severe in the heroism, was the valiant Howel;
eminently
work of violence
illustrious in the
.
proud and bright as a dragon, directing the death of the foe and this dragon, I know, will be
;
:
dismal carnage was seen amongst the people, when the daring hawk gave battle. In equal pace rushed the cataracts of blood,
Woe's
my
3.
when
* W. Archaiol. The editors have probably inserted 1350, by way p. 499. of accommodation with the chronology of the chair. The only copy to which they refer, as their original, has the date 1380, which came from the authority of Dr. Davies of Mallwyd, and is the same which is given by Ed. Llwyd, in
his Archoeologia.
places mentioned in this poem, are in the neighbourhood of Llandois the parish in which that town is situated. The manor of Caew, or Cynvil Gaio, is at the disJtlirvryn comprehends part of that parish. tance of about ten miles, on the Ltanbedr road ; and Mi/ddvai, which joins the parish of Llandingad, was famous for us succession of physicians, in the family of lihiwaltawn, from the 13th to the Ibth century.
t
rcry,
The
Llandingad
F 2"
68
the vessel of racking poison poured the pangs of destiny,* whilst he was encouraging his host to protect the vale of Towy, a place which is now desolate, without a chief. To
be
silent henceforth, is
4.
For the Lion, of shivered spears ; for the shield of bravery, there is now crying and lamentation, because our
hope
is
removed
huge
clarions,
whose
The afflicted like the raging sea. host of Lloegr ~f- did he consume in his descent, like the tumultuous flame in the mountain heath. +
whelming course was
5.
with a violent, irresistible assault, he vaulted into battle, to plunder the King of Bernicia ; yet the hero of the race of Twedor,
Though
the ravager of thrice seven dominions, was a placid and liberal-handed chief, when he entertained the Bards at his
magnificent table.
6.
With
the three provinces. His hand was upon the sword, spotted with crimson, and the scabbard adorned with gold. Then
had the severe Lion uninterrupted success, in the deadly battle of Caew: the area was filled with terror, and the
*
rior,
It
just as he
appears by this passage, that poison had been administered to the warwas going to battle.
t England.
$ It is the custom in many partj of Wales, to burn the heath* upon the mountains, in order to clear the turf, which is paiied off, tor fuel.
tfi4
69
buildings reduced to ashes, as with the wrath of Llyr Lieand the conduct of Cai.*~ f
7.
to
cease within those gates, where energy was cherished by the assiduous friend of Genius, the ruler of battle, the
benefactor of strangers, in his ever-open hall so that now he lives no more the leader of spearnien, of illustrious
jace, the arbiter of
all
the South.
8.
thousand strains of praise are preparing, as a viaticum, for this gem of heroes, this mighty eagle, by my golden muse a prudent, a fortunate, an irresistible chief was he,
:
the tumults of his principality his spear dispossessed the aliens ; for he was the foe of slavery.
in
:
9-
righteous Judge, the patriof the blessed a portion which has been prepared (and the only portion which violence cannot remove) by the favour of HIM, who presides
beholds secrets, the supreme Son of Mary, supporter of princes, and the all-knowing his pure good will, by the visible and speedy cause, by
the
And may
God who
endowment of
after his
will
be mentioned again
11.
May remain with his generous grandsons, the objects of the wanderer's vows Though dreadful in battle, was the
!
blade of Einion the judge? yet was he a golden president in his district, an entertainer of the Muses, in the great
sanctuary of the children of panegyric thousands.
the supporter of
As
it
is
my
privilege to judge, I
shall
shall
my
sentiment, that no
sport with the great renown of the. not be found in the company) or in the form of
an outlaw, or
blameless, and entitled to the peace of the plough, the general and free boon of the warrior, according to the
established and sincere decree of the great, unerring Father, the love-diffusing Lord, the supreme dispenser of
light,
am
14.
I will relate
send forth) a
the natural delineation of the muse golden tale, a canon of tribe: and this with joy will I do, to prevent the for my
colouring of falsehood, till the spring of my genius be that calls me hence. gone, with the messenger
15.
to
71
horns of delicious liquor, amongst the mighty pillars of the glittering sword. battle, whose hands brandish
16.
Wretched
is
he, whose
lot it
mead
and the wine, that flow to the frequenters of those halls, which are liberal to every claimant ; and the frank invitations,
and the presents, of those Dragon chiefs, .who pour vale of Towy ! forth thy precious showers,
17.
Every night
is
my
the by the violence of one rash transgression, I have forfeited valuable privilege, and lost the protecting power of the sup-
Mer-
Of
and his
scarlet, I
partake no
more!
18.
Yet still, with due and lasting praise, shall be celebrated the munificent shower of the hawks of Hirvryn, the last
of that warlike race, which derives its blood from the line of the slaughterer and my eagle, the leader of the em;
peruses this poem, must be immediately convinced, that the feelings and sentiments of Trahaearn are
utterly irreconcileable with the principles,
He who
which he
in
is
re-
presented as
having taught.
The Bard
is
neither shocked
backward
espousing
the cause of his country and his patron, as well as of his own appetite. And here is not a syllable that countenances the doctrine of pet-fed equality.
72
shall have occasion to mention the nocturnal mysof the Bards, I must just take notice of another dogma of the boasted chair, which asserts, that the Bards did every thing in the eye of the the face of the light, and in
I
As
teries
sun ; and, that none of their meetings could be holden, but in a conspicuous place, whilst the sun was above the horizon.*
As
and practice of the Druids, it must stagger the confidence of those who have been accustomed to contemplate the
awful secrets of the grove, and the veil of mystery which was thrown over the whole institution.
The
they
sat,
in loco consecrato, to
may
and by day be inferred, from their mounts of asmay but what regarded their internal discipline, and the
in a conspicuous place,
" "
il
JDocent multa,
clam,
et
||
nobilissimos
gentis," says P.
Mela,
abditis
is
diu,
aut
in
saltibus.
And
for-
and
p. 216.
t In a consecrated place.
first
nobility of the
" These lessons are private, and continued for a long time of twenty years, in a cave, or amongst inaccessible forests."
Lib. III. c. 2.
||
73
"*UNUM
The
quae praecipiumt, in vulgus effluxit"-? attentive ear of curiosity had been able to catch but
iis,
ex
religious
"
Medio cum Phoebus in axe est, Aut Ccelum nox atra tenet." +
-f-
With all this, the celebration of the nightly mysteries, described in the chair of Taliesin, his Ogov Gorddewin, Cave, or Specus of the Arch-Diviner, the torches of Ceridwen, which flamed at midnight, and at the dawn, together with Merddin's concealment in^the Caledonian forest, perfectly accord.
preliminary section, when I have brought the Bards into one more point of comparison with their
I shall close
my
men
does not
recommend
itself to
false philosophy,
or
its
way
to the Public.
+ "
When
the sun
is
in the
middle of
his course, or
when
for justice,
moral and
:
" "
"
religious doctrines, and skill in the laws of their country for which reason, all disputes were referred to their arbi:
tration and their decision, whether relating to private " and * domestic, or public and civil affairs, was final."
Mela, speaking of the three nations of Gallia Cornata, " Habent facundiam f suam, magistrosque sapientiae, says " Druidas/'J
Sotion,
htif
Mr. Whitaker regards the three first books of the Laws of Howel, as comprising the Laws of the Ancient Britons.
The
And
the
Manksmen
Man
has always
been governed.
||
Whether
full,
or only in
a qualified sense, they seem utterly incompatible with the doctrine of that chair, which admits of a continual lapse in
religious principles, the only real foundation of laws
and
of morals
existence of
human
authority,
all
and
insists
upon an
"
their
wisdom."
$ Lib. III. c. 2.
$ Lei.
j|
rfe
Script. Brit.
p. 5.
p. 46.
Laertius,
this.
Deity, innocence in our intercourse with mankind, and the of fortitude in the personal character and hence it
:
instructions.
the Bards profess to have drawn all their doctrines the Druidical fountain, I think, there is no subject from which ascertains the authenticity of their pretensions better,
And as
than that of moral instruction, and the study of human Their lessons of this kind, however, are generally nature.
Amongst
we
may
lets.
Each of
these
is
rhymes.
The most singular feature of these versicles is, that the sense of the two first verses has no obvious connection with,
that of the last.
The
first
line contains
some
trivial re<-
of the
like,
To
this
is
frequently subjoined,
more of
heart, with a
upon men
plained,
weighty moral precept, or a pertinent remark and manners. My meaning will be best ex-
by a few examples.
Eiry
Yn
76
" Snow of the mountain
!
the bird
is
" Keen
J<
on the headland
!"
friend
most valuable
Glaw
allan,
Melyn
eithin
Duw
tf
Rheen, py
beraist lyvwr
It rains
is
a shelter
What!
the
"
yellow furze, or the rotten hedge! Creating hast thou formed the slothful !"
God! whv
ddeilen a drevyd
o'i
Gwynt*
!
Gwae hi Hen hi
!
thynged
eleni
y ganed
leaf
is
tossed about
is
by the wind
!
Alas,
is
how wretched
old
!
fate
But,
this
year was
it
born /"
seem already
to perceive a smile
of the
critical reader.
The
evinces, will hardly protect our Druidical lectures from the charge of puerile conceit. I do not bring fonvard our British Doctors as men of the highest polish, or most accuBut let us consider, if any thing can be said rate taste.
in their defence.
Some
praise
must be due
which was
calculated,
to
be
a'* threved.
ddeikn-gwynt
77
British society, to lead the mind, imperceptibly, from a trivial remark upon the screaming of hungry birds, the
state of the weather, or a
Avind, to the
dry leaf tossed about by the of moral truth, or to pertinent contemplation And these triplets, which reflection upon the state of man.
the people learned by rote, were peculiarly adapted to produce such a salutary effect.
most
For the introductory objects of remark, being of the and their familiar kind, were daily before their eyes
:
very occurrence would naturally suggest those maxims and reflections, which the memory had already connected with
wholly unrefined, and which, at best, had but a scanty supply of books, and those in few hands, must have found the benefit of this mode of instruction.
them.
A nation
Whatever page of nature was presented to their view, teachers had contrived to make it a page of wisdom.
their
Let us apply this observation to the examples which I have given. The appearance of snow upon the hills, or of hungry and screaming birds, suggests the remark" There " is snow upon the mountain the bird screams for food."
;
With
this, the
memory
scribing a cold and dreary season, in which man, 'AS well as the wild fowl, probably felt distress. " Keen whistles the
"
blast
third clause,
to the
drawn
bosom, and
" In
distress,
most valuable."
As
if his
manded him
social duties
"
Now
most sacred of
So, in the second triplet, a man who has neglected his duty or his business, to indulge an indolent habit, is re-
78
minded, by a sprinkling shower, of the " It rains but here is a
without,
shelter."
lects
trivial
remark
He
then recol!"
"
is
What,
And
te
ashamed of
This feeling
is
imme" Cre-
diately strengthened
by the emphatical
reflection
ating
God! why
The emblem of
human
life,
more
"
It
is
social converse
is
pleasant
" The gale and the storm keep equal pace To preserve a " secret, is the part of the skilful (Celvydd)."
" It is the eve of winter. The the tops stags are lean " of the birch are deserted is the summer dwelling yellow " Woe to him who, for a trifling advantage, merits "
:
disgrace."
"
Though
be small, yet ingenious is the bird's fabric The virtuous and the happy skirt of the wood
it
.
equal age."
Cold is the grey ice is the mountain " Trust in he will not deceive thee; nor will per seGod; " vering patience leave thee long in affliction."
"
"
It rains
without
the brake
is
is
The sand of
is
the sea
white with
crown of foam
" Patience
bare
is
" The man of discretion cannot associate with the silly " Where nothing has been learned, there can be no ge" nius." " Snow of the mountain
" stream The " God will
lean,
crouching stag seeks the shady glen the industry of man." prosper
the birds are tame
The
dis~
"
be born erectly happy needs only to " for the wicked." procure good
God
himself cannot
be admitted, that this method of teaching moral wisdom, was continued by the Britons for some time
Though
it
after
the introduction of
Christianity,
yet
think,
for
several reasons,
ideas,
mode of
classing
the
was derived from the school of the Druids; and that several of the triplets, still extant, have descended
their times.
from
The
three
members each
and
the
Druids.
The metre
have any
is
also the
tradition.
And
most ancient, of which the Welsh it does not appear from history,
composition from any nation with which they were connected, since the period of the Roman conquest.
plan of these triplets has that mixture of rude simplicity, and accurate observation, which history ascribes to
The
80
Here, the barbaric muse appears in her rustic dress, without a single ornament of cultivated taste.
the Druids.
many
centuries,
become
racter
obsolete
is
conquest. Even the metre has scarcely been used since the time of Llywarch Hen, in the sixth century. Taliesin and Arieurin seem to have rejected it as antiquated,
Norman
The
For
in our oldest
poems, we find
moreover, the
their connection,
and used
as
common-place aphorisms.
And
very same aphorisms, as being now public property, are employed, without scruple, by several contemporary Bards,
triplet
Beside the
triplets
by the final rhymes, and each with Eiry Mynydd, Snow of the Mounstanza beginning tain. These seem to be nothing more than metrical arrangesentences, connected only
triplets.
The two
Snow of
the mountain
troublesome
i4
the world
to Mervin Gwawdrydd, whose age is unknown, be a corrupt reading for Aniuriu Gwawdrvdd ; and ninetctu bear th* parae of a SOB of Llywarch lieu.
unless
81
" No mart can foretel the accidents to which wealth is ex" posed. Arrogance will not arrive at a state of security* " Prosperity often comes after adversity. Nothing endures " but for a season. To deceive the innocent, is utterly dis"
graceful.
No man
will
ever thrive
by
vice.
On God
"
" Snow of
" The
thief
the mountain
white
is
is
Happy
is
the
man
" who has done no evil. The fro ward is to easily allured " do mischief. No An good befals the lascivious person. " old often ends in a massacre. A fault is most grudge " conspicuous in a prince. Give less heed to the ear, than " to the
eye."
The
stanzas.
"
'*
A noble descent is
it
is
the resource
of
human
reason."
painful of diseases,
is
is
seldom long in
office."
limits of a
kingdom
are too
is
82
"
"
When
is
gence succeeds."
"
Many
" Obstruct not the prospect of futurity, to provide for " the present."
" Pride
is
unseemly in a
ruler."
is
her modesty
but confidence
"
without rope, or
"
sail
or anchor,
is
the
despises advice."
The
:aoral
titled to
some
'-'
" In the month of April, thin is the air upon the heights. The oxen are weary. Bare is the surface of the ground.
"
''
The guest
is
The
'
Playful is the hare. Many are stag looks dejected. Idleness is unthe faults of him who is not beloved.*
Shame has no
Who
Or,
has no friend.
83
I
unjust.
The Viaticum of
is
the most
aphoristical style.
let it
go
let it
come
Be
it
disposed of as it may. A state of anxiety is upon a level " with real penury. Serenity will succeed, when the rain
is
over."
"
Amongst
the children of the same nursery, equality will play, whilst his blood
is
is
" flowing about him: the submissive will be trampled " upon the fierce will be avoided the discreet is in co" venant with prosperity; to him, God pours forth his
:
:
"
bounty."
is like
Lo
there!' it
has
" Incurious
" he regard
it
is
the
man who
observes not
who, though
may hap-
pen hereafter."
"
where there
is
no
religion !"
disbelieves a
God,
is
incapable of reason."
the blethat
man who
is
" mish of the assembly, the affliction of the " bare the detestation of the
him,
country.'*
womb
84
" Even "
in
A profession
a treasure-bag
"
for banishment."
The founding of a
of a desert."
of the adages and moral maxims, preserved in the Welsh language, would fill a considerable volume. Hence it appears, that the application of the
A complete collection
of their
85
SECTION
II.
General View of Druidical Theology Character and Rites of Hu, the Hello- Arkite God the Bacchus of the heathen
Britons.
J.N the introductory section of this Essay, home the profession of Druidism to the
I have brought
ancient
Welsh
Bards; and, by a collation of several of the topics upon which they expiate, with classical authorities, have proved
the justice of their claim to that character which they assume. I have also shewn, that the mythological Triads are
founded in genuine British tradition ; and that the notices which these documents present, are, for the most part, consistent
selves disciples
who
profess them-
From
now
endeavour to deduce such a general view of the theology and rites of our heathen ancestors, as the nature and extent
To attempt a complete of. of every minute part of this subject, and to investigation prepare myself to answer every question that may be asked,
of these documents will admit
my contemplation. This would be imposing upon a task, difficult in execution, and, perhaps, not very myself gratifying to the Public in its accomplishment. The hardy
is
not in
antiquary, who shall dare to penetrate far into the labyrinth of British mythology, will have frequent occasion to complain of the interruption of his clue, and the defect of
monuments, amongst our half Christian Bards. Yet th& same Bards furnish hints abundantly sufficient, to point out
in
chiefly consisted,
this
and
all
arose.
And
seems to be
would willingly qualify my reader, to satisfy his own curiosity, and form his own opinion, independent of mine,
As
I shall suffer
no assertion of moment
to intrude
upon him,
without a
full
my
exhibition of the passage upon .which it is This seems requisite in the present case. Were
Rome,
modern
times,
it
might be sufficient to cite books, chapters, and verses. But as Cambro-British documents are less accessible to the
it expedient to produce the original words with close English translations. Such auof my authors, thorities will be occasionally introduced, where the subject
learned, I
;
deem
calls for
them.
As
poems, however,
upon which various remarks will arise, I have thrown a collection of them together, as as Appendix, and I shall refer to them as they are
are of a miscellaneous nature,
numbered.
discussion, it may be proper to of the general deductions I make from apprize my reader, these documents, respecting the nature and source of the
Before
I enter
upon the
Druidical superstition, that he may have a clear prospect of the point at which I mean to arrive, and be better enabled
to
judge of
my
progress towards
it.
it in
British documents,
was
87
ciples.
It
acknowledges certain
divinities,
under a great
These divinities were, -variety of names and attributes. originally, nothing more than deified mortals, and material
objects; mostly connected with the history of the deluge: but in the progress of error, they were regarded as symsun, moon, and certain stars, which, in of this confusion, were venerated with divine consequence honours.
bolized
by the
And this superstition apparently arose, from the gradual or accidental corruption of the patriarchal religion,' by the abuse of certain commemorative honours, which were
paid to the ancestors of the
human
race,
Such is the general impression, that the study of ancient British writings leaves upon my mind. This view, I am aware, differs from the opinion maintained by some respectable authors, that the Druids acknowledged the unity
of God.*
If ever they made such a profession, they must be understood in the sense of other heathens, who occasionally
declared, that their multitude of false gods really consti-
and not
That they had no knowledge or recollection of the GREAT FIRST CAUSE, I will not venture to assert. I have some
that they did acknowledge his existand his providence; but they saw him faintly, through ence, the thick veil of superstition, and their homage and ado-
reason to conclude,
p. 107.
88
ration were almost wholly engrossed agents, of a subordinate nature.
by
certain
supposed
And
is
and
cir-
cumstantial account of the Druids, gives us this informa" Multa * de Deorum immortalium tion. vi, ac potestate,
"
"
De
This memorial was drawn up, after the historian had enjoyed a long and intimate acquaintance with Divitiacus,
one of the principal of the order in Gaul; and after his repeated expeditions into Britain, where the institution was
affirmed to have originated, and where it was observed with superior accuracy in his time. Testimonies so precise and
minute, coming from a writer thus circumstanced, must imply a considerable degree of publicity in this part of the
Druidical doctrine.
The
priests of
knowledged a plurality of divinities, and maintained opinions respecting them, which were the same, in substance,
with those of the Greeks and Romans,
gravity and dignity of our author's character, the pointed precision of his language, together with* the peculiar access to
The
dispute largely concerning the force and power of the immortal gods, youth in their principles. Of all the gods, they pay the greatest honours to Mercury, whom they represent as the inventor of all arts, Their im, they worship Apollo, and Mars, and Jupiter, and Minerva. coincides with that of other nations, &c, especting these, nearly
They
89
V,
fered,
must place
his testimony
critical
objection.
Some
allowance,
however,
may be demanded,
for
the
force of the qualifying particle, fer$ ; and the whole passage may be understood as implying, that the similarity
Roman superstition, was such, as to give Caesar a general impression of their identity; and
between the Celtic and the
such as
may
ginally sprung
the Druids
from the same source ; though the gods of may not have exactly corresponded with those
Druidical corresponded with the general superstition, not only in its theology, but also in the ceremonies by which
The
Dionysius informs us, that the of Bacchus were duly celebrated in the British islands:* and Strabo cites the authority of Artemidonrs, that, " In " an island close to Britain, Ceres and Proserpine are venerites
(t
As it is, then, an historical fact, that the mythology and the rites of the Druids were the same, in substance, with those of the Greeks and Romans, and of other nations
which came under
their observation, it must follow, that these superstitions are reducible to the same principles, and that they proceeded from the same source.
And
+ Lib. IV.
90
energy, to the very same conclusions, which have been
drawn by the best scholars, and most able have treated of general mythology.
antiquaries,
who
tradition, has,
of the Gen-
the deification of Noah, his ark, and his immediate progeny, joined with the idolatrous worship of the host of
heaven.
%
a dutiful regard to his illustrious master, though superior to servile imitation, Mr. Faber pursues the investigation still farther, and discovers, that Noah was worshipped in conjunction with the sun, and the ark in conjunct tion with the moon ; and that these were the principal divi-
With
of the heathens. With this author's mysteries of the Cabiri, I was wholly unacquainted, at the time when I drew up the present Essay ; but I found in this book so
nities
many
my previous observations, that I determined to revise the whole, to alter a few para-
pointst of coincidence
with
is
am
fully aware.
Some critics, taking a distant7and prospective view of the subject, pronounce it an improbable hypothesis, that
antiquity should be so mad after Noah and the ark; whilst others, finding that the authors indulge in a fanciful system of etymology, coldly remark upon the fallacy of
all
such a principle, and toss the books aside, as unworthy of farther notice. But surely it may be presumed, that those
who
thus
condemn them
little
in the mass,
had
either too
much
prejudice, or too
patience,
to
91
of learning and genius may have been sea favourite system, into minute and duced, by particular
ground.
Men
and absurdities; and yet, the main scope of their argument may be perfectly just, and their general conclusions founded in truth.
errors
In the supposition, that Noah was a principal object of superstition to the Gentile world, I can discover no absurIt is admitted, that some, at least, of the dity a priori.
heathen gods were nothing more than deified mortals, and that the worship of such gods was introduced very soon
then natural to presume, that this distinguished person must have been the first object of selection, in consequence of his relative situation, as the
after the
It
is
age of Noah.
all
from
his
some weight may be added, character and history, as the Just Man, whose
this,
To
integrity preserved himself and his family amidst the ruins of a perishing world. And this superstition being once set
would naturally extend its honours to his sons and immediate descendants, as the founders of their respective
on
foot,
nations.
So again it is easy to conceive, that even in the age of Noah, the ark was commemorated with great respect, as the means of miraculous preservation and that a growing
;
seized upon it, as an object of idolatrous superstition soon that Providence, which had worship; or else, represented
through the tumult of a boundless dethe Genius of the sacred vessel. luge, as a benign goddess,
guided
it
in safety,
92
derness,
Mary
There
is,
therefore,
no absurdity
in the
grounds of the
The scheme of etymology, it must be owned, has been carried to great lengths by these learned authors and here,
:
think, they often lay themselves open to the censure of men, whose genius and attainments are greatly inferior to
I
their
own.
The Greeks having admitted, that many of the terms connected with their superstition were of foreign origin,
and some writers having asserted, that the language of the mysteries was that of Egypt, or of Assyria, these mythologists undertake to retrace the sacred terms of
heathenism,
this view,
With
list of ancient primitives from various languages, but chiefly from the Hebrew and its Into these primitives, they resolve the sacred dialects.
terms of
all
nations.
The names
which, to the ordinary scholar, appear nothing more than to this mystic vocaplain Greek or Latin, are all referred Hence arises an occasion of charging the Greeks bulary.
with the gross perversion of sacred titles and symbols, and the puerile corruption of foreign words, into something of similar sound in their own idiom, but of very different imtradition port from the original
;
* I Kings,
ch. xviii. v. 4.
93
practice of carrying
them back,
in disjointed syllables, to
This has given offence to many critical readers, who maintain, that by such a mode of proceeding, any common
into
How
I
far
allowed,
shall
my
apprehension, these
gentlemen have made an injudicious, as well as an intemperate use of it. Proofs of this kind seldom amount to
demonstration.
They
many
occasions
of hesitating, or of differing in opinion from his author ; and thus tend to lessen that confidence, which might otherwise have been preserved by the legitimate argument, and the candid exposition of recorded facts, which are to be
Could
I give
of the sacred terms, employed in the British documents, have meanings appropriate to the business in hand, and should therefore be translated, yet by far the greatest part of them are native terms of the British language, and
have the same import with the corresponding terms Greek mythology.
in
Were
Britons,
then to admit, that the Greek terms are nothing blunders, I must also infer that the
who furnish us with the very same blunders in their own dialect, derived their mythology immediately from
the Greeks
:
but
this
was
94
In the mystic Bards and
tales,
find
certain terms,
which evidently pertain to the Hebrew language, or to some dialect of near affinity; as Adonai, the Lord; Al
Adur, the Glorious God; Arawn, the Arkite, and the
Taliesin, the chief Bard, declares, that his lore
like.
had been
Hebraic;* and in a song, the substance of which he professes to have derived from the sacred Ogdoad,
detailed in
some foreign
dialect, apparently of great affinity with the Hebrew, though obscured by British orthography. *f- Hence I think
it
probable, that
the
in
Britons once
poems, composed
some
fragment of those poems; and that those parts of their superstition, which were not properly Celtic, were derived
from that quarter of the globe. And if so, our ancestors could not have obtained their sacred vocabulary, by adopting the mere grammatical blunders of the Greeks.
Thus I am compelled to decline any general assistance from the derivations of our learned mythologists. At the same time, I shall not scruple to remark occasional coincidences between British terms, and those which appear in their works. If This, I trust, I may do with impunity.
some of
may be
Thus
I
natural,
far I
have deemed
it
of criticism.
Should
this
must
my
argument does
95
not rest upon the works of these authors. I cite them only for collateral proof, .or elucidation of the evidence which I
fying the report of history, that the superstition of the Druids was radically the same with that of other nations.
In
my
attempt to establish
fall
my
main proposition,
mean
to
stand or
And
to this
produce evidence,
that the people who professed Druidism, retained some memorials of the deluge, and of the patriarch of the new world.
The
which
in
I lately
subject has already been touched upon in the volume published. I there remarked a curious record
The
bursting forth of
the face
Lake of
;
and
the overwhelming
mankind were drowned, of and Dwyvach, who escaped in a naked excepting Dwyvan vessel (or a vessel without sails), and by whom the island of
of
all lands
so that all
To this I subjoined a tradition, taken from the same documents, of the Master-works, or great achievements of The first of these was, Building the the Island of Britain.
ship
of Nevydd Ndv Neivion, which carried in it a male and a female of every animal species, when the Lake of Llion burst forth: and the second was, The drawing of the Avanc
to land, out
Hu
Gadarn,
so that
and
their
* See Celt. Res. p. 157, from Archaiology of Wales, V. II. p. 59, and 71.
96
as their other peculiarities, furnishes suffilocality', as well
cient proof, that they
ditions.
tra*
Such memorials
have originated
during any age subsequent to the introduction of ChrisThe contrary appears, from their whimsical distianity.
crepancy with historical
fact.
The
Britons, then,
all
had a
lands
tradition of a deluge,
which
had overwhelmed
but this deluge, according to ; the sudden bursting of a lake. them, was occasioned by One vessel had escaped the catastrophe: in this a single
preserved ; and as Britain and its inhabitants were, in their estimation, the most important
we
especial manner, was repeopled by the man and woman who had escaped. This has no appearance of having been drawn from the record of Moses it is a mere mutilated
:
common
had a
to
So
tradition, that
been provided, somewhere or other, to preserve a single family, and the race of animals, from the destruction of a
deluge; but they possessed only a mutilated part of the
real
their
history
and, as tradition positively affirmed, that own ancestors were concerned in the building of this
:
they naturally ascribed the achievement to that country, in which their progenitors had been settled from
vessel,
remote antiquity.
they had a tradition, that some great operating cause protected the world from a repetition of the deluge. They had lost sight of the true
lastly,
And
history,
which
supreme Being, and ascribed it oxen, which drew the avanc, or beaver, out of the lake.
97
And
the want of more accurate informition gave them an opportunity of placing this ideal achievement in the island
of Britain.
only the vestiges of heaof British tradition is exactly locality similar to that of other heathen reports. To give one
In such
tales as these,
we have
thenism.
Even the
instance.
was undoubtedly the flood ot Noah. It is described by Greek and Latrn writers, with circumstances which apply exclusively to this event. There
flood of Deucalion
The
and which destroyed the whole human rac^^xcepting' those who were preserved in.
of a
loftyjnoiintaiii,
that vessel.
xet
Deucalion,
perso^ preserved, princes, and affirmed, that the vessel which escaped the deluge, rested upon the top of Pawrassus, a mountain of their own country.
the
one of
their
own
It
may be
the deluge, the Britons grounded another national error. They represented the Cymry as having descended from one
mother (the
within
this
in
Cymry nation. And it appears from Caesar, the Britons of his age, in the interior of this island, that had the very same ancient tradition or memorial. Britancradle of the
nice pars interior
ab
iis
inmla
ipsd,
WEMORIA PRODITUM
dlCUllt.*
II
*De
Bell. Gal,
L. V. c. 12.
98
But the mass of heathen tradition is always found to have some degree of inconsistency with itself. Some circumstance of true history, which is disguised in one tale, is
frequently let out in another. Thus I have remarked a tradition in the same Triads, which brings the Cymry under
Hu, from a
Hdv; and this is understood to imply the neighbourhood of Constantinople, in the eastern part of Thrace.
the popular tradition of the
interior Britons, or
their teachers
thought proper to
inculcate to the multitude; whilst the latter belonged to those who had preserved a few more vestiges of ancient history.
And
that this
their progress out of Asia into Britain, is incidentally confirmed by the popular tradition of the Britons respecting
the deluge* For though the memory of this event was almost universal, yet the traditions of every people upon this subject, had some circumstances which were local, oc
nationally discriminative.
And
the tradition of
BrUow,
as to the cause
of the deluge,
The
lands.
British tradition
tells
of a lake
lurst forth,
and the inundation covered the face of all The same tale was told in the ancient Sajnos, which
S'Hdm
of British mythology.
"
famous for a deluge which inundated the country, and reached the very top of the mountains. " This inundation, which happened before the age of the
is
''
" Samothrace
"
Argonauts, was ozving to the sudden overflow of the waters of the Euxine, which the ancients considered merely as a
^
" lake."*
......
*
Lernpriere Bib. Class.
-
V. Samothracia.
99
That the perversion of
is
real history, in
counts, precisely the same, must be obvious to every Such a peculiar coincidence could not have hapone.
pened, without direct communication: and the tradition could not have become national^ without having been
brought by a colony from one nation to another, and pre* served without interruption. But the mythology of Samothrace mounts up to a very remote sera of antiquity, and
neighbourhood, with its wide extent, and narrow outlet, furnishes a more probable occasion for such a tale, than any lake in the neighbourhood of Britain*
its
the Euxine, in
Hence
the supposition, that this mythological story came with a colony from the region contiguous to the ancient Samos into Britain, agreeably to the memorial of our ancestors,
and the
tale
of Hu, seems
much more
plausible,
than the converse of that proposition. And here the testimony of Artemidorus, that the mysteries of Ceres and
Proserpine were celebrated in one of the British islands, with the same rites as in Samothrace, tends to corroborate the inference which I draw from our national tradition.
The
under various points of view. On referred the history of Dylan Ail Mor, Dylan, Son of the But in Sea, or Ail Ton, Son of the Wave, to this event.
looking over Mr. Owen's Cambrian Biography, a volume which appeared whilst my book was in the press, I observe, that the author is of a different opinion, which he thus
expresses.
*'
Dylan
ail l*on,
a chieftain
who
H
* Celt. Res. p. 163.
100
"
"
ning of the sixth century, whose elegy, composed by
Taliesin,
is
preserved in the
Welsh Archaiology."
this
I
contents.
elegy, I shall
may be
allowed,
in support of my* own assertion, to bring forward a few passages, in which this name occurs. I shall leave the result
Taliesin, in his
thus of Dylan
Truly
was
in the ship
the Sea,
When,
like the
" The floods came forth, " From to the great deep." Heaven,
This passage surely has an evident allusion to the deluge. therefore, must have regarded Dylan as no
The Bard,
whom
survived that catastrophe, and styles Teyrnedd, or Royal, as being the universal monarch of the new world.
who
he justly
So
-f*
the British tradition of the deluge, and speaks of the day of Dylan, as a peculiar theme of his muse.
Arall ni chan
wyd
Dy ysgwyd
W.
t
allan,
Archaiol. p. 30.
Ibid. p. 24.
101
Pan yw gofaran twrwf Tonneu wrth Ian,
.
Yn
nial
Dylan;
Dydd
a haedd attan.
" No other Bard will sing the violence " Of convulsive throes, " When forth proceeded with thundering
din,
" The billows against the shore, " In Dylan's day of vengeance " A which extends to us"
day
The
in
last line
of this passage, as
I shall
shew
hereafter,
in
speaking of the future judgment, alludes to this passage of at the same time, Taliesin, and copies several of his words he introduces certain images, which may remind us of the
Druidical opinion, that Jire and water would, at some period, prevail over the world.*
will
judgment
to us will he
shall
suddenly prepare the field of come, and will not keep silence.
"
When God
on the
flight
harshly,
will
" the loud-voiced wind will call " dash around the shore the
;
the variegated
wave
glancing flame will take to " itself the of justice, recruited by the heat of vengeance " contending fires, ever bursting forth."f
* Strabo, L. IV.
t W, Archaiol.
p. 431;
102
In the same pcem, the Bard thus expresses himself, in an address to the Supreme Being
Trevnaist s^r a
'*
*<
Thou
of the
sea-faring Dylan,"
Hence
it is
ancient and
modern Bards
no other personage
It is
now time
posed for this venerable character. This little piece is not to be found in the Archaiology ; but, from a copy in my
possession, I
am
is
erroneous,
and
that,
simply
this.
A certain plain having been inundated in the age of our Bard, he expostulates with the Deity upon the occasion of this event, Jle then makes a natural transition to the my-<
thology of the flood of Dylan, or the deluge, which had been occasioned by the profligacy of mankind, and concludes with a prayer for the deliverance of his countrymen frona
the existing calamity,
the lines are imperfect in my copy ; but with the correction of a few syllables, as suggested equally by
Some of
stands as follows
103
Un Duw
uchav,
Dewin doethav,
Mwyav
Py Pwy
delis
ai
o vael.
maes,
swynas
Ar reddv
gavael
Gwaith gwythloesedd.
Gwenyg Dylan
Adwythig Ian, Gwaith yn hydredd.
thon Ogledd.
Golychav
Dad,
:
Yn
Which may be
"
drugaredd
thus translated
sole,
secrets,
most beneficent
'
What
who has
!
enchanted
it
most generous
In for*
104
" mer times, what has been more peaceful than " as a natural possession
!
this district,
It was the counter-reckoning of profligacy, which pro" duced the bane in the laborious pang of wrath the bil" lores of Dylan furiously attacked the shore forth, impe" tuously, rushed the wave of Ireland, the wave of the " Manks, the Northern wave, and the wave of Britain,
:
"
11
" I will pray to the Father, God, the Ruler, the Father " who reigns without control, that he, the Creator, jthe " Mysterious One, would embrace us with his mercy !"
This
little
ode, I think, cannot supply the slightest shade ail Ton amongst the British
occurs in
and thus
connects the character of Dylan with that of Dtcyvant and Nevydd Ndv Neivion, recorded in the Triads.
Dylan, the Declan of Irish tradition, sounds like a contraction of Deucalion ; and the people who preserved this
name, affirm, that they derived their origin from the neighbourhood of Thessaly, where the story of Deucalion was told. But not to insist upon these circumstances, I may be
allowed to remark, that the sea, the reaves, or even the
streams of Dylan, are used in the Welsh language, to denote the main ocean, or a boundless expanse of water ; and
that the metaphor evidently refers to the deluge.
105
who survived that catastrophe, I will, in the next consider their representation of that patriarch's chaplace, racter, that we may discover how far their notions respecttriarch
ing him,
national religion.
This venerable personage has already been introduced by a variety of names, as Dwyvan, Nevydd Ndv Neivion, and Dylan; but we have had no positive evidence that he received divine honours.
Were
I
might
say, that
Thus Dwy,
cause,
origin, the
mankind.
Dzvy-van, the high or lofty cause the father of His wife's name was Dwy-vach, the lesser cause
These names seem analogous to the Pangenetor and Magna Mater of antiquity, which were
the mother of mankind.
objects of worship.
So again
'Ndv, a Lord, the Creator: like many plies the celestial. other terms of ancient British mythology, it is still used
as a
is
name of the Supreme Being. Neivion, in the Bards, name of God. " Also the name of a person in the
" British mythology, probably the same with Neptune."* So that Nevydd Nav Neivion is the Celestial Lord Neivion.
Under
we may
infer, that
the patriarch Noah received divine honours ; and consequently, that he constituted one of the principal divinities
106
This fact admits of absolute proof, when we contemplate the character of the same patriarch, as delineated under the
tiame of
(pron. Hee), who secured the world from a repetition of the deluge, and whom the Cymry acknowledged as their remote progenitor, as the great founder of
their sacred
Hu
and
civil institutes,
and as
their
God.
In order to elucidate
revise
this
all,
occasion.
The drawing of
oxen of
his history
is
lake,
by the
Hu GADARN,
more.
Here
But what character did he support in that age ? The mythological Triads represent him only as a human patriarch, and a lawgiver. The following particulars are recorded
of him.
1.
He
and
oxen, he performed some achievement, which prevented the repetition of that calamity. Triad 97.*
2.
3.
With his
He
first
race; and
10,
4.
Formed them
Triad 57.
* These numbers
which begins p.
7,
W,
Archaic!.
Y.U,
107
gave traditional laws, for the regulation and of society. Triad 92. government
5.
first
He
6.
tice,
was eminently distinguished for his regard to jusTriad 5. equity, and peace.
He
7-
He
first
race
to
their respective
the
various
regions.
Triad 4.
8.
previous to their
Such
which
I find
recorded in those
Triads, respecting
Hu
my
the
Mighty.
If characteristics like
these determined
me
represented the patriarch Noah, I hope they have not led to transgress the laws of criticism, which have been al-
lowed
in similar cases.
The
:
great
Mr. Bryant
is
satisfied
these and he points out a delineation of the progenitor of all nations, in nearly the same words.
" The
*'
"
patriarch, under whatever title he may come, is as the father of Gods and men ; but generally represented in the character of Phoroneus, (for in this he is plainly
"
'*
first
of mortals,
The
" marked, that we cannot mistake to whom the mythology " relates, He lived in the time built of the flood:
Hejirst
*'
an
men
together,
laivs,
*1
into
communities:
#e
fast gave
and
distributed
108
"
justice
:
He
divided
"
mankind by
their families
and
nations,
If the learned be authorized by sound criticism, to refer the traditions of the Greeks to the incidents of primitive history, there can be no just reason for denying the like privilege to the Britons, in behalf of their national mythology,
when they find it has recorded the very same circumstances. The character of Hu is, then, as justly referable to the patriarch
Noah,
as that of Phoroneus.
Before I trace the character of this personage, as delineated by the ancient Bards, it may be proper to hear what was said and thought of him in the middle ages. lolo
Goch, a learned Bard, who wrote in the fourteenth century, thus draws the portrait of Hu, as a patriarch.
gadarn, por, hoew geidwawd Brenin a roe'r gwin a'r gwawd
Hu
Emherawdr
tir
a moroedd
bywyd byd oedd. Ai dalioedd gwedy diliw Aradr gwaisg arnoddgadr gwivv
oil o'r
Vod yn
" Hu the Mighty, the sovereign, the ready protector, " a the giver of wine and renown, the emperor of the king, " land and the seas, and the life of all that are in the zcorld " was he.
Analysis, V. II p. 266.
109
"
" "
he held the strong-beamed plough, active and excellent; this did our Lord of stimulating
shew to the proud man, and to the genius, that he might the art which was most approved by the wise,
father
;
nor
is this
sentiment false."
of
Noah
should
be drawn in stronger colours, or with touches more excluThe picture can be ascribed to no other sively appropriate.
mortal.
actually deified and worshipped, Sion Cent, an illustrious poet, of by the ancient Britons. the fifteenth century, complains of the relics of the old su-
Yet
this patriarch
was
perstition,
of Hit, as
and thus characterizes the religion of the votaries of Christ. distinguished from that
Dwy
ryw awen
dioer
ewybr
Y sy'n y byd,
Awen gan Awen
loewbryd Iwybr :
O iawn dro,
arall,
awen drwyadl
nid
call
cant
!
Two
the world;
manifest
f
"
joyful
is
the theme
principle.
" Another of falshood impulse there is (indiscreetly sung) " and base omens: this has been obtained by the men of " Bards of Wales." the
Hu,
usurping
110
as a
Here, the Welsh are charged with their devotion to Hut Heathen God nor was this complaint of the Christian
;
Bard wholly out of season ; for, however, strange it may appear in the present age, some of his contemporaries were
not ashamed to avow themselves the votaries of this Pagan Of this, the following lines of Rhys Brydydd furdivinity.
nish a glaring proof,
o'r
Bychanav
bychenyd
i
byd ;
Da
Coeliwn, a'n
ei
Duw
Celi.
Ysgawn
daith ag esgud;
Mymryn ts
gloewyn
ei
glud.
'marbedwn
i'r
mawr
is
hael
hwn
Hu
" world's judgment yet he is the greatest, and Lord over us, " we Light is his sincerely believe, and our God of mystery. " and swift: a particle of lucid sunshine is his car. course, " He is on land and seas-^-the whom I shall
great
greatest
the worlds!
Let us beware of
offer-
indignity to
Here we
triarch,
is
find that
Hu
the Mighty,
rank of the principal Demon God amongst the Britons ; and* as his chariot was composed of the rays of the sun, it may be
Ill
luminary and to the same superstition, we is said of his light and swift course.
:
may
refer
what
Nor was
Hu alone,
Moel.
Hu
A'i
bum angel,
A pheirian aur
" Should "
it
Hu
the
be disputed, I assert These are the oxen of Mighty, with a part of his chain, and his five
" angels (or attendants) which ye now behold, with a " golden harness of active flame."
The
out
chievement of
chain and the harness allude to the mythological atHu and his oxen the drawing of the Avane
lake,
of the
deluge.
Thus we
find,
that
Hu
Gadarn, to
whom
the Triads,
evidently ascribe the exclusive history of Noah, is recognized in the same view precisely, by the Bards of the
fourteenth century.
He is acknowledged as a ready protector or preserver ; thus, the peculiar righteousness of Noah made him the preserver of the human race. He
is
the giver
so
Noah was
the
first
112
who
planted a vineyard,
preparing wine,
dutiful sons.
Hu
the land
and
seas
so
Noah was
the chief personage in the ark, the only vessel which preserved life amidst the universal sea ; and after that sea had
subsided, he
zchole earth.
of
Noah
indi-
nations,
and of every
And
..
lest
we
which he
/
lived,
we
Huge,
this
he
is,
taught mankind the practice of agriculture : exclusively, the history of the patriarch Noah.
first
Yet we
traditional character of this same patriarch, sprung a religion offalsehood and base omens or a heathen religion, which
was
directly
contrary to
Christianity.
Nay,
the ,same
God, and viewed as riding on the sun-beams, or personified in the great luminary, and operating in the clouds and meteors of
deified patriarch
as the greatest
was regarded,
heaven.
That such a
superstition should
the Bards in the middle ages of Christianity, tion utterly irreconcileable with probability.
therefore, regard
it
a supposi-
We
must,
of the country, which some individual Britons, with their proverbial predilection for antiquated notions and customs,
fco less
113
be genuine British heathenism, it will be exbe discovered in the pected, that the vestiges of it should
But if
this
oldest Bards,
And
here, in fact,
they present themselves in horrid profusion. The first instances I shall produce, are taken from Aneurin's Gododin, of
will find
The Bard
is
It is an imperative duty to sing the complete associates f " the cheerful ones of the ark of the world. Hu was not " without his selection in the circle of the world; it was his " choice to have Eidiol the Harmonicus." *
"
Here we
of a priest to preside in
was peculiarly the act and privilege of Hu, who, must have been the chief God, to whom the satherefore, cred building was dedicated. And, as we have already seen.
this temple,
was emphatically styled Emperor of the Land and the world was, properly speaking, his temple. Hence Seas, the fabric erected to his honour, is denominated the Ark of
that
the world, alluding to the vessel in which he had presided over the world of waters; and the circle of the world, in reference both to the form of the building, and to the circle
Hu
in
which
his luminous
in the
heavens.
With Hu,
I find a
Song X4.
114
-the Ceto of by the name of antiquity, whom Mr. and Mr. Faber pionounce to be no other than Ceres Bryant
Kd
or
Isis.
But
let
"
"
was not formed, so eminently perfect, so so magnificent, for the strife of swords. In the place great,
structure
" where Morien preserved the merited fire, it cannot be denied, " that corpses were seen by the wearer of scaly mail, who " was harnessed and armed-witlra-piercnig weapon, but co" vered with the skin of a beast. His sword resounded on " the head of the chief singer of Noe and Eseye, at the " stone fence of their common sanctuary. Nevermore great
'
As
sacred to the god Hu, and the goddess K&d; and as he now tells us, that it was the common sanctuary of -Noe and
Eseye,
it
must
follow, that
A oe
T
characters as
Hu and
Ked.
that
Here, then, we have an express authority for the assertion, Hu was, originally no other than the great patriarch.
that I suppose the heathen Britons had actually prename of Noa'h ; but that our Bard, who lived in the
Not
served the
latter part
and beginning of the sixth century, had some knowledge of the sacred records, where he found the name and actions of Noah and did not want sufficient
of the
fifth,
;
Song 15.
115
sagacity to discover the absolute identity of Noah and in history and character. Thus we find the ground-work of this superstition expressly ascertained.
It
the
titles
may, therefore, be proper to examine a little further, and attributes which this Bard assigns to the dei-
fied patriarch.
In the passage before us, we find Morien preserving the meritedfire. Whether this is a title of the god or his priest,
or of both, I leave others to determine.
to be equivalent to Janus Marinus.
In another place, the Bard ascribes the building of the temple to him. " This " hall would not have been made so impregnable, had not
to Caradoc."
He
was
and
Tydain of Taliesin and the Triads, and the Titan of antiquity a known title of the sun.
''
With allusion to this divinity, Aneurin says " And now the lofty leader, Huan, (the sun) is about to ascend
:
Song 16.
6.
f Ibid,
116
It scarcely
Huan
is
a deriva*
is
tive
of Htiy to
whom
expressly attributed
by
We have
is
tribute of Hu,-
chosen
This is, properly, a priest, the radiant bull of battle. title of the god himself, and conferred, as usual, upon his
minister.
denominated Biw Beli bloeddvazvr, the herd of the roaring Beli.* Hence it appears, that Hu and Beli Yet the latter is certainly constituted but one character.
this priest, are
the Celtic god Belinus, mentioned by Ausonius, and expressly identified with Apollo, the solar divinity.
In allusion to the
the
Anenrin
has also
of
He
name of Budd,
Victory,
rises in
"
who
Hu, or
Angor
called
ducer of good,
the serpent
:
who
Bonus Janus, who is also called Seithenin, a little of Saturn, as I shall shew hereafter. Saturn and Janus are the same, and the character is referred by mythologists, to the patriarch Noah.
Merin, Marine, and
and
this
Again
it is
Hu,
" Eidiol
title,
the heat of the splendid Grattnazvx"* as well as Granwyn, in the poems of Taliesin,
felt
re-
Song
15.
Ibid 22.
$ Ibid.
25.
whose
Hu.
appears from this Bard, that IIu the Mighty, the Diluvian god of the heathen Britons, was no other than the patriarch Noah, deified by his apostate de-
Upon
the whole,
it
scendants, and regarded by a wild superstition, as some way connected with the sun, or symbolized by the great luminary of the material heavens. Hence the bull, the lion,
the serpent, and other general emblems of the Heliod&moniac worship, became his earth.
representatives
upon
as the
is universally acknowledged by the Welsh, most profound teacher of their ancient superstition. This Bard avows himself of the order of the Druids,
But
Taliesin
and expressly characterizes the mystical effusions of his muse, by the name of Dawn y Derwyddon, Lore of the Druids. It may, therefore, be of importance to our subject,
to consider his representation of the character of
Hu.
In the
in
first
an elegy which he composed on the death of a priest of Hu, whom he calls Aeddon, which I think, was a title of
the god himself. This priest had presided in pears from the opening of the poem.*
Mona,
as ap-
" Disturbed
is
Hu, the
island
" of the severe remunerator even MONA of the gene" rous bowls, which animate vigour the island whose " barrier is the Menai."
Mona
was a well-known
Many
have
118
regarded
it
Yet
we
find,
to the
honour of Hu,
To
:
they must, therefore, have regarded him as the god presided over drinking.
i
who
of the sixth century, cannot be supposed to have devised, either the character or the honours of this god. What he
has delivered to us, must have been what he learned from his predecessors in superstition and Hu must have been
;
Mona,
It appears
Hu
is,
by the sequel of this poem, that the priest of had the charge of a sacred Ark, and that Aeddon, that the god himself, had come from the land of Gwydion,
(Hermes) into the strong island of Seon, at the time of the deluge, and had brought his friends safe through that dreadful Here we have a curious mythological account calamity.
of the flood, M'hich shews, that the original history of
Hu
Hu,
tor.
the lord of
Mona,
title
He
has the
of Britain.
The Bard
ones,
toil
of
tine just
upon
where
it is
Hu,
band.
119
In another poem,* Taliesin introduces this Diiuvian god by the name of Deon, the distributer, who had bestowed
upon him,
of Britain. In the age of our Bard, this could have been nothing more than conferring an empty title : but we may
hence
infer, that
his authority,
the chief Druid, during the high day of had claimed and exercised the power imand that the god who invested him with title
In
this
those of a goddess,
shall say
poem, the honours of Hu are connected with named Ked, or Ceridwen, of whom I
hereafter.
more
We
ox,
the attribute of
Hu,
stationed
before a lake,
an
eagle, another of his symbols, is carried aloft in the air, in the path of Granwyn, the pervading sovereign (the This divinity is styled Hetvr Eirian, the splendid sun).
descriptions throughout this poem, are full of allusions to the deluge ; and the draining of the generous
mover.
The
bowl
rites
of the sa-
Another poem mentions Pen Annwvn, the ruler of the the emperor of the deep, who is evidently the same as Hu, This piece is full of the mythology of the deluge; seas.
and the Bard or Druid who violated
drank out of the cauldron of
his oath, after
this ruler
doomed
to destruction.
Appendix, No.
Ibid. Ibid.
1.
No.
No.
8. 3,
120
The poem
called
Cadair Teyrn
On*
upon the stage and we find, by the extract which I have subjoined, f that he was actually
worshipped under the character of FJRE. Yet this ardent god boasts, that he could protect his chair of presidency He is, therefore, the in the midst of a general deluge.
same character
bolized
as the Diluvian
Hu,
by the sun,
divinity
The
who
is
personified in the bull, Becr^,fed, is styled the supreme proprietor, and has his sanctuary in an island surrounded by
Supreme proprietor
is
is
the
title
his symbol,
Utkr Pendragon,
that
is,
or
introduced in pageantry, god wonderful and describes himself as the god of war, the atherial, havchief dragon, this
ing the rainbow for his girdle. He is a protector in darkness, a ploughman, a defender of his sanctuary, and a vanquisher of giants.
It is
of his own prowess. of Haearndor, the vessel with the iron door, which toiled to the top of the hill. He was yoked as an ox, he was patient in affliction
the earth.
He
of
Such
which superstition
Appendix, No. 4.
Ibid.
No. No.
5.
6.
t Ibid.
( Ibid,
No. 11.
In the second part of this poem, a sacrificing priest invokes this god with a prayer for the prosperity of Britain.
He
styles
Father,
of
is
stones.
again named Pn/dain the glancing Hu- the sovethe gliding king the dragon, and the reign of heaven victorious Bell, Lord of the Honey Island, or Britain.
the praise of the great leader, the Bard professes to have derived his inystic lore from the traditions of the distinguished Ogdoad,
He
by which he means
the Arkites, or eight persons who had heen preserved in the sacred ship. This piece contains the mythology of the deluge, together with some pretended
vaticinations relating to subsequent times.
The
is
Hu the Mighty,
styled Cadicaladr, the supreme disposer of battle, and described as a Druid. He is attended by a spotted cow,
which procured
suppose as
blessings.
On
a warning presage of the deluge; and afterwards, she was boiled, or sacrificed, on May eve, the season
in
the ark.
which British mythology commemorated the egress from The spot where she was sacrificed, afforded rest to
who
is
the
name of Gwarthmor,
ruler
Menz&yd the blessed, and the dragon ruler of the was the constructor of K^d, the ark, which the grievous waters, stored with corn, and was borne passed
world.
He
aloft
by serpents.
Hence the symbolical ape, the stall of the cow, and the mundane rampart, or circular temple, are consecrated to the
Diluvian god, and his vessel
tive dance,
is
;
their fes-
is
which is represented as an animal, I suppose KTO<, the whale, investing the Bard with the sovereignty of Britain. have already seen this prerogative exercised by Hu,
We
the Diluvian god Ked must therefore have acted in conwith the mystical father. junction
:
The same god is the sovereign of boundless dominion, in whose presence our priest trembles before the covering
stone, in order to escape the quagmire of hell.
Another poem*
priest has the
styles this
husbandman.
was
His
name of Aedd, a
lived alternately
;
title
and
his privilege
to carry the ivy branch, with which, Dionysius says, the Britons covered themselves in celebrating the rites of
Bacchus.
To
if
Appendix, No.
13.
323
-refer, will
be able to add
I
many
But what have here produced may suffice to shew, nent. that our ancestors paid an idolatrous homage to a great patriarch, who had been preserved from a general deluge ;
that they regarded this deified mortal as symbolized by the sun, or in some manner identified with him ; and that this
compound
But
divinity
was regarded
Druids corresponded in the main with that of other nations, respecting the nature and attributes of the Gods, it wiil be asked, with which of the gods of antiquity is this heliopatriarchal divinity to be identified
?
studied mythology only in a common school pantheon, in the works of Homer, or in the Latin
To
those
who have
poets,
my
may
satisfactory.
The mythology of the Britons was of a character somewhat more antique than that of the Greeks and Romans, as
we
find
it
sented each of their gods with his own appropriate figure, and with a character elegantly distinct: whereas the old
religion of the nations contemplated the objects of adoration as referable to one history, and represented them as in one compound the various relagrouped
body, marking
by a multitude of heads, arms, and ornaments, with which they graced their principal idol. Thus the Helio-Arkite god of
tions,
operations,
and
own
person,
most of the
to their superstition,
J24
Upon
Bryant.
this subject, I shall
" The first " were writers," says this great mythologist, " the poets and the mischief (of polytheism) began with " them for they first infected tradition, and mixed it with " The greatest abuses (says Anaxaallegory and fable.
;
:
" "
"
I goras, Legat.) of true knowledge came from them. that we owe to Orpheus, Homer, and Hesiod, the insist,
fictitious
they are pleased to call gods and I can produce " Herodotus to witness what I assert. He informs us
"
whom
"
" "
" " "
years before himself, and not more. These," says he, " were the persons who first framed the theogony of the
Greeks, and gave appellations to their deities, and distinguished them, according to their several ranks and departments.
They, at the same time, described them under different appearances : for, till their time, there was not in
representation
of the gods,
either in sculpture
painting ; nor any specimen of the statuary's art, exhi" bited no such substitutes were in those times thought " of."*
" The blindness of the Greeks, in regard to their own theology, and to that of the countries from " whence they borrowed, led them to multiply the terms
Again
"
tf
to
make
they may have separated and distin" under different personages, they are all guished them
"
But however
"
t(
into one deity, the sun. plainly resolvable to be observed, as to the gods of the
,
The same
Romans."
is
<
*
Analysis, V.
I. p.
160.
There was by no means, originally, that diversity of gods " which is imagined, as Sir John Mai-sham has very justly " observed. Neque enim tanta 7roto$tor)? Gentium, quanta " " fuit Deorum vo^vwvv^n" Pluto, amongst the best " was esteemed the same as Jupiter ; and indeed theologists, " " the same as every other deity." Porphyry (ap. " that Fvsta, Rhea, Ceres,
**
Euseb.) acknowledged,
Themis,
Priapus, Proserpine, Bacchus, Attis Adonis, Silenus, and " the Nobody had Satyrs, were all one and the same.
"
" examined the theology of the ancients more deeply than " he was a determined and his evidence
Porphyry
:
pagan
*
"
in this point
is
unexceptionable."
v.
To
"
these passages
Mr. Eaber.
"
"
Osiris,
shewn
we exa-
" mine their respective histories, and attentively consider " the actions which are ascribed to them, we shall be con " can each be that in their human
vinced,
capacity, they
" no other than the great patriarch."-^ " If the several histories of the principal deities, revered most of the ancient nations, be considered, we shall by " find them at once allusive to the Sabian idolatry, and to
" " the catastrophe of the deluge. Thus the account which (t is given of Osiris and Isis, if taken in one point of view, " directs our attention to the sun and moon; but if in " another, it places immediately before our eyes the great *' he was preserved. patriarch, and the vessel in which " we learn from Plutarch, that Osiris was a
Accordingly,
*
Analysis, V.
I. p.
17.
126
" husbandman, a legislator, and a " that of the
worship
zealous advocate for the
gods ; Typhon, or the sea, conand compelled him to enter into an spired against him, " ark," &c.*
"
result of the
most elaborate
inquiries
may
be allowed to
Britons was a Pantheos, who, under his several titles and attributes, comprehended the group of superior gods, which
the Greeks and other refined nations separated and arranged
as distinct personages.
As
As
god of
light,
he was their
Bdif
or dpollo.
their Jupiter.
of battle, he was their Mars: and as And thus Caesar ruler of the waters, he was their Neptune. discover, in the superstition of the Druids, all the might
But
of
as giver
festive carousals,
of wine and generous liquor, and as president which is his favourite picture amongst
rites,
ac-
cording to Dyonisius, were duly celebrated in the British islands. Under this character, he appropriates the title of
*
I.
p.
151.
127
Hu, which
is
precisely the
the termination.
V-?, or '*-)? of antiquity, without His two great symbols, the bull and the
"
"
have observed," says Mr. Faber, ff that Bacchus, or Dionusus, was one of the many titles of the HelioI
" Arkite Noah: accordingly, in his person, the two em" blems at present under consideration (the bull and the " will be found to be eminently united. The dragon) " as we learn from Arrian, worshipped him as Athenians, " the son of Jupiter and Proserpine. Jupiter, however, " accomplished the rape of Proserpine, under the figure of " a dragon and Bacchus is universally described as bearing " some resemblance to a bull. Hence we shall see the
;
" reason why, in the Bacchic mysteries, the bull was ce" lebrated as the parent of the dragon, and the dragon as " the of the bull.
parent
is
full
of
al-
symbols of the bull and the serpent.Euripides introduces a chorus of Bacchantes, in" viting him to appear in the shape of a bull, a dragon, or
" a
"
lion.
And
Orphic hymns
styles him, the deity with two horns, having the head of " a bull, even Mars-Dionusits, reverenced in a double form,
zvith
a beautiful
star.
For
inquires,
why
the
women of
on the sea
shore;
and
128
" " of our veneration
bull, worthy bring the graces in thy train Hear us, hear us, illustrious bull !"
!
of
different ways, he concludes with asking, whether the " title of bull might not be given to Bacchus, on account " of his the inventor and patron of agriculture"* being
the bull and the dragon were symbols, eminently conspicuous in the worship and rites of Bacchus ; and it may hence be presumed, that the very
It appears,
then,
that
frequent introduction of them in the British Bards, alludes to the worship of their Helio-Arkite god, considered in
that character,
the British rites of this divinity, I think the tradition, respecting the oxen of Hu, drawing the Avanc out of the
lake, has a
To
marked
reference.
It will therefore
be proper,
in
British
lakes.
mythology of oxen,
lakes,
and
islands,
embosomed
Of all the objects of ancient superstition, there is none which has taken such hold of the populace of Wales, as the celebrated oxen of Hu. Their fame is still vigorous in every
corner of the principality, as far, at least, as the Welsh language has maintained its ground. Fe\v indeed pretend
to
tell
Banawg
were, or what
lake.
And
tradition
tells
which appro-
I. p.
129
were of an extraordinary size, and that they were subjected to the sacred yoke. I have also several
ftfiated this epithet,
reasons to suppose, that in Pagan Britain, some rites in commemoration of the deluge, and in which the agency of sacred oxen was employed, were periodically celebrated,
lakes*
In replying to a tale, which seems utterly impossible, we use an old adage, which says, The Ychen Banazvg cannot draw the Avanc out of deep waters. This imports, that they
popular and local traditions of such c,n atchievement, are current all over Wales. There is hardly a lake in the principality
could draw
certain depth.
And
which
is
that where this feat was performed. of the populace must have arisen
which was
And
this
ceremony
seems to have been performed with several heathenish rites. Mr. Owen tells us there is a strange piece of music, still
known
oxen, and the rattling of the chains, in drawing the out of the lake. *
Avanc
wbich the Druids employed in this rite, were probably bulls of the finest breed which the country afforded, but distinguished, either i>y the size of their horns, or by some peculiar mark, and set apart for sacred use.
beasts
The
Avanc, we generally understand the beaver, though in the present instance, tradition makes it an'animal of pro-
By
K
* Welsh Eng. Diet. V. Banawg,
130
digious bulk and force.
seems to be, ultimately referable to the patriarch himself, or to the ark, considered as his shrine, and supposed to have
once thought the story contained only a mythological allusion to the sacrifice of oxen offered by Noah, when he
I
And
found
rest
upon the
spot,
zchere the
But
it
appears,
by the va-
that our superstitious ancestors had some further allusions, Let us hear what is said of the animals, by mythologists.
Mr. Bryant was decidedly of opinion, that the bulls and oxen of mythology had constant reference to Noah, to the ark, or to the history of the deluge.
It is said of the patriarch, after the deluge, that he " became an husbandman. This circumstance was reli" giously recorded in all the ancient histories of Egypt. " An ox so useful in husbandry, was, I imagine upon this " made an emblem of the patriarch. Hence, upon account, " are seen the ox's of ancient
"
many
pieces
sculpture,
head,
" with the Egyptian modius between his horns; and not " but the living animal was in many places, held only so, "* " and revered as a
sacred,
deity.
Analjs. V.
II. p.
417.
131
The author then proceeds
to shew, that
" Bulls were sacred to Osiris (who was Noah) Again " the husbandman. They were looked upon as living great " oracles, and real deities, and to be in a manner, ani11
whom
they repre-
" Symbolical imagery, observes Mr. Faber, was very " much in use among the ancients, and will be found to " the whole of their
provide (q. pervade
?)
heterogeneous seems to have been adopted, as " perhaps, the most usual emblem of the ark, and a ser" pent as that of the sun ; while the great patriarch him" self was sometimes worshipped under the form of a bull, " and in consequence of his union with the sun, sometimes, " hieroglyphically described as a serpent, having the head of a bull." f
"
mythology.
heifer
And
this
superstition
is
comes
nations,
and
With regard to the devotion of the Hyperboreans, to " the arkife mysteries, we are plainly informed by Diony" that the rites of Bacchus, or Noah, were duly cesius, " lebrated in Britain. Hence arose their veneration for
" the bull, the constant symbol of the deity of the ark.
"
"
By
this god,
made of
'
brass,
the
"
p. 177,
'*
articles of capitulation, granted to the Romans, " defended the Adige against them. After their defeat, " Catulus ordered this bull to be carried to his own
house,
his
to remain, as the
This god is ranked with Jupiter, Esus, and Vulcan, being called Tarvos Trigaramis, from ihe three " cranes perching, one on his head, one on the middle of
victory.
'
his back,
cannot help thinking, that the people who named this bull, spoke a language very similar to our Cambro-British :
I
for
Tarw Trigaramis
is
Welsh
And
I shall shew hereafter, that the chief priest, perstition, as who attended the arkite mysteries, was styled Garanhir, the
lofty crane.
Hence
may have
represented
We
bulls,
were
assigned to Hu, the Diluvian god of the Britons, as his ministers or attendants.
there are any traces of evidence in the documents left us by our ancestors, that the
I shall
this animal.
And
first
of
all,
which are
scattered in the mythological Triads. are here informed of three primary oxen of Britain : the first of which was, Mtlyn Gtvanxyn, the ydloze ox of
the spring
;
We
I.
p. 210.
133
or, which stopped the channel,
ei
yellow ox of the spring, I make no doubt is the sign Taurus, into which the sun entered at the season when the
The
Druids celebrated their great arkite mysteries. Mr. Faber has shewn, that the bull of the sphere, in general mythology, was the god of the ark. f And the mythology of Britain
did not differ essentially from that of other nations.
stopped the channel, seems to have some reference to the oxen of Hu, which prevented the repetition of the deluge.
The ox which
Of
J
of mythology implied the same I find that the Triads mention
bulls
:
be granted
and
The first of them is styled Cynvawr Cad Gaddug, mab Cynvyd Cynvydion : that is, the primor-
dial great one, of the contest of mystery, son of the prior world, of former inhabitants. This elaborate title, evidently son of the antedipoints to that personage, who was
luvians,
an
inhabitant of
the
former
world,
and
the
He was Marsgreat patriarch of the new. Dionusus of the Orphic poet. And, as the great one of the mystery, he was no other than the Mighty Hu of the Brithe bull,
tons.
into his
title,
brings
forward his other great symbol. Prydydd Bychan, an eminent Bard of the thirteenth century, says Dragon gyrchiad Cad
Gaddug.
The dragon
* See
+
W. Archaiology, V.
st.
21 and 80.
My
.
of the Cabiri, V.
3.
206.
W,
A'rchaiol.
V.
134
If I
am not mistaken,
this bull
altars
sometimes introduce MoJtyn or Moyn, for Tarw, a bull.* Therefore Moyn Cad is synonymous with Tarw Cad, bull of battle: and Camden has copied two inscriptions, Deo
Mogonti Cad, and Deo Mouno CW. f It should appear from hence, that our hull of battle was publicly acknowledged as a god, in the ages when the Romans occupied Briton: and consequently, that the Helio-arkite god of the Britons was venerated, under the title and form of a bull.
The two
are said to
in the sixth
century
but
eminently patronizes his worship, is often dignified Thus Aneurin styles the \vith one or other of his titles.
solar deity, Beli Bloeddvawr,
is,
who
the loud roaring Beli, that the bull Beli, and then calls his priest, Taw Trin, bull
of
battle.
Again, the Triads speak of the three bull sovereigns of Britain, J one of whom is named Elmur mob Cadeir. The
firm or established spirit, son of the Chair; in another copy, the son of Cibddar, the Mystic. This seems to be a description of
The
second, a mere
title,
duplicate of the
different
is
This can
be no other than the patriarch, who issued from the ark, and presented the first specimen of man to the new world.
* So
Taliesin,
Appendix, No.
Col. 1075.
2.
+ Gibson's Camden
.-*
W.
135
The
third bull sovereign
liesin;
but
it
appears, that
;
of solar
and Taliesin, radiant front is a deity, though conferred on his chief priest.
bulls
The mythological
sovereigns,
still
pertain to
superstition.
Damons.
three bull daemons of Britain were Ellyll Gwidawl, the dtemon of the whirling stream ; Ellyll Llyr Merini, the
The
dtemon of the flowing sea; and Elhjll Gurthmrcl Wledig, the daemon of the sovereign, of the equiponderate mass (q. the earth ?) * All this seems referable to him, who was acknowledged as emperor of the land and seas, and worshipped as
chief
Britain.
And we
of the three daemons which were recognized in this island, the first was Ellyll Banawg : but this was the epethet of the oxen of Hu. To him, therefore, the symbolical ox or
bull chiefly pertains.
The
One
Ednyvedawg Drythyll, the damon of wanton animation, and seems to allude to a symbol which
them
is
called Ellyll
disgraced, even paganism itself : the last was Ellyll Malen, the dcemon Malen, the Minerva or Bollona of Britain, -j-
with an ox or
In these notices we find the Helio-arkite god identified bull, whether as the leader in battle, as suruler of the land, or as the great object of
.
preme
daemon
worship. It may, therefore, be presumed that the Druids adored him in the image of a bull; or that they kept the
W.
-Ubia.V. II ;
17/71.
136
living animal as his representative.
But
let
us hear what
That Aneurin
and gives his
served.
calls
priest the
the Helio-arkite god the roaring belt, title of bull of battle, has been ob.
poem
called
Buarth Beirdd,
the Oxpen of the Bards, or Bardic stall of the ox, professes to deliver the lore of his order, with superior accuracy, pronounces a kind of curse upon the pretended Bard, who
was not acquainted with this sacred stall. This inclosure was situated in a small island, or rock, beyond the billows.
The rock
exile
displayed the countenance of him who receives the into his sanctuary, that is r of the deified patriarch,
who
his ark,
It
was
is,
of
Hu
the
Mighty, who
of the British islands, and the emperor of the land and seas : and he was evidently the Bacchus of the Britons for not
:
to insist at present
we
this poem, hastening to the jolly carousal, an4 a free indulgence in the mead feast, a principal rite making in the worship of their god,
throughout
Hu, the
Helio-arkite patriarch,
ox-stall, it
must be
in-
god
presided in
image of a
animal,
bull,
the living
Accordingly, we find the priest, who gives the meadfeast, and introduces the votaries into the temple, making procla-
edifice,
137
himself"
I
am
the
cell
am
presented by implying the bull of fame. such a derivation, perfectly harmonizes with the general
tenor of British mythology.
roared in thunder, and blazed in lightning, that the supreme bull himself, had an es-
form
Hu
in the
form of a
bull.
But
sacrecl
upon a great occasion, had submitted to the and dragged the chain of affliction, yoke,
this bull,
patriarch god, who, amongst his other titles, is ad* dressed by the name of Hu, thus speaks, by the mouth of
his priest
*'
The
"
was subjected
my
affliction ;
my
<*
not for
my progeny"^
Here
it
garded an
seems to be implied, that our mythologists re-. ox, submitting to the yoke, as an apt symbol of
the patriarch, in his afflicted state during the deluge. And this explains the meaning of the Bard, when he says of the
"
<*
Diluvian patriarch, " The heavy blue chain didst thiou, Ojust man endure ; and for the spoils of the deep (the
ravages of the deluge) doleful
is
thy song." J
-ipa
t
NO,
a.
138
In the same poem, the Bard says of certain persons, who were not admitted into the society of the patiarch, and of his own order " into the knew not on
mysteries
They
**
what day the stroke would be given, nor what hour of " the splendid day C\vy (the agitated person) would be " his or who into the dales of
born,
prevented
going
Devwy
"
(the possession of the waters). They know not the brin" died ox with the thick head-band, having seven score knobs
" in
his collar."
This brindled ox
Triads mention
is
whom
the
oxen of Britain.
few lines lower down, we have a. hint, that the Druids kept an ox as the representative of their god. The Bard says " They know not what animal it is, which the silver-headed " ones (the hoary Druids) protect." This animal must have been the brindled ox mentioned in the preceding paragraph.
Indeed," the keeping of sacred oxen seems to have been to the establishment of these fanatical priests.
essential
Thus, Taliesin and Merddin are introduced, bewailing the destruction of their temples and idols in the sixth century.
" It was Maelgwn whom I saw, with piercing weapons : " before the master of the fair ox-herd (ter y vuluj, hig " household will not be silent. Before the two personages, " they land in the celestial circle before the passing form " and the fixed form, over the pale white boundary. The " grey-stones they actually remove. Soon is Elgan (the " supremely fair) and his retinue discovered for his slaugh" * This ter, alas, how great the vengeance that ensued !"
* See Appendix, No, 9.
Etgan, master of the fair herd, seems to have been the symbol of Hu, and he was a living animal, as appears from the
fate
which
befel him.
Upon
he
is
the whole,
it
was represented by a
bull.
Banawg, or oxen
which he employed in drawing the avanc out of the lakeThese animals were subjected to his control. It appears by a passage which I shall presently exhibit, that they were
originally three in
the office
to
number but that one of them failed in assigned to him and his companions, which was,
;
draw the
shrine or car of their master in a sacred procesfor the selection of these animals for this
sion.
To account
may be observed, that as mythology represented the himself as a bull, it might be deemed meet, that he god should have ministers of the same species. But the original
use, it
and
historical
patriarch
Noah.
exist-
So
his original
ence.
may reality, they were the three sons of the patriarch, who attended upon him, with the title of D'D^'X, which implies both leaders,
it
And
princes,
whilst unsophisticated, may have reported, that they assisted their aged father in his debarkation.*
tradition,
and oxen.
And
The oxen of
;
Hu
deluge therefore, connected with the Arkite mythology of the Britons. Yet popular tradition recites the following tale of them. One of these oxen overstrained himself, in
drawing forth the avanc, so that his eyes started from their
* And hence may have arisen the fable of the
out of the water.
D'D^K
140
sockets,
was
of his companion, wandered about disconsolate, till he died refused food, and
achieved.
other, pining for the loss
The
in Cardiganshire, at a place
which
is
is,
the bellowing, from the dismal moans of the sacred animal. Some such incident may have happened during the comme-
morative
rites
of the Britains
and the
implies a probability, that this spot was sacred to the of Hu, and his oxen,
In this instance, as well as in many others, the early Christians selected the sanctuary of their heathen predecessors, for the place of a religious establishment. Perhaps
this
was done with the view of diverting the attention of the people from the objects of idolatrous superstition, which they had been used to contemplate in those places but it
;
had generally a contrary effect. Dewi, first Bishop of St, JPavid's, founded a church and a religious seminary at
firevi.
But
of the old superstition, that the history of the Christian bishop seems to have been confounded with that of a hea-
and the Bards transferred to him the mytholooxen of the votaries of Hu. Thus Gwynvardd Bregical cheiniog, a Bard who wrote in the former part of the twelfth
then god
;
century.
Deu ychen Dewi deu odidawc Dodyssant hwy eu gwarr dan garr kynawe. Deu ychen Dewi arterchawc oetynt. Deu garn a gertynt yn gyd preinyawc
:
hcbrwng anrec yn redegawc Lasgwm, nyd oet trwm tri urtassawc, Edewid Bangu gu gadwynawc ;
ereill ureisc
A'r deu
y Vrycheinyawc,
141
Ban del gofyn arnam ny rybytwn omawc Rac gormes kedeirn cad dybrunawc. Ar Duw a Dewi deu niuerawc
Yd
" The two oxen of Dewi, two of distinguished honour, " The two their necks under the car of the lofty one. put " oxen of were they. With equal pace Dewi, majestic " they moved to the festival. When they hastened, in con" ducting the sacred boon to Glascwm (the green valley), the "
THREE
others,
dignified ones
The amiable
"
"
left behind, bearing his chain and the t&o T with their huge bulk, arrived in Brechinia. e " shall not be terrified for the intrusion of the mighty ones, " meritorious in battle. Let us call God and
Bangu was
upon
Dewi,
" the two leaders of hosts, who, at " us." journ amongst
Throughout this curious poem, which is of considerable length, the Bard intermixes a large proportion of mythological
Dewi.
imagery and description, with the popish legends of need not, then, be surprised, that he assigns
We
ascertained property of Hit, to whom all that is said in the passage before us must be referred. Here, then, we may
remark the following particulars of the Ychain Banazeg. They were, originally, three in number, but, by the failure
of one, reduced to a pair. Their office, in the commemorative ceremony of the Britc-ns, was to draw the car of the
lofty one, or of Hit, the patriarch god, to
whom
And
the oxen
if this
was
the meaning of the memorial, the avanc of mythology, which the sacred oxen drew out of the lake, and
whieh-gave
142
ceremony, must imply the identical tehicle, which inclosed the Diluvian patriarch.
rise to the
shrine, or
peculiar to the Britons ; and, did not originate in these islands. Mr. Faber has perhaps, proved, by just reasoning, that the Phoenician Agruerus, the patron of agriculture, was no other than the deified
patriarch Noah.
" Sancho-
"
place by a yoke of oxen, and that, amongst the Byblians, the greatest of gods !"*
Here we have the avanc, and the Ychain Banawg of Hu Gadarn; but the Phoenician historian does not tell us, that this shrine was drawn out of a lake, which was an essential
circumstance in the mythology of the Britons.
It
may
therefore be proper to consider their opinion concerning certain lakes, and the phenomena which they presented.
represented the deluge under the figure of a lake, called Llyn Llion, the waters of which burst forth, and overwhelmed the face of the whole earth. Hence they
The Druids
punishment but also as a divine lustration, which washed away the bane of corruption, and purified the earth for the reception of
the just ones, or of the deified patriarch and his family.
it
But the just symbol of the deluge. deluge itself was viewed, not merely as an instrument of to destroy the wicked inhabitants of the globe,
regarded a lake as
the.
Consequently,
municated
its
was deemed
was
bays, by which
<y..
'
it
locally represented.
-
* Sec Myst.
V.
I. p.
143
As a
relict
may
of adoration, upon of adoration : and Llyn Urddyn, the lake of consecration, in Merionethshire ; and Llyn Gwydd lor, the lake of the grove of lor, or God, in Montgomeryas,
Llyn
shire.*
religious
And
that
kind of superstition was prevalent amongst the ancient Druids, may be inferred from the testimony of Gildas, who informs us that they worshipped mountains and rivers.^i
And,
Welsh
chronicles of Walter de
Mapes, and Geoffrey of Monmouth. These writers, in the mass of their romance, involve a few genuine national traditions which they would fain pass upon the world for sober " There Thus as introduce
;
history.
they
Arthur,
saying
a lake near the Severn, called Llyn Llion, which swal" lows all the water that flows into it at the tide of flood,
is
"
" without any visible increase but at the tide of ebb, it " swells up like a mountain, and pours its waters over the " banks, so that whoever stands near it at this time, must
:
* run
"
Llion of these writers preserves the name oi that mythological lake^ which occasioned the .deluge; of
The Llyn
which it was, therefore, a local symbol. The peculiarity here assigned to it, may allude to some such natural phenomenon as the Hygre, or Seyerrt Boar; a high and roarSee Camb. Reg. V.
302, 370.
p. 110.
I.
p.
W.
144
1
ing surge, which leads the flood lo the inland parts of the (channel, whilst the river is actually ebbing in its aestuary.
may have
proved upon
it,
The
deluge,
The
reader
is
referred to the
Ap-
pendix
in general.
And
lakes.
Strabo says, that the Gauls consecrated their gold in certain lakes; and adds, that lakes furnished them with
their
most
inviolate sanctuaries.
M?ur
'
aurotj at Ai/*i*a
rw
or
*aerv*ixv
certain
islets,
rafts, inclosed
sequel.
from Justin, that in a time of public calathe priests of the Gauls, that is, the Druids, declared mity, to the people, that they should not be free from the pestilential distemper,
We also learn
which then raged among them, till they should have dipped the gold and silver, gotten by war and sacrilege, in the lake of Thoulouse.*
tib.
XXXII.
c. 3.
145
The same author presents
"
us with this curious account
Many
human
"
habits,
linen,
cloth,
and
others cast in
"
cheese, wax, bread, and other things, every one according "to his ability; then sacrificed animals, and feasted for
"three days/'*
This seems to be perfectly consonant with British super^ stition, in regard to the Diluvian lakes.
But the deluge overwhelmed the world, and this catastrophe was figured out in the traditional history of several of
our sacred lakes.
which ancient
cities
drowned, f
I could
to this
list,
but
I observe, that
escaped upon a piece of timber, or by other means.Though I think it improbable that such submersions actually happened, I refer the tales in which they are reported,
to
those lessons
their
The
by our author
is
~Llyn Sa-
V.
p.
114128.
146
vaddan, in Brecknock shire. tion is not totally forgotten.
dents, as related
The
old story of
its
formainci-
I recollect
some of
its
hy an old
man
in the
town of Hay.
" The scite of the present lake was formerly occupied by " a but the inhabitants were reported to be very large city " wicked. The king of the country sent his servant to ex;
" amine into the truth of this rumour, adding a threat, that " in case it should prove- to be well founded, he would de" the place, as an example to his other subjects. The stroy " minister arrived at the town in the evening. All the in" habitants were in riotous festivity, and wallowengaged " ing in excess. Not one of them regarded the stranger, or " offered him the rites of At he saw the
hospitality.
last,
"
open door of a mean habitation, into which he entered. " The family had deserted it to repair to the scene of tumult,
" "
all
who lay weeping in the cradle. The down by the side of this cradle, soothed
" the little innocent, and was grieved at the thought, that " he must in the destruction of his abandoned
perish
" bours.
" and whilst he was diverting the child, he accidently " dropped his glove into the cradle. The next morning he " departed before it was light, to carry his melancholy " to the
tidings
king.
He had but just left the town when he heard a noise " behind him, like a tremendous crack of thunder mixed " with dismal shrieks and lamentations. He stopped
" to
listen.
"
Now
all
it
sounded
like the
was dead
silence.
He
:
" what had happened, as it was still dark, and he felt " no inclination to return into the so he pursued his city " The morning was cold. He searched till sunrise. journey " for his gloves, and rinding but one of them, he presently
" recollected where he had left the other. These gloves " had been a present from his sovereign. He determined " to return for that which he had left behind. When he " was come near to the scite of the he observed with town, " surprize, that none of the buildings presented themselves " to his as on the He a
view,
preceding day.
" few The whole plain was covered with a lake. steps " Whilst he was gazing at this novel and terrific scene, he " remarked a little in the middle of the water the wind
spot
:
proceeded
"
gently wafted
it
as it
"
" drew near, he recognized the identical cradle in which he " had left his His joy on receiving this pledge of glove. " favour was only heightened by the discovery, that royal " the little object of his compassion had reached the shore
alive
and unhurt.
He
"
was
all
" able
This
wretched place."
narrative evidently contains the substance of one of those tales, which we call Mabinogion, that is, tales
little
my-
thology.
pressive
And
it
its
profligate
Such
of the country, or of populous districts, by the intrusion of the sea, are current all over Wales. They were not unfre-
-*~
quent in other heathenish countries,- and I observe, Mr. Faber uniformly refers them to the history of the deluge.
s.
Thus " Phlegyas and his children, the Phlegyae, were said " to have come from the land of Minyas, and in the pride " of their of the Orchomethe to have
heart,
quitted
city
148
" nians or Arkites. This desertion from the Minyse or " the cause of their destruction for it Noachida, proved " was in reality, the separation of the antediluvian giants, " or refused to from the of Noah.
;
Titans,
family
They
" imitate the piety of that patriarch, and were consequently " excluded from the ark by their own wickedness. Accord-
"
"
ingly
represents them as being overwhelmed by with the waters of the ocean. Neptune,
Nonnus
its
deep rooted base, the Phlegyan isle Neptune shook, and plung'd beneath the waves,
impious inhabitants."*
>
>
persuaded, says our author, that the tradition of the sinking of the Phlegyan istej is the very same as that u of the sinking of the island Atlantis. They both appear
tf
" I
am
" to
me to allude to one great event, the sinking of the old " world beneath the waters of the deluge, or if we suppose " the arch of the earth to have remained in its
"
original po-
The sition, the rising of the central waters above it. " force of truth leads him to main(M. Baily) unguardedly
"
tain, for he doubtless did not perceive the consequences " of such a position, that the Atlantians were the same as " the Titans and the and he even cites an ancient
giants
"
"
"'
tradition, preserved
formerly inhabited the island Atlantis ; but that, at the time of the deluge, he was carried in an ark to that continent,
rity.
"
"
which has ever since been occupied by his posteThese particulars unequivocally point out
to us,
I. p.
jIU^
p. 283.
149
As a further elucidation of our prevalent traditions, of the submersion of cities and regions, I must take the liberty to transcribe the following curious passage.
" As the sinking of the Phlegyan isle, and the submersion " of the island Atlantis, equally relate to the events of the " flood so the Chinese have ; preserved a precisely similar " of the the
tradition, respecting
preservation
island
"
in
" former ages, for the excellency and fruitfulness of its soil, " which afforded among the rest, a particular clay, exceed" for the making of those vessels, which now go ingly proper *' by the name of Porcelain, or China ware. The inhabitants " very much enriched themselves by the manufacture but
;
"
" of religion, which incensed the gods to that degree, that " by an irrevocable decree, they determined to sink the " whole island. ^However, the then reigning king [and so" the island, whose name was Peiruun, being a vereign>of " very virtuous and religious prince, no ways guilty of the " crimes of his subjects, this decree of the gods was re" vealed to him in a dream wherein he was
;
commanded,
" as he valued the security of his person, to retire on board '' his ships, and to flee from the island, as soon as he should " that the faces of the two idols which stood at the
observe,
So pressing a danger, entry of the temple turned red. impending over the heads of his subjects, and the signs " whereby they might know its approach, in order to save " their lives by a speedy flight, he caused forthwith to be
" " made for his zeal and public ; but he was only ridiculed " Some time care, and grew contemptible to his subjects.
'>
"
150
*'
after,
a loose
" perstitious fears, went one night, nobody observing him, " and painted the faces of both idols red. The next morning notice was given to the king, that the idols' faces " were red upon which, little imagining it to be done by " such wicked hands, but looking upon it as a miraculous " and undoubted sign of the island's destruction event, " now at hand he went forthwith on board his
:
"
being
ships
" with his and with family, and all that would follow him " crowded hastened from the fatal shores, towards the sails, " coasts of the After the in China.
;
"
province Foktsju, king's departure, the island sunk ; and the scofter, with " his accomplices, not apprehensive that their frolic would
" lowed up by the waves, with all the unfaithful that re" mained in the island, and an immense quantity of por" celain ware. " The king and "
11
memory
his people got safe to China, where the of his arrival is still celebrated by a yearly fes-
tival, on which the Chinese, particularly the inhabitants " of the southern maritime provinces, divert themselves on " the and down in their boats, as if they water, rowing up " were preparing for a flight, and sometimes crying with a " loud which was the name of that
voice, Peirmin,
festival
prince.
Japan
"
"
" tation of the fable of the Atlantis, to the manners and " habits of the Chinese. The same local
ft
appropriation
whicli fixed the one island in the western, fixed the other
151
"
in the eastern ocean; and, while the Greeks and Phceni" cians worshipped the great solar patriarch, under the " name of Atlas; the Chinese revered the common proge" nitor of mankind, under the title of Peiruun, or P'Arun' " the Arkite." *
the same general conclusion, to which Mr, Faber is by a view of universal mythology, I had arrived by the contemplation of British tradition. This coincidence furled
To
we
and
situa-
must
allude to
in
were concerned.
And
and provinces,
presented our rude ancestors with local commemorations of the destruction of mankind, by the deluge; so, on the other
hand,
we
which must be
and
his family
this class
To
as passing uncorlakes.
rupted and unmixed through the waters of certain Let it suffice to mention two instances^
described,
"
still
"
retains its
own
colour, and
as
it
II. p.
289, from
p. 13.
152
"
<*
thought to carry out no more, nor other water, than what it brought in."*
ture, is
" the
(t
(f (f
" In the East part of the county (Meirioneth) This river, river Dee springs from two fountains. after a very short course, is said to pass entire and unAgain, mixed, through a large lake, called Llyn Tegid, in English, Pemble Mear carrying out the same quantity of
that
it
" water
brought in."f
As
*
the lakes themselves were symbols of the deluge, so the stream of life, which
be remarked, that the fountains of the Dee are distinguished by the names of Drcyvawr, and Dwyvach :
Here
it is
to
my thological, pair ak
in the sacred
ready mentioned, who ^*e re preserved when the lake burst forth and drowned
it
ship^
the world.
Hence
must be
united
and immaculate
personages. Such are the sacred rivers reported by Gildas, to have been worshipped by the Pagan Britons.
not only from the consecrated spots and temples which adorn its banks, but from its very names. It was called Dyvrdwy, the di~>
The honours of
the
Dee may be
inferred,
153
and Peryddon, a
divine stream, or, the stream of the great
causes or commanders.*
as
the
image of the
Nor were even deified patriarch, and his supposed consort. Mr. Faber these conceits peculiar to our Celtic ancestors. has shewn by a variety of arguments and deductions, that
JStyx, the river or lake of hehV^ike our British lakes, was a
personification
of theflood,
-f-
" Accordingly, adds our author, the Sholiast upon Hesiod " declares, that Styx was the water which proceeded from " the lowest parts of the earth, and occasioned the phoenome" non of the rainbow." This passage brings to view the great
deep,
of the deluge. Yet Homer records a tale of the Titaresius, a stream which flows forth from the Styx, precisely ana^
legous to the British mythology of the Dee,
" Or where the pleasing Titaresius glides, " And into Peneus, rolls his tides ;
easy
pure theyflow, sacred stream, UNMIXED with streams " Sacred and awful from the dark abodes
!
f<
belozv,
"
This aenigma being precisely the same in Greece and Britain, it is probable, that if it were duly investigated, it
would be found
to
V.
I. p.
259, &c.
154
But
I
must go on
tradition,
to consider another circumstance of connected with the lakes and bays of Britain ;
and by which our ancestors commemorated the which their deified patriarch overcame the deluge.
This vessel
closure,
is
vessel in
denominated a
is
caer, that
is,
a fenced in-
described as an island.*
Hence
the sanctuaries of the Druids, which were intended as representatives of this prototype, are often styled caers and islands, and were frequently constructed within small islands,
as
And where
our hierophants seem to have constructed a kind of floats, in imitation of such islands.
or
Thus the British Apollo, speaking through his priest, asks the names of the three caers, between the high and
the low water mark, and boasts, that in case of a general deluge, he would preserve his seat of presidency safe and inviolate
intimating, that the sacred spot would mount on Such is the representation the surface of the waters, f
:
Sidi.
yet complete my chair, in Caer Sidi, neither dis" order nor age will oppress him that is within it. Three " loud strains, round the fire, will be sung before it, whilst
:
Ked
its
"
pious fountain
is
Appendix, No.
Ibid.
3.
No. No.
4.
$ Ibid.
1.
155
from place to
Taliesin describes his holy sanctuary as wandering about He first mentions it, as being upon place.
the surface of the ocean: the billows assail it, and with speed it removes before them. It now appears on the wide lake,
a city not protected with walls ; the sea surrounds it. Again we perceive it on the ninth wave, and presently it is
as
arrived within the gulph, or bend of the shore ; there it lifts itself on high, and at last, fixes on the margin of the flood.
appears that this holy sanctuary was nothing morethau the little island of Dinbych, in Dyved, or that inall,
After
it
sulated spot,
in
Pembroke-
What
can
all
this
mean, unless
it
be,
it
was congenial to their arkite mythology, to devise the fable, that it had once floated on the surface of the ocean ?
In the mountains near Brecknock, there is a small lake, which tradition assigns some of the properties of the faI recollect a
to
bulous Avernus.
tale,
that
raft, for
no
island.
" In ancient times, it is said, a door in a rock near this lake, was found open upon a certain day every year. " I think it was May day. Those who had the curiosity and " resolution to enter, were conducted by a secret passage, " which terminated in a small island, in the centre of the "
Here the visitors were surprized with lake. " of a most enchanting garden, stored with
lt
Appendix, No.
2.
156
"
"
and inhabited by the Tylwytli Teg, or fair family, a kind of fairies, whose beauty could be " equalled only by the courtesy and affability which they " exhibited to those who them. fruit
fruits
and
flowers,
pleased
They gathered
" events of futurity, and invited them " should find their situation
they
to stay,
agreeable.
its
But the
produce must be
carried away,"
this scene
was
invisible
to those
who
stood without the margin of the lake. tinct mass was seen in the middle ; and
fly
" ness
in the breeze
of the mountain.
" "
"
happened upon one of these annual visits, that a sacrilegious wretch, when he was about to leave the garIt
den, put a flower, with which he had been presented, " into his pocket but the theft boded him no good. As " soon as he had touched unhallowed ground, the flour va;
'*
" Of
" time. "
They dismissed their guests with their accustomed But their courtesy, and the door was closed as usual.
" resentment ran high. For though, as the tale goes, the " and their garden undoubtedly occupy the Tylwyth Teg " spot to this day though the birds still keep at a re" spcctful distance from the lake, and some broken strains " of music are still heard at the door which led "
to the island has
(57
'*
the
unfor-
" tunate."
It
is
Some time
after this,
an adventurous
"
person attempted to draw off the water, in order to dis" cover its contents, when a terrific form arose from the " 'midst of the lake, commanding him to desist, or other" wise he would drown the country."
by com-
pressing language, without altering or adding to its circumstances. Its connection with British mythology may
be inferred, from a passage of Taliesin, where he says, that the deluge was presaged by the Druid, who earnestly attended, in the sethereal temple of Geirionydd, to the songs
that were chaunted
ing, in the
The
sanctuary.
Giraldus Cambrensis, speaking of the lakes amongst the mountains of Snowdon, mentions one which was remarkable for a wandering island, concerning which some traditional stories were related.
Camden
is
to
be recognized in " A small pond, called Llyn y Dywarchen " little green moveable patch, (i.e. Lacus Cespitis), from a
" which
is
all
"
island." f
little
inquisitive, as to the
Camden
Col.
W.
otherwise he
would have recorded some curious particulars of the islands He only observes, that in the celebrated lake of Lomond.
many
people.
traditional stories
As
the truth of
in question
for
body from swimming, that is dry and hollow, like a pinnace, and very light ? And so Pliny tells us, that certain
down
green islands, covered with reeds and rushes, float up and in the lake of Vadimon"*
Vadimon
is
minute and
it
;
curious.
Many
but the
perfectly round, the banks even, regular, of equal height ; so that it appears as if scooped out,
The
lake
is
and
and
artist.
The water
is
of a
smells of sulphur,
quality of
consolidating
vessel
fertile,
things
that
There
is
no
upon
sacred; but
it
has several
lightness,
and formed
of
ships.
The same
earth.
a short space,
If any thing is cast into this stream, before the cave, it is carried forth to the place where ters
appears, f
re-
* Gibson's
Camden
Col. 1217.
159
of Vadimon, or Vandimon, with its floating islands, was sacred, there can be little doubt, that it was accommodated by art to the commemoration of Arkite
this lake
As
superstition
and consecrated
whose
name
it
bore.
But
this divinity, as
we
are informed
by a
very curious relic of Etruscan antiquity, was no other than the Noah of Scripture.
Magnus pater Fandimon, qui a Latinis Janus, a Syris Noa vocatur, advenit in hanc regionem (scil. Hetruriam) cum secundo filio Japeto, et illius filiis; et cum venissent
super hunc montem, sibi
putavit.
commodum,
parte,
posteris
jucundum
Qnare,
in superiori
quae
salubrior esset,
The
arrival
of Noah in
Italy, is
;
the settlement of
Hu
in Britain
sons are generally represented as having settled in those All I would places, where their worship was established.
infer
from the testimony of Pliny, connected with this passage, is, that the Helio-arkite patriarch was commemorated
in his sacred lakes
Italy, as well as
in Britain;
and consequently, that the tales of the Britons, respecting such lakes and islands, are authentically derived from heathen mythology.
such floating islands, or rafts, substituted for islands, seem to have been generally viewed as symbols of the ark.
And
floating
Inglir.
160
" was a large temple, dedicated to Apollo, and furnished " with three altars. It was not supposed, however, to have " been in a but to have lost its orialways
floating state,
"
"
" "
When
Typhon,
or
the ocean,
was roaming
through the world, in quest of Horns, or Apollo, the mythological son of Osiris, Latona, who was one of the
primitive eight gods, and who dwelt in the city Buto, having received him in trust from Isis, concealed him
"
"
" from the rage of that destructive monster in this sacred " As for " which then first began to float." * island, " the floating island mentioned by Herodotus," continues Mr. Faber, " it was probably only a large raft, constructed
"
in imitation
it,
of the ark
supposed father
the
Noah, worshipped
in conjunction with
" sun." " This mode of representing the ark by a float" was not exclusively confined to Egypt. As ing island, " Latona and Apollo were two of the great gods wor-
Again
" "
"
shipped at Buto, so
we
find the
same
traditions prevalent
floating island,
assailed.
"+
1
Delos, any
in fable
;
and
more than our Dinbych, never wandered but same reason, because it was congod
;
who,
in his
human
capa-
I.
p. 61.
From Herodot. L.
II. c. 156.
t Ib. p. 64.
p. 65,
161
The same author adduces many more
'*
instances in the
course of his work, and then remarks in general. " All these lakes contained small sacred islands^ which seem to
;
" have been considered as x emblemajical of the ark whence " those in the lakes of Buto and Cotyle, were supposed to " have once floated."* Thus he solves the of M.
problem
t(
Bailly, who, noticing the extreme veneration of the an" Ne trouvez-vous cients for islands, demands -fpas,
"
le
"
Monsieur, quelque chose de singulier, dans cet amour les isles ? Tout ce qu'il y a de sacre, de
:
pourquoi
les
habitans
sur le
cet avantage
aux
jsles,
be
in the sacred
the
This fact
is
Gvydda hiero-
naw Garanhir,
of the
ship,
it was to conduct the noviciates through a scenic representation of the patriarch's adventures. To this end, he piclosed the persons to be initiated in coracles,
M
V.
f
'
II. p. 429. n.
"
is something singular in this In these, whatever is sacred, great, or '' ancient has constantly occurred, why have the inhabitants of the coutiurul " giren islands this advantage over the continent itself?"
Does
it
Sir,
that there
162
shore in Cardigan bay, and, after they had weathered the mimic deluge, received them safe upon a reef of rocks, I
which represuppose, Sam Badrig, or Patrick's Causeway, sented the landing-place of the patriarch.
In a curious poem, which I
shall
is
have occasion to
presented to vievr.
insert
The
probationer standing upon mystic coracle, but observing that the waves were rough, and the rock at a considerable distance, exclaims
"
*'
Though
billow
may come,
To
this the
hierophant replies-
to the magnanimous, to the amiable, to " the who boldly embarks, the landing-stone of generous, ," the Bards will prove the harbour of life : it has asserted " the of the of the
praise
"
sky
and
till
the
its
As
luge,
this scene
it is
was to typify the passage through the deevident, that the landing-stone which terminated
that passage, and proved a harbour of life, stood for the rock or mount upon which the patriarch arrived safe, from
he built the ; the same upon which and obtained the gracious promise, that the deluge should return no more, The Druids then regarded certain
islands, or rocks,
this
mount,
163
stall
of
the ox*.
let
"
its
high
"
limit
" dawn, displaying the countenance of him who receives " the exile into his sanctuary the rock of the supreme pro" In the name of the chief place of tranquillity" prietor,
this rock, the
"
am
the
cell,
I am the place of re-anirnation !" the opening chasm This was then the landing-stone, the harbour of life, where the patriarch and his children were restored to light and ani-
"
am
In allusion to this, thejnyjrtical^ Bard says " Existing of " yore, in the great seas, from the time when the shout " was whilst -miling at the side heard, we were put forth
tf
Ner was
abyss,
patriarch and
his family
mythology, the stories of the sacred islands in the lake of Lomond may have alluded. The Welsh romanthis
tic chronicles
To
lake receives sixty streams from the neighbouring hills, which it unites, and puts forth in the form of one river,
named Leven
that
it
has a rock or petra, with an eagle's nest on its top these eagles assemble annually at a central petra, on
May-
Appendix, No.
Ibid.
6.
No.
7.
164
day, and by countries and
their concert of screams, vaticinate the fates of
kingdoms
eagles,
If,
by these
we understand
fraternities of
heathen
often appear under that name, the story may priests, have been authentically derived from the mythology of the
who
country.
The
lore,
and popish
seems to have been one of the rocks of the supreme which commemorated proprietor, or places of re-animation,
the landing of the patriarch. Meilyr, a celebrated Bard of the twelfth century, says of it
Ynys
glan yglain
Gwrthrych dadwyrain
Ys
tl f<
cain iddi.
The holy
which
might extend
my
islands, as
that of Hit, lona or Icolmkil, where popish superstition adopted the prejudice of its pagan ancestor ; and even to
the
name of
But
as this appellation
has something of an obsolete sound, it is familiarized to our countrymen, by making him the son of Morvryn, mount
in the sea.
In
all
this,
the reader
may
or
whe-
ther
embosomed
in
lakes,
bays,
aestuaries
of
rivers.
The same
W.
165
researches of
modern
antiquaries,
re-
marks some huge remains of monuments, which are deemed Druidical, in the islets of Scilly, more particularly in Treswhich was anciently called Inis Caw, the island of confederacy, whence a graduate in the Druidical school was
cazv,
styled
Bardd Caw.
not easy to determine with precision, which of our
It is
sacred islands symbolized the wandering ark, and which the stable mount, upon whose firm base the patriarch rested from his toils. But they had an intimate relation one to
the other; and to some such sacred island, our mystical Bards refer the ultimate origin of their Diluvian lore.
ft
" for the fame " Am I not contending," says the Bard, " of that song which was four times reviewed in the qua" As the first sentence, was drangular Caer, or sanctuary " it uttered from the cauldron, which began to be warmed " the breath of the nine damsels. Is not this the caulby " dron of the ruler That is, the cauldron of the deep .'" of
!
the emperor of the seas. And again : " not I confor the honour of a song which deserves attentending " tion In the quadrangular inclosure, iix the island of the
Hu,
Am
"
strong door or barrier, the twilight and the pitchy dark" ness are mi-ted together, whilst bright wine is the beve" of the narrow circle !" rage
"
Appendix, No.
3.
166
and we are here
the
first
of
its
attended and originally prepared by nine damsels, in a quadrangular sanctuary, within a sacred island. These damsels
are
commemorated
in the
monuments of Cornwall.
"
" "
the downs, leading from Wadebridge to St. Columb, and about two miles distant from it, is a line of
stones, bearing
On
This monument is ge* These maids, in whom nerally called the nine maids." the Diluvian lore originated, must be ultimately referred to the Gwyllion, certain prophetesses of mythology, who gave
N. E. and
S.
W.
"
the
in first presage of -the deluge, by their nightly songs, the bosoms of lakes ; that is, in their sacred islands, -j-
From
esses
these
fabulous
models,
sisterhood
of
priest-
and pretended prophetesses seem to have been established early, and to have continued down to the sixth
century.
Taliesin mentions four damsels,
who
attended to lament
Hu,
of
the
god
himself. J
Gwyllion, the
name of
Sec.
these
damsels,
is
is
the plural of
Gwyll, which,
derer,
a.
fairy, a witch,
They
was
1.
No. 10.
But what was their island with the strong door ? I think it must be recognized in the Seon with the strong door, mentioned in the poem last cited. At this spot, Hu, or Aeddon,
is
That
poem.*
of a
this
was an
island, appears
Taliesin, in his
approach
to
river,
where he
is
son of Mydnazv, mover of the ship, or of the nine, who presided as a sovereign in his sacred Caer, and was acknowledged as the teacher of liberality and honour, and
the giver of
Hu).
seems
He
invites the
are the
booth,
endowments of
latter
which the
cated their
own name
to
it,
to
other than the Gzeyllion, or prophetic maids above menLike the muses of old, they were the patronesses tioned. of poetry and music.
Taliesin says
Se of
There was some signal disaster attendant upon the fall of one of these ladies hence the Bards use the simile, in il:
Thus
*
t
Appendix, No.
8.
W.
Archtiol. p. 40.
168
Astrus chwedl ry chweiris i Gymry Ystryw chwenv, nid chweriau ryle
Ail yrth,
ail
syrth Se
" "
A doleful
tale to
the
Cymry,
sports about
Of
bitter
"
"
stratagem, not fair contention for superiority; like the of a SE like the deluge that
dragon"
Druidism, then, is asserted to have originated in the sacred island of the Seon t where the mysteries of Hu, the Helio-arkite god, considered in the character of Bacchus,
were celebrated by nine priestesses, who had the title of Gwyllion. This brings our Bardic mythology again into
contact with classical authority. For our Seon corresponds with the Sena, and our Gwyllion with the Gallicena of
Pomponius Mela.
situated in the British Sena," says that geographer, " sea, over against the land of the Osismii, is famous for
"
"
deity,
whose
priestesses,
devoted
in
by their incantations, of transforming themselves into what " animals they please, of curing ailments, reckoned by " others beyond the reach of medicine quick at discern" ing, and able to foretel what is to come; but easy of " cvldress to and to those who come this
;
"
num." perpetual virginity, to be of great They are called Gatticena, supposed " genius, and rare endowments ; capable of raising storms
only
sailors,
into
"
island
W.
Archaiol. p.
169
This spot must have been near the Land's-end, or amongst the Scilly islands; but as the different Celtic tribes had, several Caer Seons, with establishments someprobably,
what
seas,
from each other, I find a Sena in the British mentioned by Strabo, which in some particulars comes
differing
Men
ships, and having conversed with their husbands, returned again to the island, and to their charge, which was to worship Bacchus, the god to whom they were consecrated, with
rites
and
sacrifices.
Every year
it
was
their
custom to
unroof their temple, and to renew the covering the same day, before sun-set, by the united labours of all the women ;
of
whom,
if
lost the
was torn in
by the rest, and the several limbs of this unhappy companion they carried round their temple, with rejoicings
pieces
Of
pened some instance, whenever the annual solemnity of uncovering the temple was celebrated.*
The Gallicena of Mela were evidently priestesses of Ktd or Ceridwen, the mythological consort of the Arkite god ; and to her, the singular qualities ascribed to them properly
It will be seen in the ensuing section, that appertained. her knowledge and genius were very extraordinary. She was an enchantress she could assume the form of what-
soever animal she pleased. She was eminently skilled in medicine, and both possessed herself, and could communicate to her priests, a view of all future events.
Lib. IV.
170
Strabo's priestesses were immediately consecrated to
the British Bacchus,
Hn,
cell, quadrangular they covered annually with branches. The geographer's narrative fully illustrates the meaning of our Bards, when they allude to the calamitous slip of one of
whose
inclosure, or
stall
of the
ox,
this sisterhood.
Agreeably to the Helio-arkite superstition,these personages exercised their sacred function in the bosoms of lakes or
bays, which represented the deluge, and within the verge of consecrated islands, the symbols either of the floating
ark, or of the spot
As, then, the deified patriarch, or his representative, was supposed to have his usual residence in such situations, and
as the office of the sacred to the car of the lofty one,
oxen was
to
by
that important
It could
rite,
we may
lake.
than
drawing the
shrine of the Diluvian god from his symbolical ark, to the rock of debarkation, preparatory to his periodical visits to
his temples
or investing
him with
The Bards supply many curious hints respecting the used upon this occasion.
The
consecrated
usual residence of this tauriform god, was in his cell, or ox-stall, on a rock surrounded with the
of tranquillity. At a certain season, his festival commences with the adorning of the rock and the cell then a
;
solemn proclamation
jolly carousal ;
is
and,
171
their thighs, so as to
This was
at the season of
May,
when
Cuckoo
is
when
this
" when
performed; loud is the horn of the lustrator, the kine move in the evening.";};
the dance
is
performed with solemn festivity about the lakes, round which and the sanctuary the priests move
sideways,
earnestly invoking the gliding king (the dragon, Bacchus), before whom the fair one retreats, upon the veil that covers the huge stones.
And
whilst the
sanctuary
is
>.
This
is
also
the
time
of libation,
victim.
wide
This sanctuary is in the island which had floated on the lake, but was now fixed on the margin of the flood.
Here the sacred ox, the Ych Banazcg, is stationed before the lake, to draw the shrine through the shallow water to
dry ground.
There
is
is
the
procession, there the eagle waves aloft in the air, marking the path of Granzeyn, the solar deity, the pervading and
invincible sovereign.
||
Aneurin, as an eye witness, thus describes the solemnities of this ceremony, and an accident, or mystical incident, which attended its celebration.
Appendix, No.
6.
No. No.
11.
&.
Ibid.
172
4t
"
In the presence of the blessed ones, before the great assembly, before the occupiers of the holme, (the priests
island), when the house (shrine of the god) was recovered from the swamp (drawn out of the shallow water) surrounded with crooked horns and crooked
king of open countenance (Bacchus); I saw dark gore (from the frantic gashes of the bacchanals) arising on
stalks of plants,
" the
" oxen), on the bunches (ornaments of their collars), on " the sovereign (the god himself), on .the bush and the " was the sea whilst
spear (the thyrsus).
Ruddy
beach,
" the circular revolution was performed by the attendants, " and the white in graceful extravagance. bands,
" The assembled
were dancing after the manner, in cadence, with garlands on their brows:
train
" and singing " loud was the " " him who, " involved
"
and
lively
in his prowess,
ball,
which
casts
(This was a priest, who was fabled to have obtained the Anguinum, in the manner described by Pliny the acquisition seems to have procured him the privilege of personi:
"
"
" wounded art thou, seBut," continues the Bard, thou delight of princesses, thou who verely wounded,
living herd! It
was
my
" "
thou of victorious energy Ah, thou bull, thou hast wrongfully oppressed, thy death I deplore " been a friend to the sea, in the In view of tranquillity
mightest
live,
!
173
"
front of assembled
pit
of conflict, the
was
who
mystical incident, I
am
But, up'on the whole, it may be asserted, that in the solemnitief here described, the ancients may have perceived conlegitimate rites of the orgies of Bacchus ; and we may
clude, that
was something of this kind that Strabo and Dionysius had in view, when they ascribed the worship of
it
that
god
The
might be proved
in almost every particular; but I shall three or four passages, as bearing generally only produce upon the subject.
" Immortal leader of the maddening " Whose torches blaze with
choir,
fire,
unextinguish'd
" Great son of Jove, who guid'st the tuneful throng, " Thou who presid'st over the nightly song, " Come, with thy Naxian maids, a festive train, " Who, wild with joy, and raging o'er the plain, " For thee the dance to thee devote the
prepare,
strain."^.
Here, as well as amongst the Britons, this god has his is attended by
*
Appendix, No. 14.
Antig. V. 1162.
Francklin'i translation.
\
|
174
his frantic priestesses,
gress,
and from whence he begins his prowith the nightly song and extravagant dance. Anohis priestesses
ther
band of
welcome him
to land at Elis, in
the
hymn
recorded by Plutarch.
to thy temple
"
"
on the
sea shore
sacrifice,
"
" veneration
hear us,
The following passages of Euripides, preserved by Strabo,-frepresent the rites of this god much in the same manner
as our British Bards, allowing for the homeliness of the
Celtic muse.
Happy the man who, crown'd with ivy And brandishing his thyrsus, " The mystic rites of Cuba understands, " And worships mighty Dionusus.
" "
Haste, ye Bacchae
!
"
zcreaths,
" Haste, bring our god, Sabazian Bromus, " From Phrygia's mountains to the realms of Greece."
"
"
On
Ida's
"
summit, with his mighty mother, Bacchus leads the frantic train,
the echoing
woods the
rattling timbrels
t Lib. X.
175
" Then the Curetes clastid their sounding arms, " And raised, with joyful voice, the song " To Bacchus, ever young " While the shrill
;
pipe
" Resounded to the praise of Cybele, " And the gay Satyrs tripp'd in jocund dance, " Such dance as Bacchus loves." *
.
These descriptions correspond with the rites of the British Bacchus; but the reader will, perhaps, inquire for the mighty mother of the god, who makes so conspicuous a
figure in the Grecian Bard.
have already mentioned, incidentally, a female character, as connected with the Helio-arkite god of the
I
Britons.
as
This goddess, who is, at one time, represented the mother of that deity, and, at other times, as his
all
his
honours and
prerogatives
is
so that,
what
is
now
again presently ascribed to the other. She comes under a variety of names, as Ked, Ceridwen, Lldd, Awen, and many others ; and she has a daughter, named Creirzey or
those of her mother.
Llywy, whose attributes are not easily distinguished from At present, I shall only touch upon
a few particulars of this character, and note some of its analogies with general mythology, reserving what I have
farther to say
to another section.
Ked, or Ceridwen, presides in the same floating sane-. tuary which was sacred to the Arkite god.-f- She, as well
II. p.
329.
176
as that god,
is
Consequently, the privilege of investing the chief Bard, or priest, with the dominion of Britain, pertains to her, conjointly with the Arkite god. J.
is
meant by
this character, it
may be remarked, that her symbol, or distinguishing attriAnd she is even identified with bute, was a sacred boat
.
the boat, or vessel, which was fabricated by the Diluvian " Let truth be ascribed to patriarch, Menwyd, the dragon
" chief of the world, who formed the curvatures of Kyd " (the ark), which passed the dale of grievous waters, hav" the fore stored with and mounted aloft,
ing
part
corn,
||
Hence she
is
represented
shall poem, " the ones be broken: they shall have their feeble great " wanderings beyond the effusion (deluge) of the father of " Ked." And as the deified patriarch was symbolized by
" Then
the sun, so the goddess of the boat and the cauldron was
Hence
it
by whatever name
she was distinguished, may be regarded as a personification of the ark; or else as an imaginary genius, supposed to preside over that sacred vessel; and therefore connected
* Ibid. No.
t
1, 2,
and
4,
and 12.
No.
9.
||
No. 12.
Taliesin in tbe ensuing section.
5 See Cadair
177
with the Arkite god, and dignified, like him, with a ceks-<
tial
symbol.
Hu
stall.
was Represented by a
It
is
his
sacred
.also
was sometimes viewed under the emblem of a cow, and had animals of this species set apart for the sacred
deity
office
The Triads mention three mythological cows, one of which, I suppose, was the symbol of this goddess, whilst the other two were devoted to her service.* And in the
poem of
the Ogdoadrf
we
which
at the
era of the flood procured a blessing. On the serene day the commencement of the storm) she bellowed on (before
:
the eve of May she was boiled (tossed about by the deluge), and .on the spot where her boiling was completed, the Diluvian patriarch found rest. Great must have been the
honours conferred upon this cow, when the preservation of her sacred stall was deemed of such importance, that, withsong convene the appointed dance over the green, The cow being the symbol of this goddess, furnishes a probable reason why that island, in which her worship emiit,
out
the world
would become
of the cuckoo
to
commemorations of that sacred ark, in which the Divine Providence saved an expiring world, were
fantastical
Such
M
W.
Archaiol. Vol. II.
12.
p,
22.
i Appendix, No.
178
" The various goddesses of paganism/' says Mr. Faber, " seem to be all one and the same mythological character ; " sometimes represent the moon, sometime though they " the ark, and sometimes the globe of the earth, emerging * " from the waters of the
deluge."
Again
"
far
that their several mythological histories appear " almost universally to relate, partly to the catastrophe of
rising from the midst of the waters, " the ark, wandering over their surface, and upon the " introduction of Sabianism, the lunar crescent, seem to be " alike described in the diversified characters of all and
" each of them. Their names, moreover, are perpetually " so that one goddess is not uniformly a interchanged, per" Bonification of the ark, another of the moon, and a third " of the earth ; but, on the contrary, all these various ob" of worship are frequently symbolized, upon diiferent jects " occasions, by one and the same deity. Thus Venus, Der" ceto, Isis, Ceres, Proserpine, and Latona, are severally " and equally the moon, the renovated globe, and the ark " of Noah."f
The same
times considered as the mother, sometimes as the daughter, and sometimes as the consort of its builder + and that a
:
emblem of
the ark.
I. p.
17.
t
J
$ Ibid, p, 177,
&c.
179
Mr. Faber
of our Celts),
also takes notice of
citus, as prevalent
mentioned by Ta amongst the Germans (the neighbours " In which we behold the great goddess cona
rite
in the mysteries
" In an island in the ocean (says the historian) is a sacred " and in it a chariot, covered with a garment (the grove, " Lien of our Bards), which the priest alone can lawfully " touch. At particular seasons, the goddess is supposed " to be present in this sanctuary ; she is then drawn in her " car by heifers, with much reverence, and followed by the " priests. During this period, unbounded festivity prevails, " and all wars are at an till the restores the
end,
priest
"
" mortals.
Immediately
the chariot,
herself, are
Upon this
shrine, drawn by oxen, was one of the same nature as that of Agruerus or Noah, mentioned by Sanchoniatho ; and that it is not improbable, that the mode which the Philistines adopted, of sending
home
this very superstition. Willing to pay it all honour, they conveyed it, like the shrine of the possible great Phoenician deity, Agruerus, in a cart drawn by cozes.
rowed from
therefore, make a new cart, and take two milch on which there hath come no yoke, and tie the kine, " kine to the cart, and bring their calves home from them ; " and take the ark of the Lord, and lay it upon the cart ; " and the jewels of gold, which ye return him for a put
"
Now,
"
N 2
180
"
"
trespass offering, in a coffer
it
by the
side thereof;
and send
away, that
it
it
may
go."
Thus
had a
by which our
ancestors
commemorated the
patriarch and
Gentiles.
me
take a
which
have gone.
In the course of the present section, I have produced a mass of evidence, that the mythology and rites of the Druids have a reference to the history of the deluge, combined with Sabian idolatry that this people had preserved
:
many heathen traditions respecting" the deluge; that they recognized the character of the patriarch Noah, whom they worshipped as a god, in conjunction with the sun; that
this Helio-arkite deity was their chief god, appropriating the attributes of most of the principal gods of the Gentiles,
but more particularly corresponding in character with Bacchus; that his symbols and titles point out his identity with
that the rites by which he was honoured, were with the superstitious veneration of certain sacred connected lakes, rivers, islands, and rocks; that these rites were approthis deity
;
Bacchus
god was connected with that of a goddess, who represented the ark ; and that all this corresponds, as history requires it
should correspond, with the general superstition of other nations, and is therefore derived from the same source.
/
We
I,,
t Myst, of the
Cabiri,
V-
I-
p. 218,
J81
produce in the sequel, that the worship of the sun was an adventitious branch, grafted at some remote
I shall
which
But as for the period into the religion of our ancestors. Arkite superstion, and the idolatrous veneration of the great
we have seen, that the country of the Cambroeven in the present age, is full of traditions, which must be referred, exclusively, to certain local and
patriarch,
Britons,
national
And
strong confirmation to them, by the positive that the patriarch who survived the deluge, had assertion, been acknowledged as a great god by the ancient Bards, or
who add a
Druids of Britain.
which we
regard as the
describe
Hu t
most venerable memorials of our progenitors, the great deified patriarch and legislator, with
which can only be
verified in
And
that Aneurin,
that great repository of tradition, which was ancient in his days; that bigot to the religion of his forefathers, which
he was not ashamed openly to profess, acknowledged the same Hu as the mystical ruler of Britain, and as the god of
ancient
In that
consecrated spQt, this Diluvian god had no avowed superior ; for Mona was the island of the praise of Hu the island
of Hu,
This could have been no new superstition in the days of Taliesin. For the fabrication of such an idolatrous svsteia
182
a fabrication,
by that Bard, no adequate motives can be assigned. Such if attempted, could not have been rendered
;
permanent and national nor would the learning of his age have carried him through the task of devising a system, which could tally with the remotest traditions of the heathen nations, and with the elucidation of those traditions by the best scholars of our own times, in so many minute
given us is, then, the genuine opinion of the Druids of the sixth century, respecting the religion of their remote predecessors and we have sufficient reason to conclude, that the chain which
particulars.
:
What
Taliesin has
connected them with those predecessors, was neither slack nor feeble.
It
is,
pay an
idolatrous
homage
to the patriarch
Noah, and
to the vessel
safe
supreme God, whose providence alone had protected the righteous man, and his tottering ark.
And
their traditions,
cannot account for their ascending thus high in and there stopping at once ; nor for their
retaining just ideas of the patriarchal character, viewed as a man, in the midst of the grossest superstition and errors, without supposing that their ancestors, at some period of
had respected the righteous laws of Noah, and professed his pure religion, notwithstanding the depth to which they had fallen in the course of ages.
their history,
However
this
may have
and apply them as a clue, in out some of the hidden recesses of this ancient su tracing
facts developed in this section, pcrstition.
SECTION
III.
Her Iden-
A HE
title;
tish sage
awarded to the patriarch Noah, under whatever the magnificent mention of the ship of Nevydd; and the commemorations of the deluge upon the borders of the
me
to search for
some
farther
vestiges of that kind of superstition, and of those mystic rites, which Mr. Bryant terms Arkite; which he considers
at large in the second
volume of
his Analysis ;
and which
According
to this very
eminent writer,
of
of
the delugef
and of
that
He
remarks,
the most part, of a melancholy process, and were celebrated by night with torches, in commemoration of that state of darkness, iji
those mysteries consisted,
his family
To be more
particular
184
rites,
Noah was an object of superstitious veneover which a divinity was represented as presiding; ration, and that this character was known by the several names of
the ark of
Sslene,
and
Ceres, Rhea, Vesta, Cybele, Arcjiia, Niobe, which were the same: these being only titles, Melissa, by which that female personage was described, who was supposed to be the genius of the ark, and the mother of
Isis,
mankind.*
And as this personage was the genius of the ark, so our author takes notice, that the celebration of her mysteries
in the British islands, stands upon ancient record. Having quoted the authority of Artemidorus upon this subject, Mr.
his
own
"
opinion.
make no
doubt,
rites
prevailed in
many
in hand the clue presented to me in the presection of this Essay, and walking in the shade of ceding
Holding
my
this giant
of erudition,
who
clears the
way
before me, I
shall
now
and history
the British Ceres : and I think I distinguish her character in the celebrated goddess Ked, or Ceridwen,
whom
Arkite god.
Mr. Owen, in his Cambrian Biography, describes Ceridwen as " A female personage, in the mythology of the " Britons, considered as 'the first of womankind, having " the same attributes with
nearly
Venus, in
whom are
pei-
tf
'"
.*
* t
185
In
this description, she is evidently
acknowledged
as the
great mother : and Mr. Bryant says of Ceres, that she was named da mater, or the mother, because she was esteemed
(as representative of the ark) the
common
of
all
mankind.*
veral passages
In the introductory section of this Essay, I quoted sefrom those Bards who lived under the Welsh
princes, in
which Ceridwen
is
mentioned.
They uniformly
having pertained to the superof the primitive Bards, or Druids. They describe her, as having presided over the most hidden mysteries of that ancient superstition ; and as a personage, from whom,
stition
alone the secrets of their fanatical priesthood were to be obtained in purity and perfection. They also intimate,
that
it
was
who
have tasted the waters of inspiration from her sacred cauldron, or, in other words, to have been inipresidency, to
tiated into her mysteries.
rites
of our
find
temote progenitors
we can
no
parallel amongst the heathen priesthood of other nations, if we except the celebrated mysteries of Ceres, Isis, or Cytole, all
refers to the
same
his-
But
Venus,
must observe,
be
Analysis V.
II. p.
323.
The most
familiar
Ceres, presented her as the goddess of corn ; as having introduced the art of tillage, and taught mankind to sow the
land,
reader may recollect a passage of Cuhetyn, a Bard of sixth or eighth century, which I have already quoted, he and which delineates the character of Ceridwen one
The
by
styled Ogyrven Amhad, Thus Ceres and Ceridwen unite by a And our British Ceres, agreeably to Mr. single touch. observation, was the genius of the ark. Her attriBryant's
she
is
the god-
bute was a boat, and she was even identified with that
vessel,
which
carried
harnessed serpents.* \
The
called
Hanes
Taliesin, the
It is prefixed
to the
works of that
Bard, and has been supposed to contain some romantic account of his birth ; but, in reality, it has nothing to do
with the history of a private individual, or with romance, It is a mytholoin the common acceptation of that term. gical allegory, upon the subject of initiation into the mystical rites
of Ceridwen.
And though
its
vated taste
may
be offended at
it
which
now
extant.
tale itself, it
may be
proper to ob-
II.
18?
viate
recites.
an objection to the era of the incidents which it Ceridwen is represented as living in the time of
be argued, that she could neither have been the great mother, nor have belonged at all to the ancient superstition of the Druids.
Arthur.
it
Hence
may
is
a traditional cha-
name
He
is
placed, as
logical ages,
and
far
in the
history.
The
great bear
and the
He
is
the son of
Uthyr Bendragon, the wonderful supreme leader, and Eigyr, His adventures, as related in the
mythological tales, had evidently, according to my author, a common origin with those of Hercules, the Argonauts, &c.
the history of Nimrod.* I rather think that Arthur was one of the titles of the deified patriarch Noah. And with
this idea, the
He
ters
is
of mythological personages: each of these wives had the name of Gwenhwyvarft that is, the lady of the summit
These three wives of Arthur are only so of the same mystical character, the import of many copies which may be perceived in the construction of the name.
of the water.
* Cam. Biog.
t
V. Arthur.
:
Gweu-wy-v&r
the
in this
word
is
merely formative.
188
And
as for
a poem which
sents this
Arthur himself, Taliesin's Spoils of the Deep,* treats wholly of Diluvian mythology, repre-
prince as presiding in the ship which brought himself, and seven friends, safe to land, when that deep
swallowed up the rest of the human race. This has no connection with the history of the sixth century. It relates entirely to the deluge ; and the personage here commemo-
was the same as his mystical parent, Uthyr Pendraor the deified patriarch Noah. gon,
rated,
It appears
from
Taliesin, that
Ceridwen
also
:
was esteemed
a character of the most remote antiquity for the Bard places the origin of her mysteries very remote in the primitive ages.
Awen
!
A
"
"
I implore
title
my
The primary
order in the
priests."
regarded as existing in
to this day,
still
personified
Appendix, No.
3.
W.
Archaiol. p. 24.
189
in their priests,
continued to prevail.*
To
this short
secrated, I
have thought
it
convenient to
divide the story, of Hams Taliesin into chapters, in order to place the long annotations which it may require, as near as
I have also, possible to the subject from which they arise. translated the names of men and places : for this I need
but
apology. Though many of these names occur in history, yet in the present, and in similar cases, they are evidently selected for the purpose of carrying on the allelittle
gory, without wholly removing the mystic veil : their import, therefore, ought to be known to the reader.
HANES TALIESIN.
" In former "
times, there
CHAP.
I.
was a
man
of noble descent in
Penllyn, the end of the lake. His name was Tegid Voel, * bald serenity, and his paternal estate was in the middle of
"
* Thus Ceridwen still exists in the middle of the poems of Hywcl, in the conclusion of this section.
twelfth century.
See the
f In
name
is
190
ee
te
sacred token
in the world
of
life.
beautiful damsel
brother,
named Avagddu,
most hideous
" of
"
beings. Ceridwen, the mother of this deformed son, concluded in her mind, that he would have but little
" chance of being admitted into respectable company, un" less he were endowed with some honourable accompiish" or sciences; for this was in the first of
"
ments, Arthur, and the round table."
period
This opening of the -tale carries us at once into mytholoIn the situation of Tegid's paternal estate, gical ground.
in the figure presented by that personage, and in the names and characters of his children, we have the history of the deluge presented to our view ; and that history is sketched
upon
British canvas.
The
Britons, as
we have
represented the deluge as having been occasioned by the bursting forth of the waters of a lake. Hence they consecrated certain lakes, as symbols of the deluge ; whilst the which rose to the surface, and were fabled to
floated, or else artificial rafts, representing
little islands
have
such
float-
ing islands, were viewed as emblems of the ark, and as mystical sanctuaries. They also regarded certain rocks, or
mounts, attached to such lakes, as typifying the place of the patriarch's debarkation ; and in the midst of these hal-
by some
periodicalrites.
We
191
was
a
in the centre of
lakes.
This estate
Pemble meer, the largest of the Welsh must have heen limited to the space of
which could have
floated in such a
or raft, ship,
boat,
must be supposed to have suffered that kind of submersion, by which our ancestors commemorated
situation; or else it
But the selection of Pemble meer, made at random. That lake, and its
in this tale,
is
not
Camden
it
by an
anti-
quarian poet, in
which
British accounts of
Llyn Llion,
their Dilu-
Hispida qua tellus Mervinia respicit Eurum, " Est Lacus, antiquo Penlinum nomine dictus. " Hie Lacus illimis, in valle Tegeius alt^, " Late expandit aquas, et vastum conficit orbem, " Excipiens gremio latices, qui, fonte perenni, " Vicinis recidunt de montibus, atque sonoris " Illecebris captas, demulcent suaviter aures. " Illud habet certe Lacus admirabile dictu, " Quantumvis magnd pluvid non testuat , atqui,
storms disturb the peaceful skies, In Merioneth famous Penlin lies. Here a vast lake, which deepest vales surround, His wat'ry globe rolls on the yielding ground, Increas'd with constant springs, that gently run From the rough hills with pleasing murmurs down-i This wond'rous property the waters boast, The greatest rams are in its channels lost, Nor raise the flood ; but when the tempests roar, . The rising waves with sadden rage boil o'er. * And conqu'ring billows scorn th' unequal shore."
Where Eastern
tl
Acre turbato,
si
ventus
murmura
tollat,
"
Dee
rises,
which retain the names of the god and goddess of the ark
here these fountains unite their venerated stream, which they roll, uncorrupted, through the midst of the Diluvian
lake,
till
And here we
heathens.
from
;
the
ark,
on Mount Ararat,
was
called
and from Pausanias, that the place where DaA9roaTfc naus made his first descent in Argolis, was called A7roa$/A0f.
Danaus (whose sole history is referred to the and to Arkite superstition) is supposed to have deluge, brought with him the Amphiprumnon, or sacred model of
that
And
where the
was distinguished
going forth.
where Dzcyvazcr and Dtvyvach, or the incorruptible Dee, emerges safe from the waters of the lake, we find the Bala, or going forth. The term is applied to the shooting, or coming forth of leaves
Agreeably to
this idea, in the spot
*
I
_ x
---,
-._
1--
193
and
flowers,
and
at this
mount, of the Egress, which seems to have been dedicated to the honour of this sacred stream.
is
Bala there
called
Tomen y Bala
the tumulus
In the neighbourhood of
Aren.
of
tells
us, that
names of the
city
of the
ark. *
to Tydain Tad Awen, Titan, the father of the inspiring muse, or Apollo, *f who, as we have already seen, was the Helio-arkite patriarch.
Our
British
The bards speak of the sanctuaries of their gods, and canonized personages, by the name of Beddau, Graves, or
resting places ; just as the temples of Osiris, in
Egypt, were
remarkable,
And it is
BSdd of
Tidain, in the
same stanza
with that of Dylan, whom I have already proved to have been no other than the Diluvian patriarch.
Tad Awen Bron Aren Yg godir Yn yd wna ton tolo, Bed Dilan Llan Beuno.J Bed
Tidain,
:
*
*
Thus we
a temple of Apollo
of Deucalion rested.
+
W.
Archaiol. p. 79.
" muse, is in the border of the mount of Aren: whilst the " wave makes an overwhelming din, the resting place of " is in the fane of Beuno,* the ox Dylan of the ship."
Of Beunaw,
is,
the Welsh arch, venerated under the shape of that animal Heralds and Monks have made a celebrated saint a descendIf ever ant of Tegid, and a founder of several churches. was such a saint, he must have borrowed his name there
his
pagan
ancestors.
That the name of Aren has an ancient mythological meaning, and probably the same which Mr. Bryant assigns
to
it,
may
as our
or Apollo, so, on the top of the Arencs, in the borders of Britany, there are the ruins of an old fabric, which is positively decided to
have been a temple of the same god.-\- From its situation, in the skirt of Armorica, and in the neighbourhood of Brtieur, it may be conjectured that this was that identical
temple of Belen, or Apollo, in which Attius Patera the friend of Ausonius had presided. For that professor is
called
Bagocassis, and
is
said
to
Druidum
Gentis Aremorica. J
Britany, like that of Wales, may also have furnished their Druids with a local opportunity of
The Arenes of
* Ed, an
ox,
and
AW,
skip.
le Finistcre,
Tom.
I.
Prof.
4 and
10.
commemorating the deluge, a3 they contain a natural phtenomenon, which must just have suited their purpose. We
are told,
*f
lies
" a league West from this town, (Falaise) In the village of Ames, the mountain of Arenees*
that
to this town, there
is
channels,
which sometimes
and
is
suddenly
again"
Tegid~ we may
infer
its
from
neigh-
bourhood were deeply impressed with the characters of arkite and that our mythological narrator was fully superstition
;
aware of
when he placed the paternal estate of the husband of Ceridicen, in the bosom of Pemble Tegidj
this fact,
fegid Vohel, bald serenity, presents himself at once to bur fancy. The painter would find no embarrassment in
sketching the portrait of this sedate, venerable personage, whose crown is partly stripped of its hoary honours. But
of
the gods of antiquity, none could with propriety, sit for this picture, excepting Saturn, the acknowledged reall
presentative of Noah, and the husband of Rhea, which was but another name for Ceres, the genius of the ark.
As consort of
deified patriarch
the arkite goddess, Tegid was evidently the : it has, however, been observed, that this
in his
deity
own
person,
p. 1062.
196
most of the superior gods of the heathens
contemplate him
;
here then,
we
but
The
.parti;
by a
little
we
shall discover
him
already seen, was the father of Creirwy, the token of the egg, or the British Proserpine ; and Creirwy was the same personage as Llywy, the putting
Tegid,
as
we have
by Aneurin and
Taliesin, in
conjunction with
Hu or Aeddon.
This identity appears from the poems of Hywel, son of Owen, prince of North Wales, -who styles Llywy his sister, and that, in consequence of his matriculation into the mysteries
tical
of Ceridwen.*
sister
She could not have become the mysof Hywell by this means, had she not been the
The same
soul, as she
princely
Bard
says, that
Llywy had
stolen his
daughter of Ceridwen.
hoyw
deg
Am
I not deprived
of spirit
am
enchanted like
Garwy, by her
who
it
W.ArchaioK
p. 51?,
197
follows, that the father
Llywy; but the parent of the latter is mentioned in the And here it Triads, by the name of Seithwedd Saidi.* must be remarked of the lady, that, notwithstanding her exquisite beauty and delicacy, she is classed with two other
mythological personages, under the character of Grprvorwyn, a man-maid, which must imply a virago at least, if not something still less attractive.
From
a
name of
these premises it is clear, that Seithzcedd Saidi was Tegid, the father of this mystical lady ; and this
We
shall
now have an
Seithwedd
is
mythology.
This may allude to the tiform, or else, having seven courses. multitude of his names and functions, or to the annual feasts
of Saturn, which were continued for the space of seven If Saidi be a British term, it must be derived from days.
From this word, and Wrn, a covered Sad, firm, or just. vessel, Mr. Owen deduces the Welsh name of Saturn ; so
This description is the just man of the vessel. not inapplicable to the patriarch Noah, and to his history, the character of Saturn is referred by mythologists
that Sad-wrn
is
in general,
tice, that
and particularly by Mr. Bryant, who takes noDagon, a representative of the same patriarch,
Said-on,-\-
was called
Saidi.
Seithzcedd, or as
he
W.
r Analysis, V. II.
198
is
represented as king of Dyved, Demetia; but this leads us again into the regions of mythology.
Dyved was the patrimony of Pwyll, reason who embarked in the vale of Cwch, the boat,
plete year,
or patience^
for
Anmen,
also
the great deep, which he governed for the space of a comwhilst Aratcn,
jr.H
the
Arkite,
styled
Upon
a future occasion
I shall
produce more
tale. In the mean time, I may be allowed to sugthat from the specimen here exhibited, Mr. Bryant gest, would have pronounced it genuine arkite mythology.
of this
The
district
of
Dyved was
so entirely devoted to
the
mysteries of Druidism, that it was said to have been anciently enveloped in LlengGl, a concealing veil: and it was by
the land
There
is
triads,
states, that
time, this prince was intoxicated, and that in his liquor, he let in the sea over the country, so as to overwhelm a large,
and populace
district.
This
tale,
which
after, is of the same origin with those local relations of the submersion of cities in the lakes of Britain, which I have remarked in the preceding section.
But Seithenin is nothing more than Septimianus, a title which the Romans conferred upon Saturn BO that Seitke-i nin, and his mythological father, Seithu'cdd, are in
:
reality^
the
same character.
199
under another name, which, rank and connexions, is very remarkable. together with his He is acknowledged as" one of three sovereigns in the court
I find a son of this Saidi
is,
Noah, hy the
title
of
Cadeiriaith, the language of the chair, the son of Saidi ; and Cadraith, the law of the inclosure, the son of Porthawr Godo,
is,
the ark, or
This doorkeeper was therefore, the same person with Saidi, and with Tegid, the husband of Ceridwen ; and his
office
to Janus, the deity of the door or gate, been identified with that of Saturn.
Cadeiriaith, the son of Saidi, holds his dignity in conjunction with Gor-on-wy, great lord of the &ater, the son
character",
son of Godo,
knights, in the court of the same Arthur, personage is recognized under the name of Cadair, the chair or presidency, and as the son of Seithin
this
Saidi
he
is
May, the son of Gwyar, clotted gore; and with Gartsy, water*s edge, son of Geraint, the vessel, son of Erbyn, the lofty
chiefs.^
This
Cactair, or presidency
named
See
W.
Archaiol.
V.
II. p.
4 and 26,
200
Cibddar, the Mystic, and he had a son styled Elmur, the fixed or established spirit, ranked as one of the sovereign
BULLS.*
to the history of
Tauriform, Helio-arkite god, and his sacred royal bnll before us, as I have already observed,
con-
nected with Cynhaval prototype, the son of Argat, the ark; and with Avaon, the cardinal point, in the Ecliptic, son of
Taliesin, radiant front,
which
is
title
This
little
various avenues,
pointing
to
The
parts of one connected system, and the mystical pedigrees are only intended to shew the relation of those parts
many
amongst themselves. This is only the same story told in the British language, which Mr. Bryant and Mr. Faber analyzed in the Greek, and resolved entirely into the mythology of the Diluvian age, mixed with Sabian idolatry.
that Tegid, the husband of Ceridwen, Seithwedd Saidi, and the doorkeeper of Godo, were one and
find then,
We
the same personage, in whom we may have the features of the Saturn, or Janus, of classical antiquity.
their personification
of the language of the chair, or law of the inclosure of Saturn ; and by elevating this character to the dignity of a sovereign,
it is difficult
to say, unless
by
this figure,
Bardd Cadair,
Bard
* W.
201
or Druid, and to intimate that, he taught and governed the maxims and laws of the Diluvian patriarch.
by
their
meaning ;
pointedly
by our great my thologist, Mr. Bryant who obthat amongst all the various representations of the
is
delineated
more
of
plainly,
whom
carried about
than in those of Saturn and Janus, the latter him many emblems to denote his
There was particularly, a staff in one hand, with which he pointed to a rock, from whence in the other hand, he held a issued a profusion of water
different departments.
;
had generally near him, some resemblance of a key. he had the title of GvfetKx;, or the ship, and like our Tegid, * the door or passage. deity of
He
Mr. Bryant also remarks, that though the Romans made a distinction between Janus and Saturn, they were only two titles of the same person ; hence many of their emblems
were the same.
and
his coins
had the
Saturn, like Janus, had keys in his hand, 1 He had the name figure of a ship.
of Septimianus ; and the Saturnalia, which were days set apart for his rites |in December, were in number seven.
These
rites
are said to
far
Rome,
-f-
As
our' British
spouse seems to have had a title of nearly the same sound ; for her chair or sanctuary was called Caer Sidi, the sanc-
p. 253,
&c,
Ibid. p. 260,
202
tuary of Sidi; but according to
Mr. Bryant,
BJ,,
Sidee,
was a legitimate
title
of Ceres.*
of this subject I must defer for the present, and go on to examine, whether the children of Tegid and Ceridwen have any similar relation to the history
consideration
The
of the deluge.
Their
Of this
born was named Morvran, raven of the sea. personage, a few particulars are recorded. He was
first
dark and hideous in his person ; he was Ysgymmydd Aerau y addicted to contention ; and he escaped from the army of the
mythological Arthur, or the deified patriarch.
From
Morvran was the
these hints I conjecture, that the character of represents the raven which Noah sent forth. This
first
mythology might regard him as her first-born son. And the short account which we have of him, is perfectly consistent with what Mr. Bryant has collected from the ancient mythology of other
raven.
nations,
is remarked, that Noah sent the raven out of the ark, by of experiment ; but that it disappointed him and never way returned hence a tradition is mentioned, that the raven was
It
once sent out upon a message by Apollo, but deserted him, and did not return when he was expected. *|-
But
this faithless
* Sec Analys/V.
t Ibid.
II. p.
380,
286 V
203
teemed a bird of
stop to
His very croaking would put a But like Morvran, he the process of matrimony.
ill
omen.
was
also personified
by a human character.
The mytholo-
Mr. Bryant, out of every circumstance and gists, observes Hence Pausanias speaks of the title, formed a personage.
raven, as an ancient hero,
condition of Avagddu, utter darkness, or black accumulation, whose misfortune was the grief of his mother; and who
could not be relieved, as we learn from the sequel of the tale, till the renovating cauldron of the deluge had boiled And what are we to think of his for a year and a day.
subsequent illuminated state, when he became the pride of {Ceridwen, and if I mistake not, married the rainbow ?f
Avagddu
nealogy
is
is
made a
mere
son of Tegid ; but as mythological geallegory, and the father and son are fre-
quently the same person under different points of view; this character, in his abject state, may be referred to the
patriarch himself, during his confinement in the internal gloom of the ark, where he was surrounded with utter darkness,
commemorated
in all the
mysteries of the gentile world. If this be granted, then the son of Ceridwen, or the ark in his renovated state, is the
same
patriarch, born
anew
to light
and
life,
at the close of
the deluge.
* See Analys. V.
II. p. 393.
+ For these particulars, see the sequel of Hanes Taliisin, and that remarkable poem called the Chair of Ceridwen, which I ahall produce in the
course of this Section.
And
as our
complex mythology
of
the patriarch, with that of the sun ; so Avagddu may also have been viewed as a type of that luminary, in his veil of
darkness and gloom, during the melancholy period of the This gloom was afterwards changed into light and delude.
cheerfulness; nized, in his illuminated state,
and thus the son of Ceridwen may he recogunder the titles of Elphin
and Rhuvawn Bevyr, which implies bursting forth with rato he an epithet of the Helio-arkite god. diancy, and seems
chair of Ceridwen represents Gwydion. or Hermes, in the act of forming the Iris, as a consort for the reno-
The
vated sun; and the allegory is as just as it is beautiful for what was the secondary cause of this sacred token, but the
:
rays of the sun just bursting forth from the gloom, and mixing with the humid air ?
Avagddu, thus considered as a type of the Helio-arkite god in his afflicted and renovated state, has a striking coincidence of character with
Eros, the blind
god of the
Greeks,
teries,
who was a
whose name,
myswas
changed into Phanes,* a title of the sun, not dissimilar to our El-phin; and whose symbol was the bow, which, as
well as the
bow
Iris,
-f-
not sure, however, that the character of Avagddu not a secondary allusion, in his forlorn state, to the had
I
uninitiated,
teries
am
and
mys-
of Druidism
as the former
*
r
205
darkness, whereas the latter was illuminated and endowed
with
all
knowledge.
appear presently, that the mother is described as a hen, or female bird of some species, there seems to be an analogous propriety in the names of the daughter, who,
it will
As
though a Gwrvorwyn, or virago, was esteemed a paragon of beauty and, as such, she is classed with Arianrod merch
:
Don,
whom
Ceridwen represents
therefore, the appropriate genius; and with the daughter of Cy-wryd, Crydon, the manGwen, Venus, hood of Crodon, or Saturn.*
Creiwy, as daughter of Ceridwen, or Ceres, was the Proserpine of the British Druids. The attributes of the
in the Bardic
mythology, as well as
of other heathens, are so much confounded together, Mr. Bryant pronounces as not to be easily distinguished.
them
to
is
its
All the difference which I can perceive in their character, this. Ceridwen was the genius of the ark throughout
The author observes from Schedius, de Diis Germ, that Saturn had the name of Crodo. The parentage of the British Venus seems to have corresponded
with that of the Creek.
t Ibid. p. 41.
206
supposed to preside in those public sanctuaries, where th Arkite rites were celebrated: whilst Creirvvy, on the other
hand, was regarded as the genius of the same sacred vessel, only during its perilous conflict with the waters of the
and therefore represented as a helpless virgin, exposed to dreadful calamities, from which she was at length She did not preside in the Arkite temples, delivered.
deluge
;
though she was occasionally associated with her mother; but the private and portable tokens delivered to the initiated,
and the wand or branch, which was a badge of the Bardic office, were regarded as her gift.
This mystical lady
is
and described
as the
of daughter of
Lludd Llaw Eramt, the chief who governed the vessel, or of Llyr, the margin of the sea : and here she is an old acquaintance of the English nation, being no less a personage
than Cordelia, the daughter of King Lear.
Gwyn
ab Nudd, King of
Annwn,
is
himself a^
British tradition
Gwyn
the
ab
Nudd was
the
Annwn,
kingdom of
that god,
;
popular acceptation,
is hell,
but
in the mystical
poems and
*
tales,
Annwn
seems to be no
W.
Archuiol. p. 166.
207
Other than that deep or abyss, the waters of which burst forth at the deluge. Gvvyn, the King of Annvvn, was therefore the genius of the deluge; and the fable means nothing more, than that the ark was forcibly carried away by the
flood.
But the more general name of the daughter of Ceridwen was Creirwy, the token or symbol of the egg ; and under this symbol, the ark was represented in the general mythology
of the heathens.
This assertion
it
glyphical descriptions, the dove, Oinas, was represented as hovering over the mundane egg, which was exposed to the
and that this egg was, an emblem of the ark, whence proceeded that doubtless,
fury of Typhon, or the deluge;
benign person, the preacher of righteousness, who brought mankind to a more mild kind of life. Having quoted, from.
Lucius Ampelius, a passage to this effect
phratis fluvio,
et exclusisse
Dicitur et Eu-
mos,
columbam
et misericordem
homi-
nibus, ad vitam bonam he thus accounts for the topography of the fable. The ark rested upon mount Baris, in
this
country are
the.
An
life,
it
were preserved the rudiments of the future world. Hence in the Dionusiaca, and in other mysteries, one part of the
nocturnal ceremony consisted in the consecration of an egg. By this, we are informed by Porphyry, was signified the
world.
his
208
family; even all mankind, inclosed and preserved 'in the This seems to have been a favourite symbol, very ark.
and adopted among many nations. The Persians formed mankind, and inclosed The Syrians used to speak of their ancesthem in an egg.
ancient,
said of Oromasdes, that he
tors,
learned writer remarks, that in the the temple of the Dioscouri, in Laconia, there was suspended a large
The same
hieroglyphical
egg,
Leda, and sometimes to Nemesis, the deity of justice. It was sometimes described as surrounded by a serpent, either
as an
emblem of
that providence,
a renewal of
from a state
by casting his skin, seems to renew the bursting of the egg, was denoted the By opening of the ark, and the disclosing to light whatever was within contained. *fof death
life.
;
as the serpent,
his
the contemplation of this symbol of foreign superstition, we naturally turn to the celebrated Ovum Anguinum, or serpent's egg, of the Celtic priesthood, as described
From
by Pliny.
This was, by way of eminence, regarded as Insigne Dru~ Havidisj the Insigne, or distinguishing mark of a Druid.
ing already seen so this order of men,
much of the Arkite superstition amongst we may easily conceive, that this sacred
egg had a reference to the same subject, and that, like the mundane egg of other pagans, it was, in some sense,
an emblem of the ark.
Experimen-
Bryant's Analysis, V.
p. 360.
p.
319, &c.
t Ibid,
torn
gus
esse, si contra
its
vuici'ufo-*~ Eha.t
the test of
genuineness, was
I water, even with its setting of gold. suppose the author it would tneans, that keep upon the surface, when drawn against the stream ; and that, in this passage, he gives us a
hint of
its
emblem of
a floating
we
for the
moon was
a sym-
of the Anguinum, ad victorias litium, et Regum aditus, may easily be conceived. The Druids, who were the supreme judges in all litigated causes, may be supefficacy
The
posed to have lent a favourable ear to those who produced this credential of their order; and even kings, who stood
in
awe of
their tribunal,
their gates
against them.
The
of the production of
convoluti, 8cc.
natural historian recites at large the fabulous story this trinket Angues innumeri, astate,
is
had
which
casts its
"forth by serpents"*
210
But
this
The Druids themselves are called Nadredd, adders, by the Welsh Bards. This title they owed, I suppose, to their The serpent, which regenerative system of transmigration.
annually casts his skin, and seems to return to a second youth, may have been regarded by them, as well as by other
heathens, as a symbol of renovation and the renovation of mankind was the great doctrine set forth by the Arkite mys~
:
teries,
The
bled, at a stated
blems of Creirwy, and to conceal within them certain discriminative tokens, which probably were kept as a profound secret from the persons who received them.
Pliny saw one of these eggs, but he had not the curiosity examine it any farther than its cartilaginous integument $ otherwise he would probably have discovered, that it conto
material
dredd.
racter
tained either a lunette of glass, or small ring of the same such as those which the Welsh call Gleiniau Na;
These were certainly insignia of a very sacred chaamongst our ancestors ; and they seenx to .have been
intimately connected with the Anguinum: for the annotator upon Camden remarks, that in most parts of Wales, all
over Scotland, and in Cornwall, the vulgar still retain the same superstitious notions respecting the origin and virtues
of the former, which Pliny records of the latter.* And the Glain was viewed as an emblem of renovation hence
:
Gibson's
Camden
Col. 815.
See
also
Owen's Diet.
V. Clain.
Meilyr
calls
" which
" Tlie Bardsey holy island of the Glain, v there is a fair representation of a resurrection. *
in
That these Glains were artificial, can hardly admit of a doubt ; though some have hastily confounded them with
certain productions of nature.
white, a third sort green, and a fourth regularly variegated with all these sorts of colours ; but still preserving the appearance of glass whilst others again were composed
:
some
over.-j-
seems most
likely, that
these Glains
:
was
totally
unknown
the Druids J and it may be collected from some passages, that these priests carried about them certain trinkets of vitrified matter, and that this custom had a view to their
Arkite mysteries.
Thus, in the poem called the chair of Taliesin, we find the stranger admitted to the ceremonies of lunar worship, upon * "
^m
in
Gtvydryn, or boat of glass, a symbol which certainly commemorated the sacred vessel, and probably displayed the figure of a small lunette ; as the ark
his exhibiting the
Cwrwg
figure,
and
called Selene,
P 2
W.
Archaiol. p. 193.
as cited before.
f See Camden, w
'
similar reverence the Samothracians, whose devotion to the Cabiric well known, regarded their magical rings. These were of the nature of amulets, and were believed to have a power of averting danger." Faber'a Mjst. of the Cabin, V. I. p. 21".
rites is
" With
$ Bryant's Analysis, V.
II. p.
553.
(
")
<
I suppose that it
this
symbol was composed, that even the vessel, in which the patriarch and his family were preserved, was denominated
Caer Wydyr, the
inclosure, or circle
of glass.*
And Merd-
din Emrys, and his nine Bards, are represented as having put to sea in the Ty Gwydrinft or house of glass; which
,
could have been no other than a ship or vessel consecrated to Bardic mysteries.
The
its
form
portable trinket which I have mentioned, whatever may have been, was the Crair, or Insignd of the
;
Druids
and when made or dressed up in the figure of an became Creir-wy, the Insignti or token of the egg,
'
the British Proserpine. From the estimation in which this emblem was held, pre-eminent both in Gaul and in our own island, we may draw a reason-
emblem of
able inference, that the Arkite mysteries were the most sacred arcana of the Celtic priesthood.
In the short chapter which gave rise to these remarks, our mythological narrator appears, with a master's hand, to have directed our attention to the history of the deluge,
and to the
event.
-local notions
observe his dexterity in delineating the character and operations of Ceridwen herself.
We shall now
Appendix, No.
f
3.
W.
HANES TALIESIN.
w Then she
CHAP.
II.
*'
*'
" cauldron of Awen a Gwybodeu, water of inspiration and that he might be more readily admitted into sciences,
honourable society, upon account of his knowledge, and
his skill in regard to futurity.
(Ccrichven) determined, agreeably to the mysa tery of the books of Pheryllt, to prepare for her son
*l
"
" The cauldron began to boil, and it was requisite that " the should be continued, without interruption, boiling
"
"
and a day
and
till
three blessed
"
" She had stationed Greion the Little, the son of Gwreang " the Herald, of Llanvair, the fane of the lady, in Caer
Einiawn,
tin* .it if
" to superintend the preparation of the cauldron and she " had appointed a blind man, pvm, named Morda, ruler of
:
of the
just, in
restf
"
1t
the sea, to
kindle the
fire
" "
strict injunction that he should not suffer the boiling to be interrupted, before the completion of the year and the
day.
" In the mean time Ceridvven, with due attention to the " books of astronomy, and to the hours of the planets, em" herself daily in botanizing, and in collecting plants ployed " of which rare virtues.
every species,
possessed any
"
On
"
whilst she
herself,
214
" three drops of the efficacious water happened to fly out of " the cauldron, and alight upon the finger of Gwion the
" "
Little.
The heat of
mouth.
" As soon as these precious drops had touched his lips, " every event of futurity was opened to his view and he " clearly perceived, that his greatest concern was to beware " of the was of whose
:
stratagems
Ceridwen,
knowledge
" "
very great.
tive country.
With extreme
terror
he
fled
" As
tl
two halves
for the
contained, excepting the *' three efficacious drops, was poisonous ; so that it poisoned " the horses of Gwyddno Garanb-ir, which drank out of the
" channel into which the cauldron had emptied itself. " Hence that channel was afterwards called, The poison of " Gwyddno's hones."
subject brought forward in this the preparation of the cauldron of inspiration chapter, and science ; but before I consider the import of this mysis
tical vase, I
Ceridwen employs a minister, who is described as the son of a herald, and it may be implied that he himself held that office. It is observed by antiquaries, that of four
priests
officiated in the celebration of the mysteries of one was distinguished by the title of Keryx the Ceres, Herald. Another was named Hydranus, from '2g, water :
who
215
and his
title,
with that of
Morda
The keeping up of
a continual
fire,
year and a day, in a ceremony which was repeated annually, amounts to the same thing as maintaining a perpetual fire.
And
this
was a solemn
rite in the
Isis,
skilled
The
Pheryllt, according to
whose
proceeds in her
as well as
by
the prose writers of Wales. The poet Virgil, whose sixth JErieid treats so largely of the mysteries of heathenism, has
been dignified with this title ; and an old chronicle, quoted by Dr. Thomas Williams, asserts that the Pheryllt had an
establishment at Oxford, prior to the founding of the university
by
Alfred.
of
These Pheryllt are deemed to have been the first teachers all curious arts and sciences ; and, more particularly, are
thought to have been skilled in every thing that required the operation of fire. Hence some have supposed, that the
term implies chymists or metallurgists. But chymistry and metallurgy seem rather to have taken their British name
priests,
ryllt, the arts of the Pheryllt, or some of those mysteries in which they were eminently conversant.
As primary
(
Pharaon, or higher powers, who had a city or temple amongst the mountains of Snowdon, called also Dinas Emrys, or the ambrosial
216
city.
in effect, as the
Mr. Bryant assures us, that the supposed genius of the ark was worshipped under several titles, and that the principal of her priests were the Cabin, whose office and rites
were esteemed particularly sacred, and of great antiquity, They were the same as the Curetes, Corybantes, Telchines^
and
Idaei Dactyli
of Crete.
my
author,
much
and the
priests
were comprehended
title.
The
was
no other than the patriarch, who was of so great repute for his piety and justice., Hence, the other Cabiri, bis immediate offspring, are said to be the sons of Sadyc, by which is signified the just man. This is the very title given to Noah. All science, and every useful art, was attributed
to him, and through his sons transmitted to posterity.*
by the same author, consisted in arkite memorials. They passed from Egypt and Syria into Phrygia and Pontus, from thence into Thrace, and the cities of Greece. They were
Cabiritic
rites,
The
Telchinian and
we
are told
these ancient priests may have pursued ; and whether they belonged to the original establishment of the nations here mentioned, or were imported from other
Whatever route
people
clearly to
t Ibid, p, 471.
217
and with those PheryHt or Druids, who directed the mysteries
of Ceridwen.
Caesar enumerates astronomy amongst the sciences which they professed ; and that they not only rethat
marked the periodical return of their festivals, but also mixed with their arkite superstition, an idolatrous veneration of the heavenly bodies, and paid a religious regard to * their influence,
I come now to the cauldron of Ceridwen, which makes a very conspicuous figure in the works of the mystical Bards, from the beginning of the sixth, to the close of the
twelfth century.
In these authors,
we
find the
term pair,
pr cauldron, used metaphorically to imply the whole mass of doctrine and discipline, together with the confined circle
being a ne-
most sacred
Hence
vessel,
it
in British
antiquities,
and
any thing
analogous to
it.
From
subject,
upon the
does not appear that this cauldron implies one identical vessel, or at least, that its contents were designed
218
for one simple purpose.
In the
tale
before us
it is
described,
which was
and
few drops of this water fall upon the finger of the attendant, he puts it into his mouth, and immediately all futurity is open to his view. Such knowledge, however,
must not be regarded as the result of merely tasting the water, or of any single ceremony whatever ; but of a complete course of initiation, of which the tasting of this water
was an essential rite.
The poem
of ingredients, which entered into the mystical decoction, and seems to describe it as designed, for purification by
sprinkling, then, for the preparation of a bath, and again, as used in the rite of libation, and lastly, as constituting a
The sacred vessel particular kind of drink for the aspirants. is there called Pair the cauldron of the five trees Pumwydd,
or plants, alluding, I suppose, to five particular species of plants, which were deemed essentially requisite in the preparation.
the mythological tales represent ihis pair, as constituting a bath, which conferred immortality or restored
Some of
dead persons to
to initiation.
life,
styles it
+ Appendix, No.
3.
219
the cauldron of the ruler of the deep, (the arkite god) which to be warmed, hy the breath of nine damsels (the Jftrst began
Gwyllion, or Gallicena)*
He
describes
it
as having a ridge
of pearls round
its
border, and
says, that
it will
who
is
Taliesin, speaks
of the residue
From
it
may be inferred,
that the
pair, was a vessel employed by the Druids, in preparing a decoction of potent herbs and other ingredients, to which
superstition attributed
some extraordinary
virtues
that this
preparation was a preliminary to the mysteries of the arkite goddess that in those mysteries, part of the decoction was
;
used for the purpose of purification by sprinkling; that another part was applied to the consecration of the mystic
bath : that a small portion of the same decoction, was infused into the vessels which contained the liquor, exhibited
in the great festival, for the purpose of libation, or for the
use of the priests and aspirants, which liquor, is described as consisting of Gwin a Bragazvd, that is, wine with mead, and
wort, fermented
together: that
all
em-
ployed in the mysteries of Ceridwen, being thus purified and consecrated by the pair, passed under its name ; and
that, in these appropriations, the water of the cauldron
was
as
science,
and immortality,
Section.
But
it
posed to
tiated,
seems that the residue of the water, being now suphave washed away the mental impurities of the iniit
and
accursed.
therefore emptied into a deep pit or channel in the earth, which swallowed it up, together with the sins of the regenerate.
If we look for something analogous to this in the ancient mysteries of Ceres, we shall find, that the first ceremony
Was that of
purification
by
was per-
formed, both by sprinkling and immersion; ami that the water used for this purpose, underwent a certain degree of
preparation, similar to that of the cauldron of Ceridwen.
In the ceremony of purification, says M. De Gebelin, they used laurel, salt, barley, sea-water, and crowns vfforcers.
the
fire,
and were
at last,
plunged
with
tist*
this
whence the hierophant, who was charged office, had the name of Hydranos, or the Bap^
The
salt,
barley, sea-water,
specified,
must
have corresponded with the mystical cauldron of the Britons, " berries, the amongst the contents of which I find certain
" foam of the ocean, cresses of a purifying quality, wort, " and chearful, placid vervain, which had been borne aloft, u and kept apart from the Moon."f
* Monde
Primitif.
Tom. IV.
p. 318.
t Caiair Taliesin,
W.
Archaiol. p. 37,
the analogy between the purifying water of the But the mystical Greeks and Britons, may be traced.
Thus
far,
cauldron of Ceridwen was also employed in preparing the who took and liquor of those magnanimous aspirants,
It was one of its functions to boil that bekept the oath. or else a certain portion of its contents was added, verage,
Gwm a
the extract
barley.
However
this consecration
effected, the
correspondence between the mystical beverage of the Greeks and Britons, will appear still more close.
by Clemens Alexandrinus, that as a prelude to initiation, the aspirant was asked, if he had eaten of the Ex Tv/Acravo fruits of Ceres, to which he answered
xfp.GAev
tiTivr,
We are told
fxiyp^opiKct,
VETO
rov matron
vasfrvot.* 1 J
have
have drunk out of the cymbal, I have kernos, 1 have been covered in the bed."
I
M. De
in the
form of a large
Gebelin explains the cymbal, as signifying a vessel, goblet, out of which the aspirants
drank a liquor, called kykeon, which was a mixture of wine, honey, water, and meal, precisely the Gwm a Bragawd of
the British Bards.
The
tell
ancients and mythologists, as my author observes, us, that these symbols were intended as memorials of
fyad
what
happened
to
Ceres, who,
upon her
arrival in
Attica,
received
this liquor
from a
drank
it
The
which
was presented
as At&jTo. Ga&vv, a deep kettle or boiler ; this might, with propriety, be denominated the cauldron of that goddess,
\
But we are
vessel,
sins
was of a poisonous quality. It now contained the and pollutions of the noviciates: the cauldron was
therefore divided into two equal parts, and the water ran out of it into a certain terrestrial channel.
This dividing of the water, and pouring of it into a channel in the earth, was a solemn rite, perfectly analogous to the practice of the ancients in the mysteries of Ceres.
ninth and last day of the celebration of the greater mysteries, when all the ablutions and purifications had been
The
completed, was called Plemochoe, from the name of a large earthen vessel, of considerable depth, and widening from the bottom upwards.
On
of the
feast, as
we
are informed
by
two of these vessels with water, and AthenaBus,J they one of them towards the East, and the other having placed towards the West, they moved them sideways successively,
When these were concluded, prayers. the water into a kind of pit, or channel, prothey poured
reciting
certain
Monde
is
"
May we
" these
appears that the cauldron of Ceridwen, which was, properly speaking, a vessel used in preparing a kind of
it
Thus
is
to be understood, hi
employed in the mysteries of Ceres : and that genius, and immortality, the benefits supposed to be derived
But
this
has already been observed, that Taliesin describes cauldron as having been warmed, for the first time, by
it
This must imply, that the connected with the cauldron, were supposed to mysteries have been originally instituted by certain female hierpphants. These were undoubtedly the Gwyllion, from whose songs
the breath of nine damsels. the patriarch
is
deluge, and who continued to be represented by fanatical priestesses, bearing the same title, and styled Gallicente by
Pomponius Mela.
probably occur to the reader, that these nine damsels allude to the nine muses ; or that they were mystical
it will
Here
The muses,
Moude
of immortality their sacred fountain was the fountain 01* inspiration; but what had they to do with the mysteries of Ceres?
1
wish to poiht out the general analogy between Bri* tish fable, and that mass of superstition which pervaded
I
As
other heathen countries, I must be allowed to suggest, that the muses were originally nothing more than priestesses of
whose history is decisively referred, both by Mr. Bryant and Mr. Faber, to that of the ark, and the Dihivian age.
The
first
form of sacred hymns, containing the titles and actions of the gods, and describing the rites with which they were
worshipped
if therefore, those gods, and those rites, were? : the songs of the muses must have been the same. Arkite,
Deucalion's vessel, which was evidently the ark of Noah, or its representative in a Thessalian temple, is said to have
rested
of the muses was about the Castalian spring, upon that mountain.
sent their
first colony into Ionia, the muses led the way in the form of bees Melissa : and adds, that the Melissa were certainty
In the next page, the learned author tells us, that as the who sung the sacred priestesses of Damater (Ceres),
hymns, were
and Persephone,
had the
honour.
title
The
Ceres.
Melissce, or muses,
Osiris
was an avowed representative of the Diluvian paIsis, was the same character as
of the ark
:
accordingly,
we
find the
Egyptian mythology. Diodorus tells us, that Osiris was always attended by a company of musicians, amongst whom were nine damsels, accomplished in every art relative to music ;
that this was the reason
their establishment in
why
them the
nine muses, and that their president was Apollo, the king's brother.
Taliesin
is
when he
represents
the nine damsels as having first warmed the mystical cauldron of the ruler of the deep, and the Arkite goddess. And
this
we
mys-
vase was peculiarly sacred to the god and goddess of It must then be referred to something in the histhe ark.
tory of the deluge ; for the discovery of which, it may be proper to take a brief view of the ideas which the Britons entertained respecting that awful event.
The
in the
following circumstances
may be
verified
by passages
The
preme
profligacy of
to send a pestilential
mankind had provoked the great Suwind upon the earth. A pure-
poison descended
At
this
time the
patriarch, distinguished for his integrity, was shut up together with his select company, in the inclosure with the
strong door.
sently, a tempest of
fire arose.
The
bounds
the
themselves on high, round the borders the rain poured down from heaven, and the
lift
as
meet
for
its
the renewal of
life,
and
to
former inhabitants into the chasms of the abyss. The flood, which swept from the surface of the earth the expiring
remains of the patriarch's contemporaries, raised his vessel, or inclosure, on high, from the ground, bore it safe upon the
to
him and
his associates
and renovation.
Agreeably to these ideas, the cauldron which was kept boiling for a year and a day; which purified the sacred
utensils,
and with
and the company assembled at the mystic festival ; its dregs washed away the sins of the regenerate
regarded as an
emblem of
This comes very near to the view which the learned and indefatigable Mr. Maurice has taken of some ancient Hin-
doo
traditions.
But how
are
we
mythology of nations, so widely separated ? Perhaps it would not be an unreasonable supposition, that the rudiments of those fanciful systems, which prevailed over the Gentile world, whatever changes they may have afterwards
undergone from local corruption and mutual intercourse, were laid before the nations separated from the patriarchal
stock.
How
are
we
and amongst a sequestered people in the West of Europe ? I am aware that this difficulty has generally been resolved by the supposition, that certain
bols, in the East of Asia,
Eastern sages, in some distant age, found their way into these remote regions. But the experience of our country-
men and
neighbours, for the last three hundred years, may serve to convince us, that a new religion, essentially differ-
or barbarous,
ent from that of an established society, whether polished is not However this may easily introduced.
have been,
it
is
tales of the Britons, and in the ancient books of the Hindoos, the same train of superstitious ideas.
The author of
the Soors, being assembled in solemn consultation, were meditating the discovery of the Amreeta, or water of immortality; remarks, that under this allegory is shadowed out the re-animation of nature, after the general desolation made by the deluge. The sea was to be deeply agitated by the impetuous rotation of the mountain Mandar.
which con-
a heterogeneous stream, of the " concocted juice of various trees and plants, ran down into " the briny flood. It was from this milk-like stream of
"
And now,
Q 2
228
**
juices,
trees,
and
plants,
"
details of
" the Hindoos (continues Mr. Maurice), I must remark, " that however mysterious the allegory, and however wild " and romantic the language in which it is clothed, this " fact be depended upon, that there in general lies may " concealed at the bottom some or
physical meaning,
"
theological truth.
What
can
this general
"
"
convulsion of nature shadow out, except the desolation " of the earth, during the period of the universal deluge " Who is that physician, so renowned in ancient Sanscrit " the great Dezv Danwantaree, who at length histories, " rose from the churned ocean, the white foam of which " resembled milk, bearing in his hand a sacred vase, full of " the water of life unless it be the venerable sage, who " rose from the ocean, who gave new life to his expiring " and in his family upheld the human race ? That species,
!
"
ft ic
great botanist, who first planted the vine, and returned to the ground that infinite variety of medical herbs, and innumerable seedsf which Menu is represented, as taking
into the ark, for the express purpose of renovating de-
" Such is the true cayed vegetation after the deluge. " of this Avatar and such is the true Danwanmeaning " taree of India, who sprung from the foam of the churned " ocean, bearing the Amreeta, or vital ambrosia, to the " renovated world."*
;
To
the reader,
who
is
quities, I
i
...
-,_
_.
--
-.
i-r-
229
tracts
;
and,
trust,
my
making
light
which they reflect upon the renovating cauldron of Ceridwen, and the ruler of the deep, and perhaps also
upon the HLvmtut, or sacred mixture of the Arkite goddess, and her renovating mysteries. But to return to the British,
itory.
HANES TALIESIN.
" Ceridwen entering just
*f
CHAP.
III.
at this
"joar, and struck the blind Morda upon his head, so that " one of his eyes dropped 'upon his cheek.
hast disfigured
I am
innocent
me
"
it
Having pronounced
" "
" Gwion perceiving her at a distance, transformed himbut Ceridwen self into a hare, and doubled his speed
:
bitch, turned
him, and
"
Leaping into the stream, he assumed the form of a fish : but his resentful enemy, who was now become aa
"
230
"
otter bitch, traced
so that
he
to take the
" That element afforded him no refuge for the lady, m " the form of a hawk was gaining upon him she sparrow " was him. in the act of
;
just
pouncing
"
t{
Shuddering with the dread of death, he perceived a heap of clean wheat upon a floor, dropped into the midst
it,
" of
" Ceridwen took the form of a black, high-crested hen, " descended into the wheat, scratched him out, distin" guished and swallowed him. And, as the history relates, " she was pregnant of him nine months, and when delivered " of a that she had not she found him so
him,
lovely
babe,
" resolution
to put
him
to death.
skin, and, by the instigation of her husband, cast " into the sea on the twenty-ninth of April"
him
Through the fabulous wildness of this chapter, we may discover constant allusions to the history of Ceres, and her mystical rites. Ceridwen here assumes the character of a
fury.
Under that
idea, she
is
elsewhere represented.
Ta-
liesin says
of himself, that he had been nine months in the of Ceridwen Wrach, the hag, or fury. This fury womb was the goddess of death. The death of Arthur is implied,
by
fury
in
the hall
of Glaston*
ujai
231
.
\
' i
bury*
s
And,
as
o death, of which she was the goddess, the character of the ship of the earth.
Pawb
" one
must
die.
a ddaw
i'r
Ddaear Log,f
says the
;"
Bard
that
is,
"
Every
all
will
men
All this
is
list
of
re-
Under
seems to have
presented the terror and consternation, to which the patriarch and his family were exposed during the deluge.
the goddess of death. When the ark was constructed, Noah made a door in its side ; a circumstance
She was
~~7
also
The continually commemorated by the Gentile writers. entrance through this door, they esteemed a passage to death and darkness. Hence the aspirants, in the mysteries of
Ceres and
terrified
Isis, as
well as
Gwion,
were
" " of
by
"
Apuleius and Dion Chrysostom, who had gone through " the awful ceremony nothing more tremendous and ap:
"
before the eyes of the palling, than the scenery exhibited " terrified It was a rude and fearful march, through aspirant. " night and darkness and now, arrived on the verge of
W.
Archaiol.
p.
67
Ibid. p. 322.
V. II p. 257.
11
"
death and initiation, every thing wears a dreadful aspect ; *Accessi it is all horror, trembling, and astonishment:
" confinium mortis, says Apuleius, et calcato proserpin& " limine, per omnia vectus elementa remeavi."f
us proceed to consider the incidents of the story Ceridwen seizes an oar} and strikes the Daemon of the sea
But let
upon
his head.
The instrument was a proper symbol to be employed by the genius of a floating vessel, and the action an emblem of her triumph over the watery element.
How-
the symbol, these animals seem to have had a particular connexion with the mysteries of Ceres and
Isis.
book of
his JEneid,
describes
;
all
that
was lawful
and we
find
objects which presented themselves to the senses of his hero, whilst the priestess was con-
that the
terrific
river,
Upon
this
passage,
M. De
<c
"I approached the confines of death, and having nearly trodden the threshold of Prosperine, I returned, being carried through all the elements."
t
II. p. 312,
&c.
J And
seem
to
V. 257.
Pletho, in his notes upon the magical oracles of Zoroaster, also speaks of It is the custom, says he, in the celebration of the dogs mentioned by Virgil. the mysteries, to exhibit to the initiated, certain fantoms, in the figure ojf dogs* and many other monstrous spectres and apparitions.
233
(Scholies sur les oracles magiques de Zoroastre) parle aussi des
Cest la contume, dit il, chiens, dont Virgile fait mention. dans la celebration des mysteres, de faire paroitre devant
les inities,
des fantomes, sous la figure des chiens, et plusieurs autres spectres et visions monstreuses."*
W$
'i
In the sculpture which, according to this author, represents the Eleusinian cave, Ceres is attended by a dog, and the aspirant in the form of a child, is brought into the cave
by another dog.f
Plutarch
tells
was
assisted
by
certain dogs,
of Anubis, the child of Osiris, whom his mother had exposed, because she dreaded the anger of
in the discovery
Typhon.
This child, the goddess adopted and educated ; he became her companion and faithful guard. He had the name of Anubis, because he displayed the same vigilance in the cause of the gods, which dogs manifested in behalf of their
human
The
masters.
tale,
be regarded as the
his-
tory of an aspirant,
Isis,
who was
and
and
in-
grand celebration of Isis, the whole solemnity was preceded by dogs. This author indeed, produces many instances of gods, and their representatives, the
Monde
t
Primitif.
Tom. IV.
p. 33(5.
Ibid. p. 339.
234
priests
being termed Ktm ? dogs ; but he attributes this title the ignorance of the Greeks, who, according to him, to mistook the Hebrew and Egyptian term, cohen, a for
,
priest,
F,
which
in their
own
language, implies a
dog*
But, as the mythology of other nations, not intimately connected with the Greeks, and who did not use their vocabulary, furnishes us with a similar application of equivalent titles
;
Agreeably to Plutarch's hint, there may have been some allusion to the fidelity, vigilance, and sagacity of the animal.
And
whatever served to keep aloof profane intrusion, and defend the awful sanctity of the temple, may have been symbolized by the guardian dog. Thus the dog of Gwyn ab
Nudd, the British Pluto, is named Dor-Marthrf the gate of sorrow: this was no real dog, but probably the same as the Proserpina, Limen, which Apuleius approached in the
course of initiation.
These particulars
may
suffice to
our British mythologist, in transforming Ceridwen, the Ceres or Isis of the Druids, into a bitch ; whilst the aspirant
hare.
at the same time Caesar, was deemed sacred by the Britons it was an emblem of timidity, intimating the great terror to
which
process.
the noviciate
was exposed,
during
the
mystical
* See Analysis, V.
t
I.
&c.
W.
Archaiol. p. 166.
235
This hare
is still in
is
But he
After the preparation of the consecrated water, and the Ki/, the first ceremony in the
the road to initiation.
mysteries of the Greeks, was that of purification, which was The Athenians percelebrated, upon the banks of rivers.
formed
Attica.
this
ceremony at Agra, on the Ilissus, a river of Hence the banks of that river were called the
^mjw?,
the divine.
fish,
whilst the
goddess herself, or rather her priest, assumes the character of an otter. If xy ? dogs, represented heathen priests in general, and especially those of Ceres and Isis ; the otter, or
,
water dog,
who
was
very aptly typify the priest, called Hydranos, always attended those mysteries, and whose office it
may
to
not named.
implies both a wren and a Druid; and Taliesin tells us that he had been in that form. His adversary became a hawk;
but we are
Isis.*
told, that
the
last, the novitiate becomes a grain ofpure zvheat, and mixes with an assemblage of the same species and character. He was now cleansed from all his impurities, and he had assumed a form, which was eminently sacred to Ceres. In
At
this
som.
form, therefore, the goddess receives him into her boIn order to accomplish this design, she transforms
236
herself into a hen,
The singular representation of Ceridwen, as swallowing the aspirant ; and of the latter, as continuing for a considerable time imprisoned in her
thing more than his mere introduction into the sanctuary. This aspirant was intended for the priesthood: and we have
*JT'
some
ship,
cell,
or
which more immediately symbolized the person of the mystical goddess. In this inclosure, he was subjected to
a rigid course of discipline.
cal rites,
fanati-
consonant with the practice of other heathens. Porphyry, in his treatise, De Antro Nympharum, tells us, that Zoroaster consecrated a natural cell, adorned with
This
is
and watered with fountains, in honour of Mithra, the father of the universe and that the Persians, intending
flowers,
:
an in-
nature, and
its
But
the initiatory rites was deemed by the Gentiles a regeneration, or new birth, and distinguished by that name; so
our aspirant
* Vide
De
237
As
yet,
however,
we seem
to have
ing the
lesser
mysteries
to succeed.
After the aspirant had completed his course of discipline \ in the cell, had gone through the ceremonies of the lesser
\
we
are
with skin,
This
will
day of the greater mysteries of Ceres, was called the convocation, being destined to the reception, dgyrme, ablution, and purification of the candidates.
first
>-
The
the
name of AXa&
Mtyat,
" Noviciates
being the form by which the herald sumpassed through the lesser mysteries,
moned
those
who had
of completing their purification ; but the ceremony seems to have had a further meaning, and it is probable, that on
this day, the noviciates
vessels,
in certain
commemorative of the
we
Phocion, the Athenian general, taking advantage of this day's solemnity, put to sea, and engaged the enemy in a
naval combat.*
tish
But
let
ceremony."
HANES TALIESIN.
''
CHAP. IV.
In those times, Gwyddno's wear stood out in the beach, " between Dyvi and Aberystwyth, near his own castle. " And in that wear, it was usual to take fish, to the value " of a hundred pounds, every year, upon the eve of the
first
of May.
Gwyddno had an only son, named Elphin, who had " been a most unfortunate and necessitous young man.
" This was a great affliction to his father, who began to " tnink that he had been born in an evil hour.
" His counsellors, however, persuaded the father to let " this son have the drawing of the wear on that year, by " way of experiment ; in order to prove whether any good " fortune would ever attend him, and that he might have " to begin the world. something
"
" The next day, being May-eve, Elphin examined the " and found nothing but as he was going away, he wear, " perceived the coracle, covered with a skin, resting upon " the pole of the dam.
:
" Then one of the wearmen said to him, Thou hast never " been unfortunate before this night ; for now completely " thou hast destroyed the virtue of the wear, in which the
" value of a hundred pounds was always taken upon the " eve of May-day.
" How so ? that coracle replied Elphin " contain the value of a hundred pounds.
may
possibly
239
" The skin was opened, and the opener perceiving the " forehead of an Behold Taliesin, infant, said to Elphin " radiant !
front
" Radiant front be his name, replied the prince, who " now lifted the infant in his arms, commiserating his own " and placed him behind him upon his own misfortune, " chair. as if it had been in the most
.horse,
easy
"
Immediately after
this,
"prophesied of his future renown. The consolation was " the first hymn which Taliesin sung, in order to comfort " who was in the for his
"
Elphin, grieved disappointment draught of the wear; and still more so, at the thought " that the world would impute the fault and misfortune
"
wholly to himself."
sents
Elphin carries the new-born babe to the castle, and prehim to his father, who demands whether he was a
or a spirit; and
is
human being
answered in a mystical song, in which he professes himself a general primary Bard, who had existed in all ages, and identifies his own character with that of the sun.
Gwyddno, astonished
ther song, and
is
at his
proficiency,
:
demands ano-
answered as follows
Ar y dwr mae
cyflwr,
&c.*
W.
Archaiol. p. 76.
240
" Water has the property of conferring a blessing. It is " meet to think rightly of God. It is meet to pray earnestly " to God because the benefits which ; proceed from him,
woeful that
men
will
" of the for I world, which are treasured in my bosom " know all that has and ah that will be hereafter," &c. been,
Let us now make a few observations upon our mytholoof those mystic rites, to their final comgist's account
pletion.
was properly a
his priest.
have already taken notice that Taliesin, radiant front, title of the sun, and thence transferred to
This priest had now, for a complete year, attended the preparation of the mystical cauldron : he had received the water of inspiration, and with it the sacred
lessons of
Ceridwen
up bv that goddess, and had remained for some time in her woinb, or had been subjected to a course of discipline in the mystical cell, and at length he had been born again.
But
after this,
we
find
him
boat, cast into the sea, and consigned into the hands of
Gwyddno
The very
connected series of mystical rites, allusive to one history : and the character and connexions of Ceridwen, the great
Agent, Compared with the import of the mysteries of Ceres> fcs elucidated by Mr. Bryant and Mr. Faber, abundantly
prove, that the reference must be.
deluge.
made
According to
the commemoration of the deliverance out of the ark upon the eve of May-day > And if they supposed the deluge to
have continued
for a year
employed
sary of
its
commencement would
fall,
twenty-ninth of April.
the coracle into the sea upon that day, so opportune for the drawing of Gwddno's wear on the morrow, it may be inferred, that Gwyddno and his soil
As Ceridwen threw
were intimately connected with the family of Ceridwen. Taking all circumstances into account, we may even presume, that they were the same as her husband Tegid, and her unfortunate son Avagddu.
Tegid, indeed,
have had two sons, whereas described as having but one at this time but it
is
said to
had de-
The
Gwyddno,
differs
From the received opinion of the Welsh, which Mr. thus details in his Cambrian Biography. "
Owen
Gwyddno Gafanhir, or Dewrarth Wledig, was a Prince " of Cantrev y Gwaelod, and also a poet, some of whose " composition is in the Welsh Archaiology. He flourished
" from about A. D. 460, to 520. The whole of his terri" his life-time, and it tory was inundated by the sea in " forms the present Cardigan Bay."
v
The whole of
local
this account,
though
literally
understood
me nothing more than a piece of of the same kind as those tales, -which mythology, But assert the submersion of cities in the lakes of Wales.
let
the Triads.
Saidi,
King
of Dyved,
in
"
Gwaelod, so
as to destroy all
had been
sixteen
the best of
all
This
district
of
Gwyddnaw
Garanhir,
King of Caredigiawn.
Emrys, the sovereign. men who escaped the inundation, came to land in Ardudwy, in the regions of Arvon, and in the mountains " of Snowdon, and other places which had hitherto been " uninhabited." *
in the time of
undoubtedly, the substance of an old Mabinogi) or mythological tale, and ought not to be received as au-
This
is,
thentic history.
For, in the
first
place,
by which which it
it is
who marks
receives,
at present.
* W.
Archaiol.
V. it
243
any other ancient geographer, takes notice of one of those
sixteen cities, which are said to have been lost there in the
sixth century.
In the next place, we know enough of the geography of Wales, both ancient and modern, to form a decisive conclusion, that a single Cantrev, or hundred, never did con-
slightest
compa-
was
in the
supposed age of
Gwyddno.
Again
:
the incident
is
happened, in consequence of having neglected to close a sluice; a cause inadequate, surely, to the alleged effect.
And
imputed to a son of Seithin Saidi, King of Dyved, a character whom we have already traced into the regions of mythology. have marked his intimate
is
the omission
We
connexion with the history of the deluge, and the mystic rites by which it was commemorated, and have ascertained
his identity with Tegid, the
husband of Ceridwen.
landing of those who escaped from this drowned country, upon the mountains of Snowdon, is like the land-
The
ing of Deucalion upon Mount Parnassus. It is not history, but mythology. The district of Snowdon, from the
remotest period of British mythology, was famous for its Arkite memorials. Here was the city of Emrys, or the
ambrosial city
this
was
is,
Aedd
. i
V
W.
'
'
_'*.M|,m
"u-
'"
Arcbaiql.
V-IL
p. 59.
244
\
same family.
As
dragons were harnessed in the car of the British Ked, as well as in that of Ceres, the concealing of these animals,
in a city of the higher powers,
must imply an
establish-
The
land of
Gwyddno
is
said to
the time of Emrys, the sovereign. This is the personage from whom the temple of Stonehenge, as well as the sacred
city in
fifth
Snowden, derived its name. If the Britons of the century had a monarch who bore this title, we can
only say, that like his successors Uthyr and Arthur, he was complimented with a name out of the vocabulary of the
Druids; and that the age of Emrys was any age, which ac-
We
Dyai and Aberystwyth: and that his wear, in which a valuable capture was annually made, upon the eve of May-day, was near that castle, in the- opposite beach. This gives the same
topography of the coast which we find
stated period of the capture points to
ing.
It
at present;
and the
the time and place, in the exposure of the coracle, so conveniently for its recovery in the mystical
ri.dwen,
who chose
that
wear, upon the sacred eve. Hence we may expect to find, .Gwyddnaw was the same character as Seithinin, or
Serthin,
who
W.
Archaiol. V. II.
p. 55.
245
juently the
same
patriarch.
imply priest of the ship, from Gwydd, presence, attendance, and Nazv, an old term for a ship, which is retained by Taliesin and Meugant.*
to
of this
title of Garanhir, which means, the long or high crane. As to the propriety title, it has been already seen, that the tauriform
god, of the continental Celtae, was styled Tri-garanos, from the circumstance of his carrying three cranes ; and I may
add, that
in
Mr. Bryant has remarked the same symbolical bird, the Helio-arkite superstition of other nations. The Egyphe
tells us,
He
high honour, being sacred to the god adds that Gcranos, the Greek name of this
in
was a
title
Cybele, the same character as our Ceridwen, was styled Carnas, which was a title of the deity Avhom he served, and
of the same purport as the former, f
appear, therefore,
,
have had a marked reference to Arkite superstition, and to the character of Ceres, or Cybele.
But,
as
the
Malymsawddyn
e Fenaj
Myued
cyu ni'm bu
I. p.
Naw
159
Ibid. p.
4 See Analysis, V.
If
47.
we advert
great fisher; so
priest,
246
though few
titles,
honoured with a multiplicity of importing the various functions which they filled, or
in reality, are
alluding to the several circumstances of their history ; so the same Gwyddnaw is distinguished by the name of Dewrarth Wlcdig. The first of these terms implies the mighty
nearly synonymous with Arthur, the mythological representative of the patriarch : whilst Wledig is a
bear,
is
and
it is
Elphin, the son of this personage, is represented as having been a most forlorn and unfortunate character, previous to the opening of the coracle, or mystical ark ; but afterwards
he became
illustrious.
As the preparation of
the cauldron
was designed
a
mutual connexion and dependence, I think it highly probable, that under these two names, we have a description
The
This
may
be mere
mythology, or
Britons.
it
may
Be this as it may, we find that Taliesin, the great president of the Bards, devotes himself intirely to the interest of
Elphin, styles
him
his sovereign,
"
Teganwy,
test
in the
247
"
presence of the Distributor,
Etphin, the sovereign of those
I
liberated
my
lord,
even
"
who carry
ears
of corn"*
chief of the Bards seldom Assumes the character of a prophet, without adverting to this great atchievement of
liberating Elphin
;
The
it
brilliant enterprize, in
which he was
assisted, even by a train of radiant Seraphim. In short, he always speaks of this act, with as much selfimportance, as if he were delivering an oracle, or interpret-
of the sun
he
presided in Caer Sidi, which, as I shall shew hereafter, was a type of the Zodiac, and he claimed the viceroyalty of the
British island,
by the
the acknowledged emperor of the earth and seas. may therefore be sure, that when he speaks of Elphin, not only as his lord, but as the sovereign of all the disciples of Druidisrn,
We
he regarded him, as in some sense, identified with The same thing may be inferred
title
from another
of Elphin, namely,
Rhuvawn Bevyr,
he
who
radiantly shinesforth,
The
is
son of
G wyddnaw,
He
and ranked
with
Madawc mob
Ceugant Beilliawg, searcher of certain truth ; sonages who seem to have presided over the art of divination,
or oracular mystery.
And we
had
*
t
Appendix, No.
1.
II. p.
W,
Archiol, V.
3 and
248
this
when he had
name, because he was redeemed, at his weight in gold, fallen into the hand of the enemy.*
personage-
Ton wen orewyn orwlych bedd, Gwyddfa Ruvawn Bevyr, Ben Teyrnedd"j**~vThe white wave, with its
(t
foamy edge,
sprinkles the
even the mount of the presence of Rhuvawrt " the chief of sovereigns." Bevyr,
grave;
which the Triads and mystical Gwyddnaw and his sou, are surely intitles,
applicable to the lords of a single Cantred, which was now lying in the bottom of Cardigan bay. Their story has been
titles
which
priests
supplied his place, in certain departments of th& mystic rites; and particularly, in the finishing scene, wherethe truth was to be revealed,
who
repre-r.
sented the deluge, in a close coracle, the symbol of the ark ; and after the example of the just patriarch, was to be saved
from
this
image of the
flood, at
Gwyddnaw's
its
marked topography,
W.
f
Ibid, p, 277.
249
was no other than the natural causeway, or reef of rocks, in Cardigan bay, which the Welsh call Sarn Badrig.
With
actly correspond. be chaunted at these mystical representasongs, designed to but their style and orthography are so very untions;
couth, that
passages.
it
is
difficult
to ascertain the
meaning of some
One of them
when
tains
is
said to
at the time,,
It
Gwyddnaw.
con-
the sea
is
described as
The attendant on
upon God, who had provided the chair of Kedawly the Beneficent, which is a title of the Arkite godHere Gwyddnaw, the priest of dess, as a place of refuge.
extreme
distress,
and
is
preserved
poems is a contention, between Gwyddnaw and Gvvyn ab Nudd, the Demon who presided over Annwn, the deep, or abyss.
I shall attempt the translation of another
little
The
poem,
Ascribed to
Gwyddnaw,
as
it
250
his character
and
office.
It
is
It pertains to the cerecelebration of the mystical rites. of inclosing the aspirant in the coracle, and launching mony
him
Hanes
Taliesin,
and the
The
"
Though
To
this,
the solemn
Hierophant
replies
" To the brave, to the magnanimous, to the amiable, to " the generous, who boldly embarks, the ascending stone of " the Bards will prove the harbour of life! It has asserted the " of the the
praise
HEJLYN,
doom
mysterious impeller of
sky;
w and,
^
till
the
shall
its
symbol be continued"
PROBATIONER.
"
Though
its
wave
great has
" been
violence
"
"
to
him who
dismal the overwhelming stroke. Even survives, it will be the subject of lamen.
tation."
GWYDDNAW,
"
a pleasant act, to wash on the bosom of the fair water. Though it fill the receptacle, it will not " disturb the heart. associated train regard not its,
It is
"
"
My
overwhelming.
" As
for
his enterprize,
the lofty
251
" babler far away (wave) has hurried the " but the brave, the magnanimous will find
<
to his death;
his
*'
water
z$ill
"
without external purity, is a pledge that Take out the gloomy one! I will not receive thee. " Frorn have I alienated the rueful steed my my territory
"
Thy coming
*'
"
revenge, upon the shoal of earth-worms, is their hopeless longing, for the pleasant allotment, Out of the recep" tacle which is thy aversion, did I obtain the RAIN-
f BOW."*
This
office
little
piece throws
He
ascribes to Ceridwen, the Arkite goddess, upon the instiga. was then, that husband ; or he tion of her husband.
He
was a priest, who personally represented the deified patriarch: and upon certain stated days, exhibited an emblem of the
deluge, by turning his noviciates a drift in Cardigan bay, at the mouth of the Ystzoyth, Styctuis, or Styx, of the Druids, and in covered coracles, which were manifest symbols of the ark.
The worthy candidate was encouraged to adventure in this hardy probation, with the prospect of being fished up again at the landing place of the Bards,
when
the tide, or pretended deluge had subsided.
W.
Archaiol. p. 165.
Gwyddnaw and
his assistants,
quainted with the setting of the currents, though it he fairly admitted* that occasionally, they made a sacrifice to
the deep.
The
doctrine inculcated
ficiently
obvious.
which had protected the magnanimous and amiable patriarch, from the waters of the deluge, would likewise distinguish
his worthy descendants
;
in safety
to the privileges of the Bardic religion. At the same time, the very form and condition of this ceremony must have deterred the pusilanimous candidate, as well as
him that
was.
Fortunately, this was the last hazardous scene in the iniFor we find, that as soon as tiatory rites of the Druids.
him
him upon
his steed, or
into his ship, for such were the mythological steeds of the Britons, conducted him to his father, and
acknowledged
The
which were derived from these mysterious rites. They were viewed as most important, to the happiness of human life.
.They imparted sacred science in
fection
;
its
probation, was 'called Dedzeydd, one rcho has recovered intelligence, or rather, It is nearly equiJuts been brought back into the presence.
valent to the Greek term, Evosrr^, which describes a person, who had been initiated into the greater mysteries^
253
Upon
cited
this subject, the little
poem
after
said to
by
Taliesin,
immediately
the concluding ceremony, is worthy of remark. He describes himself as thrice born, that is, once of his natural parent, once of Ceridwen, and lastly of the mystical coracle.
think rightly of
As a consequence of this regeneration, he knew how to God; he perceived that the benefits derived from him could not be impeded. All the sacred science of the world was treasured in his bosom he knew all that had
;
been, and
all
its
have
translated
in one of
introduces a christian idea, representing the son of the pledge of his happiness.
Mary
as
us, that God, the true Creator of heaven, he had a sure refuge, had been his instructor, and his guardian, and that he would finally take him to
He
then
tells
with
whom
himself.
Thus the author, whoever he was, mixes with some reference to the christian system.
reflections result
his
Bardism
rites,
doubt, but that they were of the same kind with the formula which had been used by
certainly heathenish,
we cannot
Jiis
And
how
making
may
Bishop Warburton.
His
lordship,
having remarked the division of the less and the greater; and having the former, was inculcated the general bestate,
thus proceeds
" But
" to a life of purity and Holiness, which was the vicious " There was a " examples of their gods." necessity " therefore of this evil, which could only be remedying " done by striking at the root of it; so that such of the " as were were made
initiated,
judged capable,
acquainted
delusion.
" that Jupiter, Mercury, Venus, Mars, ^and the whole " rabble of licentious deities, were indeed, only dead mor" and vices with in to the same
tah, subject
;
life,
passions
" themselves
" factors to mankind, grateful posterity had deified them; " and with their virtues, had indiscreetly canonized their " vices. The fabulous thus the " cause of " were
they
all
routed, supreme gods being of course, took their place: HIM things taught to consider, as the Creator of the uni-
who pervaded all things by his virtue, and go" verned all things by his providence. Frcm this time, the " initiated had the title of EWS^TJJJ, or, one that sees as
verse,
"
things
"
* Divine Legation, V.
I. p.
148.
255
have now considered the whole of that singular story, called Hanes Taliesin: I have shewn, that it relates to a
I
succession of ceremonies,
commemorated the history of the deluge; and that these ceremonies had a constant analogy with the mystical rites of
Ceres and
Isis,
The
narrator seems
to
lale
;
from a
and, per-
haps, he has added a few touches of his own. But the main incidents are derived from the genuine superstition of
poems.
Thus, in the piece which immediately follows the tale in Welsh Archaiology, Taliesin gives this account of
the
himself.
Kyntaf i'm lluniwyd, ar }un dyn glwys, Yn llys Ceridwen a'm penydiwys. Cyd bum bach o'm gwled, gwyl fy nghynnwys ;
Oeddwn
fawr,
uwch
llawr, llan
a'm tywys.
Ag
Pryd fum parwyden, per Awen parwys ; ynghyfraith, heb iaith, a'm ryddryllwys
Hen Widdon
Anghuriawl
" I was
~*'
ei
V
first
a.
pure man, in
to
the
hall
of Ceridwen, who
small within
I
me
penance.
Though
surface
my
chest,
and modest in
my
de-
portment,
was great.
earth.
A sanctuary carried me
I
above the
of the
256
I was inclosed within its ribs, the SWeet AWEIC " rendered me complete and my law, without audible lan" to me the old was
:
" Whilst
by giantess, darkly imparted guage, " in her wrath ; but her claim was not regretted when smiling " she set sail"
of transmigration; they rather express the several characters, under which the aspirant was viewed in the sue*
cessive stages of initiation,.
The
Ar
Ffoes yn ronyn gwyn$ gwenith lwys,< ael Hen earthen i'm carfaglwys.
Cymmaint oedd
ei
fai
yn
llenwi, fal
Hong
ar ddyfrvvys
:
Mewn boly tywyll i'm tywalltwys Mewn mor Dylan, i'm dychwelwys
Bu
Duw
"
"
"
fangs.
whjch she
In appearance^ she was as large as a proud mare; also resembled then was she swelling out, like
cast
It
" a Into a dark receptacle she ship upon the waters* " me. She carried me back into the sea DYLAN.
of
" was an auspicious omen " cated me. God the Lord
In these
to
suffo-
freely set
me
at large."
markable
lines,
257
penance, discipline, and mystical instruction, which had contributed to purify, complete, and exalt his character, and to liberate him from the ills of mortality.
These mystical lessons must have consisted in scenical or symbolical representation for his law was imparted to him,
;
And
ship,
they
commenced
an old
set sail,
in the hall
of Ceridwen,
who
is
represented as
and as a
which
and
it
for
it
Ceridwen
>
was, therefore, what Mr. Bryant pronounces Ceres to have been, the genius of the ark; and her mystic rites represented the memorials of the deluge.
From
it
goddess was represented by a series of emblems, each of which was regarded as her image: or else, that she was
depicted under one
compound symbolical
figure,
in
the
is
-
same manner
described by the author of the Orphic Argonautics, as having the heads of a dog, a horse, and a Hon.*
And that the ancient Britons actually did pourtray this character in the grotesque manner suggested by our Bard, appears by several ancient British coins, where we find a
figure,
compounded of a
bird, a boat,
s
and a mare.
I.
p. 280.
258
It
may be thought
But
Taliesin
classical.
Mr. Bryant
takes
notice, that Ceres was not only styled Hippa, the mare, but that she was represented as having been changed into the
The same
Noah,
have
to
Sometimes
is
re-
presented as
having
the authority of the Orphic hymns is quoted, in this deity has the titles of Tp^t/ufi of three natures, and
thrice born.
Here which
TfyoK>?,
Just so,
declare
last birth
we have heard
Taliesin, in the
before us,
born.
Thrice was
poem I
The
from Hippa, the mare, certainly the ark, at which time nature herself was renewed.^
in this
poem of
What
Bard of the sixth century, unless he were conducted by such a genuine clue, could have traced the connexion between the character of Ceres, under the strange symbol of a mare, and the vessel of the Diluvian patriarch ? What
scholar, in
modern and enlightened times, could have dethe system which our Bard supports, before the veloped
77 aud 274.
f Ibid. p. 410.
259
genius and erudition of Mr. Bryant demonstrated, that Ceres or Isis was in reality a female character, supposed to
preside over the ark, and that the mare was a symbol of
this
goddess
hen, appears
in other ancient poems, so as to authenticate the incidents of Hanes Taliesin. Thus the president of the Bards, having
"
"
" recess, that I might be compelled freely to yield my corn, " when I was received by the hen subjected to tribulation.
" with red fangs, and a divided
<e
have been a gram of the Arkites, which vegetated upon a hill and then the reaper placed me in a smoky
I
:
crest.
remained nine
my
former state
I
Again was
instructed
by the
cherisher (hen),
she gave me, scarcely can I I am now Taliesin. express great praise that is due. " I will a just string, which shall remain to the end compose " of * time, as a chief model of Elphin."
Of what
The
naw,
reaper,
mentioned in
Gwyddis
or Seithwedd Saidi,
the great husbandman, and the same at Saturn, nished with a sickle, or scythe.
who
fur-
The period of
womb
260
of Ceridwen,
is
variously represented.
Here,
it is
it
limited
to nine nights;
but elsewhere,
\ve
are told,
was nine
months.
Mi
a fum
ydwy
bellach.*
" I have been, for the space of nine months, in the belly " of Ceridwen the Fury : I was formerly Gwion the Little ; " henceforth I am Taliesin."
Amongst
the ancient
poems
sonage, I must distinguish one, which is entitled Cadair Ceridwen ;f in which she is brought forward to speak for
herself
:
The
tithau
:
Yn newaint, ym mhlygeineu,
Llewychawd yn
lleufereu.
Mynawg
hoedl,
i
Minawg ap
;
Lieu,
A welais
yma gynneu
W.
W.
Archaiol. p. 19.
Archaiol. p. 66.
261
Diwedd yn
lle,chwedd Lieu
:
Bu gwrdd
"
ei
liwrdd ynghadeu.
Decreed is the condawns, have our lights been shining " tinuance of life to the son of Lieu, whom I saw Minawc, " here awhile ago, and for the last time, upon the slope of " the hill of Lieu : dreadfully has he been assaulted in the " conflicts."
Sovereign of the power of the air ! even thou puttest an to my wanderings. In the dead of night, and at the
The
sovereign
of
the
power of
the air
seems to be the
Heilyn, the most mysterious impeller of the sky, mentioned in the poem of Gwyddnaw. By this title, it might be thought that the Bards meant to describe
as
same character
deluge
but
poem,
of Teyrn
On*
Apollo,
Heilyn Pasgadwr
styled,
As
of her daughter, who had been carried away by the king of the deep. To these torches, or to those which were carried in the celebration of the nocturnal mysteries, and in com-
memoration of the state of darkness, in which the patriarch and his family had been involved,^ we have a manifest allusion in the verses before us*
to
whom
a continuance of
life
Appendix, No.
<t.
t Bryant's Analysis, V.
II. p.
331.
had been
decreed,
his departure
from
the
slope
was
clearly a representative
And
seems to have
Mr. Bryant
like,
tells us,
were
titles
was distinguished in different countries :* that the votaries of the patriarch, who was called Meen and Menes, were styled Miny& ; which name was given them, from the object of their worship ;f that the Men&i, in Sicily, were situated upon the river Menais; that they had traditions of
Mount
a deluge, and a notion that Deucalion was saved upon .ZEtna, near which was the city Noa; that there
Elis,
upon the
river
Minyas; and
It is a
was worshipped by the name of Minauc, and upon the river Menai.
Mona>
It may also deserve notice, that the sentimental picture exhibited in this British passage, has a striking coincidence with the concluding ceremonies in the nocturnal mysteries
of the just person, and those of the Arkite Athene, mentioned in the Orphic Argonautics, and thus described by
Mr. Bryant.]
"
By
Agtivn
ASu
J Ibid.
263
" words, divine wisdom, by which the world was preserved. " In these had for a long time mysteries, after the people " bewailed the loss of a particular person, he was, at length " to be restored to this, $he
supposed
life.
Upon
priest
" used
t(
the people in these memorable terms. Comfort yourselves, all ye who have been partakers of the
to address
"
of the Deity, thus preserved: for we shall now some respite from our labours" To these were added enjoy " the following remarkable words I have escaped a great " " lot is mended * and
mysteries
te
calamity,
my
greatly
Dedwydd Dofydd rhwy goreu Ynghyf amryson kerddeu, Oedd gwell ei synwyr no'r fau
Celfyddaf gwr a gigleu.
A rhithwys
Ac
" As
gorwyddawd, y
plagawd
lys,
enwerys cyfrwyeu.
to Avagddu, my own son, the correcting god formed " him anew for happiness. In the contention of mysteries, " his wisdom has exceeded mine. The most
accomplished
" of beings
"
is
he.
by
charmed
264
of flowers ; and early did he conduct, to the right side (as he wanted a protecting rampart) the bold curves, and the virtue of the various " folds : and he formed a steed upon the springing plants,
forth
*
woman composed
" "
" with
illustrious trappings."
Ceridwen, having spoken of the conclusion of her wanderings, and the continuance of life, which was decreed to
Minauc, adverts to the history of Avagddu, utter darkness, or black accumulation, /her late unfortunate son. He was
he seems to have attained by means of the lady, of flowers, adorned with the
bold curves and various folds, and graced with a stately steed. This personage could have been no other than the Genius
of
the
Rainbow,
whom we
shall presently
it
find introduced
was
to constitute
poems.
counselling Hu, or Aeddon, the patriarch, to impress the front of his shield with an irresistible form, by means of
which, both he and his chosen rank, triumphed over the demon of the waters.
This Gwydion ab Don, was the same character as Mercury the son of Jove, or Hermes, the counsellor of Cronus or
Saturn, mentioned in the fragment of Sanchoniathon.
265
Ceridwen, in the next place, touches upon her
own
en-
dowments and
privileges.
Pan farmer y
cadeiriau,
:
a'm deddfon,
A'm
Rym
"
gelwir gyfrwys, yn
llys
Don
When
found the superior amongst them my chair, my cauldron, and my laws, and my pervading eloquence, " meet for the I am accounted skilful in presidency. " the court of and with
will be
Don
(Jove)
" Enron."
The
tice.
Her
cauldron of Ceridwen has already engaged our nochair or presidency, must imply her sanctuary,
together with its due establishment, and all the rites and laws pertaining to it. She here speaks of those laws, and Talk'sin has told us, in a passage which I have produced, that without audible language, she had imparted to him
the laws by which he was to be governed.
It
must be
and
Isis
were esteemed,
thus
Gweleis ymladd
taer,
yn Nant Ffrancon,
Duvv
Sul,
pryd plygeint,
Rhwng Wythaint
266
I geissaw yscut, a hndolion.
Arianrhod, drem clod, a gwawr hinon, -Mwyaf gwarth y marth, o barth Brython,
Dybrys am ei lys, Enfys Avon Afon a'i hechrys gurys, gwrth temu
:
Gwenwyn ei chynbyd, cylch byd, Nid wy dywaid geu llyfreu Breda Cadair Gedwidedd yssydd yma
;
eda.
" I saw a fierce conflict in the vale of Beaver, on the day " of the Sun, at the hour of dawn, between the birds of " Wrath and Gwydion. On the day of Jove, they (the te birds of Wrath) securely went to Mpna, to demand a
*'
: but the goddess of the sil~ of auspicious mien, the dawn of serenity, the wheel, greatest restrainer of sadness, in behalf of the Britonst
away
violence
from
the earth,
and
of former state, round the circle of the " world to subside. The books of the Ruler of the IVfpunt, " record no falshood. The Chair of the Preserver* remains
"
here; and
till
it
continue in Europe."
I would
may
be a compound of Kid, the Arkite goddess, and Thus Cynddelu says of himself, and his Bardic
Gwyr
"
* white
We
are
stream."
26?
antiquities.
It furnishes a proof,
diction, of the establishment of Arkite memorials in this island, and sets forth to view some singular traits of British
tradition,
In the
name of Avanc,
lake, as
is
constantly introduced into the British and the drawing of him out of the ;
Our
already seen, is represented as a great act, to the removing of that calamity. ancestors seem to have regarded the Beaver as an em-
we have
blem of the patriarch himself. To this symbolical honour, this creature may have been promoted, by a peculiarity in The patriarch had built himself a vessel his natural history.
or house, in which he had lived in the midst of the waters
;
and which had deposited that venerable personage and his So the Beaver is not only family, safe upon dry ground.
an amphibious animal, but also a distinguished architect. He is said to build a house of two stories, one of which is
in the water,
The fanciful genius latter, he has an egress to dry ground. of heathenism could not have demanded or discovered a
more happy coincidence, with the
patriarch.
The
great
agent Gwythaint, some feigned, winged creatures, which derive their name from Gwyth, Wrath, or Fury. These may be
considered as the ministers of wrath, or the demons of destruction, let loose at the deluge.
the
When foiled
by Gwydion
or Hermes, they are represented as hastening to Mxma, to These were, unprocure assistance of certain sorcerers.
268
doubtedly the same, which are introduced in Taliesin's elegy, upon the priest of Mona,* by the names of Math and
Eunydd,
gelfydd
" Math and Eunydd, masters of the magic wand, " loose the elements."
let
From demand
now
a sudden shower, evidently for the purpose of proa second deluge, that they might triumph over ducing
Gwydion.
This new calamity was prevented by Arianrod, the god-
of the silver wheel, whom Gwydion produced from a combination of flowers. This lady, who was the dazcn of serenity, poured fourth the stream of the rainbow ; a stream,
dess
which not only scared away violence from the earth, but also, removed the bane, or poison of the deluge, to which the
mystical bards have frequent allusions.
This representation
is
clearly derived
Noah, and of the bow in the cloud, that sacred token of the covenant which God made with man, and of the promise,
that the waters should no more become a flood to destroy all fiesh. But the incidents which this poem blends with
269
that the Bardic account was derived through the channel of
heathenism.
Chair or presi-
dency of the Preserver, namely, Ceridwen, was established here, and so firmly, that it is confidently added, it should
continue to the end of time.
This
poem was
who
mendicant minstrel, who only chaunted it as an old song, has tacked on three lines, in a style and measure, totally
different
verses.
An
rhothwy y Drindawd
!
"
May
!
ment
A liberal donation,
good gentlemen
.'"
The
long
old
list
Chair of Taliesin, furnishes a of the various apparatus, requisite for the due ce-
poem,
called the
and
particularly, enu-
As
with
270
what has been recorded of the mystical
tries
;
rites
of other coun-
whole of
this
can
We here
fied
Of this
circumstance, I have
Bryant and Mr. Faber, that such confusion of characters was not peculiar to British mythology.
KADEIR TALIESIN.*
Mydwyf merwerydd
Molawd Duw Dofydd,
Llwrw cyfranc cewydd
Cyfreu dyfnwedydd. Bardd, bron Sywedydd,
Hue de,
fud
:
feirdd tud
* VV. Archaiol.
p. 37.
271
Rydebrwyddaf drud ; Rytalinaf ehud ; Ryddyhunaf dremud
Teyrn terwyu wolud.
Nid mi wyf cerdd fas Gogyfarch feirdd tras Bath fadawl iddas Dofn eigiawn addas o"
!
"
" "
am
fire,
to the
honour of the
god Dovyddf
lifted to treat
of mysteries
" of a Sywedydd, when he deliberately recites the inspired " song of the Western Cudd, on a serene night amongst
<(
the stones.
x?
" As
M
fi
to loquacious,
glittering
bards, their
:
encomium
admiration
attracts
is
me
not,
when moving
in the course
" And
am
:
a silent proficient, who address the Bards is mine to animate the hero ; to persuade
to
awaken the
!
silent
beholder
the bold
"
illuminator of kings
" "
am no
shallow
artist,
" PROFUNDITY!"
These lines are merely prefatory. As the Bard lived in an age when Druidism was upon the decline, he found it expedient to assert the importance of his own pontifical
272
character as distinguished from the mere poet, and even
the household,
was
his privilege to
king's table, to be endowed with free land, to have his wardrobe furnished, and his steed provided at the king's expence yet, he was to give place to the Cathedral Bard,
;
Though
plained,
lars,
it
must leaye several things in this poem unexmay seem proper to take notice of other particuI
or hot coals.
Merwerydd, in the first line, comes from Marwor, embers, It seems to have denoted a person who had
the charge of keeping up a fire. The term at present, imof madness or enthusiasm, which we suppose plies that kind
to have possessed the heathen prophets.
is literally,
Dovydd
in the
(line 2)
an
line, Cewydd, from Caw, a band or circumscription. Hence Prydain, Dyvnwal, and Bran are styled Ban-Cezcyddion
next
associate,
Teyrnedd,
clarer
consolidating sovereigns*
Sywedydd
(line 5) a
Ys-yw-zeedydd, a de-
what
is.
We find
Sytv, pi.
Ark.
To
A
W.
Had gwenith
'Archaiol.
V.
II.
p. 63.
273
A gwlid gwenyn A glud ac ystor
Ac Ac
elyw tramor eurbibeu Lieu
Py
gysswllt gwerin
A
/
" The man of complete discipline has obtained the meed " of in every nightly celebration, when D'ien is prohonour, " of bees* dated with an of and the
pi
offering
wheat,
suavity
and incense and mjrrh, and aloes, from beyond the seas, " and the gold pipes of Lieu, and cheerful, precious, silver, " and the ruddy gem, and the berries, and the foam of " the ocean, and cresses of a purifying quality, laved in the
'*
"
fountain,
" liquor, supplied by the assembly, and a raised load " eluded from the moon, of placid, cheerful Vervain.'*
This passage, without an atom of poetical merit, and consisting of a mere list of trifles, derives some importance,
trifles
once ob-
Upon
this score, I
would
ground my apology for lengthening the paragraph, with some attempts at elucidation.
Noethas, (line 24) a mighty solemnity; from the old term
274
Notth, the night: whence we have He-noeth, this night; Mei-noeth, a serene night, or May-eve; Peu-noeth, every night, and Tra-noeth, the morrow, or beyond the night: Noethas also implies an unveiling, or uncovering ; and the
moon, may have selected this because the night disclosed the object of his veneration, or because her mysteries were unveiled only in
term, either the night,
In
my
translation of
the
25th
line*
have rendered
Gwlith, as a verb, to attract, to persuade gently, to propi* It had such a meaning formerly ; hence we read in tiate.
the Gododin, Gwlith Eryr, the eagles allurer.* Gwlith, in the modern Welsh, only means dew ; and the line might be
rendered when the Ditine dew descends; but the context seems to require the meaning which I have given to it, and
in rendering particular passages in poems, which relate to the Druidical superstition, and which have been obscure
for a thousand years,
benefit,
is
gift or offering
in the printed
of cutting wheat.
Gwlid or Gwlydd, (line 27) I am not certain whether he means honey, or the plant Samolus, which was called Gwlydd; but I rather think, the latter is here intended.
Dr. Borlase remarks, that " the Druids experienced great
Song 11.
275
**
*'
it
to the Samolus,
and
"
gathered perform this office of gathering with his left hand," &c.*
it
in a ritual, religious
manner.
it,
He
to
that
it
was to
was
do
fasting,
Aurbibeu^ (line 30) the mineral, Orpiment, is so called ; but I rather think the gold pipes was some plant with a yellow flower, and hollow stem. So Ariant, in the next
line,
may
Gwion's
imply the Fluxroort, which is called Ariant Gwion, silver, a certain proof that the Druids held it in
Em,
Grown,
(line 52)
(ib.)
called
Gravny
and
also Eirin
Berwr,
intended.
(line
35) Cresses.
The Fabaria
and
is
is
called
Berwr
this plant
Verbyn, (line SQ) Pervain. In the British Botanology, has also the following appropriated titles, exCds gau pressive of its high esteem amongst our ancestors
Dderwen Vendigaid, the Gythraul, the Fiend's aversion; Messed oak ; and Llysiaur Hudol, the Inchanters plants.
The
Diuids,
;
we
Vervain
they used
in casting lots
and foretelling
events.
T 2
From
Pliny.
276
Anointing with
tain
all
they thought the readiest way, to obthat the heart could desire, to keep off fevers, to
this,
procure friendships, and the like. It was to be gathered at the rise of the dog star, without being looked upon, either by the sun or moon. In order to which, the earth was to
the
be propitiated by a libation of honey. In digging it up, left hand was to be used. It was then to be waved
aloft,
and the
leaves, stalk,
and
roots,
The couches
which
this plant
the ingredients enumerated in this passage, in the preparation of the mystical and they may be regarded as the simples, which cauldron; Ceridwen was fabled to have selected, with so much care and
Most of
ceremony.
But
let us
A phybyr a phyg
Ag
urddawl Segyrffyg
llyseu
meddyg
From
Pliny, L.
XXV. C.
9,
S77
" .With priests of intelligence, to officiate in behalf of " the moon, and the concourse of associated men, under " the open breeze of the sky, with the maceration and " after the and the and the
'*
portion sprinkling, boat of glass in the hand of the stranger, and the stout " youth with pitch, and the honoured SegyrfFyg, and mesprinkling,
boat of glass (line 46) was a token of the same import as the Anguinum, or Glain, as I have already remarked. In the second volume of Mountfau con's Antiquities,* there
is
The
a sculpture which illustrates this passage. It is a bassrelief, found at Autun, and represents the chief Druid,
bearing his sceptre, as head of his order, and crowned with a garland of oak leaves ; with another Druid, not thus
decorated,
hand a
old.
approaching him, and displaying in his right crescent, of the size of the moon, when six days
The
torches,
nocturnal mysteries.
plant.
The
literal translation
of the
fiftieth
line,
is
a place
The
practice of ex-
276.
278
&rcising the
ground was
common
a
ancient priests.
The
exorcising, was to
describe
aat^
then dig
it
up.*
The
A blaen gvvydd goddeu, A mail auieuedd A mynych adneuedd A gvvin tal cibedd O Ryfain hyd Rossedd A dvvfn ddwfr echwydd
Dawn
Neu
ei lif
Dofydd
"
13.Fro
Pliny.
279
**
quent mutual pledges ; and with wine which flows to the brim, from Rome to Rosedd, and deep standing water, " a flood which has \hegift of Dovydd, or the tree of pure
**
"
become* of a fructifying quality, when that gold, which " Brewer gives it a boiling, who presided over the cauldron " of the five
plants.
" Hence the stream of Gwion, and the reign of serenity, u and honey and trefoil, and horns Jtoz&ing with mead
sovereign
is
the lore
of the Druids.*'
We have now
serves the
it
de-
Primroses ranked highly amongst the mystical apparatus, if their name, which is a compound of
The
which we
lots,
of the
has told us, that the Druids used this plant in casting
and
foretelling events.
The same
rite
of libation
is
Rome
to Rosedd.
This seems to
an age when the Britons were acquainted with the Romans, but whilst Rome itself, as yet was Pagan. It may also be remarked, that
position, long before
not a single Christian idea introduced ; on the contrary, we find an open profession of worshipping the ntoon,
here
is
280
in a general concourse of men,
and the
lore of the
Druids
is
declared, to be
it
meet for sovereign princes. Hence I think probable, that no part of this poem, excepting the intro-
The
and the gift of Dovydd, was the Selago, or hedge hyssop, which has a synonymous appellative, in modern Welsh, being called Gras Duw, Gratia Dei.
te
" With great care and superstition did the Druids gather the Selago. Nothing of iron was to touch, or cut it, nor was the bare hand thought worthy of that honour, but a peculiar vesture, or sagus, applied by means of the right hand the vesture must have been holy, and taken off from some sacred person privately, and with the left hand only. The gatherer was to be clothed in white, namely, a Druid, whose garment was white, his feet
;
"
naked, and washed in pure water. He was first to offer sacrifice of bread and wine, before he proceeded to " gather the Selago, which was carried<from the place of its
" a
(t
nativity, in a clean
new napkin.
all
as
a charm against
the misseltoe (line 62) the tree of pure gold Aurutn frondens, and Ranius aureus, which the -Virgil's Arch-Druid gathered with a golden hook. Amongst the
Pren Puraur,
extraordinary reputed virtues of this plant, was that mentioned by our Bard, of promoting the increase of the species, or preventing sterility.']- The names of the misseltoe, in
From
Pliny.
281
the
Welsh language,
It is called
preserve, the
memorial of
its
ancient
;
dignity.
Pren
Pren
Uchelvar, the tree of the high summit names, derived froni Uchel, lofty.
We
find,
that this,
and
the other select plants, were amongst the ingredients of the mystical cauldron, which had been contrived by Ceridwen,
the British Ceres.
This produced the stream of Gwion, to genius, and the power of in-
but also the reign of serenity, which, as we have been told, in the chair of Ceridwen, immediately commenced upon the display of the celestial bow, at the conclusion of the deluge.
which comme-
known
have pertinaciously adhered to the religion of their ancestors; that the British Ceres should have maintained her
honours in the obscure corners of the country, as late as the sixth century; and that her votaries should have appeared in public during that age, or in the interval, between the dominion of the Romans and that of the Saxons, is not
greatly to be wondered at.
veral parts of
se-
Wales
into
which
Christianity, as yet,
scarcely penetrated
vailed.
or where,
Hence Brychan is " his children and grand-children " able to shew the faith in Christ, " the faith"* they were without
But
that the
the
Cymry, where
latest period of their princes, to the the old government, should not only tokrate, but patronize and that the mysteries of Ceres should be cesuperstition ; lebrated in South Britain, as late as the middle of the
Welsh
twelfth century,
putable,
*
Many
thentic proof, that the honours and the mysteries of Cerid-. wen did remain. Some of the paragraphs which authenticate this fact, I
essay, to
which
first
section of this
Before I look for additional evidence, I shall offer a few hints, with a view of accounting for the fact itself.
the deluge were so pointed and clear, in the mystical rites- of the Britons, that when the
The commemorations of
Bards became acquainted with scripture history, they perceived, and frequently alluded to, the connection between
own national traditions, and the sacred records, re-. specting Noah and his family. Hence they considered their
their
own
as a
QweiA C*m.
Biog,.
V. Brychan.
From
th
Triads^
283
and
therefore,
as
not
absolutely
irreconeileable
with
Christianity.
The Roman
:
some
ages, Restrained
the more cruel customs, and the bloody sacrifices of the Druids what now remained was their code of mystical doctrines,
rites.
by
tfceir
profession,
and the
to
infancy,
thenish superstitions.
The
and
:
and there are many instances of the Bards themselves, promising a kind of recantation, sometime before their
,
death,
palliatives,
gave way
which was supposed to give a strong support to personal fortitude ; and to animate the spirit of national independence, during times, the most difficult and disastrous.
Such appears to have been the feeling of Hywel, the son Owen Gwynedd, who succeeded his father, in the principality of North Wales, and died in the year 1171.
of
Ceridwen, and
that he eagerly longed for admittance to the greater, namely, those of the covered coracle, which were conducted
Gwyddnaw and
his son
for I shall
shew
hereafter, that,
by by
the Steed, in the mystical lore of the Bards, is meant a boat, or vessel upon the water ; and here we find the mean-
" shield remains white upon my shoulder; the wished " atchievement have I not obtained, though great was " desire.
"
my
for
my
Ceridwen, lofty and fair slow and delicate in her descending course her complexion is formed of the mild
in
te
the evening hour J the splendid, graceful, bright, and gentle lady of the mystic song even in bending a rush would she totter so small, so delicate, so
light,
feebly descending
W.
Archaiol. p. 278.
successful candidate he carries ihe ernretains a blank surface, not blazoned
+ That is, " another has been the ' blem of victory ; whilst my shield " with the desired atchievement."
Hywel
$
lived in
an age of Chivalry
in this passage.
tfci
goddess.
285
**
"
ft
But though -em-all, she is older than the youth of ten She is the modeller of our tender age, full of meek" years.
;
ness
" a heroine, she would rather impede " than utter one sentence of
"**
her
own
prosperity,
unseemly import.
Attend thou
"
whilst
worship in the mystical grove: adore thee, maintain thy own jurisdiction /"
my
and
If
description,
Ceridwen had
greatly improved in her person and her manners, since the sixth century ; but still, she is the same object of idolatrous veneration : she still communicates her mystical laws to the
devoted aspirant.
Upon a
to have been
subsequent application, our princely Bard seems more successful ; for thus he sings of Llywy,
who, as we have already seen, was the daughter of Cerufyen, and was now become the mystical sister of Hywel.
near the pleasant : and to the place where the modest fair one loves " to behold the sea mew to the ; place where I am greatly
"
I love the
Caer of the
"
illustrious lady,
shore
"
"
**
hold
" " quillizes my breast with her mild influence;. in " of Llywy, whose hue is like Dylan's wave.
(<
the serenely fair- -that I may bemy gently smiling that I may avow the love which fate has allotted me, in the home of her, who tranI will
visit to
sister
vow a
the
home
From
$86
**
to
ttti
Fair
is
she, as
"
lished
" For
n
"
I have
f high privilege.
" She has
stolen
my
soul
"
is
like that
of
Garwy Hir
"
in the hall
And
*'
again
proud-wrought Caer of
is
the
Gy*
"
vylchi,
*'
my
Renowned and
te
man who
enters there*
It is the chosen place of Llywy, with her splendid en" dowments. Bright gleaming, she ascends from the margin of " the sea : and the lady shines this present year, in the desart
**
o/*AnvQN,
"
in Eryri.
"
pavilion will not he regarded, nor costly robes admired, by her whose merit I fondly wish to delineate:
if
she would bestow the privilege for any strain of this night in her society."
these strains of Hywel, and from
If
many
works of his contemporaries, the Cambrian Bards were as zealously devoted to the worship of Ceridwen and JJywy, or Ceres and Proserpine, in the twelfth century, as they had been in the sixth, or in any
similar passages in the
fearlier
287
have alredy seen some hints of a solemn
oath, that
administered to the aspirants, before they were admitted to the mystical rites of these characters : accordingly,
the
Welsh Archaiology
introduction in very obscure language, and uncouth orthography, which seems to have been used upon these occasions.
Arthur and Cai are represented, as approaching the gate of the sanctuary, which wfis guarded by the hierophant,
ARTHUR.
""
What man
is
?*
HtEROPHANT.
*'
The
the
Who
**
is
man
that
demands
ARTHUR.
**
HIEROPHANT.
"
**
What good
man
in the world
Into
"
CAI.
I will preserve It, and that thou shalt behold ; though " the birds of wrath should go forth, and the three attendant " ministers should fall the
"
asleep, namely,
288
"
t(
ful supreme Ruler, and Gwyn, the Lord of those who dc~
scendfrom above."
HIEROPHANT.
" Severe have
st
stitutes.
servants been, in preserving their inManawydan, the son of Llyr, was grave in his
my
K counsel.
Manawyd truly brought a perforated shield, from Trevryd; and Mabon, the son of Lightning, stained the straw with clotted gore and Anwas, \kzwinged, and
:
Llwch Llawinarcg,
and
11
mount
them complete.
Cai
;
I solemnly
announce
though
all
is
three should be
violated,
(t
slain
when
danger
"
shall
be found
The remainder of
after their initiation,
this
and the
them.
The passage
-eery
before us
may
be understood, as in"
volving a
solemn oath.
preserve the laws of the sanctuary, however he may be assaulted by enemies, or deserted by his friends; whilst the
chief priest denounces in awful obscurity, the inevitable ruin which will attend the violation of this sacred engage-
ment.
Here we
mystical
performance of the
rites,
by
three priests,
289
.each of
whom personated a god. This is in perfect conwith the usage of the Greeks. For, we are told, formity that in the celebration of the Eleusinian mysteries, four
officiated.
:
The Hierophant, who represented the the torch-bearer, who personated the sun * the Herald, who was regarded as a type of Mercury, and the Minister of the altar, who was venerated as the
priests
Great Creator
symbol
of the moon.
in the ^grounds
of British superstition, I shall dismiss the present subject, with the persuasion, that the facts which I have brought
forward in
this,
mythology.
Bards,
who
been proved, that the great secret of the ancient' professed themselves disciples of the Druids,
and consequently of the Druids themselves, resolves itself into the mystical rites of Hu and Ceridrcen; that these characters were
tiquity,
no other than the Bacchus and Ceres of anwhose mysteries are acknowledged to have been
and
duly celebrated in the British islands ; and that the ceremonies traditions of the Britons, had evident analogy with the superstitions of the Greeks, and of some of the Eastern
nations.
comme-
morate the deluge, and those characters which are connected with its history and thus furnish an undeniable con;
Mr. Bryant's opinion, that Ceres was an imaginary genius of the Ark, from whence the post-diluvian world derived their being, their laws, and their sciences j
firmation of
290
whilst
solution of the great Bardic aenigma, that every thing sacred, pure, and primitive, was derived from the cauldron of
Ceridwen.
In British antiquities, the subject is new, and upon that account alone, may be deemed curious by many readers ;
but I regard it in a more important light, as in connexion with the discoveries of Mr. Bryant and Mr. Faber, affording a demonstration to the candid philosopher, that heathenism had no foundation of its own to rest upon, and
that
its
the great
historical truths,
291
SECTION IV
The Design of
Druids.
Structure of
the circular Temples
and Cromlechs of
to
the
Original
Documents
relative
the
celebrated
STONEHENGE.
we
it
HE
find
it
delineated
existed for inan^r before the time of any of those Bards which are centuries,
extant, appears to have been a heterogeneous system,
now
in
which the memorials of the patriarch, and of the deluge, and some of the true principles of the patriarchal religion,
were blended with a mass of absurdity, and an idolatrous
worship of the host of heaven.
is
we ob-
her representative
in the heavens.
rates
or Saidi,
commemo-
in the planet Saturn; and takes possession of the solar orb. Avagddu, the black accumulation, which appalled the world at the deluge, has brightened into Rhuvawn Bevyr,
Noah; but he
viewed
by the
which
It has
of the chair of Saidi, was personified and that he constituted an important character in British mythology.
the language
i
But such an ideal personage as this, could nothing more than a representative of the sacred
doctrine, laws,
riave
been
ceremonies,
and
institutes
of Druidism
as exhibited
and
taught,
in
circle,
or sanctuary
,of Sidi; and Taliesin's presidency, as high priest in that temple, was styled Cadair Caer Sidi, the chair of Caer Sidi.
The
>
doctrine and the law which he pronounced from that chair, were therefore, the Cadeiriaith, or language of the
chair.
why
the
name of Caer
Sidi was
might cut
this
" As the Ark, says that great mythologist, was looked " as the mother of mankind, and stiled Da-Mater, upon " so it was figured under the resemblance of the >oi, Po~ " megranate, since abounding with seeds, it was thought " no improper emblem of the Ark, which contained the " rudiments of the future world. Hence the of the
deity
'
Ark was named Rhoia, and was the Rhea of the Greeks." " Another name of the pomegranate was Side (Soi, Sidee)
*'
fe
of which
name
there
was a city
in
Pampkylia, and
in 3
(t
293
ct
'*
great measure true: for by a daughter ofDanaus, is meant a priestess of Da-Naus, the Arkj\h& same as Da-Mater."*
According to
legitimate a name as Rhea, for the genius of the Ark ; and it must have represented that sacred vessel, as hitherto im-
pregnated with
his family,
its seeds
who
or, as
to succeeding ages.
\
But the
channel.
from the
poems of
ginal Caer Sidi, and the prototype of that sanctuary, in which our Bard presided, was no other than the sacred vessel, in which the my thological Arthur and his seven friends
their
But as the Britons, like many other heathens, had blended commemorations of the patriarch and his family, with
;
as the sun,
moon, and
their consecrated
progenitors, and of their sacred ship, and probably had engrossed the greatest part of popular veneration ; so we find that the name of Caer Sidi, or Sidtn, was transferred from,
circle, in
nous emblems of their gods presided and expatiated. In British astronomy, it was become the name of the Zodiac.
t Appendix, No.
294
Agreeably to the idiom of the Welsh language, the wordi Caer Sidi, or Sidin, imply the circle, or inclosed place of the revolution. may, therefore, admire the dexterity
We
title,
to the vessel in
which
of the
world performed the greatest revolution recorded in history ; secondly, to that celestial circle, in which the luminaries of
the world perpetually revolve ; and lastly, to the Druidical temples, which appear from the works of the Bards, to have
had a marked
Zodiac.
and
to the
may be
also
from the
spoils
upon
the sons of
from
poem
tells us,
beir
Ceridwen
not
" wen?
tc
my
chair protected
let
Therefore,
my
tongue be
the sanc-
And
again, in the
this presidency
Ys
Ys
gvvyr
Tair Orian y
Appendix, No.
1.
295
Acam
ei
bannau
nor*
ffrydieu gweilgi
Ys whegach
"
Complete
is
gwin gwyn y
llyn yndi.
my
neither disorder
It
is
" nor age will oppress him that is within it. " to Manawyd and Pryderi, that three loud " the before it whilst the will be
fire,
known
round
of the
strains
sung
currents
te
sea are
round
its
borders,
and
"
from
is
" wine."
It is clear,
of Caer Sidi was given to the sanctuary, in which the rites of Ceridwen were celebrated: for the presidency which
was protected by the cauldron of Ceridwen, and the dency of Caer Sidi, imply one and the same thing.
the sanctuary of that presidency
stances,
is
presi-
And
ship,
which can be referred only to the history of a and which evidently allude to the Ark.
The
lity,
currents
is
it
fountain
literal
open
from above;
still
there
safety, tranquil-
All this
is
the
history of the Ark, and there can be little doubt, but that it is also the history of some rites, which the Britons
may be inferred from the language of the game Taliesin, who vaunting of the high importance of his
pontifical office, assimilates his
own
Having informed
us, in the
poem which
296
tory, that
inspiration,
from
flin
A honno yn
Rhwng
tri
troi
fydd
elfydd
of
is
it
continually revolving between three not a wonder to the world, that men are
enlightened?'"
with that of their representatives on earth. The Caer Sidin, which continually revolves in the midst of the Here the sttn, the universe, is the circle of the zodiac.
great luminary of the world,
is
Ou?
Bard could not pretend to have presided in this Caer Sidin; but as his own assumed name, Taliesin, radiant front, was
a mere
title of the sun, so, as chief Druid of his age, he the priest and representative of the great luminary upon was
earth
in that sanctuary,
which
typified
the abode
it
might be deemed
of some importance to ascertain the form of those Caer Sidis, or sanctuaries, in which our ancestors celebrated the
rites
of worship
of their Ceridzcen or Ceres, and performed other acts to determine whether those sanctuaries con-
-.
W.
Arcbaiol. p.
20...
S97
sisted
islets
in
the lakes or margin of the sea, and the like; or whether they are to be recognised in those round trenches and circles
of stones, which still remain in various parts of these islands, and have been deemed Druidical temples. I shall therefore offer such hints upon the subject as occur to me, and leave
them
and antiquaries.
the Britons distinguished the zodiac and the temples, or sanctuaries of their gods, by the same name of Caer
Sidi,
As
and as
one description, we may presume, that they regarded the latter as a type or representation of
and the
terrestrial Sidi in
Reformer.
The two
we
have already seen, were the patriarch and the ark ; but under the names of Hu and Ceridwen, these were figured or
represented by the two great luminaries, which revolve in the celestial zone. And this conceit was analogous to the
mythology of other nations. For Liber Pater was the same as Dionusus, who, according to Mr. Bryant, was the patriarch Noah and Ceres was the genius of the ark yet we
;
:
find
that Virgil, the most learned of the poets, unites their characters with those of the sun and moon.
Vos,
clarissima
Were
*
Liber, and holy Ceres, ye bright luminaries of the world, forth the ^ear, revolving in the heavens!
who
le*4
298
made in sculpture, we should see the two great mythological characters moving in their proper orbits, amongst the signs
of the zodiac, which mark the different seasons of the revolving year, and which the Egyptians style the grand sembly, or senate of the twelve gods.*
#-
Primitif,-t* I
ohserve a
curious antique design, taken from the zone of a statue, supposed to be that of Venus, which is highly illustrative
Here, the story of Ceres and Proserpine is beautifully told. The former goddess is mounted upon a car, formed like a boat or half moon, and drawn by dragons;
of this subject.
holding lighted torches in her hands, she flies in search of her
daughter,
who
is
violently carried
away
in Pluto's chariot.
Hercules, or the sun, leads the procession, and the group is hastening into the presence of Jupiter, who appears en-
throned on a cloud.
The whole
is
oblong tablets, or short pillars, upon which are depicted the twelve signs of the zodiac, in an erect posture; intimating evidently, that the mythology of those personages
stars,
and
And, agreeably to
this hint,
we
find'
constantly allude to the completion of the year, and the return of a particular day, when they treat of the history and the rites of Ceridwen.
a pantheon, or temple of the assembled gods, to be designed after the model of this sculpture, we should have the principal figures stationed in the central area, and the
pillars of the constellations
Were
circle.
1.
And were' this to be undertaken, by a people who abhorred covered temples, and either disallowed the use of sculpture, or else were ignorant of the art ; the central figures would be represented by rude masses of wood or stone, and the rude pillars
of the constellations would occupy the outward
the British monuments, delineated by
antiquaries.
\
circle, as in
That the Druidical temples were generally of a round form, appears by the appellative terms which the Bard
constantly use in describing them, as Caer Sidi, the circle of revolution ; Cor, a round or circle, Cylch, a circle ; and Cylch Byd, the circle of the world, which occurs in Aneurin
and
It
Taliesin.*
were composed of stone: for and Merddin, speak of the stones which Aneurin, Taliesin, composed these circles. But let us endeavour to identify
is
to
rule
In the poems of Hywel, the son of Owen, which I have already quoted, that prince says expressly, that the proudwrought inclosure in the Gyvylchi, in the desert of Arvon, in Eryri, or Snowden, and towards the shore, was the Caer, or sanctuary of the mystical goddess, and the chosen place of
her daughter Llywy, or the British Proserpine.
The topography of
this
temple
is
so minutely pointed
* To
circle,
this I may add, Cylch Balch Nevwy, the proud, or magnificent celestial round which the majestic oaks, the symbols of Taronwy, the god of
Cerdd Vuronviy.
300
be mistaken and if we find her monument which has any appearance of representing the Zodiac, or Celestial Caer Sidi, it may serve as a guide, in distinguishing other British monuments of the same
out, that the spot cannot
:
kind.
Dwy-Gyvylchi is still known, as the name of a parish, where the Cambrian prince fixes his Caer
Glaer, or sanctuary of the illustrious Lady, in the deserts of Arvon, in Eryri, and towards the sea: and here the remains of the Caer are
still
Wen
to
be found.
described a strong
" seated on the fortress, top of one of the highest moun" tains, of that part of Snowden, which lies tozcards the sea ;" gives the following account of this ancient temple.
" About a mile from this fortification, stands the most " remarkable monument in all Snowden, called Y Meineu
"
"
Hirion, upon the plain mountain, within the parish of Dwy-Gyvycheu, above Gwddw Gl&s. It is a circular
entrenchment, about twenty-six yards diameter; on the outside whereof, are certain rude, stone pillars ; of which
"
*'
" about twelve are now standing, some two yards, and " others five foot and these are again encompassed high " with a stone wall. It stands upon the plain mountain, as " soon as we come to the height, having much even ground " about it and not far from it, there are three other large " in a on
:
stones,
pitched
end,
triangular form."*
We
301
longs from this monument, there are several huge heaps, or Cams, and also cells, constructed of huge stones, fixed in
the ground, and each cell covered with one or two stones of a superior size.
Such was the sanctuary which was held sacred to Ceridwen and Llywy, or Ceres and Proserpine, in the middle of the tzoelfth century, an age in which the honours of those
characters were not forgotten for we have already seen, that their mysteries, strange as the fact may appear, were still celebrated, not only with toleration, but also under the
:
Hywel's avowed veneration of those nvysteries, into which he himself had been initiated, would not have permitted him to speak lightly, and at random, upon the subject of
this
hallowed fane.
And
his
own
studious disposition,
joined with his rank in society, must have procured him access to the best information, respecting the antiquities of his country, had any deep research been requisite. But
this case presented
no difficulty. There could have been no doubt of the intention of a temple, which was sacred
to an existing superstition.
A regular
with the facts preconclude, that in those ages, fairly the temples which were sacred to British mysteries, were regarded as images of Caer Sidi, or the Zodiac, as they
Hence, by comparing
viously stated,
we may
were dignified with its name, or else were so constructed as to represent some of the phenomena, displayed in
that celestial zone.
302
In this
twelve stones,
signs,
the Gyvylchi, we find the circle of which undoubtedly represented the twelve the same which appeared upon the Antique, pub-
monument of
From
as
it is,
we may
the description quoted out of Camden, imperfect infer, that the temple of the Gyvylchi is
the South to the North extremity of this Island, and which our best antiquaries pronounce, not only to have been temples of the heathen Britons, but also to
upon astronomical principles : in short, to have represented, either the Zodiac itself, or certain cycles and
structed
Hence
the frequent repetition of twelve, nineteen, thirty, or sixty stones, which has been remarked in the circles of these
monuments.
i
Our
fane of Snowden,
it
is
Iu vied in magnificence, with a Stonehenge, or an Abnry. of Druidism, it could have been regarded only as the ages
a provincial sanctuary, but the number of twelve stones which
repeated in the stupendous fabric of Abury; frequently occurs also, in the Cornish monuments, noted by Dr. Borlase ; and it is found in the
constitutes
its
circle, is twice
it
complete temple of
Scotland.
Classerniss,
in
Here
is
huge
Abury.
From
this little
303
to trace our
stition.
way
to the larger
monuments of
British super-
That Stonehenge was a Druidical temple of high eminence, and that its construction evinces considerable proficiency in
many
astronomy, has been the decided opinion of respectable antiquaries. That I may not multiply
proofs of a fact so generally known, I shall only extract part of the learned Mr. Maurice's remarks upon that celebrated
monument.
" But of
all
" here presented to the reader. I take it for granted, that " the passage cited by Diodorus, from Hecat&us, and be" fore alluded to by Mr. Knight, is [to be understood of} " this identical temple of Stonehenge, or Choir Gaur, its " ancient British name, meaning, according to Stukeley, " the Great Cathedral or Grand Choir and ; surely, no na" tional church could ever better deserve that
distinguished
appellation."*
quotes the passage from Diodorus, rethe Hyperborean temple of Apollo, to which he specting adds the following remark " Such is the account given
" near two thousand years ago, of this circular temple, FOR " IT COULD MEAN NO OTHER, by Diodorus the Sicilian, " from a writer still in
prior
time/'-f-
Ibid. p. 125.
304
Mr. Maurice, in the next place, extracts the description which is given of the same monument, in Mr. Gough^
edition of
Camden
is
his
remarks upon
it.
" There
no occasion
for
my troubling
any extended observations, on these accounts of Stone" henge. Whoever has read, or may be inclined to read " as connected with of oriental
"
my
history
architecture,
" the astronomical, and mythological notions of the anci" see in the third volume 6f this work
ents, printed
may
" most of the assertions realized, " ment of this old Druid "
it is
in the
temple.
For, in the
place,
" the Sun and Vesta In the second place, the were. " or Sanctum Sanctorum, is of an oval form, reAdytum " after the manner that all the Mundane
presenting
egg,
" those adyta, in which the sacred fire perpetually blazed " were constantly fabricated. In the third place, the situ" ation is fixed as we shall make eviastronomically,
fully
to speak of
trances, temple, and that superb monument " of being placed exactly North-east, as all the antiquity, " of the ancient and cavern or
gates
portals
caverns,
to
temples
is,
Mithra, that
the
"
" In the fourth place, the number of stones and uprights (in the outward circle) making together, exactly sixty y
"
plainly alludes to that peculiar, and prominent feature of " Asiatic while the astronomy, the sexagenary cycle " number of stones, forming the minor circle of the cove, " being exactly nineteen, displays to us the famous Metonic t " or rather Indian cycle; and that of thirty, repeatedly
305
**
occurring,
the
celebrated
age,
or
" Druids. " Fifthly, the temple being uncovered, proves it to have " been erected under impressions, similar to those which " animated the ancient Persians, who rejected the im" idea of confining the Deity within an inclosed pious " shrine, however magnificent, and therefore, consequently,
"
at all events, it must have been erected before the age " of Zoroaster, who flourished more than five hundred " years before Christ, and who first covered in the Persian "
temples.
" And finally, the heads and horns of oxen and other " animals, found buried on the spot, prove that the san" guinary rites, peculiar to the Solar superstition were " within the awful bounds of this hallowed
actually practised,
circle."*
"
have omitted a few clauses, in which the ingenious author derives the British, immediately from the Indian suI
might appear to disadvantage, unsupported by the arguments which are adduced in various parts of this dissertation ; and partly because I have some kind of evidence, that what was exotic in
perstition
;
the system of the Britons, came to them by the way of Cornwall, and therefore was probably derived to them from
the Phoenicians.*
Our
t See Sect. 5.
306
tare, of the
in its plan,
and of
its
will hardly
Yet still, those gentlemen who he disputed. the Druids left no monuments behind them, but assert, that
will pertinaciously contend, that 110 evidence has been produced to connect the design of this with the national superstition of the
stupendous
Britons.
pile,
It appears to
this
me, however, that considerable evidence of connection does exist; and I hope, I shall not perform
office to the public in
an unacceptable
bringing
it
forward.
great and notorious event, namely, the massacre of the British nobility in the neighbourhood of Stonehenge, by Hengist, the Saxon king of Kent, furnished the ancient
British writers with occasion, for the frequent mention of this venerable pile.
The
is
England and Wales but by way of introduction to the documents which I mean to produce, it may be proper to insert a connected account of its circumstances, from a modern author of the former nation.
Mr. Warrington,
in his
history of Wales,
relates
the
Hengist and his Saxons approached the British found that the indehabitants, under the command of Vortigeru, were
coast, after the death of Vortimer, they
fully
When
Upon
to
an expedient, suggested by
307
his wily
and
fertile
of the people, with whom he had to act. In this artifice, the weakness or the treachery of Vortigern was employed. Hengist sent to assure that monarch, that his purpose of
coming
into Britain
was not
to offer
any violence
to
the
kingdom, but only to make a vigorous opposition against whom he artfully pretended, he thought
to have been alive.
It was likewise proposed by Hengist, that an interview should take place between them, and that each of the chiefs should meet at the place appointed, attended by the most eminent of his train; and in order to banish every
it
was
artfully suggested
by the
The
proposal was agreed to by the king ; the time of meetfor the May following; and the place appointed for the interview was at Stonehenge, upon Salisbury
plain.
In the meantime, Hengist having assembled his chieftains, laid open to them his design, that under the colour of
Britons, for the purposes of peace, and to a lasting alliance, he intended to murder the establish chiefs who should attend Vortigern to the interview ; that
meeting the
by
his
future resistance..
train,
At
attended the meeting, should carry knives concealed in their sleeves ; that when the signal was given, each of them should instantly stab the person who sat next
"io
who
him; and he closed this infernal order, by requiring them to behave like men, and to shew no mercy to any
x 2
308
Notwithstanding the many proofs the Saxons had given of their perfidy, the Britons, with a degree of credulity, peculiar to themselves, fell into the snare, and came un-
armed
to the place appointed for the interview; where, by the contrivance of Hengist, they were placed with his train, alternately at the tahles, under the pretence of con-
fidence,
When
in
the unguarded mome'nts of intoxication, Hengist gave the Take, your Seaxes. At that instant, every signal agreed on
and plunged it into the bosom of the person who sat next to him. Above throe hundred of the British nobility, the most eminent for their talents,
his knife,
perished in this bloody carousal. Vortigern was spared in the general carnage, though detained a prisoner by Hengist ; probably with no other
field,
in the council or in
the
design, than as a cover to a subsequent act of the British prince, which carries with it 9, strong appearance of base-
ness; for in order to obtain his liberty, he made an assignment to the Saxon chief, of the counties of Norfolk and
him
To
many
the exploit of Eidiol or Eidol, a British prince, who had the good fortune to escape. His character is recognized by English antiquaries, who call him Eldol or Edol, and
Wamngton'a
EdiUp.
57.
:
t See Dugdale's Baronage, p. li with his authority and Gibson's Camden. col. 287. Larl must be here regarded as a meve translation of his British
title.
dible
The Triads speak of this Eidiol's having killed an increnumber of the Saxons, on the day of Hengist's plot, with a quick-beam truncheon.* The Welsh chronicles of
and Geoffry, which in this to blend some true history with their
sera,
Tyssilio
may
be allowed
num-
ber which he slew, to seventy men. But these annalists, finding that Eidiol was both a temporal prince, and a bishop,
have thought proper to give us two brothers of that name, styling one of them Earl, and the other Bishop of Gloricester.
The two
characters were
no other than Emrys, or Ambrosius, who immediately after the massacre, was elevated to the British throne. The very same actions are ascribed to Eidiol and to Emrys, such as
burying the British nobles, erecting their
monument
at
Am-
bresbury, taking Hengist prisoner at Caer Gynan, or Conisborow, and causing him to be beheaded.f If this Eidiol
was not Ambrosius, we must consider him as the great agent and counsellor of that prince, to whom his actions
were consequently ascribed.
But to proceed.
It were not to
memorable
country, should be passed over in silence by the Bards of the Their lamentations upon the woeful subject, sixth century.
are frequent and pathetic.
stances,
Of these,
I shall
produce two
ini*
which
will fully
W.
+ Compare W.
Caraden, Col.
rilies.
15-17',
Archaiol.
V*.
II. p. 255,
256
?71
273,
with Gibson's
and Warrington's
and
his
authu-
310
remote
ancestors
Sto?iehen;e.
The
first
of
Song of ClJHELYN.*
Gwr
oet Eiteol
reol
Gorwy
Gordethol doeth
Gwyth
vill
Gosgyman weith
Gnawt
Man
Maus
meidrolaeth.
MAWR
COR KYVOETH.
* W. Archaiol. In the table of contents, it is ascribed to a Bard of p. 164. the eighth century ; but in Mr. Owen's Cam. Biog. more accurately, to Cuhelyn the son of Caw, about the middle of the shth century.
311
Moes Moes
breisc vreyr
wirth vehir
Milwr orwyth.
Maer
claer
kywid
Mad
Mas
doeth.
Medel
visci
Mel
vartoni
Mynogi gwyth.
kerteu kein
Myvir corein
Mirein Anoeth,
Menestir Vytud
Mal
eur orian
Man
Gweith
vyhanieth.
reith rysset
Gwich
ruich rywet
Rinwet Keen.
Rec Rec
rjsiolav
a archav
Ruymav
Vircheni
Ry
halt itawt
Rae dac
drossot
Reghit brid
bod
Rot Cuhelin.
poem, the following is as close a translation, as the concise and obscure language of the Bard will admit.
this
Of
313
Darkening was the
addicted to the law of
sullen
steel,
At
circle,
the time
when
man
Then the chief, having malice in his designs Britons, made with them a pretended compact.
are distributed
:
And
the
fair
the spot appointed, was in the precinct of lor* in quadrangular area of THE GREAT SANCTUARY OF
THE DOMINION.
To indulge the brawny chief to indulge him whose virtue was the rushing of spears, the warrior, supreme in
wrath,
The
illustrious chief
The reaping
dism with the
Hengitt, as it
is
fully evident
The
wave
It
upon violence, rages like the drunken the sea, tumbling over the strand of
breast, intent
:
strains, the
study of the
circle,
Thus, the minister of Buddud, possessing the talent to rehearse the gentle song of praise,
Chaunted
battle:
But
it
was the
baffle
bursting shriek
of sudden assault
Who exclaimed
an execration
vereign
:
with a curse
I will
" I
with
"
command!
will
*f
" Like the sudden bursting of a dreadful gale, blow "ye the conflagration of war against the youthful heroes. up
" The flaming gold will he merit, who overwhelms the " renowned and he shall be defended blameless : ;
N
" Here is affluence the purpose of my provided for us " mind is a from the obloquy of the enterprise !" protection
:
Pre-eminent was his merit, who strove to protect the sanctuary from the violence of the foe.
did preserve the institute, though nature groaned indignant 'before the gentle goddess.
He
315
Instead of a tear shed over him,
may
his soul
be gratified
the descriptions in this ancient poem are attentively compared with the incidents of the massacre perpetrated by Hengist, I think no doubt can remain as to the
particular event of history to
When
refers.
Cuhelyn's design is clearly a tribute of respect to the memory of Eidiol, whose history is invariably connected
He
is
priest, or president of the sacred circle, and as knight of the inclosure, who distributed the liquor at the feast, and after-
deed perpetrated, in a
suite of temporary buildings, upon the Ystre, or Cursus, into which one of the avenues leads
from the great temple. " This (Cursus) is half a mile " North from Stonehenge, ten thousand feet, or two miles
**
long, inclosed
feet asunder."
"
by two ditches, three hundred and fifty Here was the precinct of lor, the fair
quadrangular area of the great sanctuary of the dominion, lor is a name sometimes applied to the Supreme Being, but
borrowed from British mythology, where meant the sun moving within his orbit, or
it
seems to have
circle.
128,
310
in name and character, this British divinity seemi be closely allied to the Oru$ of Egypt, " The supposed " son of Isis, who was an emblem of the ark, that recep-
Both
to
"
" "
which was styled the mother of mankind. He is represented as undergoing, from the Titans, all that
tacle,
;
Osiris suffered from Typhon and the history, at the bot" Hence it is said of Isis, that she had torn, is the same. " the of making people immortal and that, when power " she found her son Orus in the midst of the waters, dead
;
"
through the malice of the Titans, she not only gave life, but also conferred upon him im-
Osiris
"
The
identity of
Ceridwen and
;
Isis, as
to general cha-
racter, has
and
as
we
former was present in this circle by the name of Lleddv Ogyrven, the gentle goddess, so lor seems to have been a
name of
C6r Gawr,
Geoffry of Monmouth's Choir Gaur, or more accurately, the great circle, or sanctuary, has been often
quoted by antiquaries, as the British name of this fabric of Stonehenge. In this poem of Cuhelyn, we have not only Mawr Cor, which is exactly synonymous with the
other, but
Mawr
circle,
or sanctuary
of
litan
metropotemple of the Britons ; which fully comes up to the idea of Dr. Stukeley and Mr. Maurice.
Bryant's
Analysis, V. II. p. 527, 330.
t Ibid,
p, 394.
317
That a heathen temple should be deemed
to retain such a
prerogative in the middle of the fifth century, must be regarded as a singular fact. But the populace of Britain had not hitherto been radically converted from their naage, pelagianism, which of that superstition with a few shreds of Christianity, was very prevalent amongst them.
tional superstition
;
and
in
this
blended
much
Aneurin, as well as our present author, speaks of the as the first act of open outrage committed at the feast. This victim is here described as in-
murder of a Bard,
He
is
trious president
we have, in this little poem, a full acof the dignity of the venerable pile of knowledgement Stonehenge, and a direct testimony of its consecration to
Upon
the whole,
several
known
objects of superstition,
Britons.
British document,
ject.
which
no other than the celebrated Gododin, a work lines, composed by Aneurin, a NorIt will
thumbrian Briton.
be necessary to introduce
this
Mr. Turner,
Bard
as
Aneurin did
live
between the
The
An
historical
poem of
tribe,
that age,
composed by an
itself
indivi-
dual of a British
ceased to exist,
curiosity.
which
may
surely be deemed in
a subject of
portance which the English antiquaries attach to the structure of Stonehenge, will, I trust, apologize for the necessary length of the present article.
The name of
the Gododin
is
Se-
these allured the lofty pronounced a noble heroic poem, and the subject is said to have been a disastrous action, in which the author himself
have appeared, and some of muse of Gray. The work has been
it
bore a part.
studied.
But the work has been celebrated, more than Not one of its admirers, that I know of, has at-
tempted to identify the event, which constitutes its principal subject; or has even suspected that it alludes to the
actions of Hengist, or to the massacre at Stonehenge
:
so
that I must either establish my proposition, that such is the main business of the poem, or else expect some severe chastisement from the modern critics of my country-
scores.
The
poem
notes.
affairs
is
and wholly unattended with explanatory The subject has not much local connexion with the
ancient,
of Wales, and consequently has excited but little inquiry amongst the natives, the only people who understand the language of the Bard. The orthography is obsolete ; and the author's dialect had some, original variation
tribe.
introduces
but, as
it is
and especially
political songs,
composed
319
blesome times, generally describes them by characteristical epithets, which, however obvious they may have been in
the days of the author, are now become much less so by the lapse of ages. All these circumstances conspire to draw
veil
is
viewed through
the
medium of
And
this obscurity is
abundantly increased by the bad preservation of the text. Of this, no greater proof need be given, than a mere
exhibition of the various readings, which nearly equal the
number of
lines.
seem
These, for the most part, are only orthographical. They to have arisen from the misapprehension of the cha-
racters, or letters,
quated or defaced.
of some one copy, which was either antiBut this supposed original of the
modern
transcribers,
for all
the
known
copies agree in exhibiting certain passages in mere fragments, without connection of sense or metre.
Such
why
But where am
I to
ground
my own
pretensions, as
an
interpreter of this difh'cult work ? I can only say, in answer to this query, that over and above the share which the Gododiii
has obtained in
my
to transcribe the
,.
and once very lately from a good copy on vellum, written apparently about the ye&r 1200, and which was not used by the editors of the Archaiologia. I have also reduced all
-die
author's words into alphabetical order, with a reference to the lines in which they occur. This labour rendered
Aneurin's expressions and phrases familiar to me, gave me a facility ..in comparing part with part, and suggested a
320
whenever I met with a passage in any other Bard, which seemed to bear upon the subject of the Gododin. And as all the parts of the work are not equally
reference,
obscure, I now began to understand passages of considerable length, and to fix some leading marks, as so many clues to the investigation of the general subject.
Thus prepared, I went over the whole Gododin, line, with Mr. Owen's Dictionary at my elbow,
line
by
setting
down
the literal construction, as nearly as it could be obAnd in retained, however incoherent it might appear.
vising
my
work can-
not be regarded as a single poem, composed upon any one determinate plan; but that, on the contrary, it consists of a
of short detached songs, relating principally to one great subject, which is taken up and dismissed in one of those detached parts, and again resumed in another. This
series
discrimination agrees with the title of the work, in the very ancient copy upon vellum, described by Edward Llwyd,*
where
it is
called
Y Gododynne
in the plural
number
The
In the preface to the Incantation of Cynvelyn, and of Maelderw,"f- this work is described as a series of
Gododins.
Odleu a Chanuau, odes and songs ; and it is intimated, that they originally amounted to tri chanu a thriugaint a thrichant,
563
songs.
lately
communicated
to
me by my
excellent friend,
is
Mr. Jones, f
alternately.
And
W.
Arcbaiol. V.
I.
p. 61.
321
songs, is confirmed by the author himself, who tells us, that it was his custom to compose a Cenig, sonnet, or short song of the Gododin, to amuse the nightly horrors of a
solitary prison.
in most of the remaining songs, was not, as has been generally represented, the fall of 360 nobles in the field q/ battle, to which they had rushed forth in a state
Bard deplores
it
of
nobles, in time
of peace, and at a feast, where they had been arranged promiscuously with armed SAXONS.
An event
yet
it is clear,
tory nor tradition, whether British or Saxon, has preserved the slightest hint of any such thing having happened in this island in the sixth century, or in any other period of the
excepting in one instance, namely, the massacre of the Britons at Stonehenge, about the year 472.
British
annals,
The memory of
both nations
;
this
event
is
and we shall find by the sequel, that the Bard confirms most of the incidents which have been recorded. This is, therefore, the identical catastrophe which
Aneurin deplores.
But
The Bard represents himself as having been present at the bloody spectacle; and Edward Llwyd refers the era of the Gododin to the year 510, and this, probably, upon the authority of the ancient MS. which he quotes in the same
passage.
323
no discordance of dates, which may not be fairly There is no improbability in Aneurin's having reconciled.
is
Here
attended the feast, as a young Bard, in 472, and his having bewailed the friends of his youth -thirty-eight years afterwards, when, as an old, unfortunate warrior, he had fallen
into the hands of the foe,
dungeon.
indeed, it appears evidently from the face of th that the events which the Bard commemorates, had work,
And
preceded the date of the composition by a long interval of years; for he supports the credit of the circumstances which
he
details
by the
relation of a Briton,
by the
certain
oral testimony of
which were known* to Taliesin by the some old chiefs and by the authority of songs, which had been composed upon the occasion.
particulars
affairs
fatal feast.
So
that,
upon the
must have elapsed between the woful subject of Aneurin's songs, and the date of their composition.
When we
must Bard
we
necessarily
deplores, from the date of the composition in 510, into the age of Hengist, and fix it, with the greatest ap-
pearance of accuracy, at the era of the celebrated massacre at tonehenge. And to the circumstances which history
records of this event, the allusions of the Bard so precisely
it is
is
my
decided opinion.
it
I foresee,
however, a few
objections, which
may be
proper to obviate.
3-23
It
will
be asked
Why
Hengist, and his British partizans, by name'? To this it may be answered, that Aneurin, at the time when he com-
posed most of his songs, was a prisoner of war in the hands of the Saxons. The introduction of names might have
subjected
safer
him to personal danger he therefore chose the of gratifying his resentment, by giving such bold way hints of the affairs, and the individuals to which he alluded,
:
and
this
method afforded
him an opportunity of painting his indignation more forcibly, by sarcastic epithets, than he could have done it by
explicit attacks
Against the locality of Aneurin's subject, as referred to it may be objected, that the
term Gododin, in Nennins, implies the region of the Otta~ dinif between the rampart of Antonine, and the wall of
whilst in several passages of this poem, we find that Gododin means the same as Cattraeth, the place where
Severus
fell.
This is certainly an ambiguity; and it was probably intended as such, for the same prudential reason which I have mentioned above. But if we attend o the composition,
Godo is a partial covering, and Din a fence or outwork As applied to the region of the Ottadini, it means that dU
trict
which
is
by the Northern
equally descriptive of the British temples or sanctuaries, which were open at top, yet protected by a surrounding rampart or bank.
Y 2
324
And that the name of Godo was actually appropriated to these temples, we have already seen, in treating of the faor mily of the British Ceres : for Seithin Saidi, Janns
Saturn, the representative of the patriarch, is styled Pp; thawr Godo, the guardian of the gate of Godo, or the unco1
vered sanctuary.
Cattraeth, or, according to the older orthography, Catraith, is liable to the same objection, and admits of the
same
solution.
near Richmond, in Yorkshire, the Cataracton of the ancients. Yet it is not hence to be suspected, that by Gododin and Cattraeth, our author meant to point out an
Ottadinian town of that nanje
;
for Cataracton
was not
;
so that
which seems
to be only a con-
tainly represents the lares, &c. of the Druids, pronounced from the chair of presidency, or Bardic cathedral, hence figuratively applied to the great temple itself.
And, from
is
it is
me
I
to
have already stated, obtained such a geand subject of the Gododin, as estimate the value of most of the various
sat down patiently to re-translate the whole readings, as closely as possible, without sacrificing perspicuity to the
mere idiom of
my
tion to Mr. Owen's explanation of obsolete words, even in those passages which seemed most intelligible. And, I think, I have made out Aneuriix's meaning with tolerable
clearness, considering the nature of the work,
and the
state
of
tb.e
copy
though
it
may
some additional
lignt
upon
had some thoughts of adding the British text, as accurately as it can be obtained, from a collation of the various
I
copies
it,
but as
it
is
in
The division of the songs in this work, was the result of my own observation and conjecture and therefore, though it be generally confirmed by Mr. Jones's ancient copy, I
;
submit
it
to the censure
of the
critical reader,
who, by pass-
may
poem.
THE GODODIN.
SONG
" GBEDYF
I.
Archaiol. p. 1.
Aneurim
commemorates
Hengist had
young
Bard,
his
Associate,
whom
See the
Cuhelyn, in the
former Part of
Series.
the Section,
was the soul of the youth, whose merit I record with sorrow. A swift thick-maned steed was under the His shield, light and broad, thigh of the fair youth.
MANLY
hung upon
His
blue
and unspotted
With me
will
shall
I will
do
praise thee.
The
floor
to have
peace.
327
feast.
The raven
shall
lift
Owen,
my
dear companion
There
is
slaughtered
SONG
"
II.
CAEAWC CYNHAIAWC."
p. 1.
The Bard descants upon the Manners of Hengist, and touches upon some Particulars of the Plot, which he appears' to
have concerted, in Part, with Vortigern, the British King.
ADORNED with his wreath,* the chief of the rustics announced, that upon his arrival, unattended by his host, and in the presence of the Maidrf he would give the mead ; but he would strike the front of his shield,^ if he heard the
din of war, and to those
whom
no quarter.
retreat
from
battle,
till
who
* Caeawc, wearing a wreath This was a wreath of amber beads, as appears from the subsequent paragraphs, which also prove that the Bard means Heugist. I recollect no authority for ascribing wreaths of amber to tke native Britons ; but the costume appears upon many of the old Saxon coins, published by Camdeii. + Biui, the mafd, a name of Llywy, the British Proserpine, at whose festivals contention and tumult were deemed sacrilegious. See soug 25.
t The phrase, Twl tal y rodawc repeatedly occurs. It has been translated, " the front of whose shield was pierce 3 >" but it evidently implies, making a
by
328
would not give way, he cherished a dark resentment. The man of Gododin, upon his return before the tents of Madawc, has reported but one man in a hundred, who escaped from the hand of the. water-dweller.*
i
Adorned with
which
when
His compact J took effect. His signal was duly observed. He had devised a better stratagem. Here, his party did not shrink, though they had fled before
invited.-^
[|
army of Gododin. ^f The water-dweller boldly invites us to a mixed assembly, where neither spear nor shield ** was to be admitted ".Thus there could be no strife
the
-
"
amongst the
jovial
company
sea-drifted
in this work,
Ar taw
by several
terras,
which im-
'r
Mordei.
first
invited, the
time,
by
Vortigern,
and afterwards bj
The compact of a
The
by Hengist.
||
the massacre*
^1
That
is,
Ceres.
** The Bard continually reminds us, that the Britons had neither offensive nor defensive arms. In song 27, he mentions the plea of the Saxons, for the exclusion of shields That there might be a clear space to light the area. The conclusion of this paragraph, contains a suggestion of Hengist, which is well " And in order to banish explained by Mr. Wurrington, p. 59. every idea " of hostile intention, it was artfully suggested by the Saxon, that both par " ties should appear without their arms."
-
329
wolves:* and of amber was that wreath which twined about his
the amber which could merit such a temples. Precious was feast. The haughty f chief excludes men of a humble station,
his
the
The
hero.
leader,
The
adorned with his wreath, is armed like a general mark of his vengeance is the man who
in the bloody field
;
but the part which he selects for himself, is to give the first thrust to the conductor of the host,|| before whose blades five bands had fallen
of Deira and Bernicia, tw enty And as food for wolves hundred had perished in an hour. is sooner provided than a nuptial feast; as ravens may be
men
furnished with prey, before the funeral bier arrive; so the blood of our hero stains the floor before he lifts the spear :
* Kaeawc kynhorawc bleid e rnaran Mr. Jones' MS. " Adorned with " wreath was the chief, even the wolf of the holme," i. e. Thanet.
his
None but men of the most distinguished rank and character were admitted to the fatal banquet. And of those, the heroes who had fought under Vortimer, were especially selected for destruction, by the united treachery of and Hengist. These were th great objects of resentment to both Vortigern The British King regarded them as the supporters of a rebellious son ; parties. and they had expelled the Saxon from the Island of Britain.
t
$ Vortigern, who had di/ided his kingdom with Hengist.
]|
$ The Scots and Picts united their forces with the Saxons, who were sta^ioned in the North ; and their combined army was beaten by the lieutenomts of Vortimer. Warrington, with his authorities, p. 52> 53.
330
yet the lofty Bard remains.
Kyneid*
shall
SONG
"
III.
GWYR
AETH ODODIN."
p. 2,
The Bard
at
the JFeast,
and
THE heroes went to Gododin cheerful and sprightly, whilst he, the bitter warrior, was disposing his blades f in order. short season of peace had they enjoyed.^ The
son of Botgat^ gave them flattering language his hand explained the meaning They should have gone to churches
!
to
do penance
powerful
piercing them.||
The
The
* The Man of Kent Probably the British Prince whom Vortigern had dispossessed of his dominions, to make room for Hcngist. This chief is introduced again, under the name of Tudwlch.
+ The
Seaxes,
at the feast.
J From the expulsion of the Saxons return about two years and a half.
$ Botgat or Votgas
by Vortimer,
Hengist's father,
whom
Death was inevitable, because the unara/ied Britons were ranked alternately armtd Saxons The next paragraph describes not a battle, but a suddeu massacre.
||
with
331
in the assembly, an irresistible conflict. They were slain with blades, and without din, whilst the princely supporter
The
semblage.
poison.
loquacious was their asPale mead was their liquor, and it became their
weapons, were set in mirth what a silence ennoisy array :f sued They should have gone to churches to do penance the inevitable strife of death is piercing them.
effective
to Cattraeth
They drank
!
the intoxicat-
Brave and prosperous had they been. I should Amidst blades, them, were I to neglect their fame wrong
red, tremendous, and murky incessantly, and obstinately, would the dogs of battle fight. | " (O Saxons) had I " like j udged you to be favourers of the Bernician clan, " a I would not have left a man of you alive!" deluge,
;
My companion
I lost,
when
was secure.
Successfully
had
he withstood the
magnanimous
* It appears from the subsequent parts of the Gododin, that this interpeser was the celebrated Eidiol, a distinguished prince, and president of the Bardie community or, as he was styled in that wretched age of the British church, Bi&hop of the Britons. Upon this woful occasion, he acted as Seneschal, or Governor of the feast. He is to be regarded as Aneurin's hero j and from the particulars recorded of him, I conclude he is the same prince who is called Aurdius Ambrosius, Gwrawl Emrys, or hero of the ambrosial stones.
;
+ That
Daggers.
is,
who
privately wore
their
Setaes
of
Whether
this
himself, or from
apostrophe is to be understood, as coming from the Bard some more warlike chief; its object is to reproach the Saxons
332
hero had disallowed the endowment of the father-in-law * Such was the son of Cian, from the stone of Gwyngwn.
The
They were
afflicted
time of
peace,
by those
them.f
A hundred
dred,
blood,
who
own
when
the most terrible, manfully stood up, bemost courteous mountain chief.
||
The
spected
heroes
is
went
to
Cattraeth with
the dawn.
Re-
their
memory amongst
delicious,
fell
their connexions.
They
piercers, and their four-pointed helmets, before the retinue of the most courteous mountain chief.
to Cattraeth with the day. (Was there a disparagement of battles !) not They had made, indeed,
* This endowment was the kingdom of Kent, which Vortigern formally bestowed upon Hengist, his fathtr-in-law, when he married Rowena.
plot of Hengist
+ They were massacred at an ostensively peaceful meeting, by the united and Vortigern, to whom they had been equally formidable.
An
and Hengist.
Hengist,
who
||
region
The retinue of Vortigern, who wa* Lord of North Wales, a mountainous his great courtesy for the Saxons was a subject of indignation to the
Britons.
After the execution of Hengist's plot, the Bards defended the temple 5[ against the Saxons, where many of them must have fallen.
333
a mighty carnage.* Effectually had the gem of ChristiThis is most meet, blade. anity wielded his protecting
before
in
friendly compact.
However
had occasioned, great the bloody destruction which they the army of Gododin, when the day was decided before
was
it
!
leader
with the day, or drank the white mead, in the celebration of May everf dismal was the preconcerted signal of the associated chief,
the hero
to Gattraeth
To
who went
in secret charge,
SONG
IV.
p. 2.
In
this
upon the Subject of the calamitous Feast, intermixes some Particulars of the Bravery and Fate of a Chief wh&m he
calls
By
this
To
* That is, in the wars of Vortimer, to which the clusion of the paragraph.
Bard
alludes, in
the con-
Britons, as
p. 57.
t Meinot'hydd This was the anniversary of the great mysteries of the we have already seen in Hanrs Talies'm. And it was the season appointed by Vortigern and Hengist for the solemn meeting. Warrington,
tlor
has the
of Eidin (the living one) produced a scattcrer of the ravagers, equally great with the lofty Tudvwlch, who being
deprived of his lands and towns, had slaughtered the Saxons for seven days. His valour ought to have protected him Dear is his memory amongst his illustrious in freedom.
associates.
When
feast,
Tudvwleh, the supporter of the land, came to the the area of the son of harmony* was made a plain of
blood.
The
Ah
none
of them had the protection of shields When they had hastened to the Crai, J assembled in gleaming arms, loud as the tumult of thunder, was the din of their shields.
The ambitious man, the fickle man, and the base man he would tear them with his pikes and halberds. Standing
upon higher ground, he would gash them with his blades j but to the grief of the steel-clad commander, the waterdwellers were subdued
land.
Before
Mab
Of
Eilydd
This was the area of the Bards, or the Cursut, in front of which was the scene of the massacre..
t This probably means the bloody battle of Cray-ford, in which those heroes, under the conduct of Vortimer, had fought with Hengist, four or five years before the massacre. In that engagement, both parties seem to have claimed the victory. See Gibson's Ctanden, Col. 224. Sammes, p. 390.
SONG
V.
p. 3.
tortigern
is
and Disgrace of
OF
tinued
the
tale is
Long
There was a dominion without a sovereign, and a an iniquismoaking land.* Yet the sons of Godebawg,
*f-
tous tribe, would obstinately support the secret inviter of the great slaughterer. Dismal was the fate of dire necessity,
for
Together they drank the transparent mead, by the light of torches though it was pleasant to the taste, it pro:
He+ had
previously
stationed
above Caer
Echinig,
* This alludes to the dreadful ravages committed by massacre. bee Warringtan, p. 60. t The princely descendants of Coel Godebawg who had invited Hengist into Britain.
supported
the
cause of
Vortigern,
" the Inviter of the is Vortigorn, great slaughterer." It appears from and other passages, that Vortigcrn was privy to the design of massacre, which he had encouraged, in order to get rid of those counsellors and heroes who had supported the cause of his son Vortimer, and might still be suspected of an intention to elect another sovereign. Jt is probable, however, that the British King was not aware of Hengist's design to seize his person, and extort iroiu him a large portion of his dominions, as the price of liberty.
J That
'
this,
336
the youthful heroes of a chief,
who was
irTriis retinue.
He
had previously ordered a horn to be filled .on the Bludzce, He had directed that he might pledge the water-dweller. that the beverage should consist of mead and beer
He had previously ordered the display of (Bragawd). gold and rich purple. He had given orders for pampered
steeds, which might carry him safe away, whilst Gwarthlev and Enovryd were pouring forth the liquor. Previous to this, the benefactor whom the ebbing tide had left us,* gave
out his private signal a command which concerned, those, who had been loath to retreat.
SONG
<f
VI.
ANAWR GYNHORUAN."
to
p. 3.
This
little
want
the Conclusion,
is
un-
It appears evidently, connected with the preceding, Subject. to be an Elegy upon the Death of the victorious Mortimer,
and was
the
Court of Vortigern,
AND now
is
about to ascend
:}
Isle.
* That is Hengist, who, by hastening the execution of his plot, prevented the meditated retreat of Vortigern.
is not to be understood a hymn to the sun literally, as only comparing Voriimer to ihe sun, whom the mystical Bards acknowledged as a divinity. For Nev, heaven, I read Ndv, a Lord.
t This, I conceive,
is
the Bard
337
Direful was the flight, before the shaking of his shield,
hastening to victory.
with ostentatious courtesy, the hero was invited to taste the generous liquor. The beverage of wine he drank in the
festival
of the reaping.
it
was transparent,
the wine which he quaffed had assumed the form of deadly poison.
Though
We
illustrious chief.
We
the death of the winged one, whose had not been withheld from the spears of battle.-fThe pre-occupiers fell in the dreadful conflict. Determined
shield
was
issued.
and decisive the orders which he Wi:hout disparagement, he retaliated upon the
green sod covered the grave of the great and
blessed hero.
* Eiddin, he who extorts property or possession an epithet applied to the usurper Vortigern, in whose court Vortimer received a poisoned cup, by the contrivance of Rowena.
fall..
338
SONG VH.
" TEITHI AMGANT."
In
this
p. 4.
Place, there
is
not known.
a Chasm in the Original. Its Extent The following Enumeration must be referred
is
to the Ifliddle
THE
bands
five
complement of the borders were three moving; battalions of five hundred men each three
levies of three
hundred each three hundred warlike knights of Eiddyn,* arrayed in gilded armour three loricated with three commanders, wearing gold chains three bands,
adventurous knights, with three hundred of equal quality.
These three bands, of the same order, were mutually jealous in their bitter and impetuous assaults on the foe they were equally dreadful in the conflict: they would strike a
lion flat as lead.
Gold had
There came
tive JBritons
who were
na-
to
into
* Vortigern, as above. It appears that this bloody usurper, who owed hi* ^levatiou to the murder of his lawful sovereign, and the violence of a party, was diffident of the native Britons, ami kept a body-guard of three hundred Sttxon horse.
*r
It
seems by
this
amounted
to about aOQO.
J Atron, the Splendid one, or the Queen of Brightness; a natoie of one greiil-lurouwjes, venerated by the superstitious Biituns,
f tt*.
339
Deira.*'
And
better
there
who was
came from amongst the Britons, a man than Cenon even he who proved a serpent
to the sullen
foes.-f-
SONG
VIII.
p. 4.
Bard
DRANK
it
In the assembly of social was his glory to make food for eagles. When he men, hastened to rouse at once his fell associates before he gave
the signal
at the early
dawn, he
left
the shields
of
||
split
wood
at a distance
their
knew)
would cut
way.
That
is,
the Picts.
t The
third
is
See song 2.
"
Now,
The
sgas had a sharp edge on one side ; but the other side was frequently cut into teeth, like a saw. Sammes, p. 413.
5 The
*
The breaking of sprigs, 39 frequently mentioned by the Bards, describes the practice of sortilege. It seems, from this passage, that the diviner, either from his lots, or private conjecture, had conceived some presentiment of the
erent.
340
by the son of Seinno, the Diviner, who knew, that he who Lad sold his life would cut with sharp blades. He should have declared this openly, then he would have been slain
with pointed weapons.
Notwithstanding his friendly covenant,* he was meditating a convenient attack. He had boasted of the carcasses
of brave and powerful men, presence of Gwynedd.-^
whom
he would pierce
in the
I drank of the wine and the mead of the water-dweller, " and because I had drunk, I made a stroke with a smaD " " It was not thy excess of drinking piercing blade," J " which emboldened the fell chief: when every one made a " But when the issue comes, stroke, thou didst the same. " it would have been well for thee not to have offended the.
:
"
"
11
+ That is, Vortigern, Lord of Cu-ynedd, or North Wales. Golyddan, a Bard of the seventh century, emphatically styles him Gwrtheyrn Gwynedd.
W.
Archaiol, p. 156.
the apology of a Saxon individual, for his atrocious conduct at the which the indignant Briton replies " It was not thy excess," &c.
is
J This
feast
:
to
Eidiol, or Ambrosius,
who
retaliated
Hengist.
341
i
SONG
"
IX.
p. 4.
GWYR
A AETH GATTRAETH."
r
The Bard, pursuing his Subject, openly charges Vortigern an Accomplice in Hengisi's Plot.
as
THE
heroes
who went
Wine
when we accepted of
aside.*
the dignified
been set
Of
those
hastened to the
excess of liquor, three only escaped from the confident stabbing; namely, the two war dogs of Aeron, and our
destined governor, and myself, through blood the reward of my candid song.
my
streams of
O my friend O
!
thou
who
me
We
should noThave been beaten, but for the instigation of the should not have sovereign, who was twice elevated.
We
feast.
It
was he
Blwyddyn yu erbyn urddyn deawd The year when Vortigeru, who had been
deposed for his attachment to the sovereignty, after the death of Vortimer.
three hundred of the British nobility, the most eminent for their talents in the council, or in the field, perished in this bloody carousal." Warrington, p. 59, with his numerous authorities.
It is clear to me, that under these two names, we J Eidiol, or Ambrosius. are to contemplate but ene historical character. Ambrosius had, therefore, already returned from Armorica, either during the reign of Vortimer, or upon. the faith of this friendly meeting. As this prince was a peculiar object of Vortigern's jealousy, his flattering appointment, as governor of the feast, may have been made for the purpose of securing his attendance amongst the destined victims.
(j Vortigern, who had been deposed, and re-elected by his faction. The Bard, openly charges this infatuated prince with the odium of the massacre.
342
who made
friend.
Base
the proscription, in behalf of his convenient is he in the field, who is base to his own relareports, that after the gash-
tives.*
ing
assault, there
SONG
X.
p. 4.
to
the obtruncated
Body of
the Battle of
CAEK
mand of
who succeeded
Vortigern as
King of
the Britons.
supports no arm, who presents a lacerated form, deprived of motion, has with energy pervaded the land, through the great multitude of the Lbegrian tribes.
HE
who now
His
shields
his shields,
He
make an
liis
way
39.
to the throne
p.
by the bse murder of his fousin This paragraph record* a more shocking
The
British
Proserpine-
"Bards
her votaries.
Warrington and
343
SONG XL
"
p. 5.
This Song refers to the Actions of Eidiol,* or Ambrosias, subsequent to the Massacre of the British Nobles.
THE
van.
winged
is
his variegated
of warlike steeds.
In Aervre
!
there was fire (the slaughter) there was a din Impetuous were his spears, as the rays of the blazing sun.
mount of
And
who
flanks,
left at large
and in his front the overwhelming billow The Bards of the land will judge respecting men of valour.
to slaves.
The English historians, the Triads, and the chronicles of Tysilio and Geoffry of Monmouth, represent this prince as having singly attacked the Saxons, and slain an incredible num, er of them with a pole.
of Aneurin and Cuhelyn reconcile the report of his actions with Having some suspicion of treachery, he takes his station as governor of the feast, and consequently is not involved in the ranks. Upon the first assault, he extends his shaft between the adverse parties, and gives the alarm to the numerous disciples of the Bards, who were celebrating the festivity of May-day, and to the populace, whom the solemnity had convened. Some of this multitude parry off the Saxons with the long poles which were
probability.
The poems
used in the procession, whilst others set fire to the temporary buildings about the Cursus, and seize the arras which had been there deposited. It was Hengist's plan, immediately after the massacre, to burst into the tembut his Saxons, being half intoxicated, and ple, and plunder its treasures only armed with their corslets and short daggers, were thrown into confusion by this subitaneous host of Britons, and by the surrounding flames; so that after
:
some
loss,
completion of their
344
Devourers were his spears in the hands of heroes. And, before the deed of the lurkers covered him in the grave,* he
was a man who had energy in his commands. Buddvan (the horn of victory), the son of the bold Bleiddvan (lofty
wolf),
washed
his
Injurious,
morial of him,
most injurious would it be, to neglect the mewho left not an open gap for cowardice :
whose court was not deserted by the beneficent Bards of It was his resoluBritain, upon the calends of January.
waste.
plow his land, though it lay did he resent the stratagem of the great Indignantly Dragon,f who was a leader in the field of blood, after the
wine had been quaffed by Gwenabwy (the fair corpse), the son of the Lady the warrior of Galltraeth.^
fatal
* Or, before he was buried, after those who laid a plot for his life, had accomplished their design. This obscure sentence alludes to the manner of Arnbrosius' death. Eppa, a Saxon physician, treacherously poisoned him, by the instigatiofi of Pascens, the son of Vortigern. See Wairington, and his authorities, p. 65, 66.
t Hengist, who slaughtered the British nobles, and wasted the country, after the death of Vortimer, 'vho had fought at Galltraeth.
-
h?s
step-mother,
Rowena.
The Bard deGalltraeth, the Gallic strand, or shore of the Gallic sea. scribes the battle of Galltraeth, song 14, and ascribes the massacre to the the Britons had obtained in resentment of the Saxons, for the victory which
that engagement.
appears, that this was Vortimer's victory, recorded supra ripam Galilei marts, where the Saxons were entirely beaten off British ground, and compelled to fly to their ships. Gibson's Camden Col. 243. Llech Titleu, or Lapis Tituli, is substituted for Galltraeth in another passage ff the Gododin.
it
Tituli,
345
SONG
XII.
p. 5.
Song
describes the
Actions.
TRUE
his
it
No
steeds overtook
The governor extended Marchleu-j- (the splendid knight). spear, before the swordsman, J in his thick strewed
path.
Being educated amongst the sacred mounts, he supmother and severe was the stroke of his
:
protecting blade. spear, of quartered ash, did he extend from his hand, over the STONE CELL OF THE SA-
CRED FIRE,
of furze.
made
to puff out
who had
From
-ity
that which
t Marchleu and the governpr, refer to Eidiol is expressly and exclusively ascribed to
:
i$
* The Saxon.
These are important hints upon the subject of the Bardic temple.
In subsequent passages, the Bard expressly describes Eidiol as involving the Saxons iu flames.
||
" The British for Esca prince (Ambrosius) then York, in which place Octa, the son of Hengist, and f Esca, h's brother, had taken refuge; but these chiefs were soon obliged to. " surrender, upon condition that they and the Saxon soldiers should retire *' into the country, near Scotland. 'WYVarrington, p. 64.
A corrupt orthography
<
like the inconstant sea: he was full of and gentleness, whilst he regaled himself with modesty mead ; but he would possess a territory, from the rampart
of Ofer, to the point of Madden then the savage was with carnage, the scatterer with desolation. On glutted
the heads of mothers did his sword resound
!
spirit)
praise be to
SONG
" CAREDIG
XIII.
CARADWY E GLOD.
p. 5.
We
are here presented with a striking Contrast, in the ChaThe. racters of two Heroes, who fell at the fatal Feast.
the Son of Cunedda, who a District in Cardiganshire, which, from him, possessed was called Caredigiawn, whence the English name of the County. The second seems to have been Caradog with the
brawny Arm, a
Century.
celebrated
CAREDIG
his
lovely
is
comes
Calm
protects and guards and gentle, before he he, Does he give battle! He is brave
his
fame!
is
He
with discretion.
The
may he
!
British mysteries.
Essay.
Eidiolj or Anjbrosius,
was
feiysteries.
S47
Caredig, the amiable chief, leading in the tumultuous battle, with his golden shield, he marshalled his camp.
splinters, and penethe stroke of the unrelenting sword. Like a trating still maintains his Before he was laid on the hero, he post.
is
earth
in
guarding his station. May he find a complete reception with the Trinity, in perfect unity *
!
When
battle, like
a wild boar, he
cut his way, and burst forward. In the mangling fight, he was the BULL of the host. The wild dogs were allured
by
the motion of his hand. For this, I have the testimony of Ewein, the son of Eulat, and Gurien, and Gwyn, and But though, from Galltraeth, from the mangling Guriat.
fight,
the clear
and from Bryn Hydwn, he returned safe,f yet after mead was put into his hand, the hero saw his father
no more.
SONG
"
XIV.
p. 6.
GWYR A GRYSSIASANT."
several
of the Nobles who had been and celebrates the Heroism which they
had displayed
THE
* From
heroes
who
hastened to the
feast,
had moved
forth
it
all, his
thology, the
heathenish my-
tenets of Christianity.
t He had returned in safety from the wars of Vortimerj but he did not scape from the fatal banquet.
348
unanimously, even the short-lived heroes who were intoxicated over the clarified mead, the retinue of the mountain
chief
illustrious in the
hour of
trial.
As
with
mead
in
were paid by Caradoc and Madoc, Pyll and leuan, Peredur steel arms, Gwawrddur and Aeddan, who had escaped from the tumultuous fight with a broken shield. Though
:
they had slain the foe, they also were slain returned to their peaceful home.
none of them
The
heroes
who hastened
to the feast,
were entertained
together on that year,* over the mead of the great designers, Those deplorable wretches how doleful their com!
-j-
memoration
returned
!
the
By
How
!
lasting
After
men
had acted bravely at the moment when they were regaling receives our vigowith mead, the dank floor of Gododin
rous heroes. the mountain chief,
This was occasioned by the choice liquor of and the resen&nent of the victory
at Galltraeth.|j
to the sovereignty.
See before.
Vortimer $ The Saxons had been utterly expelled by turned to Britain upon the restoration of Vortigern.
is evidently a ^ Here Gododin sacre was perpetrated.
and
name pf
Vortimer's last victory, supra ripam Galilei marts, was the great occasion of Hengist's resentment. The Hard now proceeds to describe the bravery is heroes had displayed in that decisive action.
||
349
/
with the force of warlike steeds, and red armour and shields,
and
and
uplifted spears,
swords.
and sharp lances, and glittering mail, They had excelled they had penetrated
before their blades five battalions had
The
lofty
to the altar 5
and
SONG XV.
" NY
WNAETHPWYD NEUADD."
the great Temple, in celebrated.
p. 6.
the Precincts
of
the fatal
Banquet was
He
recites the
heroic Acts
of Eidiol, or Ambrosius, who is described by a Variety of Epithets ; and touches upon some Particulars
the Battle
of Maes
so eminently perfect,
fire,
it
cannot be denied that corpses were seen, by the wearer of scaly mail,']; who was harnessed, and armed, with a
ttie
of the great temple, in this song, deserves the attention of antiquary. In the passage before us, we are told that it was not made for strife being the sanctuary of the pacific Bards and Druids. Here, iil$o, wa the cell of the sacred fire, mentioned in a preceding paragraph.
+ The account
his outrage,
by
350
piercing weapon, but covered with the skin of a beast. His sword resounded upon the head of the chief singer of
KOE
mon
and ESEYE,* at the great stone fence of their comNever more did the child of Teitkan sanctuary.
move.
This hall would not have been made so impregnable, had not Morienf been equal to Caradoc. He did not retreat with sorrow towards Mynawc.J Enraged is he, and fiercer
than the son of Bedrawc.
in flames
Fell
is
Terrible
city,||
who
were scattered before the army of Gododin. From the inclosuf e of fire, precipitately they fled. In the day of their
wrath, they became nimble.
their pur-
* Mr. Bryant has demonttrated, that Saturn and Rkea, Osiris and Isis, &c. implied the patriarch Noah, and the Genius of the Ark : with these, I have identified the Dwyvan and Dwyvach ; Hu and Kit ; Tegid and Ceridwcn, &c. of the Britons. Noe is here introduced by his proper name ; but I do not infer from hence,, that this name had been preserved by the Pagan Britons. The sacred writings were known in the days of Aneuriu and that Bard, or some one before him, had sufficient discernment to perceive, that his Hu, Tegid, or Dwyvan, was originally the same person as the Noe of Scripture history. Eseye was certainly the same character as Isis : and Teithan must be identified with the Greek Titan, or the Sun, who is called Titin, in the HibernoCeltic. The. Bard, as usual, connects his Arkite superstition withSabian idolatry.
:
t
as
A name
it is
of the same deified person, bnt transferred to his priest, Eidiol, evident from the action ascribed to biro.
who
is
elsewhere styled
Mynnwe
M'don,
so-
||
in
booths, within
the
351
Did they merit their horns of the mountain chief !f
mead
the slaves of
No
hall
this.
As
for
feast,
he
Those whom he pierced were not the point of his lance. Through pierced again. the painted corslet did the warrior penetrate. Before his fleet were the hostile steeds. In the day of resentment,
upon
Keen was
wrath, the indignant stroke was returned by the blade Cynon, when he rushed forth with the early dawn.
of.
Heavy was
sault;
first
as*
but
he||
who
their
outrage.
administered the liquor, put an end to Effectual was his valour, in behalf of
Elphin.^ His spear pushes the chiefs, who had made war The pinnacle of renown is the radiant in their merriment.
bull
of battle!**
the stroke which had, fallen in the
Heavy was
sault, as
first as-
* That
is,
ccasioii, to
their design of plundering the temple, which appears, upon have been richly furnished and decorated.
thi
gern, lord
f The Saxons, who had been the mercenaries and the body guard of Vortiof the mountainous Venedatia. Golyddan calls them Cychmttt Gwrtheyrn Gwyuedd, the boatmen of Vortigern of Gwynedd.
" The Prince"
be referred
to Eidiol.
his office
and
his action
title
mutt hf re
The sudden
j|
^J
See Section Si
Throughout the Gododin, this singular title implies Eidiol, or Ambroiiu*, as the priest and representative of Hti, Noe,, or Beli, of whom the buii was th,?. favourite ymb.ol.
**
352
but boldly did HIS weapon interpose between the two ranks. The pinnacle of renown is the radiant butt
in the court;
of battle.
Those who made the heavy stroke for the fair treasures, had their host turned aside with trailing shields those
shields,
BELL*
From
fence.f
the bloody To us, a
field,
grey-headed man arrives his chief counsellor with the picture of the prancing steed, bearing a sacred message from the chief with the golden chain
the boar,
course
How just
* This paragraph alludes to the battle of Maes Btli, near Caer Conan, in lorkshire, where Aiubrosius (Eidiol) routed Hengist and his Saxons, in the year 481, and put them to a disorderly flight. See Gibson's Camden, Col.
847 Warringlon, p. 63. As the Bard denominates the leader a bull of battle, so his forces were theherds of the roaring Beli. This last name, though conferred upon several princes, was properly a title of the Solar Divinity, whose sanctuary the Saxons had profaned. From this victory obtained by his votaries, the field of battle may have acquired the name of Maes Beli, \hefteld of Beli.
t That is, within the fortress of Caer Conan, which the Bard describes in a subsequent passage, as situated upon the high lands -of the Done. " The Done runs within view of Connisborow, an old castle, called in British, " Caer Conan, and situated the battle of a rock whither
upon
; Maisbelly, (at the Saxons, and put them to a disorderly to secure himself; and a few day flight) Hengist, their general, retired, after, took the field against the Britons, who pursued him, and with whom he engaged a second time, which proved fatal, both to himself and his army.
For the Britons cut off many of them, and taking him prisoner, beheaded him." Camden. Ibid. It appears by this paragraph of Aneurin, that previous to the last dasperate engagement, Hengist had sent to the British commander a flag of truce, bearing his own arms ; which consisted of a white prancing horse, vpon a red field. Yerstegan, p. 131*
353
Again, we are conjured by heaven, that he might be deceived in to protection.
" Let him enjoy the kindness which he displayed " "
stabbing assault
plot,
!
in lib
The
" mous
SONG
"
XVI.
<p.
7.
The Death of
Bard
at the Feast
the Resentment
and
FOR
the piercing of the skilful and most learned man ; which fell upon the sod ; for the cutting
;
of the eagle of Gwydien,-f- GwyddhwchJ turned his protecting spear the image of the master whom he adored,
A A
* Awyr, the sky, in this passage, and Wylr, which has the same import, in the -works of Taliesin, seems to imply a building, which, like Stonehenge, and other British temples, is open ta the sky. Thus Taliesin " holy sanctuary ' there is on the wide lake, a city not protected with walls, the sea surrounds
it. Demaudest thou, O Britain, to what this can be meetly applied Be Core lake of the son of Erbin, let thy ox be stationed there, where there has been a retinue, and in the second place, a procession, and an eagle aloft in the sky, and the path of Granwyn" (Apollo). Apptnd. No. 2. So again j he mentions the Druid of Wybr Geirwnydd, the (ethereal (temAppend. No. 12. ple) of Geirwnydd.
'
!
tfce
'
+ The same as Gtvydion, the Hermes of the Britons. J The wild boar
an epithet applied
to Eidiol.
354
Morien* defended the blessed sanctuary
the basis, and
chief place of distribution of the source of energy, of the most powerful, and the most ancient.^- She is transpierced !
Though BradvvenJ
she
fell
(the treacherous
GwenabAvy (the
the son of
Gwen
(the lady).
skilful,
With
energy, his
He who handles the way before the prince. wolf's neck, without a cudgel in his hand, will have a rent
iu his garment.
In the conflict of wrath and resentment, the treacherous lady perished she did not escape.
A title
as before.
f I mast leave
attributes.
by
their
her step-son
thence called,
the fair
Eidiol, who, though he seems to have been a much better Druid than Christian, herd the rank of bishop, in the apostate church of the- Britons*
355
SONG
XVII.
p. 7.
This Part of the Gododin is badly preserved. The various the Number of Lines; yet they are Readings exceed insufficient to
make out
the
Measure or
the Construction.
The
Passage
the Command. The following is the best Sense which can pick out of the Heap of Fragments,
THE
The ar-
a meek man
wandering
" Towards the city !" But there, was stationed, with his shouts, to keep aloof the
birds.
Syll of Fireun reports, in, addition, that from the circumstance of the Llwy (river?) the army was led round the
flood, so that, at the
officers did
not act
in concert.
When thou, toiler of panegyric, wast protecting the car of corn on the height, (if ravagers may be deemed worthy of credit) there was free access to Din Drei : there
was wealth
for
to fetch
it
there was
army
replies
The Bard
Felicity
is
356
Though
cares in
there be a hundred
men
in
one house
which
am
involved
SONG
"
XVIII.
BL1N."
p.
self
AM not violent nor querimonious I will not avenge myon the petulant; nor will I laugh in derision. This particle* shall drop under foot, where my limbs are inI
:
by the
iron chain,
which
Aneurin,
to
is
will
sing,
what
:
is
known
to
who
me
his
thoughts
and thus, a
* This contemptible
scoff.
as well as from the general tenor of the work, it isevident that the Goclodiu was not undertaken as one siugle poem, with a rethis passage,
+ From
SONG XIX.
"
p. 8.
In
Song, we found Aneurin amusing the tedious Nights of his Imprisonment, with the Composition of his Sonnets. But now he has, for some Time, been set at
the
large by a
Son of Llywarch.*
considerable Interval
must, therefore,
ceding Composition.
The Bard begins with a Tribute of Gratitude factor ; and then passes, with some Address,
of
the fatal Feast,
,
to his
Bene-
to the Subject
Warriors had fought, under Fortimer; but the Paragraph which contains this Catalogue is very imperfect,
British
and
the Sense
is collected,
TH E
*
f has a hero
acquired,
10 have been Llywarch '-/en, the celebrated Bard. presents itself. Llywarch is the reputed author of an Elegy upon the death of Cadwalloii, the son of Cacv.in, which happened about the year 646 and it is obvious, thai the son of a man who was living in the year 6-56, could not have liberated Aneurin, who had witnessed the r.iassacre of 472. I think it probable, that Aneurin's friend was the son of XJywttrch Htn; but that Llywarch, who is known to have Houritbed in the beginning of the sixth century, could not have been the author of the Elegy in question. The piece was anonymous but sonie eld copyist thinking it worth preserving, transcribed it into a book which contained some of Llywarch's genuine works hence it has passed under his name.
Generally supposed
difficulty
:
But here a
so
358
of gentle disposition
equalled.
a liberal Lord,
who
earth does not support, nor has mother borne, a warrior so illustrious, when clad in steel. By the force of his
Yet
Such
is
He
so-
of mead.
;
pons for war: but with his arm he would have supported his
guests.
But
for horses
hall
gore, and blood-stained armour, and the long knife J to thrust from the hand. And with speed were they distin-
guished into tribes, whilst the Lady and her paramour were stowing their parties, an armed man, and a man un-
armed, by turns.
*
||
had perpetrated
r
" Alluding to the Gorsedd," or solemn Bardic assembly, in which Hengist his atrocious deed.
patriotic distinction,
a Northern Briton, mentions his own countrymen with a though they had constituted only a part oi the devoted
assembly.
$ The
sear,
Rowena and
I
their corslets, and armed with the dagger; the Britons totally unarmed. " the contrivance of Hengist, they were placed with his train, alterBy " nctely, at the tables, under the pretence of confidence, and of a friendly " intercourse with each other." Warringtojit p. 59.
359
Thesa were not men who would stab and fly. They had been the generous defenders of every region at Llech
Leuca, at the stone of Titleu, at Leudvre, at Llech Levdirt
at Gardithf at Tithragon, at Tegvare, in front of at Ystre Annon, at the course of Gododin, and at
Gododin,
Ragno.*
Close by his hand, was that hand which had directed the splendour of battle, the branch of Caerwys, though he had been shattered by a tempestuous season a tempestuous
season,
alien host.
To form
it
a rank before the royal power, we were allured was to our ruin Deeply did they design sharply did
!
But the chief of the projecting shield f has had his van whose enemies tremble broken, before the bull of battle,
in sorrow, since the battle of active tumult at the border of
Ban Carw.$ Ban Carw, 'the freckled fingers had broken the sprigs, to know who should be overwhelmed, who should conquer LO know who should be routed, who
the border of
|j
Hound
should triumph.
* The scenes of Vortimer's battles, in which these heroes had distinguished themselves. The paragraph is greatly injured by time, and the present catais collected from the various logue readings, including those which are inserted in the text. W. Archaiol. p. 13.
f
$
Hengist.
Eidiol, or Ambrosius, as before.
it
$ Probably, the old name of Maes Beli r before designation, from the victory of the Britons.
||
is
Hengist, who is elsewhere called Dyvynawl Vrych, the freckled intruder, here represented as consulting his lots upon the event of the approaching
battle.
360
" The native
is
roused
the invader
is
subdued."*
In Rhiwdrech, f he who is not bold, will fail of hi* purVictory is not for him who dreads being overtaken. pose.
SONG XX.
"
MY MAT WANPWYT."
to
p. 8.
This
little
have passed
beticeeti
Rowena and a
ROWEtfA.
up6n the
side of the
pillars
not meetly did the mari of the grey stone dark was his spear. mount the lofty steed
BRITON.
It
cell,J|
was dark
but darker, by
far, is
This seems to be the name f " The cliff of superiority, or prevalence." which the Britons gave to the scene of Hengist's last fatal action, near the rock of Caer Conan, where he was taken and beheaded.
$ The names of Hengist and Horsa equally imply a hone. One of these commanders had been slain, and the other beaten ; it is,- therefore, uncertain which of them is here meant.
Eidiol, the priest of the great temple, who is represented as seated when he filled the office of Seneschal.
upon
his steed,
||
Yorrigera,
who was
confined
by Hengist
till
he
pur-;
phased
his liberty
his dominions.
361
/
UOWENA.
I
hope he enjoys
!
it
may he be
jaws
BEITON
(indignantly).
How happily did our Adonis come to his Venus! " Let the Lady of the sea (says he), let Bradwen only " come hither, and then (O Hengist !) thou mayest do
" thou mayest kill thou mayest burn " thou canst not do."*
;
thou beheader,-\ with the haughty countenance Thou, didst not attend to the great swelling sea Venedotian,
!
of knights, Saxons.
who would
* sarcastic repetition of the language supposed to have been addressed bj Vortigern to Hengist, when he sued for the hand of Rowena.
t Vortigern, the Venedotian. " Gwrtheyrn Gwynedd," who had ascended the throne, by causing his cousin Comtans to be beheaded in his bed ; and afterwards, by overruling the voice of the British council, had invited the Saxons into Britain to support his tottering cause, and to oppose the Picts, ybose resentment he had provoked, by imputing to the guards of that nation his own sacrilegious crime.
<
p. 8.
the Calamities of his Country, reflect* Circumstance of the fatal Banquet, which had upon deprived the Britons of their best Supporters.
GODODIN
beyond
the ridge of Drum Essyd, A servant,* greedy of wealth, but void of shame, by the counsel of his son,f sets thy heroes on high. Not mean was the place appointed for
conference, before the perpetual fire.^: From twilight to twilight, the sweet liquor is quaffed by the stranger, who glances at the purple.^ He kills the defenceless, hut melo-
dious minister
[j
his inseparable
companion
Aneurin.
At
In Cattraeth
noisy and impetuous mob to pay the reward of the mead in the court, and the beverage of wine. Between the
Hengist,
captain.
f Vortigenit who had married the daughter of Hengist, repeatedly stigmatises as the adviser of the plot.
J Or the
acred
fire.
fire
of Meithin.
We
have frequent
fate
is
so often deplored.
* Upon
general assault.
** Eidiul, who
363
defence of Gododin.
diant bull of battle.
The
pinnacle of renown
is
the ra-
At once arose the warriors of the associated King strangers The stranger their deed shall be proclaimed. with the gorgeous robe, rolls down our heroes in the place
to the land
in full
harmony.*
Amongst
the weapons of the freckled chief, *f thou couldst not have seen the rod. % With the base, the worthy can have no concord. The sea rovers cannot defend their outrageous
steel blades,
At once
King
stran-
In close
rank, with blades, there was slaughtering; and the carnage prevailed over the hero.
man
of
The experienced
their lives
warriors
who had
assembled, were
stroke.
all
unanimous
Short were
long is the grief of their friends. Seven times their number of Loegrians had they slain. From this the screams of their wives, and many a mother conflict arose
has the tear upon her cheek.
Hengist, as before.
The
Bard
in song 25,
it is
364
SONG
" NY
The Bard
sault
XXII.
p. 9.
WNAETHPWYD NEUADD."
Fame of
it,
celebrates the
and of
As-
of the Saxons.
NEVER
as
was a
formed so complete nor a lion so the presence of the lion of the greatest course,*
hall
The fame of
And
of
all
Most qualled in his conduct, is the brandisher of arms. heroic in energy, with the sharpest blade, he slew the raLike rushes they fell before his hand. son of vagers.
Clydnaw, of the lasting fame, to thee will of praise, without boundary, without end
!
sing a song
If
iii
the banquet of
mead and
wine, they
\\
sacrificed to
Cynon
is
J Victory "
||
This seems to be a
title
Ship-bearer"
The Saxons,
of spoliation, the energetic Eiino L* daughter the mother before the mount, in the presence of also honoured her
the god of victory, the King cends the sky.
who
rises in light,
and
as-
train
were accumulating,
like
Before the vigilant son of harmony they fled, upon the awaking of the mother of Rheiddin^- (the Radiant), leader of the din.
SONG
XXIII.
p.
On
of
the fatal
Banquet.
FROM
No
tale
of slaughter*have I
known, which records so complete a destruction, as that of the assembly, who had confidently met before Cattraeth.
* The This is the first interposing knight, to whom the Bard so often alludes. time that his name is introduced; but his character is easily distinguished by the identity of the action ascribed to him. t Apollo, or the sun by his mother, I think the Bard means Aurora, tkc 4avin: he frequently tells us, that the action took place at the dawn.
I
366
alone returned, of the retinue of most demountain chief.* One alone, out of three hunplorable dred, who had hastened to the feast of wine and mead
difficulty, prodigal of their lives, who had caroused together in the well-furnished banquet, jovially copiously regaling upon mead and wine.
One man
men renowned in
From
friends.
tended to us
and I have
lost
my
chief,
and
my
sincere
Of
who
hastened to Cat-
traeth, alas !
man
alone.
In the present insurrection, confident was the son of the stranger. Easy was he in his discourse, if he were not
jocular
unrestrained,
is left motionless upon the course, and the red-stained warrior mounts the steeds of the knight, who had been formi-
* Out of three hundred and told that three escaped ; sixty-three, we are elsewhere expressed, one man out of a hundred but from this passage it appears, that only one of these pertained to three hundred of the first rank,- which composed the more immediate retinue of Vortigern, or the mountain chief.
or, as it is
:
t Hengist had carefully disguised his sentiments, mature suspicion of his design.
lest
SONG XXIV.
a ANGOR DEOR DAEN."
p. 10.
An
Foe
Invocation to the Sun, in which the Destruction of the is predicted. The Praise of Eidiol and the British
Patriots,
who
retaliated
Some Account
of
producer of good, thou serpent the sullen ones, thou wilt trample upon those piercest are clad in strong mail, in the front of the army.
ANGOR, thou
who who
In behalf of thy supplicant wilt thou arise; thou wilt guard him from the spoiler thou wilt trample the spear:
men
in the day of battle, in the dank entrenchment, like the mangling dwarf,* whose fury prepared a banquet for birds in the tumultuous fight.
Just 'art thou named, from thy righteous deed, than, leader, director, and supporter of the course of battle.
It is an imperative duty, to sing the complete acquisition of the warriors who, round Cattraeth, made a tumultuous The authors of the bloody confusion were trampled rout.
under
feet.
Neddig Nat
Otherwise,
womb
of his mother.
Satwn, Noah.
The Welsh
niouks
have
to
368
liad
the-
interposers, after
related
be
in
though
it
excel
eloquence.
It
is
nown
an imperative duty, to sing the perfection of rethe tumult of fire, of thunder and of tempest the
exerted bravery of the knight,f who interposed, the red reaper, whose soul pants for war. The strenuous, but worthless
man
With
an
vessels.
his shield
upon
his as
extorted silver for his mead, has paid and Gwaednerth,^ son of the supreme king gold in return,^ has had his banquet of wine.
He who
It
is
illustrious patriots,
who,
roism) whose hand satisfied the hunger of the brown eagles, and provided food for the beasts of prey.
Of
those
who went
to Cattraetb,
chains,
* Kibno Kid the same as Pair Ceridwen the Caruhlron> or sacred- Vase of the British Ceres figuratively, the bardic lore.
r
beheaded Hengist
at
Caep
Conan.
$
The meaning
is,
that the Saxons paid dear for their outrage at the feastor
369
of the natives
;*
it is
was better than Cynon.-fIt is an imperative duty, to sing the complete associates, was not the cheerful ones of the ARK of the world.*.
Hu
CIRCLE of
the
:
world,
it
was
drank, only one dignified man returned from thence the the grandson president of the structure of the splendid one, of Enovant.
It
is
who came on
same who
an imperative duty, to sing the illustrious patriots, the message of the mountain chief, sovereign
the
selected the
in purple, those
who were
destined to be slaughtered.
In the festival of May,|| they celebrated the praise of the holy ones, in the presence of the purifying fire, which was
B B
*
"t
Eidiol or Apbrosius,
who had
The
J The Arkite mythology of this passage deserves the attention of the curious. Hu, the patriarch, great temple was the ark and the circle of the world. was the divinity, and Eidiol, his chosen priest Hu, at the same time, was
|1"IK? or the splendid one
such
is
and Sabian
superstition.
usurper.
for
is
in
conjunction with her paramour, Vortigern, disposed the ranks at the least.
|| Meiwyr, the May-men The meeting took place, at the solemn festival of the Britons, in the beginning of May. The fire here mentioned is well known to the Irish, by the name of Bealteinc. See the word in Shaw's Galic and Knglbk
Dictionary,
370
made
attire
to ascend
dark garments
on high. On the Tuesday, they wore their on the Wednesday, they purified their fair
on the Thursday, they truly performed their due rites (devbed) on the Friday, the victims were conducted round
the circle
on the Saturday, their united exertion was displayed without the circular dance (didwrn) on the Sunday, the men with red blades were conducted round the circle on
the
Monday, was
toil,
up
to the belt.*
of Gododin, upon his return before the tents of Madawc, reports but one man in a. hunAfter the
the
dred,
man
thence.
SONG XXV.
"
MOCHDWYREAWC YM MORE."
many
p. 10.
the Sanctity of the Bardic Temple, and of Eidiol's Address and Heroism, in defending it.
of
AT
early
morn
course.f
arose the tumult of the gate, before the but there was a heap, per;
* This passage describes some of the regular ceremonies 9f the meeting, which, upon the present occasion, unexpectedly closed, with a deplorable massacre.
t The feast was celebrated, and the outrage committed, upon the Cursus, at the distance of half a mile from the temple, and to which one of the avenues leads. Upon this avenue, or perhaps, in the very gate, or passage of the
vallum, which surrounds the structure, and which was probably fortified with a strong palisade; Eidiol kindled a fire to obstruct the irruption of the Saxons, who intended to plunder the temple.
371
Like a boar didst thou protect the mount, where was the treasure of the associated ones the place was
vaded with
fire.
Suddenly aroused, in a moment, after kindling the avenue, f before the boundary, and conducting his associates
in firm array
he thrusts forwards
It was horrid that ye (Saxons)J should make a flood " of gore in the same merriment, with which ye regaled " with mead. Was it brave in you to kill a defenceless^ " man, with the cruel and sudden stroke of a sword ? How " outrageous were it for an enemy to slay a man not equally
"
" armed But he (your chief) has descended, with a sud" den and promiscuous stroke. The skilful chief of song " was not to be outraged. To kill him, when he carried
!
" the branch, was a violation of privilege. It was a pri" mary law, that Owen should ascend the course that " this branch should the before the fierce
whisper
onset,
* These birds of prey seem to imply the Saxons, though the term used, to denote the British princes.
is
often
or outlet.
$ That is, the Bard, who, as we find, was named Owen. He carried the sacred branch, and chaunted the pacific songs of Llywy, the British Proserpine. That Owen was invested with the prerogative of a Druid, appears from the striking coincidence of this passage, with the testimony of Diodorus, respecting those ancient priests. Lib. V. C. 31. The passage is thus translated by Dr. Henry. " No sacred rite was ever performed without a Druid ; by -whom, as being the favourites of the gods, and depositaries of their counsels, the people ot' fered all their sacrifices, thanksgivings, and prayers ; and were perfectly submissive and obedient to their commands. Nay, so great was the veneration in which they were held, that when two hostile armies, inflamed with warlike rage, with swords drawn, and spears extended, were on the point af in battle; at their intervention, they sheathed their swords, and became engaging cairn and peaceful," Hist, of Great Britain, B. I. Chap, 2.
" "
effectual
songs of Llywy,*
his hand,
" Then
the songs, which claimed obedient attention the assuager of tumult and battle. would the sword retire to the left side ; the warrior,
corslet,
and the
precious reward."
placid Eidiol felt the heat of the splendid Grannawiyf (Apollo) when the maid (Llywy) was treated with outrage
The
even she
His
(Eidiol's)
fall,
%tand or
associates join the fray, determined to whilst he, their wasteful leader, conducts the
war
even he
who
whose energy
They sound
for steeds
over his temples, he binds the defensive band, and the image of death, scatters desolation in the conflict. In the
first onset,
upon the
spears.
Thus
fought the musical tribe,]; for the injury of thy cell, O Ked, and of the conclave where he resided, who merited the delicious,
potent mead.
the dawn,
With
to
* The British Proserpine, who was symbolized by the whom the mystic branch was sacred.
f Grannawr
Gwyn
Taliesiu calls
in
clergy of the
373
clash,
in his
Red,* thou ruler of the Loegrian tribes ; and resentment, he punishes the vexatious hirelingsf
fair
His renown
shall
be heard
SONG XXVL
"
GWAN ANHON
fiYD VEDD."
p. 11.
this
HE
assaults the
the same
infamous contriver of ruin, at the mead who grasped the violent spear of Gwy-
princely battle : fall, the superior band of Gododin provided his grave.
transgressed the laws of though he had kindled the land before his
who had
Involved in vapours,^ is he that was accustomed to armies. The sovereign, but bitter-handed commander of the
as
Ceridwen,
t Vortigern's castle, in North Wales, was burnt to the ground by Arabrosius, and the unfortunate king perished in the flames. tVarrington, p. til
374
forces,
talents,
feast, he was not harsh to his associates, who gant. might remove, and possess his valuable treasures; but in no respect was he a benefactor to his country.
SONG XXVII.
"
AN GELWIR!"
p. 11.
The Wars of the Britons and Saxons after the Massacre. The Bravery of Eidiol or Ambrosius, with some Particulars
of his Conduct at
the
Catastrophe.
WE
rished.
are called!
The
spears of those
whom we
Gashing
chethe
There
is
is
The Seaxes, in wild uproar, are descending on the Before the hostile band, flaming in steel, there is a pate. prosperous leader, even he who supported the steeds and the
sword.
bloody harness,* on the red-stained Cattraeth. The foremost shaft in the host is held by the consumer of towns, the
at the
supreme mount.-j-
To the bright glory of conflict, led on the hand of the meritorious, the iron-clad chief, the by
!
We are called
a red
r
Alluding probably to the arms of Hengist, namely, a prancing steed, upon field, which was displayed at the fatal banquet.
slain
or British
375
sovereign,
reign,
who
is
the sove-
who
Before Eidiol,^ the energetic, there is a flame; it will Men of approved worth has he sta-
command.
The
he
He
foe.
it
was,
When
vigorously descended upon the scattered the cry arose, he supported the main weight.
who
Of
the retinue of the mountain chief, none escaped but those defenceless ones, whom his arm protected.
By
shield
the
management of the sea rovers, there was not a amongst them.J They insisted upon a clear space to
He who
priest|| was leaning a priest's long staff, seated upon a grey steed, as goupon vernor of the feast. Beneath the blade,<Jf there was a dread-
ful
fall
of slaughter.
Nor from
* Eidiol or Arabrosius
+ The original has Eidyn, the living one; but the two next paragraphs clearly evince, that Eidioi is the person intended.
J Though shields were not offensive arms, yet their admission into the assembly, might have defeated the murderous purpose of Hengist a reason was therefore devised, why they should be excluded. It was pretended that their wide orbs would obstruct the light of the torches, during the nightly carousal. The Saxon corslets were not liable to the same objection.
:
$ Hengist.
||
Eidiol
but the introducing of the governor of the feast upon rite, whether considered as religious or military.
^T
was a whimsical
Of
**
Eidiol, as above.
376
the spearman, mounted upon the steed he who did the honours of the banquet of delicious, potent mead.
beheld a spectacle* from the high land of the Done, when they were descending with the sacrifice round the omen fire.
I
I
usual, in a
town
closely shut
up
and
dis-
pierced with agony. I saw men in complete order, approaching with a shout, and carrying the head of the freckled intruder. -\ May the ravens devour it!
orderly
men were
SONG
ft
XXVIII.
p.
MAT MUDIG."
12.
his
Death.
THE
by
light
aliens are
removed
the fortunate chief: his blue banners are displayed : whilst Gwrawl (Aurelius) is in the watery
region, with a mighty host. The magnanimous triumphs : disarmed is the feeble. It was his primary order, to make
a descent, before the ships of the royal force, with propulsive strokes, in the face of blood, and of the land.
I
will
at
377
harmony, thou president of the structure of the luminous speech. I could wish to splendid one, with the have fallen the first in Cattraeth, as the price of the mead
strains of
and wine
in the court
I could
wish
it
for
he should be slain disgraced the sword, rather than that it for the son of fame, with the pale potion.* I could wish
sustained the bloody fight, and made his sword descend upon the violent. Can a tale of valour be recorded before
who
Gododin, in which the son of Ceidiawf has not his fame, sis a warlike hero
!
SONG XXIX.
"
TRUAN YW GENNYF."
p. 12.
The Bard
from
the
Time of Fortimer,
,
to the
Century.
WITH
sorrow
our
toils,
we
suffer the
pang of death through indiscretion. And again, with pain and sorrow I observe, that our men are falling, from the highest to the lowest, breathing the lengthened sigh, and loaded with obloquy. (We are going) after those men who extended the fame of our land Rhuvawn and Gwgawn, Gwyn and
Gwylged,
men most
valiant,
physician.
* Atnbrosius was poisoned by Eppa, a Saxon, acting in the character of a Warriugton, p. 66.
the mystical parent of our hero, as an adept in the mys-
f The Preserver
teries of Bardisra.
378
in the hour of
toils
trial.
May
now
their
have ceased
!
a se-
cure dwelling
who, through a lake of gore, repelled the slavish chain* he who, like a hero, cut down those foes, who would not retreat to the clear expanse; even he, together
with the spear, brought forth the crystal cup with mead,
placed before the princes, he encouraged the army. greatness of his counsels a multitude cannot express.
He
The The
coward was not suffered to hesitate. Before the velocity of his great designs, together with the sharpened blades, he
took care to provide flags of message, the means of supporting his army, a supply of penetrating weapons, and a strong van-guard, with a menacing front.
In the day of strenuous exertion, in the gallant conflict, these displayed their valour but after the intoxication, in
;
yerance.f
was prosperous for a season for it will be recorded, that their impulse was broken, by men and steeds. But fixed was the decree of fate,
Our
president at the
festival;}:
when
I
that vexatious multitude with sorrow, they arrived recount their bands eleven complete battalions. Now
is
there
upon the
road.
* Vortimer, who, after a series of bloody battles, drove the Saxons out of
Britain.
t Eidiol or Ambrosius.
379
what I greatly loved the Celtic Dolefully do I deplore, And the men of Argoed,* how wofully did they glory to their own overwhelming, with the wretch,
!
associate,
who
when upon
was who had robbed us upon the and with the white and fresh hide.%
it
He
Thanet,^
Thou, O Geraint,[J didst raise a shout before the South on the shield didst thou strike a signal, to repair to the
:
white water.
chief of the spear, thou, gentle chief, didst render our youth attached to the glory of the sea even thou
didst render them,
Thou
Geraint, a generous
commander wast
thou
Instantaneously his fame reaches the harbours. At once, the anchors are weighed. Like liberated eagles were his alert warriors men, who with brilliant zeal would support
the battle, and scud with a velocity, outstripping the fleetest
The
feast, in
t Danad loyw Vortigern, upon Hengisl's Thanet for the place of his residence.
Warrington, with
p.
Hengist desired of Vortigern, a grant of as much British ground as he could compass about, with a bull's hide. Having obtained this moderate request, he cut a large bull's hide into small thongs, with which he compassed a considerable tract, where he founded a castle, called from that circumstance, Thong Castle. Camden (Col. 569) places it in Lincolnshire) but Verstegan, p. 133, says it stood near in Kent. Sydingborn
Geraint, son of Erbin, a prince of the Britons of Devon, and the. comBritish fleet, in the close of the fifth, and beginning of the sixth century.
||
mander of a
380
/
If the battle paused, the wine flowed from the capacious vessel. Before he reached the grassy tomb, or his locks became hoary with age, he was a hero, who hocoursers.
SONG XXX.
"
D1HENYDD
p. 13
&
14.
An
the Original
is ob*>
HE
like a
who brought
man
his shield.
in
At
man
of those
who
are buried,
society.
it
With
and
But he who had afflicted great and courageous men, and with his sword, had severely slaughtered in the fight, receives a woful warning of conflict, from him who had prepared a hundred songs for the
festival, f
By
he was as-
* In North Wales, whither Vortigern withdrew, after the massacre, covered with confusion and reproac/i. Warrington, p. 60.
+'
Geoffry of
Monmouth
by
the Bard,
Merddin Emrys*
381
saulted
boars,
who were
of the same
parentage as a sovereign prince, and a holy maid. And though the lord of Gwynedd was a dignified sovereign, and
the blood (relation) of Cilydd, our deliverer;* yet before the turf was laid upon the face of the magnanimous, but
falling prince,
he was wisely assailed with battle, and divested of fame and privilege.
is
SONG XXXI.
tf
PEIS DINOGAT."
sarcastic
Elegy upon the Death of Hengist, addressed to when he was taken at York, whither he had
THE
stripes
garment of Tinogad
is
variegated with
grey
I will ridicule
*
*
The
wilds of Carnarvonshire.
" Br ch out of battle," an $ epithet of reproach, addressed who had deserted his father in pxtremity, and fled into York.
to Octa,
382
that lampooner, the captive Octa,* with his juggling whit
When
his shoulder, and his provisions in his hand, he would call his dogs so majestically " Gif, gaf ; thaly, thaly ; thuc,
"
thuc." J
Then would he
kill
fish in
a brook, as a lion
kills
calf.
thy father ascended the mountain, he brought back the head of a roebuck, of a wild boar, of a stag, of a
grey moor hen from the the Derwent.
hill,
When
falls
of
As many
of wild boars, that had been just dropped and licked it was certain death to them all, unless they proved too
nimble.
Were
dable.
he to come upon me, and unawares, no foe that I I shall encounter, would be more forminursed,
1
who
could be more
or
more wary
in battle.
On
* The author
tage,
t
it
calls
the meaning
is,
A
]|
curious anti-climax.
feast.
383
distance would he seek his fame, closely girt in his armour ; but before the long-haired chief was covered with the
sod, he, the son of the sea-horse, poured out the horns of
mead.*
saw the scene from the high land of the Done,f when they were carrying the sacrifice round the omen fire I saw
I
two,J
who
fell
away from
their station
I saw warriors, disorderly men, who were greatly thwarted who had made the great breach, approaching with a shout,
may
the ravens
The remainder of
readings,
of various
by
had been
collected
The death
J A sarcasm upon Octa and Esca, who retired from the field, and shut themselves up in the city of York, where they were forced to surrender.
384
my
have now, with considerable labour, and, to the best of abilities, with accuracy and fidelity, translated and
explained the Gododin of Aneurin, that the reader, having the whole work under his eye, may draw his own conclusion from
it
:
and
this, if I
conviction, that the great catastrophe which the Bard deplores, was no other than that historical event, the mas-
of the British nobles by the Saxon king, in the neighbourhood of Stonehenge ; and consequently, that the
sacre
From hence
it
must
have
been erected, as fable has sometimes reported, in commemoration of the massacre; but that, on the contrary, it was a monument of venerable antiquity in the days of Hengist;
and that
its
of that spot for the place of conference between the British and Saxon princes. It is equally clear, that the sacred building did not receive its name, Ga'aith Emrys, from
*
:
* Yet I think it probable, that the real founder of this temple may have had the name of Emnjs, which was a title of the Helio-arkite god, and hence conferred upon his priest, under whose direction the buildmc was completed. Aneurin seems to ascribe its construction to Moritn, Janus Marimis, which was also a name of the same god, and of his priest. The mythological Triads describe Morien the Full-bearded as a foreigner, who was vested with the sovereignty of Jhitain. W. Archaiol, V. II. p. 61.
It is the general tradition of the Britons, that the Hdio-arkitc superstition was of foreign growth, and that it came to them by ihe way of Cornwall, and And it may therefore probably from the tin merchants. See the 5tfc section. be reasonably interred, that the building of those temples, which are constructed upon astronomical principles, was not prior to The introduction of that superstition, whatever may have been its date.
S85
but that, on the other hand, it communicated to him its own name, as he was the president and defender of the
Ambrosial stones.
That
superstition, fully evident, from the language in which it was described, and the great veneration in which it was
held by the primitive Bards, those immediate descendants, and avowed disciples of the British Druids.
As
litan
temple of our heathen ancestors, so complex in its plan, and constructed upon such a multitude of astronomical calculations, we find it was not exclusively dedicated to
the sun, the moon, Saturn, or any other individual object of superstition; but it was a kind of pantheon, in which all the Arkite and Sabian divinities, of British theology, weije supposed to have been present for here we perceive Noe
:
and Hu, the deified patriarch; Elphin and Rheiddin, the sun; Eseye, Isis; Ked, Ceres, with the cell of her sacred
fire; tory,
Gwydien,
Hermes;
Budd,
vic-
We
is still
banquet, took place upon the Ystre, discernible, at the distance of half
a mile North from the temple. Here, we are told, some temporary buildings of ruddy heten timber were erected,
for the
easy to account for the choice of this spot, in an of that gross superstition, which overspread our counage The Celtic of Gaul and Britain, try in the fifth century.
It is
c c
386
during their pagan
state, were, for the
it
by
their priests,
whose custom
upon the
tuaries.
And
as this particular
had been esteemed pre-eminently sacred before the coming of the Romans, and whilst the Britons were an independent
nation, so, at the departure of those foreigners,
its
it
had
re-
ancient reputation amongst a people, who coverered were still pertinaciously attached to their national usages and superstitions. And May was the season appointed for
it
To most
when
then
readers
it
must appear
singular, that in an
age
Britain was nominally Christian, the Bards should with veneration of a heathen temple, in which heaspeak
rites
were
still
celebrated
is
re-
corded against them in their own compositions. It may, indeed, be urged as an excuse for our present author, that
he describes the ancient, rather than the actual solemnities of the place; and that during the great Bardic festival, some ancient rites may have been admitted, which were
not, at that time, in general establishment: but I
do not
mean
to
be his apologist.
it
called himself,
is
Whatever Aneurin might have evident, from the warmth of his lan-
guage, when speaking of those mystical characters, //, Ked, Llytzy, and the rest, that they were objects of venethey were to the "body of the British nation, whose profession of Christiaration to
him
and
so, I
am persuaded,
it
387
appears from their own works, were determined bigots to the ancient superstition. Many of the populace of this
age were also disciples of Pelagius, whose great aim it was to blend the heterogeneous tissue of Druidism with a few
so
Could a people, who had profited shreds of Christianity. little by the of the gospel, complain of the act of light Providence, in depriving them of their dominion and their
country ?
in this
did antiquary, that the larger British monuments, consisting of rude stone pillars, disposed into circles, whether of
twelve, nineteen, thirty, or
more
stones,
cred to some divinity, or to all the divinities of the heathen Britons. I shall now proceed to make a few observations
stition.
stones, pitched end, triangular form." Such appendages, either within or near to the sacred circles, often occur; and they have been generally regarded as consti-
In the account of the temple of the Gyvylchi, we are " Not far from it there are three other told, that large " on in a
tuting the
cell
or
Adytum of
their
respective
temples.
Thus, at Abury, in the Northermost circle, is a cell or Kebla, formed of three stones, placed with an obtuse angle c c 2
388
/
That the
"
cell
cell
norary jire" did exist at Stonehenge, is tance ascertained by Aneurin's Gododin ; and
probable, that the
highly
in other temples,
where Ceres presided, either alone, or in conjunction with other divinities: yet I have considerable doubts, whether
the
monuments of
I
this
kind,
which
have seen, or of
which
have read the description, did constitute the cells in question. I rather suspect, that these stones were either
the very images of the gods, to whom the temples were dedicated, or that they were esteemed peculiarly sacred to
them, and viewed as emblems of their presence. Thus the three large stones before the temple of the Gyvylchi, may
have represented the three great objects of superstition, Hu, Ked, or Ceridwen, and Llywy or Creincy, or Bacchus, Ceres, and Proserpine, whose history and rites were closely
connected in British mythology.
No
images pertaining to our pagan progenitors, carved human shape, or that of any animal, have
been discovered and ascertained, unless the figures pourtrayed upon the British coins should be thought to deserve
the
it is
were, at
had preserved the usage of the earliest ages, in the form and rude materials of their open temples, why may they not have observed the same rule with regard
the* Britons
As
p. 138.
389
'
to images? And we have good authority to assert, that " In ancient times, they had no images in their temples ; " but in lieu of used conical called
them, they
stones,
was often
Mr. Bryant
stone
pillar,
Ab-adir was a
ru^?, or
One
:
of
it
was deemed very sacred, and used to have libations of wing poured upon it daily and upon festivals, it was otherwise
;
honoured.-j-
" Near the Again we are told, that temple of Eleusinian " in Arcadia, were two vast stones, called PeDamater, " troma, one of which w^s erect, and the other was laid " and inserted into the former. There was a hollow
over,
"
place in the upper stone, with a lid to it. In this, among things, was kept a kind of mask, which was thought
represent the countenance of Damater, to
sacred. "J
whom
these
These passages are adduced, in order to shew, that nei ther the form nor the situation of those rude isolated stones,
which are attached
to our British temples, is irreconcileable
divinities,
which
Bryant's Analysis, V.
I. p.
49,
t Ibid. p. 476.
Ibid..
V.
II. p. 203.
390
on
ed
Leaving this hint to the consideration of the antiquary, I g to inquire for another^ ind of apparatus, .which was deemessen/tial to
In the
that Bard's
tale
treated at large in the preceding section, and in some of poems upon the same subject, we are told that
Ceridwen, transforming herself into a bird, swallowed the noviciate, who had taken the form of a grain of pure
wheat; that she continued for some time pregnant of him, and that, at the expiration of that period, he was born
again.
a dark allegory; but we shall find others upon the same opic, of easier solution.
This
is
In another passage which I have quoted, the Bard represents himself as a grain of the Arkites, which had vegetated upon the mount, and produced an ear of corn; in tUis state, the reaper placed in a dose, smoky recess, in order
to ripen.
In a third passage, the Bard plainly tells us, that he had endured a close confinement in the hall of Ceridwen, where
he was subjected to penance, and modelled into the form af a perfect man. This is also the representation which Hy w el,
the son of
affair.
presumed, that this confinement in the zcomb of Ceridwen, in the hall of that goddess, and in the smoky recess, implies one and the same thing and those
it
Now
may be
fairly
representations clearly allude to the inclosure of the noviciate, either for mortification, and trial of his fortitude, or
for appropriate instruction in
some private
celt,
which was
deemed
whom
the
Something of
this kind, I
it
was
Greek
have some reason to think, that the British cells appropriated to this use, are to be recognized amongst those
I
monuments, which are known by the general name of Cromlech. These consist of a certain number of stones,
pitched in the ground, so as to form a cell, which over with a flat stone of enormous dimensions.
seen, that there are several
circle
is
covered
We have
of the
Gy
vylchi, in
found either
similar
in the
Snowdon
monuments.
date of these erections being very remote, and their use entirely forgotten, it is not improbable, that being
The
misled by certain resemblances, which present themselves to superficial observation, we confound two or three kinds
of monuments which are really distinct, and which were, erected for different purposes ; and that in consequence of
when we have discovered the use of one Cromlech, we make erroneous conclusions respecting others.
this
mistake,
I shall
In the Cromlech, some antiquaries see nothing but the bloody altars of the Druids, smoking with human victims.
392
To
this
opinion,
their
it
many
of them
seem, by gibbous form, and slanting position, to be very ill-contrived for the purpose of altars, and that they
fire,
side.
Others pronounce them altogether sepulchral, and support their opinion, with the evidence of bones and urns,
which have been found under some few of them; but it may be objected, that several Cromlechs which have been ex^ amined, shew no vestige of sepulture, and others seem to
have been badly calculated for the purpose, as standing
upon unbroken
If
it
rocks.
be urged, that because some of them are found to be sepulchres, they must all be regarded as of the sepulchral
form;
this
argument
will
In the British mysteries, the noviciate passed the river of death, in the boat of Garan hir, the Charon of antiquity
:
to this privilege, it
was
re-
he should have been mystically buried, as well as And thus much seems to be implied in the dead. mystically ancient Greek formulary 'two wra.ro* 'vxiovov "I covered
myself, or was covered in the bed."
Owen, whose
is
vulgar
name
for
Maen
Llog, or Maen,
Gorsedd; the stone of covenant, or altar of the Bards; which was placed within the Cylch Cyngrair, or circle offederation : and on which were performed various ceremonies belonging
to Bardism.*
'
* See
W.
393
Crair Gorsedd,
literally
Maen
same
implies the token or pledge of the Llog, the stone of the ark or chest.
as Aneurin's Llogell
therefore, the
Byd, ark of
the zvorld, in
The way
priest of Hu had been inclosed. of these terms to the Cromlech, goes a great application towards establishing my opinion for as a due initia-
which the
was the
last requisite
;
towards
so this
of
the ark
was employed
in the celebration
of those
mysteries.
called Cromlechs,
were
actually resorted to in celebrating the rites of Ceres, and that the'stone arks, or chests which they covered, constituted
or hall of the goddess, in which the aspirants were inclosed, will appear from the following observations.
the
womb
Ceridwen, or Ceres, was the genius of the ark ; and that ark had its representative in the temple, or sanctuary of the
goddess.
of
Gwgawn Lawgadarn, the severe one, with the mighty hand, who rolled the stone of Maen-Arch, the stone ark, from
the valley to the top of the hill, though it was so large, that not less than sixty oxen could have moved it. a mere personification of the Druidical or of the ministers which they employed : and the Hierarchy,
stone,
is not to be understood as implying but as a general appurtinent to a kind of monument known by that name ; and as a memorial of
This
Gwgawn was
one individual
its
If
we
hills for
monumental
394
stones,
which answer
only in the
this description, we shall find them enormous Cromlech, the covering stone of the
name
precisely synony-
these
altars, or mere sepulchres, is evident from their very form. For instance,, the monument in Gower, called Arthur's
"
They
upon a
is
jutting, at
hill in
is
"
the North-west of
Kevn Bryn,
stone,
There
unwrought
weight, supported by " not above four feet high and these are set in a circle, " some on end, and some edgewise, or sidelong, to bear ft the great one up. The great one is much diminished of " what it has been in as five or
;
six
bulk,
it,
having
tuns,
:
more,
*'
by
to
make
mill-stones
so that I
"
"
guess, the stone originally to have been, between twenty* The common people call five and thirty tuns in weight.
"
under it is a well, which, as the neighit Arthurs stone " hours tell me, has a flux and reflux with the sea."*
Here we
find the
cell
sacred fountain.
The
as-
cribing of this, and similar monuments, to Arthur, is not, as our author supposes, a vulgar conceit, respecting the hero
of that name,
who
have distriads,
395
and
in the
inclosed in the ark; to the traditional patriarch, who was fountain under this Maenarch, or history of which, the seems to have had an allusion for we are told stone-ark,
:
remains of a similar
in
Llanvareth,
in
inclosing a fair spring, called Fynawn Einion, or the well of the just one : and I learn from Mr. Maurice, that fountains often occurred in the sacred cells of antiquity,
which
were appropriated
Let us hear the description of another Cromlech, which appears as an appendage to an ancient temple.
in this
" "
"
monuments as that described in Carmarthenshire, by the name of Meineu Gz&ur; and Kevn " But the most remarkable Llechart, in Glamorganshire.
circular
stone
Y Gromlech in Nevern* parish, is that which is called u where are several rude stones pitched on end, in a circular order
*'
and in the midst of the circle, a vast rude stone, ; on several pillars. The diameter of the &ra is "^placed " about The stone, supported in the midst of fifty feet. " this is feet and nine in
circle,
eighteen
long,
breadth;
" and at the one end, it is about three " thinner at the other. There lies also by
tl
feet
it,
thick, but
a piece bro-
about ten feet in length, and five in breadth, " which seems more than twenty oxen could draw. It is
ken
off,
"
"
supported by three large rude pillars, about eight feet high ; but there are also five others, which are of no
* Nev^ern, pledge
of heaven.
396
" use at present, as not being high enough, or duly placed, " to bear any weight of the top stone. Under this stone " the ground is neatly flagged, considering the rudeness of " monuments of this kind."*
This Cromlech, covering a rude, but magnificent cell, with a paved floor, and placed in the midst of the sacred
circle,
Many
like.
of these monuments,
it
and the
But
is
Arthur
connected with the mysteries of Ceridwen, and in Llan Beudyf parish, in Carmarthenshire, we find a monument
It is
called
Bardd
Gwal y
This
is
by four
pillars,
which
Not
to insist
upon the
dogs,
which were always exhibited and Ceres, and the title of dogs,
it
must be
re-
t Ox-house.
Gibson's Caradcn, Col, 752.
397
mentioned,
towards the
we
and
In
this
monument,
therefore,
we have a commemoration
of the Diluvian patriarch, under the mythological name of Arthur; and of the genius of the ark, under her assumed
character of a greyhound bitch.
And
is
lest it
purely accidental, it must be observed, that more than one spot preserves the memory of the mystical bitch.
There
monument of the same kind, and distinguished same name of Gwal y Vilast, in Glamorganshire,
is
called Llech
stone
of the
bitch,
in Cardiganshire.*
And
of
as
this
be suspected, that some of the connections mystical lady, had assumed a correspondent form ;
it
may
we find Ffynawn Maen Milgi, the spring of the greyhound's stone, a remarkably large stream, issuing out of the
side of
Berwyn mountain,
in Merionethshire
and a circular area, inclosed with rude pillars, &c. so that it appears to have been a work of the very same kind, as the temple of Ceres and Proserpine, in the
Gy vylchi.
Cerid wen, the British Ceres, was also represented under the character of the Giantess. Taliesin, giving an account of
t Carab. Regirter, V*
X.
p. 298-
398
his
initiation,
styles
her
Hen Widdon
dark-smiling Giantess.
Under
"
monument
"
Being an exceeding vast stone, on four other very large pillars or supporters, placed " about the height of five or six feet. Besides which four, " there are two others on under the
pitched
end,
top stone,
There are
two large
"
ones, and behind them a lesser, lying on the ground, at " each end of this monument. This Llech y Gowres stands " on such a small bank, or rising, in a plain open field, as " the five called near the circular
stones,
monument,
" Rolrich
stones, in Oxfordshire."*
Near this Llech y Gowres are several monuments, which have an evident relation to the same subject; as Meini
liirion,
retaining the
name and
Gwyddog, the high stone of the Mystagogue ; unless it be a corruption of Gwydion, Hermes, or Gwyddon, the Giantess:
this
is
pillar,
feet broad,
Not
far
from
it
is
Maen y
Prenvol, the
stone of the wooden ark, or chest ; this must have been the
memorial, or the repository of an ark of zcood: and Gwely Taliesin, the bed or, nro? of Taliesin, which is also a kind
of stone
chest.
"
I take this,
and
all
my
Gibson's
Camden,
Col. 773.
399
" "
author) to be old heathen ^monuments, and arn far from
believing that Taliesin was interred there."*
And if we allow the probable conjecture, that they are heathen monuments, there is every reason to pronounce them Druidical, and to infer, that they were constructed
for that purpose,
and
their very
names
Had
would surely
have preserved some memorial of the occasion of their construction. Instead of this, we generally find some circumstance, either in their
of the
hill
of judicature.
,*f-
So again
it
there
is
monuments which
chests,
entitle
covered
.with their ponderous slabs, or Cromlechs; and these chests, are traditionally reported to have served the purpose of
prisons.;};
my
hint,
and
400
Kistvaen,
which
the
is
becomes the cell, most considerable object of remark. And though I do not deny, that some monuments of similar form, have served
the purpose of sepulchres yet, I am persuaded, that they were in general, the Maenarchs, or stone arks of the Triads, and those in which the British Ceres, and Proserpine, con
;
fined
and humbled
their votaries.
be objected, that at present, we seldom find these close and secure, for the purpose of conit must be recollected, that time and accident finement;
If
it
cells sufficiently
have injured them that in the age of superstition, it is probable they were surrounded with a fence of wood, or some
;
which have long since disappeared ; and that the confinement itself, is not supposed to have been absolutely involuntary. It was a trial of fortitude,
perishing
materials,
which report the larger works of thiskind to have been sepulchral, will, if closely examined, favour that idea of their application, which I have suggested. Thus, " We have a Cromlech in this that the
traditions
tradition,
Even the
largest
"
county (Anglesea) is the monument of Bronwen, daugh" ter of King Llyr, or Leirus, who, you know, is said to " his reign, Anno Mundi 3105."* begin
I shall notftake the trouble to
examine the
tera
of thi*
Anno Mundi
sovereign,
who,
as such,
was unknown in
Gibion's
Camden,
Col. 81O,
The
tale
of Llyr,
whom
was, originally, mythological ; and the daughter Cordelia of Shakespeare, was Creirddylad, Gzvyn ab Nudd, the British Pluto, claims as his
the
mistress.*
the tradition
great
this
Anglesea
that
it
Cromlech,
amounts
cell,
to
constituted a
sacred to Proserpine.
same Bronwen, the daughter of Llyr, like Creirwy, the daughter of Ceridwen, had a brother, named Bran, the raven, who had the disposal of the mystical
I find that the
cauldron.^
and
This history, therefore, hrings us home to the sanctuary, to the mystical rites of Ceridwen and her family. The
the daughter of Llyr, the sea, the mistress of Pluto, and sister of the raven, was no other than Creirwy, the daughter
whom
peculiarly sacred.
The Cromlech
is
by another
name, synonymous with Maenarch, and referable to the ark. history of Ceridwen, considered as the genius of the
The name
mean
is
Maen
Ketti.
D D
*
t
Archaiol. p. 166.
$ See
p,
283.
402
We are told,
semblies.*
island
of Britain were, lifting the stone of KETTI ; building the work of EMRYS ; and piling up the mount of the as-
known by
Ambres,
in
Cornwall
Dinas Emrys,
in
Snowdon ; and
other Petrai Ambrosial ; and in Silbury-hill, we may contemplate the mount of the assemblies: but what third kind
of British
monument
,
is
there,
Ketti
is
an ark or chest; for we still retain its diminutive form, Keten, to denote a small chest, or cabinet.
I have had frequent occasion to remark, that Ceridwen, the Arkite goddess, is distinguished by the name of Red. Aneurin, in his Gododin, repeatedly calls her by this name,
as
wen, the cauldron of Ceridwen, or sacred vase of Ceres. Now, those who are at all conversant in Cambro-British
must be aware, that Ked and Ket are precisely the same word, it being usual in our old orthography, to write the final t, where at present we use the d. Thus we have
writing,
bot,
bod;
is
rule
and a hundred more; for the general, and almost without exception.
cat,
cad;
tat, tad;
the things which were produced out of the ark, or the word Ked figuratively implies a benefit, aid, rechest,
From
W.
403
lief;
wherefore
Maen
power, or the stone of beneficence: and it could have been no other than the ponderous covering of that cell which represented the ark, and which was eminently dedicated to
the beneficent Ceres.*
re-
name of Arthur, the mythological representative of Noah, and the husband of Gwenhwyvar, the lady on the summit of the water ; that is, the ark, or its substitute that
tain the
the same
monuments
are distinguished
which imply an ark, or chest various names and characters of Ceridwen, the genius of the ark, whilst one of them, in particular, is distinguished
Taliesin
and their
local situation
that they are reported to have and that the mysteries of Ceridwen
and her daughter, were celebrated in the circle of the Gyvylchi, to which the Cromlech and its Kist Vaen are
attached.
And from
generally had a
these premises I infer, that such monuments relation to that ceremony, which is mysti-
womb
of Ceridwen, whence he was born again, and thus became her mystical child. For this confinement of the aspirant,
which preceded
his
D D 2
* I find
this
goddess described by several derivatives of Ked or Ket, as qually imply the Arkite nud the beneficent.
cell,
to that goddess.
cell in
And
Taliesin has
Llan or
which he was
inclosed,
was
Vch
llawr,
Of
cells,
we may
the ceremony of imprisoning the noviciates in such find some farther hints in the mythological
Triads.
" The three pre-eminent prisoners of the island " of Britain, were Ltyr Llediaith, in the prison of Euros" wydd the sovereign, Madawc, the son of Medron, and " Gwair, the son of Gdrunvn. And one was pre-eminent tl over the three, namely, Arthur, who was imprisoned " three in the inclosure of Oeth and and
Thus
nights
Anoeth,
" three Anights with the lady of Pendragon, and three " nights in the prison of Kud, under the flat stone of " Echemeint : and one youth released him from the three " the son of his neprisons,
namely, Goreu,
Cystenin,
"
phew."*
account was apparently extracted from some ancient mythological tale, relating to the deluge, and
this
The whole of
to certain mysteries
it.
in
memorial of
The
is,
first
Our
/
century,
a grandfather of this
W.
Tri. 50.
"Set of mystery."
405
also furnished this grandfather with a long of progenitors so that, we have L,lyr Llediaith, ab Paror, ab Cert hir Llyngicyu, ab Ceidog, ab Artlt, ab Meirion, ab Eranit, ab Eidol.*
series
:
But
and some old tales, which were purely mythological ; as it has been very usual, since the days of Geoffry of Monin'outh, to mistake British mythology for history; and as
the interpretation of proper names generally furnishes the best key to Bardic (enigmas, it may not be amiss to try the series now before us by this rule.
Here, then, we are presented with the mysterious reprehim who remained, the son
of the lofty seed of the white lake (reputed the first navigator amongst the ancestors of the Cymry), the son of the
preserver, the son of the bear (Arth,
from Arcto,
vessel,
to
con-
fine), the son of the guardian, the son of the of the living one.
the son
the real ordinary reader, this does not sound like of an ancient British prince; it is rather a series of pedigree mystical terms, relating to the history of the deluge.
To an
Even if we suppose that these mythological titles were conferred upon the ancestors of Caractacus, it is nothing more than an early instance of a custom, which is known
to have prevailed in the fifth,
century,
when the
Britons,
delivered
V. Lfyr.
406
And
the confinement of Llyr, in the prison of Eur~ the splendid destroyer, seems to allude to his inioswydd, tiation into certain mysteries, rather than to his detention
still,
at
Rome,
is
sometimes styled
the son of Mellt, lightning, is said, in another Triad, to have been amongst" the Gwyddelian Picts ; and the legend,
probably, alludes to some similar mysteries, which were celebrated in the North of Britain, when the Romans were
easily
com-
Annun*
the deluge,
which begins
thus
"
will
!
tvortd,
adore the sovereign, the supreme ruler of the If he extended his dominion over the shores of the yet in good order was the prison of Gftair, in
Sidi. Through the mission of Pwyll and Pryderi " (reason and forethought), no one before him entered " into it. The heavy, blue chain didst thou, O just man! " of the woful is and for the
" Caer
endure;
spoils
shall it
"
of Prydzccn did rue enter excepting seven, ?wne have returned from
fullness
" Caer
This
Sidi."
is
first
Appendix, No.
3.
407
who
his
when
power over the shores of the world, could have been no other than the patriarch himself.
Gvvair
is
of Gwestyl, the great tempest : and in another place, as the are told, that son of Geiriawn, the word of justice.
We
personage and his family were confined in the prison of Oeth and Anoeth, from which none of his posterity ever attempted to escape.* Hence it appears, that the prison of
this
is,
in a
primary sense, the ark itself, and in a secondary acceptation, the Arkite temple.
Oeth and Anoeth seem to be nothing more than the antiquated orthography of Wyth and Amvyth, wrath, and the
remission of wrath
of the deluge.
that
is,
Stonehenge.
corein mirein Anoeth.
Myvir
fair circle
of Anoeth."
And
synonymous
Yn Yn
*
W.
Archaiol. p. 35. The lines seem to have been transposed copyist, who did nut understand them.
+ W.
by some
408
" In the deep which is void of wrath j " In the deep where extreme indignation dwells.'*
perpetual imprisonment of Gwair and his posterity in this inclosure, can only mean, that the patriarch and his
The
family were once shut up in the ark, and that the Druids acknowledged none as his legitimate descendants, but those
and who perwithin the pale, or strictly adhered to the laws petually kept
who were
of their institution.
Hence we
first
confinement in the
prison of Oe'th and Anoeth, was the same with that of \vair; or, in other words, that the Arthur of mythology
is
And
only another representative of the polyonymous patriarch. this idea is confirmed by the same poem of Taliesin
spoils
upon the
of the deep, where we find Arthur presiding in the sacred ship. " When we went with Arthur in his
"
splendid labours,
Magna
Arthur's third imprisonment in the cell of Kud, or Kyd, under the fat stone of Echemaint, evidently alludes to the
British mysteries, which
tory.
his-
And
409
finement, must have been of that kind, which we still dis" Flat cover under enormous stones," in various parts of
Britain.
As to the name of Kyd, the proprietor of this prison, I have already remarked, that it is an appellation of the Ar" Let truth be ascribed kite goddess, and of the ark itself. " to Menwyd, the dragon^ chief of the world, who formed " the curvatures of Kyd, which passed the dale of grievous
" "
water, having the fore-part stored with corn, and with the connected serpents."* alo/t,
mounted
I also observe, that in an old Christian poem, which goes under the name of Taliesin, the^sA which swallowed Jonas
is
called
Kyd.
"
Who brought
This is only the Greek Kvro?, which Mr. Bryant pronounces to have been an emblem of the ark.J Whether our ancestors viewed their Kyd under this emblem or not, I
will
not pretend to decide ; but I observe that, in one old copy on vellum, the cell under the flat stone is simply called
is
+ W.
*
Analysis,
V.
II. p.
410
not understand : in another copy,
it is
called
Lltck a
Chymmraint, the fiat stone of social privilege : and this seems to describe an instrument of initiation, which admitted the aspirant to the privileges of the regenerate society.
But
Under whatjlat
stones could
the Arkite goddess ha\e confined her votaries, in order to confer these privileges upon them, unless it were those which are attached to her sanctuaries, which cover receptacles proper for the purpose,
stone
and which, in their local designations, retain the name of Arthur and Ceridwen, and the memorial of Arkite
arks,
mysteries
Arthur
is
said to
three prisons by Goreu, Best, the son of Cystenin, which is the British name of Constantine ; but no son of that prince
could have released the patriarch from the prototype of the mystic cell. may therefore suppose, that the compiler
We
of the
tale plays
that
we
ought
411
SECTION
V.
and Sup-
might be expected to attract the notice of the public. It would certainly be curious to trace the changes, whether improvements or corruptions, which took
place in the religion of our early progenitors, and to have an opportunity of discriminating between those rites and
superstitions,
which they
originally
Britain,
in the course
own
But
an investigation, we want an
authentic historical document, enlighted by accurate chronology, and divested of allegorical obscurity. Upon this
subject,
no such aid
is
to be found.
The
religion of the
in the dark.
grew up
All that
a mass of mythological notices, which were certainly written in ages, when Druidism was
left
is
we have
in high esteem,
the
genuine
those
these
and had many votaries and from those, and tradition of the Britons, duropinion
:
ing
ages,
may be
in
some measure
collected.
From
amigmatical
tablets, I shall
attempt to make
a few slight sketches, with the hope of gratifying the curious, and affording some little light to the antiquary ;
my
In the
first
place,
it
may be
inferred
the evidence already produced, that the primitive religion of the Cymry (long before the age of the oldest. Bard who is
now
extant,)
religion,
In the tradition of
account of a
vessel,
local
I have noticed their genitors sprung after a general deluge claim to the universal patriarch of all nations; I exclusive
have observed, that their superstition strongly verged from all points, towards the history of the deluge, and towards
that system of theology, which Mr. Brj'ant denominates Arkite: I have shewn that they worshipped the patriarch,
though they had not forgotten, that he was a and pious man and I think I have proved, that the just Ceridwen of the Druids was as much the genius of the ark,
as a deity,
:
If the Bards exhibit, together with this Arkite superstition, that mixture of Sabian idolatry, or worship of the host of heaven, which the second volume of the Analysis
traces, as
blended with the same mythology, over great ; yet we observe, that the Solar
always represented as the third, or youngest of the great objects of adoration hence it may be inferred, that the worship of the patriarch, in conjunction with the
:
and funda-
413
opinion was inculcated by our old mythologists, from a very singular triad, which I propose to appears But the reader of taste may require some apology, analyze.
That
this
Mythologists have never been very scrupulous in the seGods and their priests have been
presented to us, under the form of every animal character, from the elephant and the lion, to the insect and the reptile.
And
it is
not to be expected, that our ancestors should in their choice, than other nations
refined.
Without any such affectation of superior taste, they bring forward three distinct states of the British hierarchy, but all of them more or less Arkite, under the characters of
three
mighty
sreine herds.
Their disciples, of course, consisted of a multitude of these are the titles I am not calling them names swine. o they thought proper to assume: and no doubt, they re-
Though
Britons,
it
this
representation
still,
has
Thus, we are told that the priests of the Cabiri were Greece and Rome consecrated the styled Sues swine.
sow to Ceres, and gave
it
the
name of
The learned and ingenius M. De Gebelin says, that this selection was made, not only because the sow is a very prolific animal, but also, because she plows the ground, and
414
because the plough has a figure similar to that of her snout,
effect.*
further, but
still
upon the
In Britain, Ceres herself assumes the character of Htvch, a sow ; she addresses her child, or devotee, by the title of Porchellan, little pig ; her congregation are Mock,
swine; her chief priest is Turch, a boar, or Gwydd Hwch t boar of the wood, or grove ; and her Hierarchy is Meichiad, a
swine herd.
The
triad
which
the three mighty swine herds, is preserved in several copies, ffrom a collation of which, I shall subjoin an English version,
particular.
of the mighty swine herds of the island of Britain, was Pryderi, the son of Pwyll, chief of Annan, " who kept the swine of his foster-father, Pendaran Dyved, " in the vale of in whilst his own
first
" The
"
"
Pwyll, was
in
Cwch, Annwn."
Emlyn,
father,
it
will
In order to understand the meaning of this mythology, be necessary first of all, to take some notice of the
Pryderi,
Pzcyll,
Lord of Dyved,
*
t
Monde
Primitif.
Tom. IV.
II. p. 6.
p. 579.
W.
Arcliaio).
V.
20.
7<t.
77.
415
with the long hand, the son of Pyr, or the son of Llion the ancient.*
Pur of
the East,
the vanity of certain. Welsh families, has inscribed these princes in the first page of their pedigrees, it
Though
Pryderi
other
title
is
and the
may
Gwynvardd Dyved
Druid of Demetia,
discretion, prudence, or
is
shewn
where we are
told,
that the diluvian patriarch first entered the ark, counsel of Pwyll and Pryderi.
by
the
Meirig
ral
is
a guardian.
it
In this
series,
be translated, though
Britons.
name of seve-
Ar-col
may imply
it
is
the
man
name may have been of Eastern derivation : and if so, he may have been no less a personage than the great Hercules, who was known in the East by similar titles, as we are informed by Mr. Bryant ;
probable his
* Cambrian Biog. under the articles Pryderi, Pviyll, and Meirig.
t Appendix, No.
3.
who
that in the neighbourhood of Tyre and Sidon, the chief deity went by the name of Ourchol, the same as
tells us,
Archel and Arcles of Egypt, whence came the Heracles and Hercules of Greece and Rome.*
But the history of Hercules, as we learn from the same author, alludes to a mixture of Arkite and Sabian idolatry. " It is said of Hercules, that he traversed a vast sea, in
" a cup, or " his
which Nereus,or Oceanus sent him for preservation the same history is given to Helius, (the " sun) who is said to have traversed the ocean in the same " vehicle."
skiff',
:
sure for supposing, that his father Pyr, or Pur of the East, is to be found amongst the known connexions of that
Demigod.
Pyr is the G reek name of/zre, and my thologically of the And the great anasun,) who was the same as Hercules. of mythology assures us, that Pur was the ancient lyzer name of Latian Jupiter, the father of Hercules that he was the deity of fire ; that his name was particularly retained
;
amongst the people of Pneneste, who had been addicted to the rites of fire ; that they called their chief god Purf and dealt particularly in divination by lots, termed of old,
Analysis, V.
I.
p. 40.
p. 124.
417
From hence
it
may
probability, that this origin, had a certain connexion with the history of Jupiter
and Hercules.
But
lest
we should
fundamental prin-
ciples of Arkite theology, our mythological herald takes care to inform us, that Pyr, of the East, was the son of
Llion the Ancient, that is, the deluge, or the Diluvian god: for the waters of Llion are the great abyss, which is contained under the earth, and which once burst forth, and overwhelmed the whole world.
This mythological pedigree, therefore, only declares the Arkite origin of a certain mystical system, which was introduced into Britain through the medium of some Eastern
people.
characters here introduced, are represented as princes of Demetia, the country of Seithenin Saidi, who is Saturn
The
or Noah.
rites, that
it
This region was so greatly addicted to mystical was called, by way of eminence, Bro yr Hud,
the land of mystery, and said to have been formerly enveloped in Llengel, a veil of concealment.
But we are not immediately to conclude, that Pryderi conducted his swine, according to the rules of his Eastern ancestors. These were not the property of his father and
grandfather, but the herd of Pendaran, lord of thunder, otherwise called Arawn, the Arkite, and managed under his
supreme administration.
blished in the
different
estait
West, and, as we shall presently see, from that of Arcol, and Pyr of the East.
was
418
Pryderi kepi the swine of his foster-father, Pendaran, in the vale of Cwch, the boat, or ark, in Emlyn, the clear
lake, whilst his
own
father, Pwyll,
was
in
the dehige.
must leave the great swine-herd to the management of an elucidation of this mythology, a curious tale upon the subject of Pwyll's adventures.* from
I
and I some foreign abuses, or innovations, which were intermixing with the doctrines and
This
tale manifestly
rites
or solar worship.
The
reader
:
may judge
for himself,
by the following
abstract
Pwyll, lord of the seven provinces of Dyved, being at Arberth, high grove, one of his chief mansions, appoints a hunting party that is, the celebration of mysteries; thus
Ceridwen
is
said to
place which he chose for this exercise, was GlynCwch, the vale of the boat, or ark. Accordingly, he set out
The
to the
Book of Jests
* Cambrian Register, V. I. p. 177, and V. II. p. 322. Col. Oxford, a MS. of the 14th century.
From
the
Red
Pliny's account of the preparation of the Angmnum, by the Druids, in the character of serpents, is well known.
the ark
and that
other mysteries, one part of the nocturnal ceremony consisted in the consecration of an ess-* o
grove of the preparation of the egg, Pwyll continued that night ; and early in the morning he proceeded
this
In
to the vale of the boat, and turned out his dogs priests, who were called Kvs,*f- dogs under the wood, or grove.
He
liesin
blew his horn that is, the herald's horn Thus Ta" I have been says Mynawg, wearing a collar, with
:
"
Pwyll, entering fully upon the chace, and listening to the cry of the pack, began to hear distinctly the cry of another pack, which was of a different tone from that of his
own
This
alludes to
some mystic
rites,
which
essentially differed
from
The
garding the stag, fixed his eyes with admiration upon the E E 2
Kv
E? , 'oi
Mamie.
SchoL
in
Ly c
Ph
4.
459.
Appendix, No.
420
dogs, which were all of a shining white hue, with red ears. Such is the popular notion of the Welsh, respecting the colour of Cwn Annwn, the dogs of the deep a mystical
The
prince drives
calls his
killed the
stag, and
Whilst he is thus engaged, the master of the white pack comes up, reproves him for his uncourtly behaviotir, informs him that he is a king, wearing a crown, as sovereign
lord of Annrcn, the deep, and that his
name
is
Arkite*
this is the
personage who
is
also styled
lord of thunder.
Pwyll having expressed a wish to atone for his imprudent offence, and to ohtain the friendship of this august
straner "
" wishes.
Behold, says Arawn, how thou mayest succeed in thy There is a person whose dominion is opposite to
:
" mine who makes war ; upon me continually this is Havgan, " a king also of Annwn: by delivering me summers/line, " from his which thou canst thou
invasions,
easily do,
"
shall ohtain
my friendship."
"
* In the Cambrian " of the silver Register, Arawn is oddly translated, The word may imply eloquence ; but considering his character, I rather think it comes Irom T1~)J<, ATOH, an ark, or ihest.
tongue."
421
luvian patriarch, can be no other than the Solar Divinity, whose rites had begun to .intermix with, and partly to super-
ede the more simple Arkite memorials. Here then, we have a direct censure of that monstrous absurdity, of venerating the patriarch, in conjunction with the sun. Pwyll,
or Reason,
is
It
may be
the
all
and claimed
But
to
It
Arawn ;
Annwn,
This must
same
scenes,
which
the patriarch had experienced. Thus Noah had presided in the ark, for precisely the same period, over the great deep, or the deluged world.
On
kill
the usurper, Summershine, or the Solar Idol, with a single stroke ; and in the mean time, Arawn assumes the
to take his
dominions under
year, of the mystical deluge, that Pryderi guarded the swine of his foster-father, Arawn, or
this
It
was during
prize, is
in
nroj or
silence:
cell
of initiation
where he preserves an
who
is
the fairest
poses him
fortitude
to be her
woman in the world, and supown husband. Such were the trials of
exposed.
the appointed day, Pwyll kills the usurper, Summershine, and at the completion of the year, returns from the
palace of the deep, into his
in
On
finds
an improved and most flourishing condition, under the administration of the great Arawn, with whom he contracts
a perpetual friendship.
This part of the tale blends a mystical account of the deluge, with the history of those mysteries which were celebrated in
memory of the
great preservation.
prince being now re-established in his palace, at Aror high grove, provided a banquet or solemn sacriberth, for himself .and his retinue. After the first repast, the fice
The
whole company walked forth to the top of the Gorsedd, or Such seat of presidency, which stood above the palace.
was the quality of this seat, that whoever either receive a wound, or see a miracle.
sat
upon
it,
should
cal seat
Pwyll, regardless of consequences, sat upon the mysti: and presently, both the prince himself, and the
423
whole of his retinue, beheld a lady, mounted upon a horse of a pale bright colour, great, and very high.
The lady herself wore a garment, glittering like gold, and advanced along the main road, which led towards the Gorsedd. Her horse, in the opinion of all the spectators, had
a slow and even pace, and was coining in the direction of
the high seat.
reader will have no difficulty in comprehending, .that this splendid lady was the Iris, riding in her humid cloud ;
The
and that she was coming from the court of Arawn, upon a friendly errand. But as she was unknown to all the company
his
come
opposite to the fair stranger, than she passed by him. He pursued her on foot with the utmost speed but the faster
:
he ran, the more he was distanced by the lady, though she still seemed to continue the same gentle pace, with which
she had set out at senger upon a
cess.
first.
without any better sucThe same vain experiment was tried the next day.
fleet horse,
The prince now perceived, that there was a mystery in the appearance : yet, being persuaded, that the lady had business to communicate to some one in that field, and
hoping that the honour of her commands might be reserved for himself, he gets ready his courser, and undertakes the
enterprize on the third day.
The
full
she passed by
Then Pwyll
said
424
The remainder of
the story
is
was the rainbow, that sacred token of reconciliation, which appeared to Noah after the deluge, and which was universally
commemorated
in Gentile mythology.
The mounting of
a British device.
called
The Chair of Ceridwen, that Gwydion, Hermes, formed for the goddess of the rainbow a stately steed, upon
the springing grass, and with illustrious trappings.
The circumstance of
non, which seemed to
move
may remind
several of
my
of their own,
Many
beauty.
Upon
of
this
the whole
it is
ancient tale
may have
own
main incidents
faith-
Arkite mythology, which pervades the of the primitive Bards ; at the same time that they writings pass a severe censure upon solar worship, as a corrupt innovation.
Having taken this view of the great swine-herd, Pryderi, or deep thought, I proceed to consider the adventures of the next in order, where we shall have some hints of the
channel, by which this innovation of Sabian idolatry introduced.
T
v,
as
425
learned author of the Mysteries of the Cabiri, gives an opportunity of prefixing a few hints, which may serve to keep our British mythologists in countenance.
The
me
Having remarked from Tacitus, that the Estyi, a people of Germany, worshipped the mother of the gods, and that the symbol which they used was a boar, Mr. Faber thus
proceeds.
"
Rhea, or the mother of the gods, as it has been abundantly shewn, was the same as Ceres, Venus, Isis, or
"
" Derceto.
She was, in short, the ark of Noah, from " which issued all the hero-gods of paganism. With re" to the boar, used by this German tribe as an emgard " blem, we find it introduced very conspicuously into
"
"
of those legendary traditions, which relate to the event of the deluge. It appears to have been one great " of the symbols of the ark, although not adopted so
many
"
"
In the
first
Hindoo
Avatar, Vishnou assumes the form of a fish ; and in the " third, that of a boar, when he is represented as emerging " from the midst of the and the world
ocean,
supporting
"
upon
his tusks.
Both these
" second, are supposed by Sir William Jones to allude to " the history of the flood; whence, as we have already " seen that ajish was emblematical of the ark, it is not
may be
so like-
" us of the Egyptian Osiris, he mentions, that Typhon, or " the of one of those in
deluge, being
pursuit
" found the ark, which contained the body of " rent it asunder." *
Osiris,
and
I.
p.
220.
426
The author
"
Perhaps,
subjoins the following note
if
:
"
racy,
we ought
the matter be expressed with perfect accurather to say, that a boar was symbolical
ark.
Hence we
find, that as
"
"
is
said
by Agathocles
to
have been
"
of Cottvrewi
"
terrors,
guarded Henwen
mystagogue,
The sow was big with had been prophesied, that the island of young " Britain would suffer detriment from her progeny, Arthur
mystics, in Cornwall.
as it
;
chief of mystics,
vale of
and
for the
purpose of destroying it. The sow, in the mean time, being about to farrow, proceeded as far as the promon" tory of Land's-end, in Cornwall, where she put to sea, " with the swine-herd after her. And she first came to
"
" land at Aber Tarrogi, in Gwent Is Coed, her guardian still keeping hold of the bristles, wherever she wandered, " land or sea.
by
"At Wheatfield, in Gwent, she laid three grams of wheat, " and three bees: hence, Gwent is famous to this day for " producing the best wheat and honey.
*
427
" From Gwent, she proceeded to Dyved and in Llonnio " Llonwen, the pleasant spot of the tranquil lady) laid a " of barley, and a pig and the barley and swine of
;
grain
"
Dyved
are
become
proverbial.
" After
this,
"
laid a grain
she goes towards Arvon, and in Lleyn she since which time, the best rye is pro: of
rye
" duced
"
" "
in Lleyn
and Eivionydd.
cliff
of
Cyverthwch, in Eryri, she laid the cub of a wolf, and Coll gave the eagle to Brynach, a Northern an
eaglet.
"
Gwyddelian prince, of Dinas AJfaraon, and the present " proved detrimental to him. The wolf was given to Men" lord of Arllechwedd.
waed,
Men waed,
became
"
nach, which
in after times
so famous.
" From hence, the sow went to the black stone in Arvon, " under which she laid a kitten, which Coll threw from the " of the stone into the Menai. The sons of Paluc, in top " Mona, took it up, and nursed it, to their own injury. " This became the celebrated Paluc cat, one of the three
" chief molesters of Mona, which were nursed within the " island. The second of these molestors was Daronwy; and " the third was Edwin, the Northumbrian king."
I should not
have exhibited
it
were I
contains
some important
tradition
respecting the progress of superstition in our country, of which no other account is to be found and Uiat the greatest part
of
it
may be
explained.
428
Before
we
it
progeny,
guardian.
may
terrors, or
of religious awe,
cannot be regarded as an
He is an ideal character, implying a individual person. or the aggregate of agents, in conducting principal agent,
a particular
Coll
is
mode of
superstition.
He
is
repeatedly mentioned in the mythological Triads. there classed with the great deified patriarch, Hu
Gadarn, as one of three personages, who conferred distinguished benefits upon the Cymry nation. He has the credit of having first introduced wheat and barley into
Britain,
oats
time.*
Hence
it
appears, that he
again brought forwards, as one of the three great presidents of mysteries.^ And here, we must regard his doctrine and institutes, as comprehending the mystical theois
He
logy and
rites,
which prevailed
a collation of the passages in which this notice occurs, it may be deduced, that there had been three distinct
From
and of
W.
Archaiol. V. II. p.
p. 7, 71, 77.
67".
t Ibid.
429
Uthyr Bendragon, first of these.
or the wonderful supreme leader, was the
That of
this agreed or GwyddeKn Corr, constituted the second : and the red, bony with the mode of Rhuddlwm Gawr, or
giant.
And
eil
Don was
of these modes or stages, I suppose to have been that corruption of the patriarchal religion, or the
The
first
more simple Arkite theology, which originally prevailed amongst the Cymry, and of which we have already had some hints, under the characters of Pwyll and Pryderi.
As
to the second
when we
recollect,
that
Coll
first
began the superintendance of his mystical sow in Cornwall, which either was one of the Cassiterides of the ancients, or
else
certainly
it
carried
tin
islands, may be conjectured, that the red bony giant, the introducer of this superstition, and who is repreoriginal sented as the uncle and mystical preceptor of Coll, was no
other than the Phoenician, or red merchant, half Canaanite, and half Edomite, who traded with the tin islands. And
as this
gian, and
appears to be the meaning of the Triads, that the Belgae of Britain and Ireland adopted the mode of this stranger.
Of
same mysticism
into Wales,
430
and immediately from Cornwall, we have a more detailed account in the adventures of Coll and his wonderful sow*
This superstition contained memorials of the deluge verged more strongly towards Sabian idolatry.
;
but
it
mode, namely, that of Math, Drych, and seems to have been a mixture of the two former;, Gwydion, that is, of the superstition of the original Cymry, and the
third
The
more
or that confusion
of principles which we find in the old British Bards, and which Mr. Bryant has detected amongst many ancient
nations.
then, the great agent in the adventitious branch Druidical religion. of the
Coll
is,
is
meant by
his character,
we
proceed to the history of his sow : and we shall find, however absurd it may be in the literal sense, great part of it will admit of explanation upon mythological
that
principles.
The name of
a proper
this mystical
whom
as
title for the great mother, Da-Mater, or Ceres, to But Ceres, or the great mother, the sow was sacred.
the
ark.
has occurred to our countryAgreeably that under this allegory of a sow, we must understand men, the history of a ship. Upon the story of Coll and his mystical
charge, Mr.
Owen
dinary recital, there seems to be preserved the record of the appearance of a strange ship on the coasts, under the
appellation of a sow
:
and that
it
431
ship,
mentioned.*
again in his Dictionary, under the word Hwch, a " It has been also used as an sow, the same author tells us " reason as Banw is applied epithet for a ship, for the same
And
" to a pig, and to a coffer; the abstract meaning of the " word being characteristic of the form of both. There is " a tradition in Monmouthshire, that the first corn sown " in Wales was at Maes Gwenith, Wheatfield, in that " county, and was brought there by a ship; which, in a " Triad to the same event, is called Hwch" that
alluding
is,
a sow.
That
this
tale alludes
there can be
no doubt
and we
first
hear of
is
This was a sacred ship. Its cargo consisted, not in common merchandise, but in religious symbols and apparatus. And there is every reason to conclude, that
it
was
itself
have already observed, that the name of this mystical vehicle, old lady, was a proper epithet for the great mother
.
the ark.
The depositing
Camb. Biog.
V.
Coll.
432
die office of Ceres,
British Ked,
who
the genius of the ark ; to the passed through the deluge, stored with
who was
who
is
styled
seeds,
and whose
The whimsical use of the terb dodwi, to lay, lays her eggs, when applied to the parturition of
tical sow,
as a
hen
the mys-
or ship, cannot be accounted for, till we recollect, that our Arkite goddess is styled and described as a
hen.
And
tical
this
symbolical sow,
land, as well as
like the
Argo of
antiquity,
proceeds by
priest.
by
sea,
place from whence she began her progress, and the persons to whom she belonged, with equal clearness point out her mythological character. For this sow, we are told,
The
was the property of Dallwyr, the blind men, or Mtr of Dallben, the mystagogue; and was guarded in Glyn Dallwyr, the glen, or vale, of the mystics, in Cornwall.
To
period ;
were jealous of the innovations which she might introduce. Hence the old prophecy, that Britain would be injured by
She was, therefore, of foreign extraction ; her progeny. and the doctrines and rites of her priests differed from the
more simple
as she
try,
Wherefore, as soon
began
433
of the island, in order to exterminate her race ; but the design proved abortive the novel system gained ground.
this mystical
of wheat, and a Triad of beesi, The wheat, every one knows to be the fruit of Ceres and in Britain, the person who aspired to the mysfirst
The
consisted
of,
three grains
teries
of that goddess,
grain of pure wheat. And as to the bees of mythology, the great analyzer of ancient tradition proves, from a multitude of circumstances, that the Melissa,
or
bees,
zeere
the same blunders constantly pervading the sacred vocabularies of the Greeks and Britons, might be insisted upon
as arguments, that the latter
The history of the provident bee, the architect of her own commodious cell, in which she weathers out the
destructive winter, might supply another reason for making her the symbol of an Arkite priestess.
author's etymologies, and taking with us his historical deductions, it will appear, that along the sacred ship which brought the bees, was a representaF F
434
tive of the ark.
first
or the same distinguished writer, who that Ceres was the genius of the ark, has also proved shewn, that she was styled Melissa, or the bee, and that the
So that
we have
the record of
an.
Arkite temple, founded in Monmouthshire by a colony of priests, which came from Cornwall, with an establishment
The grain of
species,
and the pig, or one of her own which the n^stical sow deposited in the pleasant
barley,
to nearly the
amounts
same thing.
deposit, consisted iu the cub of a
The wolf of mythology, according to Mr. Bryant, reThe eagle also, he tells
was one of the insignia of Egypt, and was particularly sacred to the sun. It was called Ait, or A TO?; and Homer
Hence
it
lady were intimately blended with an idolatrous worship of the sun that usurper, whom we have seen the great Arawn
Analysis V.
Ibid. p. 19.
I.
p. 78.
435
The
eagle and the wolf were deposited in Eryri, or Snow-
don; and Coll is said to have presented the former to a Northern prince, and the latter to a lord of Arllechwedd
:
mean, that these symbols of solar worship were introduced from Cornwall, by a circuitous route, into the regions of Snowdon, and from thence
to
into
North
Britain,
and Arllechwedd.
The
serves attention.
the panting
cliff,
in
Dinas Affaraon, or Pharaon, the city of the higher powers.* The scite was upon the road from the promontory of Lleyn, to that part of the coast which is opposite to Mona, foi
the mystical sow takes it in her way. Hence it seems to have been the same which is now known by the name of
Y Ddinas,
Camden.
" On the top of Penmaen, stands a lofty and impreg" nable called Braich y Ddinas (the ridge of the city), hill, " where we find the ruinous walls of an exceeding strong " arid within fortification, encompassed with a triple wall " each the foundation of, at least, a hundred towers, wall,
;
"
all round, and of equal bigness, and about six yards dia" meter within the walls. The walls of this Dinas were, in " most two yards thick, and in some about three. places, " This castle there while it
seems,
stood,
"
to- it
* Pharaon seems to be the British name of the Cabiri, their priests, called were skilled in metallurgy, and are said to have possessed certain books upon mysterious subjects.
Pheryll,
436
" "
strength.
very high,
steep,
At
the
summit of
is
a well, which affords plenty of summer. The greatness of the dryest " work, shews that it was a princely fortification, strength" ened by nature and workmanship, seated on the top of
" one of the highest mountains of that part of Snowdon, " which lies towards the sea."*
The temple of
distance of a mile
is
from
local
this place.
This stately
which
memprial of its greatness, hut the name " The city," must have been, as I concmphatical jecture, the celebrated Dinas Pharaon, in the rocks of
left
has
no other
also the name of Dinas Emrys, or This was famous, not only for the wolf and eagle, which were deposited by the mystical sow, but also for certain dragons,-^- which appeared in the time of
Manhogan,
in the time of Prydain, the is, in the age of the solar divinity.
told,
that
In
gons were lodged by a son of Beli, or child of the sun; and the destiny of Britain was supposed to depend upon the due concealment of the mystery
.
* Gibson's
Camden
Col. 804.
II. p. 59, 65.
t W. Archaiol. V.
is
Beli represented as the father of the brave Cassivtllaunus, and the son of But Beli and Prydain are titles of the Manhtifeai, radiated with splendour. lielio-arkite divinity. See Append. No. 11, where he is addressed bv botli
these names,
W.
437
As to these dragons, the reader has seen that they were harnessed in the car of the British, as well as of the Greek
Ceres: and
solar
more than
is
it
superstition
selves :*
hence
who wandered
from the mystic vale in Cornwall, to the regions of Snowdon, imported a mixture of Arkite and Sabian idolatry.
us come to the last deposit of the mystical sozr, the kitten, which was laid under the black stone, namely, that is, in a cell, or Kistvaen., in Arvon, from whence the
But
let
mystagogue
of this
cast
it
Isis, the Arkite goddess, was sometimes represented under the figure of a cat, because that animal, by the voluntary dilatation and contraction of the pupils of its eyes,
of
imitates the phases of the moon, which was also a symbol Isis and Mr. Bryant thinks, that the very names of
:
But Paluc
cat
is
spoken of as a large and fierce creature, Mr. Owen thinks it was a tyger. It is
Mona; and
by the mystical sow, were as pernicious innovations, by those who adhered regarded to the primitive religion of their country, the destroying of
the symbols imported
" DRAIG, a * Thus Mr. Owen, in his Dictionary, explains the word " generative principle, or procreator; a fiery serpent; a dragon; the supreme. " Dreigiau, silent lightnings. In the mythology of the primitive world, the " serpent is universally the symbol of the sun, under various appellations, " but of the same Bel and B&l amongst the import as the Draig, Adon, Addon; <* Cymry,"
438
this
cat
act.
Though
calls
it
it
is
described as an animal,
idol,
and attended by foreign ministers. Taliesin Vraithy the spotted cat, and thus denounces its
Cath
Ys
trabluddir y
Gath Vraith
A'i hanghyvieithon *
" The spotted cat shall be disturbed, together with her " men a foreign language." of
seem, from another passage, to have been a the of the sun : for Taliesin, who often speaks symbol and character of that luminary, mentions as one person
It should
of his transformations
Bum
"
I
Cath Benfrith
ar driphren
the whole, we may suppose it to have been the of some animal of the cat kind, which was deemed figure sacred, either to the Helio-arkite god, or the Lunar-arkite
Upon
goddess, or to both, as
it
and
But
mystic lore from the red giant, who resided in a nook of Cornwall, a region which had early intercourse with stran-
W.
Archjiiol. p. 73.
t Ibid. p. 44.
Ben
Vrith.
439
.
with the Phoenician, or red notion; as the gcrs, particularly been jealous of the mystical sow, or sacred ship, Britons had which introduced the symbols here enumerated ; and as the
and the cat are mentioned with disapprobation, as things which proved injurious to those who received them, I conclude that these symbols, and the idowolf, the eagle, latry
who
known
romance by the
name of
" The
Sir Tristram.
third swineherd was Trystan, proclaimer, the son " of Tallwchf the overzehelming, who kept the swine of " March, the horse, the son of Meirchiawn, the horses of " was carrying a message to justice, whilst the swineherd
"
Essyllt, spectacle, to
**
" In the mean time, Arthur, March, Cai, and Bedwyr, went forth against him upon a depredatory expedition.
" But they failed in their design of procuring as much as " a single pig, either by donation, by purchase, by strata" gem, by force, or by stealth.
" These were called the mighty swineherds, because nei" ther nor force could extort from them one of stratagem " the swine which were under their care, and which they
440
"
"
restored, together with the full increase of the herd, to
their right
owners."*
This story also describes the meddling with some foreign and mysteries, which had been introduced into Cornwall,
districts
were regarded as unlawful and depraved ; for the intercourse of Trystan with his mistress, Essyllt, was both adulterous and incestuous. As I have hinted above, it seems
to allude to the incorporation of the primitive religion of
rites
of the Phoenician
sozp.
By
his
name
the character of Trystan, we are to understand, as imports, a herald of mysteries and hence a re:
presentative of the mystical system, which prevailed at a certain period, or in a certain state of the British hie-
rarchy,
The memorials of
Triads, are
this
character in the
mythological
We
the first was Greidiawl, the ardent, or, as he is otherwise called, Gwgon Gwron, the severely energetic, herald of Envael, the acquisition of life, the son of Adran t
Britain,
second distribution.
The second
herald was
Gwair Gwrhyd-
rarer, renovation of great energy : and the third was Trystan, the prqclaimer, the son of Tallwch, the overwhelming that
is.,
the deluge. And it is added, that such was the privilege of these heralds, that none could resist their authority in the island of Britain, without becoming outlaws.f
W.
t Ibid. p.
441
The very names and connexions of
tory of the deluge, whatever they
sides
:
may have
included be-
and
their authority
is
have, in the next place, some intimation of the dignity with which these characters supported their
We
high
office,
when we
the first was Huail, vicechiefs of the island of Britain, the son of Caw, the inclosure, also called gerent of Hu,
Gwair, renovation, the son of Gwestyl, the great tempest. Cai, association, the son of Cynyn COD,
the origin of memorial, surnamed Cainvarvog, or with the splendid beard : and the third was Trystan, the son of
Tall wch,
And Bedwyr,
After
this,
we
tion with which the authority and dignity of these chaFor Eiddilic Corr, the same as Coll; racters were asserted. Gwair and Trystan, were the three determined personages, whom no one could divert from their purpose.f
Trystan
is
who had
again introduced as hierophant ; for the three the conducting of mysteries in the court
calls,
W.
f
|
Archaiol. V. II. p. 5,
p.
80.
442
these particulars it may be collected, that Trystan is a personification of the great moving power, in the religious establishment of the Britons, during a certain period
From
of their history: and hence it may be inferred, that his amorous intercourse with Essyllt, spectacle, the wife, otherwise called the daughter, of March, horse, the son of Meirchiawn, his uncle,* is to be understood in a mystical sense.
March, who seems to be the same personage, and is ranked with Rhyhawt eil Morgant, the son of Adras, and Dalldav, mystagogue, the son of Cynin Cov, principle of memorial, as a
also read of Trystan, the son of this
We
compeer
Such- being the mystical character of Trystan, let us now look for the owner of the herd which he superintended,
Essyllt, his
beautiful
pa-
This personage was a prince of some part of Cornwall ; and his singular name Horse, the son of the horses of jus-"
tice,
must undoubtedly be referred to the Hippos, or horse of the ancient mythologists, which Mr. Bryant proves to have meant the ark. He imputes the name, as usual, to an
error of the Greeks: but
it
is
should be constantly and accurately translated into the language of our British forefathers.
But
let
*
t
W.
443
" I cannot help surmising, that the horse of Neptune " was a mistaken emblem; and that the ancients, in the " did not refer to that animal. What the original history, " 'iwwoj alluded to in the was a
early mythology,
as the
certainly
or ship; the
firs,t
place,
same
"
'Irro,
TOV ptya,*
6a^a?o
ixfivn,
1. 6.
Se-
"
remarkable, that the Hippos was certainly " called xk ? xu^ .* I therefore cannot help thinkZxapws " ing, that the supposed horse of Neptune, as it has so
condly,
it is
" manifest a relation to the Ceto and the Scyphus, must " have been an emblem of the like purport; and that it " a reference to the same to which
had, originally,
history,
" the Scyphus and Ceto related (that is, the ark). The " fable of the horse certainly arose from a misprision of " the mistake be as old as Homer. The terms, though " goddess Hippa is the same as Hippos, and relates to the
" same There were many symbols of an horse. history. " The of Pegasus, the winged horse, is probably history " of the same So does Palaephatus, a judicious purport. " This it u* tu
'
writer,
interpret
'Oo^a
tc^na, niy?oj.
Hip-
"
The March, or
must evi-
dently be referred to the same Arkite history, which is here intimated by Mr. Bryant and not only so, but also, as I
:
prove in the course of this section, the horse was, amongst our ancestors, a favourite symbol of a sacred,
shall
ship.
* Schol.
in
Lycoph. V. 766;
444
The
horses
is
arch
of justice; probably, with allusion to the just patriand, in order the more forcibly to mark his cha-
is represented as a master of ships, and, in this classed with Gwenwynwun, thrice fair, the son capacity, of Nav, the lord, a title of the Diluvian patriarch ; and
racter,
he
vessel
character, we must also search the Bardic pedigree for the lady, whether his wife
as
And
or his daughter,
whom
moured.
We
narrow
dical mystery, were daughters of one father, namely, Fanawyd Prydain, which implies, the person
spot, in the waters
Cul
occupying the
of Britain.
sisters
was
the white
The second was Penarwen, the lady with head, the wife of Owen, the son of Urien.J
the splendid
Archaiol. V. II. p. 5, 13, 68. .a prince called Geraint ab Erbin, in the beginning of the sixth century but the name itself is borrowed from mythology, and the Geraiiit of the Welsh tales is a mystical character. See Ed. Llwyd's Archaeol. p. 265.
W.
There was
:
this
Essay.
is
mythological.
The
third sister
'
flame-bearer.*
It
is
pretty clear, that these three daughters of Mamodes of the same origin,
and
I think, the
reason
why
scribed as unchaste, was, either because they were communicated to persons of different nations, or because they included some foreign and adulterated rites, which had not
been acknowledged
primitive Bards.
religion of the
present business is only with Essyllt, whose name Spectacle, or subject of steady contemplation, manifestly imAnd as she was the wife of plies some mystical exhibition.
Our
is
She
was, therefore, a mare ; but the aspirant, Taliesin, saw the British Ceres in the form of a proud and wanton mare;
Mr. Bryant
also
the most ancient goddesses of the gentile world, and particularly informs us, that the Arkite Ceres was distinguished
by
that
title,
priestesses
pai, mares.-\
He
seems to have occupied a distinguished place iu the mystical drama. See the story told of him and the lady of the fountain, In the red book of Jesus College, Oxford, it is mentioned by Ed. Llwyd. Archaeol. p. 265.
* W. Archaiol. V. II. p. 14. 73. Ida, the Northumbrian King, is supposed to be described, under the name of Flamebearer. If such be the meaning of the terra in this passage, I should conceive that Bun may allude to the mysteries of Isis, which Tacitus remarked amongst the ancient Germans, and which this pagau prince may have celebrated in Britain. t Analysis, V. IL
p. 27,
&c.
446
Hence we
sacred
rites,
perceive, that it
was of
this goddess
and her
Mystagogue was
so deeply enamoured
and that the herd, which he superconsisted of her priests and votaries. intended,
be remarked, that the character of Trystan seems to refer to a period somewhat more recent than that
it
Here
may
of Coll
mystical sow, before she had farrowed, or produced vataries upon British ground hut here, the pigs are already pro:
still
hierarchy of the native Britons. It may also deserve notice, that Coll is uniformly described as a foreigner, who intro-
duced something into Britain, but Trystan was a native, and of some mystical eminence, before he tampered with
the swine, or the consort of the Cornish horse.
The
stracts
notices
which the
triads
subject of the celebrated Trystan, are undoubtedly, abof some old mystical tales, which were current
And
although the
tales
which
more immediately regarded the character now before us, have disappeared in the Welsh language, it is evident that
they must have existed, and that they formed the basis of certain romantic histories, of the famous knight, Sir Tristram, which are
still
Of these,
the Metrical
44?
Auchinleck
served
MS. is worthy of special notice, as having premuch genuine British mythology, though blended
with the fanciful embellishments of the thirteenth century. I shall, therefore, remark a few particulars of the story.
This author changes the name of Trystan, the proclaimer, and Trem Trist, which in the Welsh lan-
into Tristrem,
guage implies a woeful countenance ; a designation too whimsical to have escaped the notice of the humourous Cervantes, who probably had seen this romance in French or
Spanish.
The
seems
is here called Houland, which be a mere French translation of his British name
His mother
is
sister
of King Mark, who is the March or horse of the Triads. This lady is certainly the lovely Flur of British mythology, of
whom
moured, that he undertook an expedition into Gaul, attended by the gods of Britain, in order to redress her
wrongs
and by
this act,
Caesar.*
character of Flur imports that token, or pledge of union, amongst the professors of Druidism which in-
The
W. Archaiol. V. II. p. 3. 10. 13. 60. Caswallon, the son of Beli vras attended by Gwenwynwyn, thriee fair, and Gwanar, the ruler, who were sons of Lli-aws, impeller of ike waves, son of Nwyvre, the firmament, by Arianrhod, goddess of the silver wheel (the Iris) daughter of Beit, the sun.
448
duced the Britons to
lated
assist their
by
Caesar,
was,
This was a sacred plant amongst the Bards,* the mysterious three in one, the great secret indisplaying culcated by the very form of their Triads and Tribanau.
shamrock.
Hence we are told, that wherever their goddess Olwen, the great mother, trod upon the ground, four white trefoils
the daughter of Mygnach, a mystical character, Mydnaw, the mover of the ship. In a dialogue which he holds with Taliesin, he comes forward like Arawn,
Flur
is
the son of
the king of the deep, with his white dogs, or ministering Druids; his residence is in Caer Se'on, in the mystic island, and the chief of the Bards reveres his Gorsedd or throne. +
By
the symbol of union, the original narrator seems to have implied, that he was a legitimate son of the Arkite
religion.
* See the poem called the Chair of TaliesinEvery leaf of this plant is naturally impressed with a pale figure of a crescent, which was also a sacred symbol amongst the Druids, and other heathens.
.
+ Owen's Cam. Biog. V. Olwen. From Maill, the name of this plant, we may one who mutually exhibits the Maill.
J Appendix, No. 8.
out" young hero is committed to the care of a prince, named Rohand, who is a mortal enemy of Duke Morgan,
son of the sea, a neighbouring potentate. Both these perin the Triads; but with characters somesonages are found
what
differently
drawn.
or most courteous, the son of Adras (Adraste ?) was one of the royal knights in the court of the mythological Arthur.*
And
cess,
the
Rohand of
the tale,
is
name
The
triads rank
him with
Dalldav, Mustagogue and March, the horse, as a compeer, in the court of the same Arthur.
He is also styled Overvardd, or one who corrupted the Bardic system with a mixture of foreign fable. This is the delineation of a Hierophant, who made some innovation
in the Druidical
mode.
This Roband, anxious for the safety of his charge, directed his wife to feign a second delivery, adopted the infant as his son, and called him by the inverted name of
took the greatest care of his education, and had him instructed in all the fashionable arts and sci
Trist.
Trem
He
nently discriminated.
Under
this allegory,
which
British tales,
i:
>
we have
Taliesin,
the mongrel rites of Rhyhawd. Thus the aspirant, was born again of Ceridwen, and instructed in
hall
;
her mystical
is
W.
'450
represented in the story of Pwyll, under the image of hunting but the new lore, communicated to Triatrem, differed
:
from that of
name was
inverted,
afterwards told of a strange ship, which appeared upon the coast of Cornwall. The English translator, a rhymer of the thirteenth century, naturally calls it Nor"
weglan, hut as the story
is
We are
who
the early ages of mythology. This vessel was freighted with hawks, which Tristrem won at chess, and distributed amongst his friends. Here it may be remarked, that no
ship ever sailed with such a cargo
;
hawk * and
;
was a
sa-
cred symbol in Eastern mythology. It occurs frequently in Egyptian sculpture, as the favourite representative of
Isis.
Tristrem
is
now conducted
to the court of
Cornwall,
and by means of a ring, the glain, or insigne of a Druid, which he had received of his mother, is recognized as the
nephew of March,
the Bardic order
;
army, or
made
assigned to him, all of them bearing boars heads. The meaning of this allegory is evidently the same as that of the Triads, which represent him as a great swine herd.
attack
Invested with this power, Sir Tristrem sallies forth, to Duke Morgan, the president of the older system of
Druidism ; kills his adversary, and confers his conquered dominions upon Rohand, or Rhyhawd, the corrupter of
*
#ane
Talitsin*.
451
Bardic mystery.
as Eil
represent
Rhyhawd
hear of our hero's combat with a champion of Ireland, whom he kills in the field: but at the same time, he is pierced with a poisonous weapon. The wound proving
incurable, renders his person so disgusting, that he with-
We next
draws from society. In mere despair he goes on board a ship, which he commits to the mercy of the wind and
waves; but such is his good fortune, that after tossing about for some time, he finds himself safe arrived in the
port of Dublin. Here again, I suspect the rhymer has modernized the geography of his tale. The Queen of the
country,
heals the
however,
wound of our
He
is
called to court.
The
or Spectacle of the Triads, is bepupil, and instructed in music and poetry, and in every branch of his mystic lore. coming
his return to Cornwall, Sir Tristrem reports the
Upon
his fair pupil to King Markt a violent passion for the princess, and comwho conceives missions his nephew to return to Ireland in his name, and
demand her
in marriage.
Through a
series
Cornwall arrives at the accomplishment of his commission. The prineess is entrusted to his care ; and they set sail.
At their departure, the queen mother, anxious to secure the happiness of the married couple, prepared and c G 2
452
delivered to 'Brengwain, Ysonde's favourite damsel, a drin k
of might, with directions, that it should be divided between the bride and bride-groom, on the wedding evening. But fortune decided otherwise. During a contrary wind, when
Trist.rem
was
and
thirst
from
the*
fatigue of
rowing, Ysonde
called for
some liquor
to refresh him,
and
Brengwain, inadvertently brought the fatal drink of might, of which Tristrem and Ysonde having partaken, they inbibed
overcome.
the sudden and resistless passion, which death alone could Even a dog, named Hodain, - who licked the
cup
after
it
was
set
down,
felt
its
invincible power,
and
became
their inseparable
companion.
The
been the
drink of might which is here mentioned, must have Kvxtu*, or mystical potion of Ceres, agreeing with
the preparation of the sacred cauldron of Ceridwen, and with the- wine and bragget of the Welsh Bards, which was
whom
Bran, the
Raven had carried into Ireland, along with the mystical cauldron, and espoused ,to a sovereign of that country, distinguished by the remarkable
worship.
Ceres,
ears
Hodain, corn shooting into the ear, is the attribute of whose priests Taliesin styles Hodigion, bearers of
of corn.
this tale
is
The Hodain of
priests,
though he
were called
Km?
described as a dog for heathen priests the British Ceres transformed herself into
453
a bitch; and in the talc of Prcyll, the priesthood are represented under the character of white dogs.
Ysonde, notwithstanding her intrigue with Sir Tristrem, becomes the Queen of Cornwall but not long afterwards,
:
an Irish nobleman, her old admirer, arrives at the court of Mark, in the disguise of a minstrel, obtains possession of
her person, and conveys her into his ship. I apprehend the import of this incident to be, that th< Belgce, or other inhabitants of ancient Ireland, were initiated into the mystical rites
which prevailed
in Cornwall.
But
her to the king, taking care, however, to devise means of keeping up a private intercourse with her. One of the
stratagems to which he had recourse for this purpose, is very remarkable. Being separated from his mistress, he
contrived to correspond with her by means of small bits of wood, on which were engraved secret characters, and which
were floated down a small stream, which ran through the orchard of Ysonde's country seat.
a clear allusion to the practice of which the Druids consulted their gods*
is
This
sortilege,
by
The
of
bits
sprigs,
of wood were the Coelbreni, omen-sticks, or points so often mentioned by the Bards; or the lots, cut
and
dis-
tinguished by
As
to the orchard,
we may
either
the Druidical grove, in which those fruit-bearing trees must have been cultivated, or else we may restrain the
interpret
it
meaning
grove,
And
Merddin
mysticism, under the allegory of an orchard, containing 147 fruit-bearing trees, which were perfect tallies with each
other.
is
made
Triads express
it,
and, as
a privilege jannexed to this office, sleeps in the queen's apartment. Here he takes some unwarrantable liberties ; in
consequence of which, he is banished the court of Cornwall, and retires into Wales, where he undertakes the defence of Triamour, king of the country, against the usurpations
the giant Urgan, whom he kills in single combat. Triamour bestows the sovereignty of Wales upon his protector, together with a little dog, which was spotted
of
with red, blue, and green; but our hero immediately restores the crown to Blanche Flour, the king's daughter, and sends
the dog as a present to Ysonde.
Irish,
in
which the
th are
not audible.
And
the
title
king, hog, sow, wave, or hill:* so that it is cient mystical latitude, to denote either the president of the
Welsh Druids,
Urgan
cannibal
;
is,
probably, the
is,
Gwrgi of the
it
Triads, a mystical
that
priest, or an idol,
human
sacrifices.
And
here
may
who
itself iu This ambiguity arises from a general principle, which discovers very page of the Irish vocabulary ; namely, the appropriating of the same term to every object which presents the same general idea; and the primary and abstract meaning of Triath happens to be, bulkiness, eminence, or prominenct.
455
character of a mythological giant, for the most part, imHence we find, plies the idea of impiety or heterodoxy.
that the courteous knight of one
duced into that country, but not established there. And it is observable, that the daughter of Tri amour, as well as the
the white
trefoil,
pledge of union.
The little dog was a priest; and his spots of red, blue, and green, seem to import those insignia, called Gleiniau, which were of the colours here specified.
" These
Gemma Anguina
com-
monly about as wide as our finger-rings, but much " thicker; of a green colour, usually, though some of them
" are blue, and others curiously waved with " white."*
blue, red,
"
and
Mr. Owen says, they were worn by the different orders of Bards, each having his appropriate colour. The blue ones belonged to the presiding Bards, the white to the
the green to the blended, to the disciples.f
Druids,
a graduate, in the
+ Owen's
Diet.
V. darn.
456
Tristrem, upon his return to Cornwall, renews his intimacy with the queen; in consequence of which, they are both banished the court. The lovers retire into a forest,
where they discover a cavern, that had been constructed in Here they reside, and subsist upon old time by the giants.
the venison taken by their mystical dogs.
surprised
them, when
sword between them, is persuaded of their innocency, and restores them both into favour.
This forest was the Druidical grove; the cavern, a sacred cell, which had been constructed by the giants, or profesthe dogs were the priests; the deer their noviciates; and the sword, that weapon which
sors of a different
mode;
disciple,
and religiously
sheathed again in the solemn meetings of the Bards, upon the stone which covered the sacred cell.*
falling
into disgrace,
fly.
obliged to
last,
of Fiorentin
some
relation
of Flur
Duke of
who had
a daughter, named Ysonde, more chaste, and less beautiful than the beloved Queen of Cornwall. scarcely Tristrem marries this princess; but his ring, or sacred
amulet, having reminded him of his former attachment, he treats his lovely bride with absolute neglect.
^Essyllt,
or spectacle, presents a
religious mysteries,
which
satisfy the
3,
V. Cnmlech.
457
debauched
Cornish hierophant ; and the next incident gives us a hint of the particular. defect which he found in it.
taste of the
nuptial present, Tristrem had received a tract of country im mediately adjoining the territories of a ferocious
As a
giant,
strict
this was accompanied with a from Florentin, that he should abstain injunction from hunting celebrating his mysteries upon the lands of
that monster,
Moraunt.
who was brother to Morgan, Urgan, and The champion of Cornwall, regardless of this
injunction, hunts upon the lands of Beliagog, encounters the giant in person, disables him in combat, and makes him
his vassal,
think Beliagog may imply, what would be expressed in Welsh, Beli a gwg, the severe or frowning Beli ; the Belenus of the more recent
As
Beli was a
name
of the sun, so
Druids of Armorica, whom Ausonius expressly identifies with Phcebits, or Apollo. So that the giant, so greatly
abhorred by the primitive hierophants of Brittany, though
observable throughout the Triads, and the mythological tales, that whenever the corruption of Druidism is described, there is always some allusion to the
it
And
is
symbols by which it is implied. This superstition, indeed, appears in the works of the oldest Bards, which are now extant, incorporated with their Arsolar worship, or to those
mythology but those who were more peculiarly devoted to it, had the opprobrious name of Beirdd Be./i the
kite
:
Bards of
Beli.
When we
of Druidism, such as
it
then was,
had
458
been,
from thence brought over into the following incident worthy of note.
hall
Tristrem ordered his new vassal, Beliagog, to build a (temple) in honour of Ysonde and Brengwain the
this injunction,
Ceres and
with
to
Proserpine of Cornwall. The giant complied and built the hall within his own castle,
He
adorned
this hall
secure
and
secret
This, surely, as a mythological tablet, describes the introduction of a system of theology, and religious rites, out
of Britain into Gaul; and this appears to have been a mixture of Arkite superstition, and Sabian idolatry.
In the chapter which I have just quoted from Caesar, the historian adds the information, that in his days, those who
wished to have a more accurate knowledge of Druidism,
generally went into Britain for instruction.
tale
of Sir
This knight gave his brother-in-law, Ganhardin, Prince of Brittany, such an interesting description of the
Queen of Cornwall,
Being conducted by Tristrem to the marvellous castle of Beliagog, which he could scarcely approach without trembling, and having there viewed the portraits of Ysonde and
Brengwain, he was so astonished with their beauty, that he
*
De
staggered, and fell backward in a swoon. Upon his recovery, he felt a violent passion for the charms of Brengwain,
Proserpine, whom he determined to see in person, without loss of time. Accordingly, the Gaulish prince embarks for this island, attended by the British hierophant. They arrive in
Cornwall,
meet
in
the
espoused
tale is supplied
from some French fragments. But, if I may judge from British mythology, which certainly constitutes the
basis of the history of Sir Tristrem, this part
is
less
au-
The
particulars
have remarked
in this
story,
have the genuine character of that traditional lore, which we find in the Triads, the Mabinogion, and several passages
of the ancient Bards
and they discover one principal of those romantic narratives, which, for a series of source favourite reading of Europe. ages, constituted the
:
knowledged.
the Mabinogion, it will be said, do not deThis is freely acserve to be ranked with sober history. They are only brought forward, to diffuse a
Such
tales as
where history refuses its light. In this useful. They contain traditions of sense, they may be when Druidism had many private, and some remote times,
faint ray over ages,
and they are found to coincide with the most authentic documents which we have upon the subject of British superstition, and with the researches of our best
avowed
friends
antiquaries.
460
Thus, under the representation of three mighty swineherds, or hierophants, we have, first of all, an account of
the earliest religion of our Celtic ancestors, concerning which any memorials have come to our times and this ap:
pears to have consisted of a depraved copy of the patriarchal religion, with a strong abhorrence of Sabian
idolatry.
Coll and his mystical sow, present' the picture of a novel system, which was introduced into Cornwall, and from
thence extended into Wales, and into other parts of Britain. This had a general correspondence with the former, in the
memorials of Arkite superstition but it also included an adoration of the heavenly bodies, and viewed the deified
;
character of Trystan continues the history of a heterogeneous superstition, made up of the religion of the
native Britons, incorporated with foreign innovation, extending over great part of Britain, and cultivated in Ireland, but chiefly centering in Cornwall,
The
the
first
establishment upon
As the characters of the three great swine-herds, present a general view of the history and revolutions of Druidisin, previous to the Roman conquest of Briton; it may not be amiss to consider a few traditions, to those events
relating
46' I
which affected the superstition of our ancestors, subsequent to that period.
The
British documents, in
it
which these
traditions are
suffi-
involved, are,
must be confessed,
ciently uncouth and obscure; but they are the best that we have, and I shall pass over them as slightly as possible.
their profession of paganism, countenance to the Celtic priesthood, may be inferred from the severe prohibition of their religious
shewed but
rites in
the% Druids, the groves and the altars of Mono. cannot be supposed, that this people, after they
Christian,
And
it
became
could
view the
The
fession
public sacrifices of the Druids, and their open proof magic, were undoubtedly suppressed in those
does not necessarily imply, the immediate eradication of an inveterate superstition from the minds of
edicts,
the people.
British infatuation,
reasonable to con-
clude, that during their vassalage, our progenitors kept fast hold of their ancient prejudices and customs.
are told,
had
We
probably true, that in many corners of Romans permitted the natives to be governed partly by their own laws, and under princes of their own. In those Asyla, people thus disposed, and who
is
which
462
masters, would naturally preserve the
memory of
their sa-
cred
institutes
tinue to perform such of their mystical rites, as were less obnoxious to observation and public censure.
the language of the Triads, and some ancient poems, there is reason to infer, that they carried their prejudices still further that during the Roman government,
:
From
there was a seminary of Druids some where in the North of Britain, or in an adjacent island ; and probably beyond
the limits of the empire, where the doctrine and discipline of heathenism were cultivated without controul : that those
Druids persisted in
tain devotees,
festivals
sacrificing,
even
human victims
that'cer-
their
solemn upon the departure of the Romans, some abominable rites were brought back from the North
that into
Mona, and
Wales
suppressed
the close
The
notices
upon which
ground
this opinion, I
now
proceed to state.
Of
mode of Druidism
into Carnarvonshire,
hint in the story of Co//, the great mystasaid to have presented Bi-ynack, prince of
the Northern Gwyddelians, with the Eaglet which was deposited by the mystical sow, and which, in after times be-
The fame of
this eagle
and
his
is
now
to
be
re-
dusky birds
of
Gwenddoleu, which guarded his treasure, wearing a yoke of gold; and which were in the daily habit of consuming two
persons for their dinner, and the like number for their supSuch is the language of the Triads : and if this per.*
human
to
victims, to
some
who
or his attributes, I
make of it.
Gwenddoleu, the master of those consumers, is described as a prince, who resided on the North of the Strath-Clwyd
Britons; but contiguous to them. His destructive birds fell together with himself, by the hand of Gall Power, the
son of Dysg Yvedawg, the imbiber of learning, who is represented as prince of Deira and Bernicia. This catastrophe happened in the battle of Arderydd ag Eryddon, the high eagle, and the eagles, a fanatical contest on account of
a bird's
nest,-f-
tims
These birds which daily consumed their human r vicwhich were destroyed by the power of a prince, who had imbided learning, or embraced Christianity, and
in the battle of eagles, are certainly to be understood in a mystical sense; and as the eagle was one of the symbols
under which an object of Druidical superstition was reGwenddoleu must presented, I presume that these birds of
have the same symbolical meaning, "as the eaglet which was
W.
+ W.
"
$ Cambrian Register, V. II. p. 313. la this contest, another mystical canibal was destroyed
hideout, grey,
namely, Gwrgi
Garu Iwydthe
human
dog.
brought forth, by the mystical sow, or genius of the ark, and presented to a prince of the North Britons.
If this be admitted,
it
must
at the
a posed, that Gwenddoleu himself was either a priest or establishment of those Britons. divinity in the superstitious
Let us inquire a
little
and connexions.
That there was a celebrated Northern prince in the sixth century, known by the name of Gwenddoleu, and litterally
,
opposed to Rhydderch, in the battle of Arderydd, I will not take upon me to deny ; but as it was a notorious practice
of British
priests, to
;
assume some
title
of the
God
they
worshipped
and as this
name
it
I lique courses,
rather think
His
to
it.
priest,
notwithstanding,
Amongst
life;
mist.
the Arkite, the son of Mor, the sea. and brothers we have Pabo, producer of Eleuver, the luminary; Cov ; memory, and Nudd, Those are mystical connections of the Helio-Arkite
his uncles
divinity.
If
we
we
digree somewhat
of superstition.
differently, but from the same vocabulary He was the son of Senyllt, the seneschal or
mystagogue, the son of Cedig, the beneficent, a title of the Arkite goddess, recognized by Taleisin.* And this Nudd
Appendix, No.
4.
465
had a son named Drywon, the Druidical
tinue
is
teacher,
whose
re-
celebrated for having voluntarily maintained the contest, in the open course of Arderydd, the scene of
Gwenddoleu's overthrow. *
The
It
is
fidelity
of Gwenddoleu's retinue
is
equally famous
recorded of them, that they maintained the conflict for forty-six days after the death of their Lord, and till
fall.f
Gwenddoleu was
also
bulls
of the
contest of mystery, classed with the Primordial great one, son of the prior world, of former inhabitants; and with
the parent, son
ship.
He,
of the primitive horse, Hippos or sacred therefore, personified the great Helio-Arkite
god.
these notices offered by the Triads, let us turn to Merddin, the Caledonian. This dignified priest informs us,
that his Lord Gwenddoleu had presented, or privately exhibited to him, a hundred and forty-seven apple-trees of equal age, height, length, and size, which had sprung from the bo-
From
veil,
and were
under the protection or Okcen, a mythological chawho must be identified with the Arkite goddess. racter, The fruit of these trees were precious things which Gwendstill left
H H
W
t
Ibid. p. 7. 16. 70. The poems of Merddin the Caledonian, afford ground f conjecture, that these days were years, during which, the votaries of Druidism persisted in their superstitious practices, after some serere laws had
and
6.
466
.
Those
trees,
as I shall
shew
the various secrets of Druidism ; gorical, and imported consequently, Gwenddoleu, ,who had the peculiar privilege of exhibiting the mystical orchard, and disposing of its
some
sense,
the
And
thus
much
logue between Gwyn ab Nudd, the king of the deep, and Gwyddnaw, the great Heriophant, or representative of the
patriarch,
the pillar
where Gwenddoleu
is
of .Bardic lore.*
still
recollecting the
which wore a golden yoke, guarded the treasures of Gwenddoleu, and consumed four persons daily ; I think we may conclude, that Gwenddoleu was the head of an eminent
Druidical establishment in North Britain, which admitted
of
human
sacrifices.
And whether he
is
to be
deemed a
we may
collect
and
"
"
have seen Gwenddoleu, adorned with the precious gilts of princes, gathering his contributions from every
I
"
now,
covered
As
W.
Archaiol. p. 166.
3.
t Huanau
467
culars of that Bard's character, both as
ancient writers,
bited
who composed
in his
the English reader, I am aware, that the term Bard, suggests only the idea of a person of mean condition, who has distinguished himself by the composition of a few silly
To
rhymes and this idea is generally accurate, when it regards the modern Welsh Bards but amongst the ancient Britons, the title was of eminent dignity and importance it could
;
:
be conferred only upon men of distinguished rank in society, and who filled a sacred office.
Thus, Merddin
that
is,
;
Clwyd
is styled supreme judge of the North ; of the regions beyond the little kingdom of Strath and the Syw, or diviner of every region :* and in
\irtue of this office, he was Cerddglud Clyd Lliant, president of Bardic lore, about the waters of Clyde. *j- He was
companion of Canawon Cynllaith t % the offspring of the whom Aneurin thus commemorates,
Gododin.
"
If,
in the banquet of
to
energetic Eidiol also honoured - " her before the in the presence of the god of mount,
spoliation
;
" mead and wine, the Saxons " mother of the "
victory,
sacrificed
slaughter, the
the king
who
rises
in
light,
"
sky."
H H 2
Cyvoesi
1.
468
And
din,
this
divinities
of
slaughter and
marked
in the character of
Merd-
who
is
styled
Nr*
the key,
or, interpreter
victory.
He
the
was the brother of Gwenddydd Wen, adlam Cerddeu^ fair lady of the day, the refuge of Bardic lore a
mythological character: and this lady addresses the vene" Arise from rable priest in the following terms thy secret " place, and unfold the books of the Awen (Bardic muse, " a name of Ceres)) the object of general dread, and the
:
"
These are some of the qualifications of Merddin, as recorded by a "Northern, but unknown Bard, who wrote in his name and character about the He was a year 948.
supreme judge, a priest, and a prophet and he was conversant in the mysteries of the very same divinities, Cynllaith, Budd, Awen, and Bun, which were revered at the great
temple of Stonehenge.
His reputation as a prophet, has thrown a shade over the few remains of his genuine productions. It has suggested
a hint
for their interpolation,
The
Cyvoesi 69.
t Ibid. 133.
J Ibid. $
129.
is
So Ms age
fixed
by our great
of "British MISS.
469
Hoianau, certainly contains some specimens of this kind, which cannot be as old as the time of Merddin: yet, I
think, the bulk of the piece
is
At
its
least,
it
is
Welshman
for
much
of
acknowledged that
In
this piece,
Merddin
lived.*
and Trystan, supports the character of a swineherd, or niys He had resided, with his herd, either in an tagogue.
island,
or in
other arts, he had practiced divination, by the flight and voices of sea-fowls. And it is from this locality of his
residence, as I suppose, that
he
is
In this happy retreat, Merddin is exposed, as well as his mystical herd, to a severe persecution, conducted by a King
* This
fact will appear upon the examination of the very first line. Olan a phorchellan, a pharchell dedwydd which would be thus expressed ia
Welsh
Edrych
o barchellyu, o barchell
little
dedwydd.
It must here be remarked, that we have no such word as Oian : it certainly comes from the Irish and Caledonian verb Oigham, or Oighanam. I beholfl t I attend, whence the imperative Oighan, pronounced Oi'an, Behold ! Attend ! Again, a, in Irish and Erse, is a sign of the vocative case j but it is never so in Welsh we write and pronounce o. The initial p in 'pwchellan, is here changed into ph, after the sign of the vocative, as in Ireland and the Highlands j whereas in Welsh, it would necesThus, instead of the exclamation of the Irish Ossian A sarily become a b. Patrick, a Welshman would express himself " O Badrig!" and Phadruig,
:
in all parallel cases, the variations of the initials are the same.
Porchelt, in this poem, takes the Irish and Erse diminutive termination, an, which the Welsh express by yn. So that it is evident from these three first words, that the Hoianau is not Welsh ; and hat we had our copy from the country of Merddin: for had it come from Ireland, it would have differed stilt more than it does from our native idiom.
I
470
of Alclud, who
is
styled
Rhydderch
faith.
the
Liberal,
The flame
kindled by this
King of
the Strath
Clwyd
Bri-
tons, communicates itself to the neighbouring princes, to a host of bishops and monks, and, in short, to all the professors of Christianity
;
is
in
danger
is
upon
Druid rouses
the attention of his pigs, and warns them to fly for their lives into some secret place in the Caledonian forest. His
address
is
The
" "
(t
reader
worthy of a swineherd, and of his audience. may be amused with a short specimen or two.
Attend, little pig thou initiated pig Burrow not with thy snout on the top of the hill. Burrow in a secret hiding place, amongst the forests a place whicfi has
!
Liberal, the
champion
"
i(
pig it was necessary to depart to avoid the hunters of the water-dwellings (our insular abodes), if
Attend,
little
!
"
f<
they should attempt to seize us lest the persecution should come upon us, and we should be seen. If we ^ can but our calamitous toil." * we will not
escape,
to
deplore
If
ideas
all thjs is
be understood in the
literal sense,
what
who
* Hoianau
1, 9.
But the
gorical:
were certainly
alle-
of persecution are suggested in a little poem,* purporting to have been a dialogue be.tween Merddin, and a person called Ys Colan, The Colan.
and the
Merddin seeing a stranger approach his watery nook, with a .black horse, and a black cap, and in dark attire, demands if his name was Ys Colan.
stranger replies, that he really was Ys Colan, a Scottish or Irish scholar, who held the Bard in little esteem: and
at the
The
those
who
baptized.
As
and
of the Bards,
the battle of Arderydd, or the aera of the persecution is dated in the year 593,f and as Merddin
his associates
made a
some years
longer, I think it
scholar,
who
highly probable that The Colan, an Irish introduced Christianity amongst the Druid i-
necessity of baptism,
was no other than Colombo, the priest aud abbot, who came
out of Ireland into Britain, in the year 605, to instruct the Northern Picts in the Christian religion, and received from
his converts, the island of
v
Hu,
lona, or I-Colm-Kil.^
To
W
T
Archaiol. p. 132.
II, p.
c, 4.
Cam. Reg. V.
613.
Gibson's
t Cede, L. III.
Camden
for in the
poem above
by having burnt
of a
school,
the church,
~*
presented.
He then pleads the merit of having been confined for a whole year upon the pole of a wear: that is, having been
initiated, like Taliesin,
wear of Gwyddnaw;
the greater mysteries of the and upon this plea, he implores the
into
how
In the conclusion he acknowledges, that had he known perceptibly the wind blew upon the points of the mys
tical sprigs,
As
this
is
an
illusion
to
mode of
writing,
it
may
imply, that
Merddin
had
system, which, in the event, proved injurious to it. And the Bards have a tradition, that Ys Colon threw a heap of
British books into the
fire.
From these particulars, it is pretty evident that Merddin, the vassal of Gwenddoleu, has been viewed as the hierophant of a herd of heathenish swine.
consider the character of their great enemy, the neighbouring princes, together with the instigated bishops and monks, to unite in the persecution of this infatuated race.
Let us
now
who
MS. copy
in
my
possession,
The
printed edition
473
Rhydderch the Liberal, the son of Tudwal of Tud-Clyd, or the district of Clyde, was King of the Strath Clwyd Britons, about the close of the sixth century; and his resihave seen, that dence was at Alclud, or Dunbarton.*
We
mentioned by Merddin as the champion of the Christian faith, and the determined persecutor of the mystagogue
he
is
and
his swine.
introduced as prophesying of those events which should take place, subsequent to the battle of Arderydd, in which Rhydderch slew the
is
celebrated
G wenddoleu, we
Dyd Gwynnydd yn
rhyd Tawy, Rhydderch Hael, dan ysbeid, Gelyn Dinas Beirdd bro Glyd.
This passage
is
to the transpo-
is this
"
**
**
Rhydderch the
Liberal, the
enemy of
the
community
of Bards, in the vale of Clyde, after an interval, will put the white-vested ones into the ford of Tay."f
That
is,
idolatrous
Bards from his own dominions, and the neighbouring districts, they retired into the midst of the Caledonian forest,
as related
by Merddin.
is
discovered upon the bank of the Tay; and the pagan fugi-
W.
Archaiol.
V.
II. p. 11.
t Tawy, a
/orest,
Caledonian
474
tives
are
still
But
Druids, into the ford, and not into the deep parts of the river, we may conclude that his intention was to baptize,
and not
to
drown them.
Hence we may form a probable idea of what is meant, by the celebrated battle of Ard-erydd ag Eryddon, the high
eagle
and
the eagles,
Gwenddoleu, who in which the imbiber of learning slew his two mysrin which tical birds, which delighted in human sacrifices
stition
which
grey human
dog, also
fell
Gwrgi Garwlwyd, the hideous and and in which the united cham;
pions of the Christian faith dispersed the adherents to the ancient superstition, amongst the rocks and caves of the
Caledonian
forest.
This battle seems to have been decided, not by the sword, but by severe edicts, by the oratory of Christian ministers,
and the zeal of reformers, manifested in the demolition of idols and heathen temples, and in the punishment of the
contumacious, or their expulsion from society.
have now produced a chain of traditional notices, which their way imply, that the symbols of superstition found
I
475
age of general heathenism
;
accompanied these symbols, flourished in the West of Scotland, till nearly the close of the sixth century.
It
is
that the
provincial Britons
viewed
this
great respect, and that they not only made pilgrimages to the feasts of the Caledonian priests, but also, that they re-
imported some of their mystical furniture and rites into Wales, after the departure of the Romans. This Triad
introduces
certain
sacred ships,
The
first article
runs thus
ft
Three
of the island of
"
Britain.
" dorus, the most courteous, carried seven persons and a " half, from the mount of the flat stone of Heliodorus, in " the North, to the mount of the flat stone of Heliodorus, " in Mona.
" The
"
seven persons were, Heliodorus, the most courteous ; Eurgain, golden splendour, his wife, the daughter of
" Maelgwn, the beneficent chief; and Gwyn da Gyvoed " white,* good to his contemporaries, the master of his dogs " (his high priest) ; and Gwyn da Reiniad, white, the good " darter; and the monk of Nawmon, the ship of the cow, " his counsellor and his butler
; ; Pedrylaw, four-handed, " and And the half silvercrook, his servant. Arianvagul, " person was Gel ben evyn, shoot or branch, with the sfuxckled
-*
476
"
head, his cook,
the horse's
"
crupper, and
It
is
will
or antiquary,
several items.
who may
discover something curious in the I shall only remark, that the steed which
can only be considered as the representative of the sacred ship of mythology, which was the
sea,
Mono, and by
This voyage took place in the interval, between the departure of the Romans in the fifth, and the general conversion of the
the story, therefore, involves an account of the re-conducting of some Druidical apparatus, with a suite of And the name of priests, out of Scotland into Wales.
ference to the sun,
Heliodorus, the master of the group, has, probably, a rewho was a distinguished object in the
thus
crescent
and Perednr, and great retinue, which carried Gwrgi " Dunawd and Cynvelyn Drwscyl, Bwr, the sons of Pabo, " to see the sacred fire of Gwenddoleu, in Arderydd."
Nor-
W.
477
This Cornan, or Crescent, was, I suppose, a mere symbol of the sacred ship ; an insigne of the same import as the Cwrwg Gwydrin, or boat of glass, mentioned by Taliesin, as exhibited in the hand of the stranger, and
Druids.
the nocturnal celebrities.* procuring his admission to
them
The
heroes,
whom
this
Cornan introduced
to the
Nor-
thern solemnities, were near relations of Gwenddoleu, or members of his mystical society. Eliver and Pabo were
brothers of Ceidio, Gwenddoleu's father, and grandsons of
Mor, thesea.f
Gwrgi and Peredur, the sons of Pabo, were, at last, deserted by their party, and slain at Caer Greu, the city of
blood,^. or
Their story
is full
of mythology.
Gwrgi, the
human
hvyd, hideous and grey, like the birds of his cousin Gwenddoleu, delighted in human sacrifices ; and, like them, was
slain
learning.^
The
by our
* Cadair See also Maurice's Taliesin, in the third section of this Essay. Indian Antiquities, V. VI. p. 190. Bryant's Analysis, V. II. p. 242. In Montfaucon's Antiquities, V. II. fronting p. 276, is the figure of a bass relief, found at Autun, representing the Arch-Druid bearing his sceptre, and .crowned with a garland of oak leaves, whilst another Diuid approaches, and displays a crescent in bis right hand.
Eleuver, the luminary (W. Archaiol. V. II. the severely energetic, herald of mysteries, is sometimes represented as bis son, and other times as his grandson. Ibid. p. 15 nd 63.
Eliver
is
sometimes called
p. 64).
Gwgawn Gwron,
Camb. Reg. V.
|]
IT-
p.
813.
VV. Archaiol.
V,
478
of Erch, or
Haid*
and Arthanawd, upon an expedition against the cliff of Maelawr, in Cardigan, to avenge their father. It was a sacred law with Maelawr, not to close his port against any load that might arrive in
:
consequence of
this,
he was
slain.f
This sea-horse, or
one
dialect,
and a
swarm
in
another,
must be referred
to Melissa,
and her
Gwrthmwl, the sovereign, was the priest of an idol, or sacred ox, called Tarw Ellyll,t\ie bull demon :$ but this bull
pertained to the Arkite deity.
mount of
North, where he presided as chief elder, of one of the regal tribes, under the mytho-
His
castle
and, in a comparatively
scite
it
became the
of an archie-
Rheonydd
Rlieon and
is,
evidently,
Rh'e'on,
Caer
Rhyd
*
t
Irish,
Earc, a bee
W.
$ Ibid. p. 3, 68.
||
Ib-id.
p. 14, 73.
Ibid. p. 68.
479
I
perstition,
or St.
Columba.
Hence
it
may
fairly
be conjectured, that
this celebrated
of the Northern Druids, was the spot, the great asylum or lona, which was occupied by the said island of Hu, Columba, and in after-ages contained the metropolitan
church of
all
The
early
Christians
Mr. Bryant
is
If I
may
be permitted to
go upon
similar grounds, 1
may
name of Hu ;
Hu
Bede's island of
Hu,
of Northern Druidism.
From
or sacred ship, and land in South Wales, for the purposehim in those ho-
had partly
lost
during the
Roman
go-
vernment.
the heroes engaged in this expedition, I disthe name of Gwair, one of the titles of the Divinguish luvian patriarch. This personage, and his associates, over-
Amongst
come
their
adversary,
or
the
Southern
480
provinces ; and they succeeded in replanting some mystical rites in the territories of the Welsh, during the short period
of British independence.
Thus, the history of the three mythological horses is referred to the tampering of our Cambrian progenitors with
some heathenish
in the North,
if I
superstitions,
beyond
Roman
empire
and
may depend upon our Welsh chronologers, for the aera of the characters here introduced, these transactions occurred after the departure of the Romans, and a considerable time before Rhydderch, with his princes, bishops, and
monks, slew Gwenddoleu and his cannibal the Northern establishment of the Druids.
birds, or ruined
Of
some Mr. Turner has proved to be the genuine production of Merddin; and which contains the expiring groans of the
Northern Druids.
the consequence of the battle of Arderydd, we have account in the Avallenau, or apple-trees, a poem, which
afflictions
may have
been,
we
own
their weight,
by the undesigned
the same fatal en-
own
gagement.
That
is,
481
It is difficult to
meaning of
this
we may suppose
mystagogue, in the imprudent defence of his fraternity, committed some action which proved detrimental to its
cause.
We
though
too
have
much method
It
is
the madness of a
heathen prophet.
The
for
an orchard, containing a hundred and forty-seven delicious apple trees, which had been privately exhibited to the
Bard, by his Lord Gwendoleu, and which he with him in all his wanderings.
still
carries
This circumstance, at once, points out the impropriety of understanding Merddin's orchard, in the literal sense, and
leads us to
some
allegorical
meaning.
Many
may be
and
it
interpreted from
may
:
be admitted
namely, that
the superstitious rites of Dmidism were avowedly practiced, in certain corners of Britain, as late as the close of the sixth
century; and that the Bards of that age, used all the mean* in their power, to conceal their secrets from the knowledge
i i
482
of the populace, to guard them from the persecution of Christian princes and ministers, and at the same time, to
transmit them safe and unblemished, to future ages.
In support of this assertion, I shall produce abstracts from the several stanzas of the Avallenau, translated as darkness of the subject, and the faults of literally as the
the copies, will permit casional remarks.
:
and
to these, I shall
"
"
" To no one has been exhibited, at one hour of dawn, " what was shewn to Merddin, before he became aged
;
trees,
of
*'
*'
equal age, height, length, and size, which sprung from the bosom of Mercy. One bending veil covers them
locks:
over. They are guarded by one maid, with crisped " her name is Qlwedd, with the luminous teeth."*
These
They were
nocturnal
exhibited
celebration of mysteries was completed. The view of these trees, therefore, implies the complete initiation
of the
priest.
They were
each other,
origin.
Hence we maj
* W. Archaiol.
p. 150.
Ibid. p. 34. the square of 7, multiplied by the mystical 3. The round number 140 often occurs. This is the computed number of the stones, which coirif letcd the great temple upon Salisbury plain.
f Anger Cynyndawd.
is
This
483
gather, that one of the secrets
art
Beren, in this sense, corresponded with the Arbor Frugifera of 'Tacitus,* the shoots of which were cut
tallies, distinguished by energetic marks, thrown into a white garment, or covered with a veil, and thus became the means of interpreting the will of heaven.
into lots or
These
trees
still
veil,
Olwedd or Olwen
But
to proceed
" The
" and wide spreading branches, produces sweet apples, for " those who can And they have always grown digest them. " in the wood, which grows apart. The nymph who appears *' and disappears, vaticinates words which will come to
"
pass, 8cc.
seem
to
mentioning one of them. The white blossoms imply the robe of the Druid, the spreading branches,
the fruit, his doctrine and hopes,
I i
* This If it be said, that identity will appear more- clearly in the sequel. Tacitus desc ibes a Gentian, and not a Celtic rite, I would reply, that the Barditits or Bardism, which the Germans near the Rhine, possessed, in the days of that historian, was probably a shrcad of the Celtic institute, which "had been expelled from Gaul. I do not find that any such term as Barditut was familiar to, the Germum of Ctcsar, or io those of the, Lddu,
484
and the sequestered wood which had always produced
fruit, his sacred grove.
this
Most of
great event, which is here put into the mouth of Chwibhian, the nymph, or goddess, who is alternately visible and invisible, still meaning Olwen or Proserpine, who guarded
In the third Stanza, Mrddin tells us, that he had armed himself with sword and shield, and lodged in the Caledonian wood, guarding the trunk of the
gratify
tree, in
order to
Bun,
by way
of acknow-
ledgement,
calls to
him
little
in the pig,
Northern dialect
listen
Oian a
to the
Phorchellan, attend
The Bard
sweet apple tree has pure white sprigs, a portion for food. I had rather en" counter the wrath of a sovereign, than permit rustics
Stanza 4. "
" in raven hue, to ascend its branches. The lady of com" manding aspect is splendidly endowed nor am I destitute " either of talents or of emulation,"
;
The white sprigs could only have furnished mental food for the Bards, as constituting their lots and their books.
The men
in black
Stanza
5.
" The
485
"
*'
the vale:
jects,
its
its
ob-
and even
but
I
"
"
my Gwnem,
and
my
wolfj
now my complexion
weeping;
am
my
who know me
not."
condition,
seems to be a corruption of Gwenyn, bees, priestesses, which were deposited by the mystical sow ; and especially as they are joined with the wolf, another of her productions.
" Thou sweet and beneficient treef not scanty is the fruit " with which thou art loaded but upon thy account, I am " terrified and lest the wood-men sJtould
;
anxious,
come,
" those profaners of the wood, to dig up thy root, and corrupt " thy seed, that not an apple may ever grow upon thee
" more."
" I am become a wild distracted object, no longer greeted " the brethren of my order, nor covered with mv habit. by " Upon me Gwenddoleu freely bestowed these precious " but he as if he had never been." this
gifts
;
is,
day,
(Stanza 6.)
delicate tree,
is
within a shelter
highly beneficent and beautiful ; but princes devise false pretences, with lying, gluttonous, and " vicious monks, and pert youngsters, rash in their derenown,
f g reat
"
"
signs
men
" course."
"
(Stanza 7.)
Now,
alas,
upon
486
" the confluence of streams, without the
(Stanza
8.)
raised circle"*
In these passages, we perceive the Bard's great anxiety to preserve his mystical lore, from the effects of persecution, by princes, monks, and their youthful agents, who are em*
ployed in pointing and cutting dozen the sacred groves, and
demolishing the circular temples.
tree
hut
"
select
men,
to cultivate
shall
and
trunk
be
named
Bard
quisite."
" Incorruptible is the tree which grows in the spot, set " apart (the sanctuary) under its wide envelope. For four " hundred years may it remain in peace But its root is " oftener surrounded by the violating wolf, than by the " who can its fruit."
!
youth
enjoy
" This
tree they
would
so
Here the fanatical priest cherishes a hope, that his Druidism, and his temples, will be re-established in some future
age, though he has at present,
dis-
In another
copy" On the
its
circle.
487
In mentioning the 400 years, he seems to have a retrospect to the period of the Roman government, during which, his superstition had already weathered the storm of
ciples.
persecution, and therefore, as the Bard infers, vive another calamity of four centuries.
it
may
sur-
Stanza
grows in the glade of the Its hiding place has no skilful protector from the of Rhydderchf who trample on its roots, whilst the
13.
fair
" The
tree
" multitude The energetic figures are compass it round. " viewed with and envy. The Lady of the Day loves grief " me I am hated by the minot, nor will she greet me. " nister his son and his daughter of Rhydderch's authority " have I ruined. Death who removes all, why will he not " visit me! After the loss of Gwenddolen* the the
lady of
" white bow, hy no nymph em I respected. No soother " amuses my grief: by no mistress am I visited. Yet, in
" the conflict of Arderydd, " that I were this
precious,
wore the gold collar. Oh day, with those who have the
I
" hue of
Druids
!)"
Stanza 14. " The tree with delicate blossoms, grows " in concealment amongst the forests. A report is heard " at the that the minister has expressed his indigdawn,
" nation
"
thrice,
against the authority of the small sprigs^, twice, nay four times, in one day."-
fair tree
river.
* Gwenddolen, was the mystical daughter of an ancient king 'of Cornwall. She may icpresent in general, the Cornish rites; but I think, more particuThus she answers lo Gwenddoleu, who represented larly, the Lunur divinity.
the sun.
by
lots.
488
cannot thrive on the splendid fruit which I enjoyed from its trunk, whilst my reason was entire, in '''company with Bun, the maid, elegantly pleasing, deli-
"
A provost
"
" cate and most beautiful. But now, " treasures been
my
splendid
" "
wandering amongst ghosts and spectres, after having enjoyed abundant affluence, and the pleasant society of
tribe."
tree,
princes, beginning of The Darter of Rays shall vanquish the " profane man. Before the CHILD OF THE SUN, bold in his " courses, Saxons shall be eradicated: Bards shallflourish,"
and the maid predicts words which will come td half appearing " Mental design shall cover, as with a vessel, the pass " the in the the
soms, grows upon the sod, amongst the trees
"
"
green assemblies,
from
"
tempestuous hour.
put into the mouth of Proserpine, the Bards of Merddin's order, with unequivocally charges the abomination of solar worship. The child of the Sun
is
his priest,
who,
like Taliesin,
assumed his
and character.
tree
grows
in Hidlock, in the
it,
Caledonian
will
The attempts
till
to discover
by
its seeds,
be
"
vain, Cadwaladyr, " comes to the conference of Cadvaon, with the eagle of " the and the Teivi till ranks be formed of the Towy, " white ones of the lofty mount, and the wearers of long " hair be divided into the ihe fierce." gentle and
all in
" The sweet fruits of this tree are prisoners of words. " The ASS will to remove men out of office; but this arise,
489
" " " " "
know, an eagle from the sky will play with his men, and bitter will be the sound of Ywein's arms. A veil covers the tree with green branches and I will foretel
I
the harvest
when the green corn shall be cropped when the he eagle and the she eagle shall arrive from France."*
mount of asof
its
wood
its
"
Concluding Stanza.
Caledonian wood.
in
it
bank of
its
stream,
Rhyd Rheon, with Kynan, opposing the tumult of the Saxons. Then Cymru shall prevail. Her
ference of
Britons shall rejoice. The horns of joy shall sound " song of peace and serenity ."-{
the
Such are the seemingly wild hints, which Merddin has thought proper to communicate upon the subject of his
* Merddin
eaglet.
is
Ctridweii,
* This triumphant close very much resembles that of Cadair Talleiin, Cadair and several other mystical poems. This seems to have been the
comme-
490
apple trees, and which, undoubtedly, were agreeable to the mystical lore of his order.
These
trees,
we
find,
were
allegorical,
and pointed to
that mass of superstition, which the Bards of the sixth century had retained, and which they were desirous of concealing, preserving,
and transmitting safely to posterity. The Christian princes and ministers, who diligently sought for
the mystical orchard, for the avowed purpose of destroying could have viewed it in no other it, root and- branch,
light.
may be
represented; yet
lam
I
more particularly refer to the practice of and have a marked connexion with the Coelbreni,
or letters of the Bards.*
Omen
sticks, lots
As Merddin was
deemed by
his fraternity, to have possessed the gift of prophec}', his oracles were never superseded, during the long ages of supersti-
tion: but
when new
predictions were
demanded
for political
purposes, the succeeding Bards thought it most expedient, cither to interpolate the Hoianaurf or to make the prophet
* That Merddin used them as means of divination, may be further inferred from hence in most of the stanzas, a prediction of some great event is immeof these mystical trees. diately subjoined to the contemplation These predictions, of which I have inserted a specimen or two, are sometimes delivered by the Bard himself; at other times, they are put into themouth of the guardian goddess, who has the property of alternately appearing
;
and disappearing.
+ W. J
Archaiol.
p.
135.
Ibid. p. 132.
491
ancient priest, are not much calculated to derive credit to his order, from the present age ;
but the absurdity of his pretentious was not peculiar to the Celtae. Odin, as well as Merddin, was deemed a prophet,
more
and Partridge and Moore were renowned Gothic Seers, of recent days. Both in their nature, and in the fate
These were
that
in such
and Barbarians,
men
them worth interpolating, for political purposes. But the Athenians deemed the crime worthy of banishment and
;
the sacred predictions had an authority which could embolden foreign princes to invade their
:
country.*
once closed the poems of Merddin the Caledonian, we hear no more of the Druidism of the North. Of the countenance which this ancient superstition experienced amongst the Welsh, for some centuries longer ; and of the documents which their poetry and traditions furnish
When we have
upon the
subject, I
492
British library, and that the cause of true religion cannot
be injured by
error.
this
delineation of the
gloomy mazes of
I shall take
I have shewn, that the Bards pretend to the preservation of the mystical lore of the Druids ; and that a comparison of
their works, with the
documents of
classical antiquity,
con-
From the barren, or desolated field of Bardic philosophy, I hastened to the consideration of religious doctrines and
lites
;
and here
One
embraced some memorials of the history of the deluge, together with an idolatrous commemoration of Noah, of
his family, and of his sacred ship.
The other was Sabian idolatry, or the worship of the host of heaven, a superstition, which in many other countries,, has existed in conjunction with Arkite theology.
It has been remarked,
weave the memorials of the deluge, with their remotest traditions of the origin of the country and the nation:
493
whence arose an
of the
earliest
settlers in Britain,
spring of the patriarchal religion, rived from the great stock of the Noachidse.
was shewn, that British tradition clearly discriminates, and steadily reports the worship of the sun and moon, as an innovation, which found its way
the contrary,
it
On
into Cornwall,
itself into
various
and hence,
judged
it
a rea-
sonable conjecture, that this alloy was derived from the tin merchants of Phoenicia, in whose country, a similar
superstition confessedly prevailed.
From
Britons differed from that of most heathen nations, only as a variety in the same species : that it presented no fundamental principle which can be accounted peculiar. Its
two main branches, the Arkite and the Sabian, have been clearly traced, and in the same connexion, over great part
of the ancient world.
This intimate, and almost universal combination of two systems, which have no obvious relation to each other, I
gannot contemplate, without searching for some early cause of such connexion. Why should Noah be the sun ? or why
should the Arkite goddess be the for a new disquisition ; but I
state a conjecture.
moon f This
may
righteous Noah and his family, who had been distinguished by a Supreme Providence, and miraculously preserved amidst a perishing world, must have been highly
The
their pious
and obedient
chil-
494
dren, whilst living, their prayers were besought, and their precepts received, as the oracles of heaven.
their
growing superstition may doubted favourites of heaven, as mediators with the su-
preme being (just so the saints of the Roman church are invoked), and at last proceeded to worship them as gods.
The
ark, also,
righteous.
Its figure
was the means of preservation to the may have been consecrated, as a reli-
gious memorial of that preservation, till superstition began to view it as a pledge of safety, and to put it under the
as the uni-
Thus, the Arkite theology may have sprung from a corruption of the patriarchal religion ; and in a manner which
would not
of
man
in
immediate and
open
As
perstition,
when
I recollect, that
tons, the sacred ship, or ark, the zodiac and the circular temple, had equally the name of Caer Sidi, I cannot help
astronomy.
it
Whether
was
its
evident design, to commemorate the history and circumstances of the deluge, in the disposition of signs and constellations.
This device
an innocent,
495
scenes, with
But from henceforth, the heavens represented those very which Noah and his sons had heen conversant.
These canonized patriarchs were acknowledged to be immortal for the age which first paid religious homage to the
:
deceased, must of course have admitted the immortality of the soul, and the doctrine of future rewards.
The
unbridled imagination of
man no
sooner contem-
plated the sun, moon, and planets, expatiating amongst the heavenly mansions of these immortals, than it also began to regard
them
;
as
emblems of
their persons,
and of
their
sacred vessel
man
and the unknown and great Supreme. Thus, the Arkite and the Sabian idolatry became one and the
race,
same.
This union seems not to have been coeval with the earliest
Arkite superstition of the Noachidae. Hence the traditions of the Greeks and other nations relative to the
persecution of Latona and her children, of Hercules, Bacchus, and other characters which implied an adoration of
They were admitted, with reluctance, to the rank of gods. Mankind adopted the practice of Sabian idolatry, with an avowed consciousness, that they
the host of heaven.
felt this
consciousness,
had abundant proof. It may also be urged, traditions and acknowledgements, that their Arkite superstition was a manifest corruption of better principles.
496
man, and ascribe to him the actions of a " The man. Taliesin says of him and his family just " ones tolled: on the sea which had no land, long did they " dwell of their it
:
as a righteous
integrity
distress."
it
must have
power
is
this
acknowledged by the same Bard, in his song upon Dylan, where we find, that " sole supreme God, most wise un-
secrets, most beneficent," had destroyed a proworld, and preserved the righteous patriarch. And fligate again the sovereign, the supreme ruler of the land, extended
:
" folder of
his
dominion over the shores of the world, or destroyed it bj the deluge ; but, at the same time, preserved the inclosure of
that the great Diluvian god, who was worshipped under the symbol of the bull and the dragon, and who wa* even identified with the luminary of the material heavens,
So
is
saint
of the
most high.
If such principles were admitted by heathens, when they to the candid avowal of the truth, wherein did the
its
came
votaries, consist?
an absolute ignorance of a great First Cause, and of his superintending Providence, but in giving his glory
in
Not
to another,
and
which
their
own minds
t Appendix, No. 3,
497
" Because " "
that which
may be known
it
of God,
is
manifest
to them, for
God
hath shewed
unto them.
For the
invisible things of him, from the creation of the world, are " clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made,
" even
his eternal
so
because that, when they faiere God, they " glorified him not, as God, neither were thankful; but " became vain in their imaginations, and their foolish heart
excuse
:
" without
"
tl
beasts,
man, and to birds, and and creeping things who changed the into a lie, and worshipped and served the
is
Such
is
by a
true philosopher, a
good
is
ajitiqtiary, said
no mean scholar.
way
to
vain
Thus, Druidism was removed but a few paces further from the religion of Noah, than popery, and some other modes of
worship, denominated Christian, are departed from the faith, the purity, and the simplicity of the gospel. Wherefore it
men, who build their hopes upon the religion of Christ, not to place an implicit confidence in the practice of a corrupt age, or in the principles of an arrogant and
behoves
all
presumptuous teacher; but to have a constant eye to the foundation once laid by the apostles and prophets.
K K
*
Romans, Chap.
St. Paul's
EpistU
to the
I.
498
Here another remark of some importance
offers itself.
As Gentilism
religion, it is
plicity of errors
arose from a corruption of the patriarchal reasonable to suppose, that amongst a multi-
and absurdities,
is
it
same manner
as
popery
acknowledged
to
possess
and a diligent comparison of heathen systems with the book of Job, and the first book of Moses, will evince
that this was actually the case.
Whatever Gentilism had thus preserved without corruption, must be regarded as derived from the revelations
vouchsafed to the patriarchs, and therefore, in its origin, of Divine authority, like those uncorrupted forms and
tenets in popery,
Gospel.
We
form of
may
have prevailed amongst the ancient heathens, was of human device, and therefore could have nothing similar to
it
Being.
For
this
mde
conclusions, as
persons,
who
unjust as the cavils of those scrupulous assert, that the church of England must be
it
superstitious, because
retains
church of Rome.
As
this
institutes
of true
of
Christianity, so Gentilism
:
had not
and these uncorrupted institutes the patriarchal religion are pure and sacred, notwithstanding the general corruption
of the channels through which they have flowed.
499
Upon
modes of
this
adversaries
we jnay frame an answer to those of revelation, who having observed, that some
ground,
sacrifice, some rites of purification, some sacred and many other particulars, sanctioned in the symbols, writings of Moses and the prophets, have their parallel in the religion of Egypt, Syria, or Chaldea, boldly assert,
that these things were adopted from the heathens, and, consequently, that the writings of the Old Testament, and
communication.
The answer
is
ready.
As God had
form of worship, by the prophets of the and primitive world, Adam, Enoch, and Noah, so, when the primitive religion was corrupted by the vanity and wickedinstituted a
of turning, again inculcated to his chosen people the same expectation of the promised Redeemer, figured out by the same symbolical types, which had been communicated to the
patriarchs.
And
as the
some
vestiges of the true primitive religion, an occasional analogy between their forms and symbols, and those of the Israelites,
As
were not omitted, in consequence of the mere accident, the Gentiles had retained them.
tiiat
The word of God, that word, of which every jot and tittl> must be fulfilled, never turns to the right hand, nor to the left never gives way to the error, or the pctuience of man.
K K 2
the general and unequivocal vestiges of Arkite mythology, which were impressed upon the heathen world,
From
inferences
may
be drawn.
As the united voice of the earl}' ages, they forcibly recal the candid sceptic, if such there be, to the acknowledgment of the true, that is, the scriptural account of the deluge,
and the consequent rejection of all those astronomical and mankind geological fables, which plunge the origin of
into the abyss of unfathomable antiquity, and thus open the gap into the regions of darkness, and infidel delusion.
Let reason only be consistent with itself, in exploring even the history of heathenism, and it must acknowledge the
truth of our sacred oracles.
The general voice of mythology, to which I may now add that of the sequestered Briton, admits, that the personage who escaped in his bark from the great deluge, was
distinguished from the mass of perishing mortals
by a
di-
and righteousness.
This attestation to the character of the great patriarch, itself, not only asserts the
reli-
man whose
faith
approved by heaven.
morally responsible to
And
man
as
one supreme and over-ruling God, who mercifully accepted the offerings and the persons of those who sincerely obeyed him, and pardoned their offence?,
our
first
APPENDIX*
CONSISTING OF
Subjects
SOME REMARKS
UPON
ANCIENT BRITISH
A HESE
being
COINS.
of the several subjects discussed in the preceding Essay, are subjoined with the originals at large, for the satisfaction of the antiquarian reader.
illustrative
No.
I.
Song of
Sons of Llyr. *
Gulwydd, Arghvydd pob cchon, Arbennig torfoedd ynhyoedd am Ordden. Ceint yn yspytidawd, uch gwirawd aflawen
Golychaf
i
:
Ceint rhag meibion Llyr, yn ebyr Hen Felon. Gweleis treis trydar ac afar ac anghen
Yd
* W. Arcliaiol. Llyr implies the sea, or the sea-beach. Thb name p. 66. It ha.v b*en CIMIhas a constant reference to the rites of the Diluvian god. ferred upon his priests and eminent votaries. The sons of l.liir ni.-.v lii-not**, 'in general, those who bad beeu iiuliii'.v'd iu the mvs'.eries of the Druid*.
502
Ceint rhag
APPENDIX.
Udd Clodeu, yn noleu Hafren ; Brochvvel Powys, a garwys fy awen. llhag
Ceint yn addfwyn rodle, ym more, rhag Urien Yn ewydd am an traed gvvaed ar ddi'en.
No.
I.
heir Ceridvven
beverage a battle against the sons of Llyr, at the outlets of Hen Velen.
saw the oppression of tumult, and wrath, and tribulation, when the blades gleamed on the glittering helmets
I
Severn
against Brochwel^;
who
loved
my
muse.
There was a
when death
Is not
prevailed.
my
! {]
* The Bard speaks of one supreme God, as acknowledged by the ancient Druids, together with their subordinate divinities, Ceridwen, Elphin,&ic. whose flames occur in ihis poem.
+ Of the three battles here mentioned, the first, namely, that against the sons of L!yr, or the Barrb, at the feast seems to have been the same which took place in the avenues or outlets of Stonehenge, which is here called Hen Velen, the old Belenium, or temple of Apollo. See the songs of the Gododin.
$ Brochwel was prince of the country, about the dales of the Severn, in the sixth century. In his old ae;e, he commanded the Britons in the memo* rable battle of Chester, A. D. 603.
$
lebrated in
Hen.
||
Urien of Reged, a warlike prince of the sixth century. His fame is cemany songs of Taliesin, and his death lamented by Llywarch
the sanctuary of Ceridwen, have
been considered,
$tc*.
No.
I.
APPENDIX.
let
503
sanctuary of the
Therefore,
my
tongue be
2.
free, in tire
Gwawd Ogyrwen
Arnunt, a
llefrith
Ystyriem yn llvvyr, cyn clwyr cyffes, Dyfod yn ddiheu angheu nes nes
:
Ac am
A galwn ar y g\vr a'n digones, A'n nothvvy rhag gvvyth llwyth anghes.
Pan
alwer ynys Vqn tirion vaes, Gwyn eu byd hwy gwleiddion Saeson artrSs.
The
is
ACORNS.
Let us ponder deeply, before confession is heard, that death is evidently approaching nearer and nearer, and that
for the lands of Bardsey,f there will be an inroad.
shall rise on the face of the water.
fleet
Let us then
call
upon
sufficient, that
he
may
protect
When the
oppress.
Isle
of
Mona
shall
be called a pleasant
field,
whom
the Saxons
* Or oblation, in behalf of the fallen warriors. In this passage, we may remark the bigotry with which the Bards continued to honour the imaginary gods of their forefathers, notwithstanding they acknowledged the being of one love-diffusing Lord of the universe. Are there not nominal Chrrstians in the present day, chargeable with practices no less
absurd or impious
!
t It appears from several passages, that this spot, as well as Mona, was sacred to the ancient superstition.
"
named
" When in his Avallennau. Pyvnant the city of stone*, the Bard shall receive his perquisite."
504
APPENDIX.
3.
No.
I.
Doddwyf Deganhwy i amryson A Maelgwn, mwyaf ei achwyson Ellyngais fy Arglwydd, yngwydd Deon
:
Elphin Pendefig, ri hodigion. Yssid imi deir cadeir, cyweir, cysson ; Ac yd fravvd parhawd gan Gerddorion.
Cigleu gyfarfod
am
gerddorion,
unfryd,
gwrhyd wrion,
to
came
to
Teganwy
maintain
:
the
contest with
Maelgwn,*
in the presence
of
Deon f
I
till
my
\ of have three presidencies, complete and concordant, and I was the doom shall they remain with the tuneful tribe,
ears of corn.
j|
who carry
Gwydion, ^[
who
set
* The Maglocnnus of Gildas Lord of North Wales, from A. D. 517, te 546, and then nominal sovereign of the Britons, to the time of his death, about th year 560.
+ A title of Ho, Bacchus, tr Liber Pater, the Helio-artit* god. pendix, No. 11. " O Uu, with the expanded wings O father Deon .'"
$ See his character and connexions in the 3d Section,
Thus Ap-
That
M
is,
Or masters of Bardic
I-leu,
the lumin&ry, was the father of M'mavc, the Diluvian patriarch. 51 By Ciwydion was the British Hermes. See the Chair of Ceridwen, in Sect 5. itttir^g in order the elementary {re, is implied, Laying the Jirst faundnta^t, tf written memorials.
No.
I.
APPENDIX.
in
505
Bran f
cut.
Ireland.
and plants.* I was with saw when the thigh of Tyllon was
I heard the conference, respecting the Bards, with the Gwyddelian, polluted fiends. From the promontory of BlethJ to Lluch Roon, the
Cymry
medd
lestri,
:
Yngheinion Deon, i'm a'i dyroddi A'n dwy ben sywed Ced ryferthi.
Ys cyweir
fy nghadeir,
ynghaer Sidi
Ys
gvvyr
Manavvyd a Phryderi,
Tair Orian, y
am
Ac am
ei
Elestren,
more
particularly,
mean
the water
lilits,
or Jlags
the Lotos of
the Druids.
f Bran ap Llyr, Raven, ton of the sea, was the traditional father of the celebrated Caractacus. He first introduced the mystical cauldron into Ireland, probably with a view to secure his mysteries from the persecutions of the invadSee Turner's Vindic p. 283. ing Romans. The name of this Diluvian priest is referable to the raven of Noah. Our mystical Bard, like Pythagoras of old, pretends to have been present in the transactions of various ages. As he held in the doctrine of Metempsychosis, he blended his own personal character, with that of the Taliesins, or priests' of the sun, who had gone before him.
t Perhaps Blatum of the Itinerary Bulnis, at the West end of the wall of Severus. Lluch Rum, the chief seat of the Northern Druids. See 6ecf. 5. One of the great maxirni of the Druids wa? A>^na a^xity, to exercise fcr iitude. Diog. Laert.
APPENDIX.
Ys whegach no'r gwin gwyn y llyn yndi Ac wedi ath iolaf, Oruchaf, cyn gweiyd,
Gorod cymmod a
thi
!
No.
I.
Deliver thou the Cymry, in the hour of tribulation! Three tribes, cruel from native disposition, the Gwyddelians,
the Britons,*
quillity with their tumults': and round the borders of Britain, with its fair dwellings, they contend for the sovereignty,
over vessels of mead, -f- even in the pavilions of the disThe inundation will tributor, who bestowed it upon me.
Yet complete is my chair in Caer Sidi, J neither disorder nor age will oppress him that is within it. It is known to Manawyd and Pryderi, that three loud strains round the
fire, will
be sung before
it,
are round its borders, and the copious fountain is open from above, the liquor within it is sweeter than delicious
wine.
And
after I shall
thou Most
I
High, before I
am
may
be found
* The Brython, when distinguished from the Cymry, or primitive inhabitants, seem to have been the Belgian tribes, whom the Triads place in the North, as
well as the South of Britain.
f An allusion to the bloody feast, on the Cursus, at Stonehenge, where D'icm, or Hu, held his court. Taliesin, as chief Druid, and vicegerent of this god, and of Kid, or Ceres, claims the sovereignty of the British Island. Had his religion been in full establishment, he would have been acknowledged as supreme judge, from whose decree there would have been no appeal. Merddm was styled Supreme Judge of the North, in the sixth century.
i In this passage, our Bard borrows his imagery from Diluvian'rnythology, and represents his sanctuary as a type of the ark.
It seems to express some $ This sentiment often occurs in the old Bards. drgre.^ of dissatisfaction in their heathenish mummery, and to import a vow of fcrtonang Christians, sometime before their death.-See the first stanza of the
following poem.
No.
If.
APPENDIX.
No. II. called MIC DINBYCH^,
1.
507
Poem of
Taliesin,
a View of the
JSardic Sanctuary.*
Archaf y'wen i Dduw plwyf esgoii. Perchen nev a llawr, pwyll fawr wofri, Addfwyn Gaer y sydd, ar Glawr Gweilgi ;
Bid llawen ynghalan
eirian
ri
Ac amser pan wna mor mawr wrhydri, Ys gnawd gorun Beirdd uch medd lestri.
Dyddybydd gwaneg, ar frys, dybrys A ddaw hwynt i werlas o glas Fichti
iddi,
:
Ac am
bwyf,
my
whom
great
attributed, a holy sanctuary there is on the surface of the ocean may its chief be joyful in the splendid festival, and at the time when the sea rises with expanding
wisdom
is
energy
asail
mead
this
may
and on the day when the billows are exinclosure skim away, though the billows
:
come beyond
Picts.J
And,
though I
*
May I be, for the sake of my prayer, preserve my institute, in covenant with thee
!
God!
W.
Archaiol. p. 67.
is
508
APPENDIX.
2.
No.
II.
lyn,
Gvgyvarch ti, Prydein, cwdd gyngein hyn Blaen Hyn ab Erbin boed teu vbyn Bu gosgordd, a bu cerdd, yn eil mebyn,
:
Ac
eryr,
Rhag Udd
sanctuary tbere is, on the wide lake ; a city not protected with walls ; the sea surrounds it. Demandest thou, Britain, to what this can be meetly applied
A holy
Before the lake of the son of Erbin, let thy ox be stationed * there, where there has been a retinue, and in the second place, a procession, and an eagle aloft in the sky, aud the path of Granwyn before the pervading sovereign,
who would
leader.
who
dis-
Addfwyn Gaer y sydd ar don nawfed, Addfwyn ei gwerin yn ymwared Ni wnant eu dwyn cyt, trwy feflhued
:
Ni
lefaraf au, ar fy
nhrwydded
* The Bard, by an enigmatical description, reminds bis countrymen of the ancient solemnities connected with the insular sanctuary. 1. The sacred ox of the patriarch, the Ych Banawg, is stationed before the lake, ready to draw the Avanc or Shrine to land, out of its watery repository. 2. It is the lake of Eraint ab Erlin, or of 'the vessel of the lofty chiefs. 3. The retinue of 4. The priests assembled on the occasion, and joined in the mystical procession. eagle, or symbol of the sun, was placed aloft in the sky t that is, in the open
5. There 'was the temple, which is often so called. representation of the path of Granwyn, or Apollo an image of the ecliptic, in which the was conducted, preceded by the waving eagle. And 6, this was done pomp in the presence of the great ssvereipn, or the sun himself that is t it wa* a lUurual celebration, which commenced at the dawn.~- Set No. .
asthere.il
No.
II.
APPENDIX.
eillion
509
Nog
ciwed.
A holy sanctuary
are
its
there
is,
inhabitants,
in preserving
riot associate in
tablished
custom
the bonds of pollution. It is not their esto act with severity. I will not abuse my
The
restrained
man
of
Dyved*
is
two
strands.
;
Preservers
is
Addf\vyn Gaer y sydd a'i gwna cyman, Meddut, a molut, ac adar ban.
:
Llyfn
ei
cherddau, yn
ei
chalan
A'm Arglwydd hyvvydd, H'cwr eirian, Cyn ei fyned yn ei adwyd, yn derfyn Han, Ef a'm rhoddes medd a gwin o wydrin ban.
sanctuary there is it is rendered complete by the rehearsal, the hymn and the birds of the mountain.^
A holy
Smooth
are
its lays,
and
my
lord,
duly observant of the splendid mover, before he entered his earthly cell, in the border of the circle, gave me mead and
The Bard distinguisltes three particulars in the business of his sanctuary. The rehearsal of ancient lore. 2., The chauntiug of hymns, in honour of the gods. 3. The interpretation of iheir will, by birds of augury.
$
The
hierophaiit,
had received
the
by whom the Bard had been mead and wiue, or the Kvxja'v of
initiated,
and of
whom he
510
APPENDIX.
No.
II.
Adwen, yn Ninbych, gorwen Gwylan, Cyweithydd wleiddydd, Udd Erlyssan: Oedd ef fy nevawd i, nos Galan,
Lleddfawd y gan
ri,
ryfel eiran,
A lien,
Hyn
A
one
I
is
holy sanctuary there is, within the gulf; there, every kindly presented with his portion.
knew the eminently white sea-mew * in Dinbych the meek associate the lord of the supreme court it was my
:
custom to attend, on the eve of the festival, to what the ruler sweetly sung (the war of the splendid onef ) with my robe of bright green,J possessing a place in the assembly.
Hence
my
word
is
Oedd meu ei Ni lyfaraf i daith rhaith rysgattvra Ni ddyly celennig ni wyppo hwn.
Ysgrifen Brydain, bryder briffwn, Yn yd wna tonneu eu hamgyffrwn,
wn ;
Pe
reit,
hyd
bell
gell attreiddwn.
* By the description which is given of this sea-mew, it is evident, he was no other than the hierophant, or chief Druid, mentioned above. Hywel, the son of Owen, describes the Druids under the same figure. The choice of this aquatic bird as their symbol, arose from their Arkite rites, and Diluvian mythology. Amongst the ancients, the sea mew was the symbol of Minerva, as an Arkite goddess. See Faber's Cabiri, V. I. p. 106, 185, &c. The sanctuary, or sacred island, which was fabled to have wandered from place to place, like the ark of old, now fixes itself upon the border of the flood, and proves to be the insular spot, now containing the town of Tenby, in Pembrokeshire : fbr it is evident, from what the Bard had said before, that he means Dinbych, in Dyvcd. This is but a small distance from Arberth, High See Sect. V. Grove, the chief seat of the mystical Pwylt.
t Probably, some
lio-arkite god.
poem upon
He-
J Green was the colour of the ovate, or of him who had already been inifirst principles of Bardism. See Owen's Diet. V. Gluin and
Ovydd.
No.
II.
APPENDIX.
is,
511
vessel of
Kd*
I possessed
productions of the of its courses, which I myself I will not disclose the progress of
with
its
He who knows
not
The
regard
again,
not entitled to the perquisite at the festival. writings of Britain^ are the first object of anxious
:
necessary, conceal
them deep
7.
in the cell.
Godde gwrych dymbi, hir ei hadein, Dychyrch bar carreg, creg ei hadnein.
Llid y mevvn tynged : treidded troth mein bleiddud gorllwyd goreu affein. Dimpyner, odduch pwy, Lllad cofein.
Bendith culwydd nef gydlef afein Arnyn, gwnel yn frowyr gorwyr Owein.
holy sanctuary there is, exalting itself on high. The small reeds, with joined points, declare its praise : fair, in
its
borders, the
first
* The cauldron of
Sect. III.
inspiration,
See
t Or writings of Prydain, who was the same as Hu. See No. 11. maj gather from hence, that the Druids had certain ancient writings, which they deemed more sacred by far, and of greater importance, than those songs and These tales, which were made public, or recited in the ears of the people. writings had already been concealed in times of persecution, probably during the Human government and they were known only to the Druids, or Bards of the highest order ; for f aliesin tells us, that in case of necessity, he possessed the effectual means of concealing them again. We can only guess, in general, that these arcana comprehended the sacred history, and rituals of the Druids, together with the rules of divination, and most mysterious doctrines of the an:
We
'
cient priesthood. From the beginning of the next stanza, it appears that this code was cornposed in the mystical characters of the Bards, consisting of reeds, and the To this kind of writing Taliesin alludes, when he points, and shoots of trees. " I know aayi every reed, or twig, in the care U' the chief diviner."
512
APPENDIX.
No.
IT.
She
There
Let
it
meet only amongst the grey wolves. memorials of Llad shall be secured from the assault.
Contention
The
May
the blessing of the beneficent Ruler of heaven, who is harmoniously praised in the heights, be upon them; and may he make the late posterity of Owen possessors of the
land
!
8.
Ian Lliant:
i
Addfwyn yd
Gogyfarch
ti
roddir
bawb
chwant.
Gwaywawr
Duw
Ac am
gefn Llech Vaelvvy cylchwy friwant. C \vyddyn y gan gefn llu o Garant.
A
flood
:
is,
tl>e
wishes.
I warn thee to depart !f Thou be prosperous! Spearmen, with vibrating spears, will occupy the spot. On the day of Mercury, I saw men in mutual enjoyment on the day
:
* Here we perceive the augur in the solemn exercise of his divining artthe cormorant, a Inrd of ill omen, denounces an approaching persecution. The Druid comprehends the hint, and conceal* his sacred memorials. I.ldal, in other passages, is a name of the Arkite goddess. In Taliesin's Aiigar Cyvyndawd, she is represented as the mother of the Celtic Apollo. Her manorial? seem to imply tbe same thing as the writings of Prydain, mentioned above.
t After the Bard had received the omen from the cormorant, and concealed
his memorials, he still persists in celebrating his holy santtuary, till he is interrupted by a repeated message from some bird of augury, protecting spirit, or
brother Druid,
wh seams
to
No.
III.
APPENDIX
there was a disparagement of
of Jove,
protected. The hair was red with blood, and there was clamourous
woe.
arrived.
There were funeral processions on the day when they They will break the circle behind the flat stone of
Let the multitude of our friends
retire.
Maehvy.
No.
III.
A Poem
I
of Taliesin, called
PREIDDEU ANNWN,
The
repeated occasion to mention this piece in the preceding sections: but before I insert it at length, it may be proper to observe, that Mr. Turner has introduced
it in
HAVE had
is so much of Taliesin's poetry, which no one " can understand, that I cannot but place him, in point of " intrinsic merit> below the other Bards; although, in " the estimation of his countrymen, he seems to have been " ranked in a His Cad Goddeu, The Battle superior class. " and so are the is
" There
of
Trees,
"
others.
That
"
"
unjustly, I will
eminently incomprehensible may not be thought to condemn him beg leave to present the reader with his
;
poem, called Preiddeu Anmen, The " If its allusions are at all
Spoils of
Annwn.
much
" involved in mythology, to be comprehended. In his mead " there is a connected train of thought in the folsong, " lowing poem, all connexion of thought seems to have " been avoided."
:
studiously
W.
Archaiol. p.
4,
APPENDIX.
The author adds
"
It
is,
No.
III.
this note.
fair to
however,
the
remark, that
if
the Mabinogion,
" and
'*
all
Welsh
it is
"
"
propable, that enough might be gathered from them, to elucidate some of the allusions of Taliesin to the opi-
nions, tales,
intelligible
I
and traditions of
passages,
his day.
"
many
now
obscure."
be thought rather too adventurous, in encountering this select specimen of incomprehensibility) which was no
may
less
enigmatical to the chair of Glamorgan, than to the learned Vindicator of the Bards but if I succeed in pointing out a due connexion of thought throughout the poem ;
:
if I
can satisfactorily prove, that the Bard alludes, with consistency and accuracy, to the mysteries of the British Bacchus and Ceres; that he connects these mysteries with
Diluvian mythology; and that he represents them as the basis of the Bardic or Druidical system; then I may be allowed to presume, that I possess the true key to the mys-
poems, and to the adytum of British superstition. At the same time, I am ready to admit, that another hand
tical
in
moving the
rusty wards,
which
of
shall, first
all,
poem
is
the mythology
of the
deluge,
and
it.
commemo*
ration of
PREIDBEU ANNWN.
1.
ri.
Pe
ledas
Mundi ;
No.
III.
APPENDIX.
ebostol Pwyll a Phryderi,
515
Bu
Trwy
Ac, yd frawd, parahavvd yn Barddweddi ; Tri lloneid Prydwen ydd aetham ni iddi; Namyn Saith, ni dyrraith o Gaer Sidi.
"
supreme
ruler of the
"
land.
" the world, yet in good order was the prison of Gwair, " in the Enclosure of Sidi. Through the mission of Pwyll " and no one before him entered into it.
Pryderi,
blue chain didst thou, O just man, endure: " and for the and spoils of the deep, woful is thy song " till the doom shall it remain in the Bardic Thrice
;
" "
"
prayer
the
liave filled
the deep
excepting seven,
Sidi."
In this
first
stanza,
we
find the
existence of one supreme God, and declaring his resolution to adore him, because he had shewn respect to Gwair, the just man, and preserved the inclosure of Caer Sidi, in which
at the time
when he extended
his
The Supreme Being was, therefore, universal deluge. adored for his beneficent providence, which had distinguished the just man, and preserved him through a calamity which overwhelmed the world. This, I conceive, was a
genuine principle of the patriarchal religion. I have already observed, that Gwair, the principal person who escaped this catastrophe, was the patriarch Noah.
The
Triads represent this Gwair, with his family, as confined in the prison of Oeth ag Anoeth, wrath, and the
L L 2
APPENDIX.
remission
No.
Ill,
his descendants, to
the
latest
attempted
to
escape.
The
allegory
implies, that as the patriarch, with his family, had been shut up in the ark, so the Druids acknowledged those only
as his legitimate descendants,
The
prison of
Gwair
is
been explained above, as implying, in the first place, the ark, in which the patriarch and his family were inclosed ;
secondly, the circle of the zodiac, in which their luminous emblems, the sun, moon, and planets, revolved; thirdly,
the sanctuary of the British Ceres, which represented both" the ark and the zodiac.
The
other
Caers,
mentioned
in
same
:
and
may
be
regarded as so
many
titles
of the ark
thus,
Caer Bediwyd, the inclosure of the inhabitants of the world the ark, which contained all that was living; or, Caer Medhcyd, the inclosure of the perfect
jvst family.
ones, or
of the
Caer Ri-gor, the inclosure of the royal assembly of the patriarch and his sons, who were kings of the world.
Caer Gohtr, the gloomy inclosure
the ark, which was
closed up, so as to exclude the light. Caer Fandn-y, the inclosure resting on the height. Caer Qchren, the inclosure whose side produced life.
The patriarch entered his inclosure, through the mission t or apostlcship (which, I fear, implies a profane scoff at the gospel), of Pwyll and Pryderi, reason or prudence, and
serious meditation.
were
mythology, and that their history In the vale of relates to the deluge and Arkite mysteries. the Boat, Ptcyll was met by Arazon, Pendaran, the Arkite
personified in British
No.
III.
APPENDIX.
517
lord of thunder, who commissioned him to take the government of the deep into his own hands for a whole
year, &c.*
chain mentioned by our Bard, was the symbol of that confinement, which the just man had endured; and of the
restraint to
The
which those of
his descendants,
who were
ini-
the patriarch implies his pensive reflection upon the multitudes which had been swept away by the deluge. At the conclusion of the other stanzas, the Bard repeats the same reflection, with some variety of ex-
own
song.
Prydwen, sometimes mentioned as the shield of the mythological Arthur, was more properly his ship, and a title
of the ark.
It is derived
Ko?/xo ?
;
order of things,
from Prvd, beauty, the general and Wen t which marks a female
the world,
character
who
had
carried
surviving inhabitants. According to the of our Bard, thrice the number of men which
filled
deep; but none escaped, excepting the patriarch, and the seven, who were inclosed with him in Caer Sidi.
Neud wyf
glod
geymyn
cerdd, o chlywid,
!
Ynghaer Pedryfan pedyr y chwelid Ynghynneir o'r pair pan leferid, Oanadl naw morwyn gochynnessid. Neu pair pen Annwfn pwy y vynud
:
Gwrym am
ei oror,
a mererid,
rydyngid.
Ni beirw bwyd
llwfr, ni
* Se
Sect.
Y,
518
Cleddyf
APPENDIX.
lluch, lleawc, idclaw
No.
:
III.
rydderchid
:
edewid
A rhag drvvs porth Uffern llugyrn lloscid A phan aetharn ni gan Arthur trafferth llethrid,
Namyn
"
Saith, ni ddyrraith o
Gaer Vediwid.
lore, if it
Am
" were regarded, which was four times reviewed in the qua" drangular inclosure !* As the first sentence was it uttered " from the cauldron, which began to be warmed by the
" breath of the nine damsels. Is not this the cauldron of " the ruler of the What is its quality ? With the deep
!
tl
its is
border,
it
will
"
Against him
will
be
" and in the hand of the sword-bearer " before the entrance of the of
gate
(l
he be
left
and
hell, shall
the horns
of light be burning.
Vedizcid."
ird here
And when we
"
" Caer
The B
the sacred
cell,
upon the peculiar sanctity of the had been four times revised in or Adytum, before it was uttered, as the
insists
It
first sentence, or
fundamental doctrine of the mystical cauldron of Ceridwen, and the ruler of the deep. The subject
of
this sacred vase
plies,
has been already introduced. It immetaphorically, the whole system of Arkite mysteries
as the baptismal the Christian religion. cauldron had been first warmed by the breath of
in the
same manner
emblem of
The
nine damsels, or prepared by those Arkite priestesses, callecl GwyUion and Seon. The same cauldron, as typifying the
* Or the inclosure which had four avenues or passages, pointing different
No.
III.
APPENDIX.
communicated
science,
;
519
wisdom, virtue/ would not pre-
sacred mysteries,
but
it
who
coward, the remiss or refractory perwanted resolution and fortitude to preserve the-
of his order, or who disregarded the dreadful with which he had bound himself, at the time of adoath,
institues
mission.
The
tence
fate
of such a wretch
will
is
"
Against him
be
lifted
sword," &c. Of the ceremony to which our Bard alludes, the chair of Glamorgan have preserved some tradition. " Degradation (the punishment of a refractory member) was
"
erbi/n. of warfare against him-,. yn bring " after the decision, all the Bards covered their heads, and " one of them unsheathed the sword, named the person " aloud three with the sword lifted in his hand, addtimes, " when he was last named the sword is naked
" a particular act of the Gorsedd (solemn session), be" fore the close of t, and it was called Dzvyn cyrch cyvlavan " ei the assault To
i
ing,
against
"
him.''
called "
map
"
fare-'*
seem, from the language of Taliesin, that the Druids did not scruple to use, the sword against the caitiff, thus deprived of privilege and hope, and to consign or their lowest hell.
him
to
Abred,
triarch
Noah.
3.
cerdd glywanhawr
Hn,
p. 51.
APPENDIX.
Echwydd
a
No.
III.
muchedd cymysgettor,
Gwm
Tri lloneid
Namyn
Gaer Rigor.
" Am I not contending for the honour of a lore that de~ " serves attention " In the quadrangular inclosure, in the island with the " strong door, the twilight and the pitchy darkness were
!
" mixed together, whilst bright wine was the beverage, " before the narrow circle placed " Thrice the number that zvould have filled Prydwen, we " embarked upon the sea ; excepting seven, none returned from " Caer
Rigor."
The quadrangular
the ark
itself;
inclosure
is
the
cell,
or
Adytum
of
of an Arkite temple. It follows, that the island with the strong door, was that of the
and hence,
Seon or Gzvyllion, which contained this sacred Arkite cell. The Druids seem to have appointed a great divinity, as the guardian of the door, or entrance of this sanctuary.
Thus Taliesin says " The * before whom heaven and earth oak, the mover, f would tremble a vindictive foe The guardian of the " door is his name in our table books."
!
door of Godo, the ark. All this has its counterpart in the mythology of other " When the ark was ISoah made a riations.
constructed,
1'
door in
its
* Or Quickener.
No.
III.
APPENDIX.
521
The entrance through it, writers. esteemed a passage to death and darkness; hut the they " egress from it was represented as a return to life hence
:
" the
of
it
were religiously
re-
corded."*
confusion of twilight and utter darkness, in this sacred inclosure, alludes to the internal gloom of the ark, a cirrid wen, the Arkite goddess,
The
cumstance seldom forgotten in the mystical poems. Ce* was the mother of Avagddu, utter darkness, who could not be illuminated, till the re-
novating cauldron had boiled for a complete year. The torches of this goddess were burning in the dead of the aspirant to the greater night, and at the hour of dawn
:
mysteries was cast into the sea, Mewn boly tywyll, in a dark receptacle; and in the poem before us, the ark is styled Caer Golur, the gloomy inclosure. Mr. Bryant has re-
marked numerous
allusions to the
same circumstance.
We are here
told, that
before the narrow circle of the Diluvian patriarch. That revered personage was the first upon record, who planted
He was the Dionusus its produce. of antiquity. The British Bards represent him uuder the character of liu, as the giver of wine: and they seldom allude to his mystical festivals, without mentioning the
the vine, and drank of
mead and
as sacred memorials.
4.
Tra Chaer Wydr, ni welsynt wrhyd Arthur Tri ugeint canhwr a sefi ar y mur ;
* Bryant'sAnalysis, V. II. See also p. 364, where we
(>f
p. 257. find a
divinity
the door.
522
APPENDIX.
Oedd anawdd ymadrawdd a'i gwiliadur Tri lloneidd Prydwen ydd aeth gan Arthur
No.
III.
Namyn
" "
saith, ni ddyrraith o
Gaer Golur.
I will not
governor.
Beyond
" not the prowess of Arthur. " Thrice twenty hundred men stood on " difficult to converse with its centinel. " Thrice the number that would have
"
its
wall
it
was
filled
Prydwen went
forth with Arthur ; excepting seven, none returned " Caer Golur."
from
represents the inhabitants of the old under the banners of the patriarch,
the prospect of impending ruin. They were ascending the sides of the ark, and imploring protection
The circumstance
is
po-
etically
We are not,
tlie inclosure of glass. hence to conclude, that the Druids regarded the sacred ship as constructed of that material ; but they
The
esteemed certain
little glass models, as very sacred symbols of the mystical vessel, and held the material itself in reli-
gious esteem. Thus the stranger, in the chair of Taliesin, is introduced to the nocturnal mysteries, by exhibiting his
boat of glass, which
ark.
house of glass,
Merddin Emrys and his nine Bards put to sea in the which could have been nothing more than
distributed the sacred liquor to his disciples,
:
The Druid
wydrin Ban, out of the deep cup of glass and those sacred insignia, the Glain, and the Ovum Anguinum, were
preparations of some vitrified substance.
All these com,-
No,
III.
APPENDIX.
vessel,
523
its
which, amongst
multitude
Ni obrynaf llawyr llaes eu cylchwy. Ni wyddant hwy py ddydd peridydd pwy, Py awr, ym meinddydd, y ganed Cwy, Pwy gwnaeth ar"nid aeth doleu Dev\vy. Ni vvddant hwy yr ych brych, bras ei benrhwy,
i
A
"
"
phan aetham
ni
Namyn
saith, ni
yn
ei
I will not
" nor what hour in the serene day, Cwy (the agitated per" son) would be born, or who prevented his going into the " dales of of the
'water). They Devwy (the possession " know not the brindled ox with the thick head-band, " having seven score knobs in his collar. And when zee " went with Arthur, of mournful memory ; excepting seven, lt none, refurned from Caer Vandzcy."
and
new
with trailing shields, or wanted the world, invincible fortitude of Bardism. Providence had not disfled
who
covered to the former, on what day the fatal stroke of the deluge would be given; at what time the patriarch, who
was tossed upon the waters, would be born again from his vessel, or who prevented his sinking to those dales, which
were covered with the deluge. The latter knew not the brindled
ox,
&c.
In almost every British memorial of the deluge, the oxf is The oxen of Hu the Mighty drew the introduced. o %/ beaver out of the lake, and prevented the repetition of the
deluge.
524
And an ox
APPENDIX.
or bull, as I have
No.
in the
III.
shewn
second sec-
tion, was the symbol of the Helio-arkite god. Whatever is to be understood by the knobs,
in the collar
of this brindled ox, it must be observed, that seven score, or seven score and seven, constituted a sacred number with
the Druids, or ancient Bards.
Thus Taliesin
says,
that
seven score Ogyrvens, or mystical personages, pertain to the British muse. The mystical trees exhibited to Merddin, were 147 and the stones which completed the great temple
:
on Salisbury plain, are computed at 140. If the sacred ox was kept in this temple, the stones of the fabric may have
been described, as composing his ring, or collar. By not knozving this ox, the Bard implies an ignorance of Arkite
mysteries, or of the Pruidical religion,
6.
>
a gadwant ariant y pen Pan aetham ni gan Arthur, afrddwl gynhen Namyn saith, ni ddyrraith o Gaer Ochreri.
fil
Py Py
awr,
ym
"
will
unguarded
born; " headed ones protect " When we "jent with Arthur " none returned
They know not on what day the chief was " appointed on what hour in the serene day, the propri" etor was or what animal it is, which the silver:
" mouths.
mournful conflict ; Caer Qchren" from excepting seven, The persons of unguarded mouths, were those who violated
into the
the oath of secrecy, administered to them before their initiation. The chief and the proprietor are titles of the
deified patriarch,
and of
his
representative
in the myste.-
No.
ries
:
III.
arid the
APPENDIX.
525.
Mynaich
gyfranc uddudd ai gwyddanhor Ai un hynt gwynt; ai un dwfr mor Ai un ufel tan, tvvrwf diachor
!
like
Js
of
energy.
Taliesin having asserted the merit of his own' system, proceeds in this, and the concluding stanza, to reprove the
monks, the determined adversaries of the Bards, He seems to say illiberality and their ignorance.
one
for their
Though
may
be right,
it
"
"
Is there
Myneich dychnuct fal bleiddiawr, O gyfranc uddudd ai gwyddyanhawr. Ni wddant pan ysgar devveint a gvvawr;
yn ddifant o
i
bet allawr
Golychaf
Wledig,
Pendevig Mawr
like wolves,
"
wrangling with their instructors. They know not when the darkness and the " dawn divide nor what is the course of the wind, or the ;
" cause of
its
agitation
it
in
what place
it
dies
away, or on
;;
expands.
526
APPENDIX.
No, IV.
" The grave of the saint is vanishing from the foot of " the altar: I will adore the SOVEREIGN, the GREAT
" SUPREME
This
is
!"
the proper conclusion of the poem, and it has something of sublimity. The Bard had introduced his subject, with a resolution to adore the Great Supreme, who
had preserved the just man from the waters of the deluge j and he closes with the same sentiment. Some idle copyist, however, as usual, has added a
Christian idea, in a verse which disagrees with what has
final
rhyme
Na bwyf
" That
I
trist,
Crist
am
be not sorrowful,
my
portion."
No. IV.
IN the Celtic Researches, I have observed, that Tydain Tad Atoen Titan, the father of inspiration, the third of the
chief regulators; and Angar, the fountain of heat, the son of Ladon, and the third of the equal judges, corresponded in
character with Apollo. Yet Tydain and Angar are evidently connected with the Arkite theology of the Britons. The
former had his tomb, or shrine, in the hill of Aren; and Mr. Bryant informs us, that Aren was the ark.
Ladon, the mother of Angar, was no other than Latona ; and the same great mythologist assures us, that Isis, the Arkite goddess, and Latona, were the same personage.
This solar divinity of the Britons appears again in a poem of Taliesin, with the title Teyrn On, the sovereign
ON.
And he
still
retains the
No.
III.
APPENDIX.
527
passage in Taliesin's poem, on the rod of Moses, connects this On with the Egyptian divinity, On, or Helios.
The
patriarch Joseph
priest,
or prince, of On, which is also called Heliopolis; and thus he had become the son of this prince. And the Bard says
On
collected treasures
from
his asso-
ciates,
"
possession."
by
this
the sovereign
name, On.
it
is
entitled
is
It
curious
particularly as
was composed upon a memorable occasion, the inauguration of the renowned Arthur. I shall therefore
it
give
entire.
Awen
tra messur,
ffwr,
W.
Archaiol. p. 65.
528
APPENDIX.
A'i gadair gymmesswr^ Ymhlith gosgordd mwr.
No, IV.
The
unbounded
Awen (Bardic muse), concerning the person of two origins,* of the race of Al Adurft with his divining staff,
his
and his neighing coursers, and and his potent number, and his regulator of kings, blushing purple, and his vaulting over the boundary, and
and
his pervading glance,
Lo, he
is
amongst the established train. brought from the firm inclosure,J with
his
the light-coloured bounding steeds even the sovereign ON, the generous feeder,^ the third profound object of ancient,
* Alluding, perhaps, to the double birth of the Arkite god. Thus Dionusus have had an eye to the (Noali) was styled Ai^yf. Or else, the Bard may mystical union of the patriarch and the sun.
f "n^X,
:
Tlie Glorious
God.
I shall not undertake to explain the various particulars introduced in this passage only, 1 suppose, that by the solar god's vaulting over the boundary, the Bards intimated his crossing the equator. This may have been represented by some mystic rite. Diodorus tells us, that Apollo had his appropriate chair in the great Hyperborean temple, which antiquaries, of no mean name, pronounce to have been no other than the famous structure of Stonehenge- There the god amused himself with a dance, once in nineteen years, amongst hi As it was the known practice for Certain priests, in the established train. celebration pf the mysteries, personally to represent the sun and moan, I conjecture that the Druids, in their great festival of the cycle, dressed up a pageant of their own order, to personate this luminous divinity.
inclosure,
or strong
boundary, seems to
mean
the
fir-
Or, Heilin the Feeder, the solar divinity, the third rank.
whom
No. IV.
APPENDIX.
2.
529
Arthur fendigad,
Ar gerdd
A'r
gyfaenad,
Pwy
tri
chynweissad,
?
Avverchedvvis gwlad
Pwy y
tri
chyfarwydd,
may he
!
which wantonly
Who
the country?
Who
having preserved the token, are coming with alacrity to meet their lord ?
3.
Ban rinwedd rotwydd, Ban fydd hyn hoywedd. Ban corn cerddetrwydd Ban biw, wrth echwydd Ban gwir, pan ddisgleir
Bannach pan
Ogyrven,
lefair.
M M
*
tion,
Apollo is here introduced in person, as pronouncing the solemn benedicand calling his chosen votaries into his presence, to join in the, celebration
poem
is
priest,
who
rcpre*
530
APPENDIX.
Ni ddyly cadair, Ni gatwo fy ngair.
Cadeir gennyf glaer,
hyavvdl daer. the virtue of the free course,
No. IV.
Awen
Eminent
is
is
when
is
this
dance*
performed.
Loud
in
is
kinef move
shines;
the evening.
it
Manifest
truth
when
I
it
speaks; and loud it spoke, came forth from the cauldron of Awen, the ardent
goddess.
my
have been Mynawg,j wearing the collar, and carrying horn in my hand. He is not entitled to the presidency,
will
who
not keep
my decree.
Awen.
4.
Pwy yw enw y
Rhwng
Eissillut
lliant
teir caer,
llaer
?
Ym Mhrydain
Nid
fydd,
am
nid
fo.
Llynghessawr a fo;
Tohid gwaneg
Tir dylyn,
allt
tra gro,
dir,
bo
No. IV.
APPENDIX.
Na rhynnawd
Cadeira Teyrn
531
Godo,
sorho
:
On
What
flowing and the ebbing tide? The man of slow intellect recognizes not the offspring of their president. Four Caers-jthere are, stationary, in Britain: their governors are agitators of fire.
As
for
it
be,
it will
not be
because
fleet
then, were
the billows to overwhelm beyond the strand, so that of firm land there should indeed remain neither cliff nor defile, nor
hill
wind,_when
fury
:
is
ON
will
skilful is
he
5.
who
guards
it.
Ceissitor
yngno!
Ceissitor Cedig,
O O O
ddifa Pendefig,
ddull difynnig*
Leon
lluryg,
M M
* Insular sanctuaries.
and VI.
See the Essay, Sect. II. and Append No. also allude to the sacred rafts, or boats. See Sect.
cells of the sacred fire.
II.
HI.
A curious specimen
of Druidical logic.
The pageant means to say " Were the world to be again overwhelmed, as at the deluge, yet the Arkite sanctuary, the chair of the Helio-arkite god should remain iu security.
"
532
APPENDIX.
Breuhawd bragawd brig
Breuha\vd eissorig.
Orig, a merin,
No. IV.
Am derfyn chwefrin,
leithoedd eddein,
Mordwyaid merin
Aches
ffysgiolin
O blan Seraphin,
Dogyn, dwfn, diwerin,
Dyllyngein Elphin. Let application be made to> be. sought Kedigy* for the men of Kedrf who have been lost. When it seemed most likely that, in a wrathful manner, the nobility would be destroyed, with lacerated forms, then,
There
let
them
clad in legionary mail, a sovereign was exalted. Round the ancient and renowned focus, the shooting sprigs were broken : they were broken into tallies.^
"
shall dissolve!
Round
the bor-
"
der, mysterious
and pure,
* The same as Kid, the Arkite goddess> -whose renovating cauldron could restore the slain to life: but, at the same time, it deprived them of utterance* or obliged them to take aa oatb of secrecy. See Turner's Vindic. p. 283.
The efficacy of this cauldron is here illustrated, by the energy which waa displayed by a prince of the Bardic order, after the massacre of the nobles. f Or warrior*.
$ This passage describes the rite of sortilege the vaticination, deduced from the experiment.
No. V.
APPENDIX.
No. V.
533
poem, we have seen the solar divinity, as and represented by his priest and namesake, personified
IN the
last
Taliesin,
Britons.
There
magi of Bri-
name and
Jiesin's
character of fire.
this subject,
of Persia, worshipped the sun, under the Let the reader form his judg-
ment upon
poem on
Torrid, anuynudawl,
Tuthiawl
Dan
iogawl
!
Ef iolen, o dduch lawr T&n Tan ! hustin Gwawr Uch awel uchel ; Uch no pob nyfel
!
Mawr
Ni
ei
anyfel
thrig yngofel,
Llyr.
Na neithiawr
Dy
far,
ynghynebyr.
Gwawr gwen wrth TJchyr Wrth wawr, wrth wrys Wrth pob hefelis Wrth hefelis Nwython Wrth pedyr af aon,
; ;
vehement
earth !
fire:
even he
whom we
adore,
Archaiol. p. 43.
534
"
APPENDIX.
THE
!
No. V.
"
" He is FIRE, THE FIRE !" whispers Aurora. high above the lofty gale. High above every sacred " Vast is the bulk of his courser He will not despirit
!
"
(the sea).
Thy
is
perceived
Aurora, smiling, repels the gloom! At the dawn, at his ardent hour, at every meet season, at the meet season of his turnings, at the four stages of his
course, will I extol him,
who judges
dreadful
is
the ambitious
the
mighty
lord of the
dinf
his
wrath!
This n surely, implies the practice of Jire-worship. The Bard, however, has not forgotten his Arkite lore. In the
course of the poem, he celebrates the mythological steeds, which pertained to that superstition and then recites a
;
we
ysgof ysgeiniad Dilyw. " I have been a I have been a wave flood on the slope. " on the extended shore, I have been a memorial of the
llif,
yn
eirth.
ton,
yn engweirth.
"
spreading deluge"
* It should seem, that the Bard imputes the flowing and ebbing of the tide
t The phrase Rhwyv Trydar, lord, or leader nf the din, which Taliesin and Aneurio apply to tt^e snii, with others of similar import, seem to denote, that the Druids welcomed his risings with frantic shouts of joy, accompanied with the vocal hymn, and instrumental music.
No. VI.
APPENDIX.
No. VI.
535
Poem of
Taliesin, called,
BUARTH BEIRDD,
The
O feirdd
Digawn
Ymryoreu, ymryorsedd,
gofal
i
gofan gordd.
Wyf
Yn
Pymthengmil drostaw,
gymhwyaw, wyf ceiniad claer dvvr Wyf wyf Dry w saer Wyf wyf sy w Wyf sarph wyf serch, ydd ymgestaf. Kid wyf fardd syji, yn yryfreidiaw. Pan gan ceinied, canu yngof.
ei
WyP cerddoliad
:
:
Nyt
ef wnafyt
wy
ryfedd uchon.
;
Handid a mi eu herbyniaw Mai arfoll dillad heb law ; Mai ymsavvd yn llyn, heb naw.
Gliding with rapidity were my thoughts, over the vain poetic art of the Bards of Britain,*}- who labouring to make
an excessive shew at the solemn meeting, with sufficient care hammer out a song. I require a staff', at unity with
the Bardic lore.
As
for
W.
+ Taliesin censures those Bards who were ambitious of displaying their talents, without having acquired an accurate knowledge of the mystic lore of the order. It appears from the sequel, that his satire is pointed chiefly against those poetical geniuses, who attended at the gates of the great.
J The insular cell or
stall
of the sacred ox, which represented the Atkite god, Bards or Druids.
536
of the Bards, him at once
!
APPENDIX.
may
fifteen
No. VI.
afflict
am
:
tower *
I
am
a serpent
am
not
love
indulge.
Bard
am
I,
doating upon
superfluous
trifles.
When a master sings, his song will be close to the He will not be searching for those remote wonders.
Shall I then admit these, like
subject.
men
like
men
toiling in the
2.
yngradd
Craig,
An
Wyf llogell
A
IS
barcld a bryd, ni
A
A A
chelfyddeid,
am
geliyddyd,
yvmbols df
* The raystagogue, as usual, blends his own personal character with the his god the tower or pyramid, the serpent, &c.
jp-.irpo.-e
in the original-ponra, for the of ridiculing the pretended Bards; but 1 have omitted theui, as deswtute of mterusi,
No. VI.
APPENDIX.
gad bardd neuodd, wyf kyv kadeir
drefet,
i
53?
Wyf
Digonaf
Boldly*
be
swells
the stream to
thigh be pierced in blood. set in order, at the dawn, displaying the countenance of HIM, who receives the exile into his sanctuary. The rock
high limit. Let thf Let the rock beyond the billow,
its
of the Supreme Proprietor, the chief place of tranquillity. Then let the giver of the mead feast cause to be proclaimed, f " I am the cell; I am the opening chasm I " am the bull Beer Lled;% I am the repository of the mys;
"
4t
**
tery
am
of
trees, with the points well connected,}! and the Bard who composes without meriting a repulse: but him I
"
tf
love not,
who delights in contention. the adept, shall not enjoy the mead.
He who
It is
traduces
time to has-
* This passage describes the preparation for the solemn periodical rite, of removing the shrine out of the cell, in the Arkite island, which seems to have been surrounded only at high water. Here we may remark. 1. A ritual obfanatical rite of servation of the time of flood, alluding to the deluge. 2. draw blood. Thus, the idolatrous Israelites piercing the thigh, so as to " cried aloud, and cut themselves, after their manner, with knives and lancets, " till the blood gushed out upon them." 3. ritual adorning of the sacred rock, which was, at that time, to display the countenance of the Arkite god. 4, This was done at the dawn, that the Helio-Arkite god might be coining 5. This roek was forth from the cell, at the precise hour of the sun's rising. the chiet place of tranquillity ; for here the divinity was supposed to reside, excepting at the time of the solemn procession. 6. This patriarchal god, the Supreme Proprietor, was he who received lib family, exiled from the worid, jnto his ark or sanctuary.
is
made
in the
name
foreign term
butt,
and
dawn or morning ; compounded with DPI?, flame, fire, inchantment. The bull of Jire was an apt title for the Helio-Arkite god, as the bull was the symbol of the patriarch, and the su was worshipped in the form of/zre, or
also the
flame.
strictly pertinent to
reader, that the other meanings of these terms, were the mysticism of the Druids, whose god came forth in the morning, and was esteemed the president of inchantm-s.
It will occur to the
The mystagogue requires a song, not only perfectly consistent with the lore || of the Bards, but also, noted in their mystical characters, or nmen-sticks.
That
is,
is
ritually administered
by the
priests.
538
"
"
APPENDIX.
No. VII.
ten to the banquet, where the skilful ones are employed the custom in their mysteries, with the hundred^ kuots*
" of our countrymen." The shepherds of the plains, the supporters of gates,-f are like persons marching to battle, without their clan.
chair
am the stock that supports the succeed in impeding the progress of the loquacious Bards.
I
am
No. VII.
Conclusion of Taliesitfs
CAD GODDEU,
Trees.%
1.
or Battle of thg
Handid
cynt,
myr mawr,
warchan Maelderw
Wherthinrawg,
tu craig,
Ner, nid ystereig. of yore, in the great seas, from the time when Existing
* By which, the symbolical sprigs above mentioned, were confined to their places, in the composition of the sacred hymn.
t
by
seem, according to the vulgar phrase, to prop the gates of the great, as venal minstrels. As Druidism was not now established law, the president had no weapon but his satire, wherewith to silence these
:
Who
poetasters.
tical allusions,
This piece contains much of the Helio-arkite loie but it is so full of myswhich are become obscure, from the loss of monuments, that I hope to be pardoned, If I do not succeed in explaining the whole. It is here exhibited, in order to exercise the ingenuity of better raylhologists.
bee W. Archaiol.
p. 30.
No. VII.
APPENDIX.
wef
were put
forth,
539
decomposed
The tops of and simplified, by the tops of the birch. connected us together, by the incantation of Mael the oak
Denv;l| whilst smiling at the side of the rock, Ner^f re-
mained
in
calm
tranquillity.
2.
am
cr'e'ad
O naw rhith llafanad, O ffrwy th, O ffrwy theu, O ffrwyth Duw dechreu, O friallu, blodeu bre, O flawd gwydd a goddeUj O bridd, o briddred,
* Some passages in the modern Bards might countenance the idea, that this thnut refers to the Creation ; but I rather think, the niytl)o!ogist alludes to the joy which took place at the opening of the ark, and the putting forth of its
inhabitants.
t The original fraternity of Bards and Druids. . J As Bedwen, a birch, implies the may-pole, or Phallus; and, as the term is used by a celebrated Bard, D. ab Gwilym, in a very gross sense I suspect Taliesin alludes to the powers of nature, in their simplest form.
:
^ The oak was sacred to the great god of the Druids, who is styled Buanawrt the quickener, before whom heaven and earth tremble a dreadful foe, whose name in the table book is Dryssawr, the fleity ff the door. This must apply to the deified patriarch, who received his connected family into the ark, and his connected votaries into the Dtuidical sanctuary.
is
difficult
XVI.
^l Nereus,
the deluge,
now appeased-
The name
seems to be derived from the Hebrew "V13, Ner, to run or flow, as water. " Hence (says Mr. Parkhurst) the Greeks and Romans had their Nereus, which
"
"
originally signified the great abyss, or the sea considered as communicating Thus Nereus is addressed in the Orphic hymn. with it,"
Ground of the
Possessor of the ocean's gloomy depth, sea, earth's bourn and source of Shaking prolific Ceres' sacred seat, When, in the deep recesses of thy reign,
all,
The madding blasts are, by thy power, confin'd But oh! the earthquake's dreadful force forefend
;
540
Pan
APPENDIX.
ym
digoned
;
No. VII.
When my
fruit of fruits ; of the fruit of the primordial god ; of primroses, the blossoms of the mount of the flowers of trees and shrubs of earth, in its terrene state was I
of the
modelled
ninth wave.
3.
Am swynwys
Mawr
Wydion,
nvvr o Brython,
Math.
Pan
fu led losgedig.
Pan Pan
fei
gennyf
fi
vot,
fei faint
byd hardd,
:
* From henceforth, the mystagogue describes the formation, and details the history of the great president of the Druidical order, the priest, prophet, and vicegerent of the Helio-arkite god ; who, upon the principle of the metempsy*Uiss, had preserved his existence and his identity through all ages, from the time when the ark was first constructed. The fruits flowers, earth, and water here mentioned, arc the same kind of
ingredients which were used in the mystical purifications, with *r rrgrneratc the members of the Bardic order,
view to form
No. VII.
APPENDIX.
541
I was exorcised by Math,* before I became immortal. was exorcised f by Gwydion, the great purifier of the Brython, of Eurwys, of Euron and Medron, of the multiI
tude of scientific teachers, children of Math. When the removal J took place, I was exorcised by the sovereign, when he was half consumed. By the sage of
sages was I exorcised in the primitive world, at which time I had a being : when the hostof the world was in dignity, I am he who influfrequent was the benefit of the Bard.
recites.
Gwarieis yn llychwr :
Cysgais
ym
mhorffor.
O nef,
Wrth
pan doethant
llifeiriant.
Yn'Annwfn
frwydin, dybyddant
kant,
ar eu chwant.
Pedwar ugein
A gweint
Nid ynt hyn, nid yiit iau No mi, yn eu bannau. in the gloom ;|| I slept in purple; sported
I truly
was
* Mfuh was a mighty operator with the magic wand, who. at the time of the deluge, set the elements at large; and Gwydion was the Hermes of the
Britons.
Cer'uluen.
purifications by mystical rites, seem to imply the initiation of the great pontifical character, every time he descended into a
new body. $ The separation of the Nonchidae, or the dispersion from Babel. The Bard of EMd conversed much with men." $ Or
H Tliu
542
APPENDIX.
like the
No. VII.
embraced
in the
rushing of the floods came forth, from heaven to the hostile spears, On the perforated surface, fourscore hundred* great deep.
assemble, attendant on their
will.
They
nor younger
cant,
inneu,
brith gwaed.
Ddofydd ;
golo
lie
ydd oedd.
Ys
gein ynt,
yn
ufel,
The complete
number of nine hundred pertained to me, with stained sword ."f* To me was dignity allotted by
and where he was there was protection.
If I
my
blood-
DovyddjJ
will
come
he
com-
whicli was regarded; as a great lustration. in the sacred vessel of the patriarch.
And
this
* These 8000 were, perhaps, sacred fountains, which pomed forth their waters to meet the descending rain, and complete the lustration of the globe.
sacrificed.
Pom ttor,
Ccd.
" Tacitus informs us, that the Estyi (a German tribe) worshipped the $ " mother of the the gods, and that the symbol which they used was a boar " mother of the was, in short, the ark of Noah, from whrch issued gods * all the hero-gods of paganism. With regard to the boar w.e find it intro-. " duced verjf conspicuously into many ol those legendary traditions, which
No. VII.
pose,
APPENDIX.
will
543
The
he
decompose, he
numbers, who
high.
6.
will
is
form languages.
:
he styled
will
when
ascend
011
Bum neidr fraith, ym mryn. Bum gwiber yn llyn. Bum ser gan gynbyn. Bum bwysferhyn,
nghassul am cawg. Armaaf, nid yn ddrwg,
Fy
Pum pemhwnt
Whech March
angell
A ymdal am cyllell.
Melynell :
well,
Canwaith y sydd
Cyfred a gwylan,
Fy march Melyngan,
Mi hun
nid eban,
ysgwydrwy.
.Ni ganed,
yn adwy, vu im govwy,
ddoleu Edrywy.
Namyn Goronwy,
O
"
' '
Perhaps, if the matter be expressed with perfect ther to say, that a boar was symbolical of Noah, Hence we find> that as Vishnou was feigned to have into a boar, so the nurse of the Arkite Jupiter, or, in
ship,
is
accuracy, we ought raand a sew of the ark. metamorphosed himself other words, the Noetic
said
Note. Ibid,
544
APPENDIX.
No. VII,
I have been a spotted adder* on the mount I have been a viper in the lake I have been stars f among the supreme chiefs ; I have been the weigher of the falling drops, drest
in
my
Not
priest's cloke,
my
bowl.
unskilfully do I presage, at fourscore smoking altars,^ the fate which will befal every man. To my knife, a multitude of thighs have submitted.
|[
Six steeds ^[ there are of yellow hue than these, a hundred times better is Metyngan, my steed, swift as the sea:
mew, which
shore.
will
With
gems on
my golden
which
is
shield,**
do
a hundred
chiefs?
born,
compare with
me
be Goronwy,
Hirwyn
Pell na
fy
myssawr.
or viper
wa
who occupied
his station
a symbol of the Helio-arkite god ; and hence of upon the sacred mount, or iu the Diluvian
t
J
||
priest.
of a soothsayer, or harnspex,
5?
have shewn,
his priest,
presided
The hicrarch coins. still appears upon sdme^old the area of the altar, which was guarded by the priest*/ and drenched with the blood of victims.
The device
-in
British
No. VII.
APPENDIX.
Treiglais, cylchyneis,
545
Derwyddon doethur,
Arthur, Yssid y sydd gynt Neu'r mi, ergenhynt,
Darogenwch
O ystyr dilyw
Eurem yn
euryll,
Mi hydwyf
Ac ydwyf
berthyll,
drythyll,
ormes
are
I
Fferyll.
my
fingers.
It is long since I
have
wandered in the earth, before I became a proficient in learning. I wandered, I went the circuit, 1 slept in a hundred islands ; through a hundred Caers
I toiled.
Ye
Arthur
all
Have theyf not sung of me, and of predicted of yore. Christ that was crucified, and of the day of future doom,
and of one that has been endowed with the
deluge.
lore of the
With my
upon
my
piece of gold,
N N
is styled Pasgadter, the feeder, No. IV. tradition that their solar divinity, or his chief priest and a herdsman or shepherd. The representative, in ancient times, had been Greeks told the same tale of their Apollo. See Apollodor. L. I. c. 9. and L. III. c. 10.
t That
J f
is,
many
546
Lo, I
APPENDIX.
am
that splendid one,
No. VIII.
come from the
who
sportively
No. VIII.
Dialogue between Ugnach, the Son of Mydno, of Caer Seon, and Taliesin, of Caer Deganwy.-^
TALIESIN.
Marchavvc, a girch y Dinas, Ae con gwinion, ae cirn bras,
Nyth adwaen ni rythwelas. knight, who approachest the city with white dogsj and large horns, I know thee not: to my eyes thou art
:
not familiar.
XJGNACH.
Marchawc, a circh
ir
Aber,
Thou
|j
TALIESIN.
Mi
nid
aw
ina in awr
* Or Pkeryll, Cabiri
f
Helio-arkites.
Archaiol. p. 46. The monks say that Ugnach, otherwise called Mygnach, the son of Mydnaw, the ship mover, was principal of the college of Caer Gybi, or Holyhead. But these legendaries often confound the votaries of Druidism, with the early saints of their own calendar ; and it may be inferred, from the following poem, which certainly is ancient, that Ugnach was a distinguished hierophant in Arkite mysteries. If his station was Holyhead, it must follow, that this islet was a Scon or Sena of the British Bards. See Sect. II.
W.
J Cwn Annwn, or dogs of the deep, a mystical representation of the whiterobed Druids. So Arawn, the Arkite, King of the Deep, had his pack of white dogs with red ears. See Sect V.
Attributes of the tauriform god,
(I
whom
as
Taliesin's borse^
named Melynsan,
we hare already
step.
No. VIII.
APPENDIX.
Gollew gweith y godriccawr, Elhid bendith new a Jlawr
!
547
At
present, that
is
not
my road
UGNACH.
Y Y O
when
thou
g\vr
nim gwelas
i
beunit,
tebic
gur deduit,
dy, a phan delit
?
ei
me
thou
who
resemblest
one of the
initiated,
ho^ long
?
and
wilt thou
come
TALIESIN.
Seon,
O imlat ac itewon,
I tau Caer
Leu a Gwidion.
When
I return
Jews, I will
come
from Caer Seon,* from contending with to the city of Leu and Gwydion.-f-
UGNACH.
Dabrede genhiw A thuit met ara
i'r
Dirjas,'
phellas,
Come
I
with
wanas.
have prepared,
TALIESIN.
Mi
nid aduen
y gur hy, N N 2
near Caernarvon, was called Caer Seiont, from the river (Amnis Sagarum), being probably the place where the Ston, or GalliThe Seon here mentioned was an isolated sanctuary cena, lauded from Mona. Seon Tewdor or representative of the ark. See No. X.
Segontium,
Seiont
+ The former of these was the father of the Diluvian patriarch. See Cadair Ceridwen> inserted in the third Sect. The latter was the British Hermes, often mentioned.
J The cup of initiation. A trinket, which was viewed
as the insigua of
an adept,
Aurdlwa,
548
APPENDIX.
meteu tan y gveli Tec a chuec y dyuedi.
No. VIII.
know not
fair
the confident
man, with
his
meads under
his
couch*
UGNACH.
Debre genhiw im
tino,
:
A
Come
Mydno.
with
thuit
gwin gorysgelho
me
to
my dwelling,
Ugnach
my
TALIESIN.
Ugnach, bendith ith Athro rad ac enrydet
Taliessin
orset,
!
dy gulet. Ugnach, a blessing attend thy throne,f thou teacher of I am Taliesin, who will repay thy liberality and honour
!
iti
banquet. J
UGNACH.
Taliessin,
penhaw or gwir, Beitat yng kert kyurgir, Trie yma hyd dyv Merchir.
men, thou victor
in the contention of
till
Taliesin, chief of
Wednesday. TALIESIN.
Ath
ro rad
y gulad penhaw
Ny haetaw Kabit, ny thrigiaw. Ugnach, the most affluent in riches, on thee may the I merit not the booth supreme Ruler bestow his bounty
!
may
*
not stay.
Ilarof, or cell of initiation.
seat of presidency,
The
+ Or
which Ugnach
filled, as
By
No. IX.
APPENDIX.
No. IX.
549
Song, apparently composed by Merddin the Caledonian, in form of a Dialogue between himself and Taliesin, in which the Bard deplores the Persecution of the Druids.*
Mor
Oed Oed
truan genhyf,
MYRDDIN. mor
truan
A dery
am Kedvvy
a chavan !
yscuid o Tryvrwyd, o truan How great my sorrow How woful has been the treatment of Kedwy f and the boat Unanimous was the assault, with
! !
gleaming swords.
escaped.
Alas,
conflict,
one shield
TALIESIN.
Oed Maelgwn a
welvvn,
yn ymwan,
Y
It
uulu, ni thawan.
I saw,
was Maelgwn |
whom
of the
fair
be
silent.
MYRDDIN.
Rac deuwr, yn nentur, y Rac Errith a Churn th, y
tiran
:
ar welugan.
Moch
celestial
*
*
W.
Archaic!, p. 48
the boat.
In the
to a severe persecution.
The
550
circle*
APPENDIX.
No. IX.
The grey stones J they actually remove. Soon and his retinue discovered for his slaughter,
great the vengeance that ensued
!
is
Elgan
alas,
how
TALIESIN.
Rys undant, oedd rychuant, y tarian. Hyd attad y daeth rhad cyflawn.
Lias Cyndur, tra messur, y cwynan.
Lias haelon o ddynon, tra fuan
clod,
gan Elgan.
Thou
To
had
been extended
deplored
lives
;
Excessively
the slaughter of
Cyndur
men,
||
who were
liberal in their
MYRDDIN.
Trvvy a thrwi, vug a rug, y daethan, Traw a thraw, undoeth Bran a Melgan. Llad Dyuel, oe diwed cyflafan,
Ab
Through and through, wide and pointed, they came, advancing and surrounding the only wise Bran (raven), the
son of Elgan.
his retinue,
is
mundane
+ Some symbols of the moon and sun. $ The persecutors of the Druids, it seems, amongst other
broke
to pieces, or defaced, the sacred circles.
acts of hostility,
This was deemed, by the votaries of the old superstition, a most heinous outrage. See No. XIL
The sacred
U
These seem
have been
three attendant
pri&.
No, IX.
Aerwyr cad,
APPENDIX,
trybelidiad, gwaedlan.
551
O
The
hyd y wychydd,
darparan. host of Maelgwn, exulting, advanced and severely did the embattled warriors pierce in the bloody inclosure.
:
Even the
battle of
will
Arysderydd,* which
they prepare.
is
utmost energy
MYRDDIN.
LHaws
peleidrad, gwaedlad gwaedlan,.
Many
put to
a festive horn
flight, whilst
is
broken:
is
many
a horn-
bearer
is
the host
forcing
them back
to promiscuous slaughter.
TALIESIN.
Seith meib ElifFer, Seith gwyr, ban broffer, Saith gwaew ni ochel,
Yn
The seven
the
test,
eu seithran.
sons of Eliffer, J seven heroes, when put to shun not the seven spears, in their seven stations.
terly ruined.
* Or Ardtrydd, in which the Northern establishment of the Pruids was utSee Sect. V. Merddin makes Taliesin prophesy of this calamit
tous event.
The same,
Sect. IV.
I suppose, as Sidi or Sidin, the Helio-arkite temple. This stanza seems to describe the fanatical battle of Arderydd.
See
of
He was
brother
552
APPENDIX.
MYRDDIN.
Seith tan ufeiin, Seith cad cyferbin, Seithfed Cynfelin,
No. IX.
Y
Seven blazing
venth
is
pob cinhvan.
counteract seven battles
:
fires will
the se-
Cynvelyn,*
mount.
TALIESIN.
Seith
gwaew govvanon
Cinreirion,
gwaed
Y
Seven piercing spears
dy Ian wan.
shall
fill fill
MYRDDIN.
Ynghoed Celiddon,
Y darfuan.
Canys mi Myrtin, Gwedi Taliesin,
Bythawd
Seven score
rits
:
cyffredin
Fy
darogan.
spi-
Since
Merddin,
phecy be received, in
my
pro-
In this passage, the mystagogue seems to votaries. predict the re-establishment of his cause at some future period.
and
No. X.
APPENDIX.
No. X.
553
Song of
Taliesin, called
the
Elegy of Aeddon
1.
of Mona.-\-
Echrys ynys
Gwrys Gobrettor
d&r.
Rhwyf
Tristlawn ddeon,
rhewintor.
Yr Arch Aeddon,
Can
Nid
fu,
rychior,
nid
fi,
Ynghemelrhi,
Ei gyfeissor. Pan ddoeth Aeddon,
O wlad Wydion,
Seon tewdor ;
Gwenwyn
pur ddoeth,
* Lord of the Din a title of the Helio-arkite god, who is styled Cadarn Trydar, the mighty one of the Din. No. V. and Rhivyv Trydar, leader of the Din. Gododin. He seems to have derived these names from the fanatical hymns and frantic shouts of his votaries, at the hour of his rising. The title is here
transferred to his priest.
+ See
W. Archaiol.
p. 70.
554
APPENDIX.
Pedair Peunoeth,
No. X.
Meiuoeth tymhor
Cvvyddynt gytoed ;
Ni bu clyd
coed,
Gwynt yn goror. Math ag Eunydd, Hudwydd gelfydd^ Rydd elfinor. Ym myw Gwydion Ac Amaethon,
Atoedd cynghor,
Twll
tal
y rodawg,
Ffyrf diachor
:
Ffyryf ffodiawg,
Cadarn gyngres
Ei faranres,
for.
Ymhob
Gorsedd,
Gwnelid
ei
fodd.
Cu cynaethwy!
Hyd
Disturbed
is
tra fy
fwy,
Hu,
the island
even Mona, of the generous bowls, which animate vigour the island whose barrier is the Menai.
There I enjoyed the beverage* of wine and sweet liquor with a brother, who is now departed. The universal tyrant puts an end to every energy the leader of destruction.
Deplorable
is
it is
f The ark of the god, which was under the protection of his
No. X.
APPENDIX.
55.5
perceived, that there neither has been, nor will there be his
equal, in the hour of perturbation.
Seon of the strong door,* a pure poison diffused itself for four successive nights, whilst the season was as yet serene. His contemporaries fell. The woods afforded them no
shelter,
when
Then Math
and Eunydd, masters of the magic wand, set the elements at large but in" the living Gwydion and Amaethon, there
:
was a resource of counsel, to impress the front of his shield with a prevalent form, a form irresistible. Thus the mighty
combination of his chosen rank was not overwhelmed by the sea and in every seat of presidency, the will of his
:
* The ark; and hence the insulated fanes, sacred to Arkite mysteries. Gwydion was Hermes. His land may have been the old world, which was overwhelmed by the deluge ; as it was his traditional office to conduct the dead into a region beneath the abyss. In this passage, we have much Arkite mythology. 1. The patriarch came from the land of Hermes, or the old world. 2. He entered the inclosure of Seon, or of the nine sacred damsels, which was guarded by a strong door, or barrier. This inclosure was the ark. 3. When he was shut up in this sanctuary, the great supreme (See No. III.) sent forth a poisonous vapour, to destroy the wicked world. To this bane, the Bards often allude. See Cadair Ceridwen, Mnrwnad Dylan, &c. But the messenger of death entered not the inclosure of Seon. In the same strain of fable, IVlaelgwn is said to have retired into a church, to avoid the contagion of the yellow pestilence here he would have been safe, had he not seen the demoH of destruction through a small hole in the door: but the inclosure of Seon was better secured. 4. By this pestilential vapour, which filled the whole atmosphere, the patriarch's wicked contemporaries were destroyed. But the earth was still
:
polluted.
5. Then the great magicians, with their magic wands, set free the purifying elements : one of the effects of which, as described in the Triads, was the dreadful tempest of fire, which split the earth to the great deep, and consumed the greatest part of all that lived. W. Archaiol. V. II. p. 59. Upon this, the waters of Llyn Llion, or the abyss, burst forth.
in
These powerful agents would have destroyed the patriarch and his family Caer Siion, had not Hermes counselled him to impress a mystical form, or to strike a peculiar signal upon his shield. This, I [suppose, had the same effect as the horrid din, with which the heathens pretended to save the moon,
6.
hour of her ecliose. This device, together with the integrity of the just ones, preserved them Irom being overwhelmed by the deluge. 8. Hence, an imitation of these adventures became a sacred institution, which was duly observed iu the mysteries, and conducted by the presiding
at the
priest.
556
APPENDIX.
in the feast will
No. X.
be obeyed.
mighty representative
leader of the course
The
dear
whilst ray
life
continues, he shall be
commemorated
2.
Echrys ynys
Gwawd Hu,
ynys
Gwrys gochymma.
Y rhag Buddwas,
Cymry
ddinas
Aros ara ;
Draganawl ben,
Priodawr, perchen Mretonia.
Ym
Difa gwledig,
Or
bendefig,
Ae
tu terra
Dygnawd
Erddygnawd
wir,
eu
tra.
Ar
for,
heb
dir,
Hir eu
trefra
Oi wironyn,
Na
ddigonyn
Dim
Ceryddus wyf,
gofetra.
Na
chrybwyllwyf
A'm rywnel
I Iwrw
da.
Llywy
harddwy,
Pwy gwa
I
Pwy Pwy
gynneil
attrefna
Iwrw Aeddon,
No.
XL
is
APPENDIX.
the 'island of the praise of
557
Hu,
the island
Disturbed
of the severe inspector, Before Buddwas,* may the community of the Cymry remain in tranquillity; he being the
dragon
chief,
!
the
proprietor,
the rightful
claimant
in
Britannia
What
it
shall
consume a
is
a portion of earth ? The four damsels J having ended their lamentation, have performed their last office ; but the
just ones toiled : on the sea which had no land, long did they dwell of their integrity it was, that they did not endure
:
Yet
rate
still
am
my
benefactor.
oppressed with sorrow, unless I commemoIn behalf of Llyzvy, who will now
exercise restraint,
who
shall
restore
order
In behalf of
!
Aeddon, who
shall
associates
No.
An ancient Poem,
the
XL
called
To
berless copyists,
*
the readers of Geoffrey of Monmouth, and his numthe name of Uther Pendragon, the old
of Hu, who was venerated in the symbol of a huge serpent, and as the supreme lord of Britain, where his chief priest governed
title
acknowledged
t The
as his vicegerent.
priest,
living,
Orbe
olio,
though
his cor-
J Gallicenee, Gwyllion, or Scon. Those devoted priestesses, whose office it was, in the mysteries, to lament the supposed death of their god, as the Jewish
women wept
for 1'ammv.z.
Here the Bard, as usual, digresses into his Arkite mythology. The just ones, or Arkites, had been afflicted and tossed about upon the i'ace of the deluge ; but their integrity brought them to a safe harbour. The natural inference was, that this good priest, their votary, had also escaped from trouble. .Notwithstanding this implied hope, the Bard is grieved for the departure of his benefactor, whose loss will be long felt by the fraternity of Mona.
4
The name
Leader,
558
King of
APPENDIX.
the Britons, must be perfectly familiar.
No. XI.
In this
poem, however, he appears in the character of a heathen divinity, and his history is clearly referable to that of the
deified patriarch.
fied
In the former part of the piece, this divinity is personiby one of his priests, who recites part of the attributes
:
he
is
addressed by a sacrificing priest, with a prayer for the prosperity of Britain. The whole seems to have been taken
Neu
Neu
fi
a elwir Gorlassar.
Fy ngwregys bu envys im hesgar. Neu fi tywyssawg, yn nhywyll, A'm rithwy am dwy pen kawell. Neu fi, ail Cawyl, yn arddu,
Ni pheidiwn heb wyar rhwng
deulu.
Neu
fi,
amug
fy achlessur,
Yn
Neu'r orddyfneis
waed am wythur,
Cawr Nur
fi
fi fi fi fi
a roddeis,
Henpen,
will recollect, that the titles of the Helio-arkite god have often baen conferred upon his priests, and upon those princes who were favourite* with the Druids and Bards. See W. Archaiol. p. 72.
No. XI.
APPENDIX.
Neu
Cleddyfawr, gorfawr gynghallen, fi a oreu terenhydd
559
Yin gwedduit im
gofid,
ae deubu
geint.
Rhag
Wyf Wyf
Dy
gorfawr gyngallen.
Behold me, who am powerful in the tumultuous din; who would not pause between two hosts, without blood. Am I
not called Gorlassar* the tztherial?
rainbow, enveloping
in darkness, to
My
I
belt has
been a
my
foe.
Am not
my
a protecting prince
him who
presents
* There are many things worthy of remark in the character of this British Pantheos, as delineated by his priest and representative. lord of the din, which, as we have seen, is a description of the Helio* He is and the deity to whom thte aetherial god arkite god he is the god of war See Cadair Ceriitwen. the rainbow pertains ; that is, the deified Noah. He is a protector in darkness a husbandman, like the Diluvian patriarch a the sovereign ON. See No, IV. protector of the ark, and Arkite temples, like He is the vanquisher of the Diluvian giants, the inspirer of heroism, and the lore. president of mystic He gave the invincible sword "to Henben (the ancient chief, some idolized monarch of early ages), and accomplished the purification of Haearnddor,
:
the ark, the same as Seon Tewdor, and Ynys Pybyrddor. affliction (during the deluge) was symbolized by an ox submitting to the yoke. He was the father of all mankind; and, as the great demon-god of the Bards, and their original instructor, he was skilled in all the mysteries of the order being a Bard, a musician, and an enchanter. At the same time, he disliked the symbol of the eagle, which may have offended the Druids, when he displayed his wings on th Roman standard.
j,
His state of
560
the hive ?
APPENDIX.
Am
No. XI.
not I a plower, like Kawyl? Between two Have not I prohosts I would not pause, without blood. tected my sanctuary, and, with the aid of my friends,
Have not
shed the
hlood of the indignant, in bold warfare against the sons of the giant Nur? Have not I imparted, of my guardian
power, a ninth portion, in the prowess of Arthur ? Have not I destroyed a hundred forts ? Have not I slain a hundred governors ? Have not I given a hundred not I slaughtered a hundred chieftains ?
veils
?
Have
Did not
enchanter?
I give to
Henpen, the tremendous sword of the Did not I perform the rites of purification,
toil to the top of the hill ? I was subjected to the yoke for my affliction ; hut commensurate was my confidence the world had no existence,
:
were
I
it
not for
my
progeny.
as for the unskilful encomiast,
am
the Bard
may
his
!
May
utter darkness
square band of men, between two fields It was my will to ascend into heaven from the eagle, to avoid the homage of the unskilful. I am a Bard I am a
:
Of
seven
am
the
mighty enchanter.
2.
Bu
calch
fri friniad,
Hu,
esgyll edeniad,
Handid o meinad
Gwrthgloddiad byd.
No. XI.
APPENDIX.
!
561
am
deulwch,
Lhvch o'm
Plaid
plaid,
am
gaer,
Caer yn ehaer,
Ry ys
Virein
ffo
crifiad,
rhagddaw,
vein
Y ar lien caw,
Mwyedig
Dreig amgyffreu,
;
Odduch
lleeu
;
Llestreu Had
Llad yn eurgyrn,
Fur
itti iolaf,
Ynys
Fel Veli
O Hu
this
passage
we may remark,
office
1.
The
titles
of the priest.
And
3.
The god is named Hu, and the glancing Hu, who is described as having expanded wings: he is invoked as the father of the priest he has the title of Dcon, distributor, and Prydain, ruler of seasons lie is the gliding king, that is, the dragon, who pursues the fair one alluding to some such fable as that which represents Jupiter in the form of a dragon, as violating Proserpine, and by her
:
also
named
See Myst. of the Cabiri, V. I. p. 208. He is, the sun, and adored as lord and pro*
The
god
office
mystagogue, and
deputy governor.
His
562
APPENDIX.
No,
XL
my voice has recited the thy deputy, O father Deon death song, where the mound, representing the world, is Let the countenance of Pryconstructed of stone work.
dain, let the glancing
Hu
attend to me!
!
sovereign of
heaven,
let
With
tuary
with the
lake next
;
my
side
with
my
is
side
earnestly invoking the gliding the fair one retreats, upon the veil that
;
moves round,
over the places which contain vessels of drink offering ; whilst the drink offering is in the golden horns ; whilst the
whilst the
hand
is
upon the
; upon the chief victim ; sincerely victorious Beli, son of the sovereign I implore thee, that thou wouldst preserve the honours of the Man-Hogan,
HONEY
island of Beli!*
to invoke the god to lead the mystical song, before the victim was struck procession round the sacred lakes and the temple to offer a libation with the horn of consecrated liquor ; and then to take the knife and slay the victim. These ceremonies are performed at a public and solemn festival, whilst the and sanctuary, or assembly of priests and votaries, invoke the dragon king the place of celebration is on the sacred mount, within the stone circle and which represented the world and near the coniecrated lakes. mound, At this time, the huge stones of the temple were covered with a veil, on which was delineated the history of the dragon king. There seems also to have been a living dragon, or serpent, as a symbol of the god, who is described as gliding from place to place, and tasting the drink offering in the sacred vessels.
:
and
but
Hu
No. XII.
APPENDIX.
No. XII.
to
An
ancient
Poem,
entitled
GWAWD LLUDD
MA WE,
the
Lludd, or Llud, the son of Beli, is represented in our romantic chronicles, as the elder brother of Cassivellaunus,
Julius Caesar.
poem, which is evidently the work of an obstinate heathen, and contains some curious traits of
in this very obscure
British mythology.
1.
Wyth
nifer nodant,
Duw
Llun dybyddant,
Ryodres, rychwant;
Duw
Duw
Duw Duw
leu escorant
Eiddiolydd anchwant ;
yn geugant,
Dieu dybyddant,
Pum
Hong, a
phum
cant,
Brithi Brith oi
oes
Nu
nu
edi
o o 2
W.
ArcUiol.
p. 74.
APPENDIX.
Brithi brith anhai
No. XII.
Pawb
Adonai,
Ar weryd Pwmpai.
song of dark import was composed by the distinguished Ogdoad,* who assembled on the day of the inoon,f and went in open procession on the day of Mars, they allotted
:
wrath to their adversaries: on the day of Mercury, they enjoyed their full pomp on the day of Jove, they were
:
the day of the great influx, they men on the day of Saturn
:
-----five ships,
swam
* It may be inferred, from the general tenor of the poem, that this Ogdoad consisted of the Diluvian patriarch and his family. They were, therefore, the same as Sydyk and his seven sous, the Cabiri, .mentioned by Sanchoniatho ; and the same as the sacred Ogdoad, or eight primitive gods of Egypt, who guided the ship of the sphere, thus making the ark an emblem of the system of the heavens. See Faber's Myst. of the Cabiri, V. I. pp. 56, 61, 76. Bryant's Analysis, V. II. p. 234.
f These supposed labours of the Diluvians seem to have been regarded as models of a Druidical festival, ill which the various rites had their appropriate days.
| The accumulating deluge, which ovrwhelmed and dashed to pieces the inhabitants of the earth, is figuratively styled the blood of men. Saiichoniatho speaks of the blood of the primitive race, as being mixed with rivers and fountains. ,
Or, Jive ships, with Jive hundred bitants of the old world, who being
men, embarked.
now
terrified
by the raging
approach
the ark of the just man, and pray for protection. Their prayer is in a foreign language, probably that of the mysteries which were introduced by Co//, the Cornish hierophant. Tuliesin has elsewhere informed us, that the spotted cat of Mona, one of the idols which peitaincd to this superstition, was attended by men of a foreign language. are also told by the same Bard, that the Druidical lore had been delivered in Hebrew, or Hebraic. See No XIII. And the words, Adonai and Pompai, which occur in the context, seem to imply, that this fragment has u near affinity to the Hebrew, or some of its dialects. In that language, the former of these terms
We
Mr. Bryant
tells
us, that
Ana:
Some
and
as
it
idea of the purport of this passage may be collected from the context may nerve to determine the important question, whether the Druid*
No. XII.
dred of those
APPENDIX.
who make
"
supplication
565
------
Brithi Brith
oi,
O
:
me
Darofyn darogan,
Gwaedd
Dysgogan Deruydd,
vu auudydd,
Geirionydd,
Wybr
Cerddawn a genhydd
Wylliawd, eil echwydd, Yn nhorroedd Llynydd Ban beu llawn hydd ;
Brython ar gynghydd,
I
Vrython dymbi,
Ac
Eryri,
annedd ynddi,
:
in the Phoenician language, I shall attempt to write the characters, with the hope, that some good Orientalist maj think them worthy of attention ; and if they present the vestiges of Phoenician antiquity, do me the favour of correcting them.
hymns
lines in
Hebrew
nn
in
13
yy
"
13
OK rv-a >n>-n
nn nn
566
APPENDIX.
Cymry
pedeiriaith
No. XII.
Meinddydd brefawd
Meinhoeth bervvhawd:
Ar
dir
berwhodawr,
Yn
They implore
against the overwhelming. In their public arid united song, long had Cadwaladr and * Cynan declared to the unprofitable world, that the heat of
the sun should be wasted. It was the presage of the Druid/fwho earnestly attended in the aethereal temple of Geirio-
nydd,J to the songs of the Gwyllion, the children of the " When the covert in the bosoms of the lakes
evening,
" shall be full,& when the Britons shall be concealed toJ " gether; then shall the Britons have an inclosure of great " renown. After the possession of gold and glittering " Moni and Lleeni shall become desolate, and trinkets, " of Snowdon) shall receive inhabitants."
II
* Cadwaladr, supreme ruler of battle a title of the Diluvian patriarch Cynan, the prince one of his sons- This passage implies some tradition of the preacher of righteousness: but how is is character perverted
I
t The patriarch, as father and primary instructor by way of eminence. See No. IV. and XI. J The dominion of Gwair, the son of Geiriawn,
wise called the son of Gwestyl, the great tempest.
of the Druids,
is
so styled
the word of justice, otherThis Gwair was the Diluvan patriarch. See Sect. V. and App. No. III. Taliesin, the Arkite priest, was said to have dwelt upon the bank ot the lake of Geirionydd. The patriarch is fabled to have had a temple, open to the sky, lilfe the Caer Sidi of the Druids. The Gwyllion, or Gwytlawd, were the prototypes of Mela's Gallicena.
This prophecy of the Gwyllion alludes to the ark, which was fatmlously reported to have rested upon .Eryri, or the heights of Snowdou. fiuch was the local appropriation of Diluvian history. See Sect. II, and III.
||
this island, so the patriarch and his family aie emphatically styled Brython. Are we still to look for the origin of that name in Eastern mythology, and in the root
The language of
the
Bard seems
to
No, XII.
APPENDIX.
567
There will be dwelling in the and the Cymry of four dialects will change their speech Then will come the spotted cow,* which shall procure a blessing. On the serene day will she bellow; on the
desart,
It is a perfect vaticination
eve of
boiling
May shall
is
she be boiled, and on the spot where her completed, shall her consumer rest in peace.
3.
Cysarth cynud.
Hoywedd trwy groywedd. Let the song of woe be chaunted,f round the sacred
Emblem of the ark bellowing, before the deluge for its select company then boiled, or tossed about by the flood, and finally consumed on the spot where the patriarch landed, and foui.d rest.
t This division of the poem presents a tradition of Nimrod's rebellion, or of a subsequent dereliction of some principles, which the Druids deemed sacred. His customary honours had been withholden from the patriarch, whoisheie He described as ruler of the sea, in allusion to his riding upon the deluge. has the name of which, if it be British, seems to imply the blessed
is the dragon chief of the world, or the universal patriarch and king, venehe is the fabricator of Kyd, or the ark, rated under the symbol of a dragon in which lie traversed the waters of the abyss. This ark was stored with corn: hence Ceres, her appropriate genius, as well as the British Ceridwen, was the goddess of corn; and, like the car of Ceres, the British ark was borne aloft by serpents, those favourite symbols of Helio-arkiie idolat y. The adversaries of Menwyd wished to remove or destroy three things first,
Mfnwyd,
he
568
border of Britain!
to resist
APPENDIX.
Men
will assemble,
No.
XIL
Gwarthmor (him who presided over the sea) Let truth be ascribed to Menwyd, the dragon chief of the world, who formed the curvatures of Kyd, which passed the dale of
and
grievous water, having the fore part stored with corn, mounted aloft with the connected serpents.
Without the ape, without the stall of the cow, without the mundane rampart, the world will become desolate, not requiring the cuckoos to convene the appointed dance over the green.
4.
Gwyr
Torwennawl tuth
Maw
i
angerddawl trefddyn,
caredd creuddyn,
Ac wyr
Cymry
No. XII.
APPENDIX.
569
Uch o Uch o
for,
uch o fynydd,
Yd
fi
brithred,
Alliaws gynnired,
A
Yd
fi
gofud
am
webyn.
dialeu,
Trwy hoyw
gredeu,
Men
their wishes
whether Cymry, Angles, Gwyddelians, or North Britons. The Cymry, flying in equal pace with ruin, are launching their wooden steeds (ships) upon the water. The North has been poisoned by depredatory rovers, of pale and disthe gusting hue, and hateful form, of the race of Adam
Ancient,
whom
The Bards,
forsooth,
570
change
their abode,
APPENDIX.
No. XII.
haunters of the watery plain. At sea, there is an anchor with the Gristing
cry from the sea, a cry from the mountain. multuous sea, the cry strikes the wood, the and the hill.
From
the tu-
There There
will
be a tumultuous
flight,
and abundant
faith,
distress.
There
will
purposed by
dydd brawd,
Iwerddon.
Am
Dysgogan Sywedyddion, Yngwlad y colledigion Dysgogan Derwyddon, Tra mor, tra Brython,
Haf
ni
bydd hinon,
ym
Ac yam
Na chwyaf
Frofeisor of Christianity.
No. XII.
Ergrynaf
APPENDIX.
cyllestrig caen,
571
wledig gwlad anorphen. before the day of doom,* shall the time arrive, Long when the East shall survey the fair borders of Erin's land.f*
Gan
Then
shall Britain
have a re-exaltation
Britons shall be
Rome
and
I shall
have judges,
not banding together, but void of guile. The diviners vaticinate in the land of those
who have
been
from beyond the sea beyond the Northern Britons, predict a summer, in which the rain shall not cease. Then shall the great ones be broken they
lost.
Druids
shall
have their feeble wanderings beyond the effusion of The animal (Ked) shall award to me
||
the dignified Britain,^ with its united boundaries. And, lest I sink, adhesive to the quagmire** of that
multitude, which peoples the depths of hell, I will tremble before the covering stone, with the sovereign of boundless
dominion.
* The Druids had some idea of a day of doom at least, the phrase often occurs in the most heathenish paragraphs of the ancient poems. Something of the same kind has been remarked in the tales of the Edda.
:
t As this is a pretended prophecy of the Ogdoad, we may suppose that the Bard alludes to certain events, which had occurred previous to his own age; and which he affected to regard as the accomplishment of the prophecy.
deluge.
J Diviners of the primitive world, which had been overwhelmed by the He probably means the Ogdoad, who had prophesied before the flood.
These fanatics had established a seminary arms. See Sect. V
in the North, out of the
reach of
Roman
||
The Diluvian
patriarch,
The Bard
See No.
I.
Such was the British hell. The Bards tell us, it abounded with frost and siur*, and was infested by a variety of noxious and loathsome animals.
APPENDIX.
No. XIII.
The Conclusion of Taliesins
No.
XI
II
ANGAR CYVYNDAWD.*
Ath
Gwr
Traethator fyngofeg,
Yn
Efrai,
yn Efroeg.
Eilgweith
ym
rhithad.
:
Bum Bum
glas gleisiad
ci
:
bum hydd
Bum. Iwrch
Bum
cyff:
Bum ebill
Bum
Ar
yngefel,
:
Blwyddyn a banner
ieir,
ceiliawg brithwyn
yn Eidin
:
Mai y maetbawr
Bum
grpnyn erkennis,
Ef tyfwys ym mryn ;
A mettawr am dottawr
Yn
sawell,
ym
gyrrawr
No. XIII.
A'm
APPENDIX.
bar folks iar
.
573
naw
nos,
Yn ei chroth, yn was. Bum Aedd, aeduedig Bum Had, rhag gwledig: Bum marw bum byw Keing ydd ym eiddaw, Bum arweddawd,
:
:
A'm
Odid traetbator
To
thee,
es t
together.
in
Hebrew,
in
Hebraic*
I
-a
se-
formed.
have
a dog
I
I
:
the mountain
have been a stag I have been a roebuck on I have been a stock of a tree I have been a
:
spade
in the
hand
I
and a half:
variegated with white, upon liens, in Eidin I have been a stallion upon a mare I have been a buck of a yellow hue,
:
* His lore, therefore, was not regarded as peculiar to the Druids of Britain.
in
574
which vegetated on a
in a
APPENDIX.
hill;
No. XIV.
me
my
corn,
recess, that I
a hen,* with red fangs and a divided crest. I remained nine nights an infant in her womb. I have been Aedd f
;
returning to my former state. I have been an offering before the sovereign. I have died; I have revived; and,
conspicuous with
my
ivy branch,^;
bounty I became poor. was I instructed by the cherisher with red fangs. Again Of what she gave me, scarcely can I utter th great praise
and by
my
that
is
due.
am now
Taliesin
will
compose a just
string,
which
shall
to Elphin.
No. XIV.
Poem, from
the
to
the ancient
MS. of
[j
Theophilus Jones,
and
Work of
the
same Author,
The
is
Title,
wholly obliterated.
Aryf angkynnull,
Angkyman
dull,
Twryf en agwed.
* This mystical Hen, as the reader has seen, was the Arkite goddess. t This seems to have been a title of the Diluvian patriarch, or Helio-arkite god, with whom his priest claimed a mystical union. J The heathen Britons crowned themselves with ivy branches, celebrated the mysteries of Bacchus.
wheu they
W.
Archaiol. p. 21.
manifest intention of this use of arms. The Bard first of all in the celebration of Bacchic rites of those British nobles, who laid
The
poem,
is
to
recommend
recites the
aside
and then touches upon the calamitous fate their arms in their conference with
Hengist.
No. XIV.
APPENDIX.
Erac
575
Menwed
Erac mawrwed
Erac marled
Pan ys
Earn
ty ern gwern,
gam
gyrn,
Earn
gam
gled,
voli Hi,
Alluawr Peithi,
Peithliw racwed;
Yd y
gweles,
tres,
Ar hual
Tardei galled,
A gwynlieidydd,
Kein edryssed. Trybedawt rawt,
Rac y devawt,
Eil dal rossed
:
By
Oed
edryssed
Blaid e vywyt,
bleidyat ryt,
Eny dewred,
Pu
bell peleidyr,
Welyd yd
Gwelyd
wyt,
in rwyt,
576
APPENDIX.
Riein gared,
No. XIV.
Carut vreidvyw,
Cam
hurawc darw,
Carut dyhed.
Cwynaf dy varw,
Baran
rnor,
yg kynhoryf
gatpwll,
gvvyr,
Y am
Ymwan
form, when
Bran yg kynwyt.
will
have a lacerated
In the presence of the blessed ones * before the great when the assembly before the occupiers of the holme ; house + was recovered from the surrounded with
;
-f-
swamp,
crooked horns and crooked swords, in honour of the mighty king of the plains, the king with open countenance: I
on the clasp of the chain, on the bunches, on the sovereign, on the bush and the spear. Ruddy was the sea beach, whilst the
arising
||
on the
stalks of plants,
circular revolution
the white bands,^f in graceful extravagance. The assembled train were dancing, after the manner, and
loud
title
of the Diluvian
patriarch.
t The
$
drawn forth by the sacred oxen. Hu, the Helio arkite god, the British Bacchus. was that of the sacred oxen the bunches or H The chain here mentioned, knobs belonged to their collar. See No. III. The sovereign was the god himself, or the priest who personated his character and the spear was the thyrsus, whicli
The
probably carried something of a Phallic allusion. 5f The Druids, who led the circular dance.
us, that
No. XIV.
APPENDIX,
577
was the clattering of shields, round the ancient cauldron, in frantic mirth and lively was the aspect of him, who, in
:
his prowess,
ball,
which
But wounded
energy! Alas, thou BULL, wrongfully oppressed, thy death I deplore. Thou hast been a friend of tranquillity]
In view of the
2.
Tardei donn,
Gyvryngon
Petwar mi let,
Miledawrbyt. Aessawr yn nellt ;
llavyn eg walk,
Un
o bedror : p P
* The same fable, respecting the acquisition of the Anguiaum, which lated by Pliny Praetera est ovorum genus in magn& Galliarum fania, omissum Groecis.
gues innumeri
is
re-
An-
restate convoluti, salivis faucium, corporumque spumis, gloineTantur; Anguinum appellatur. Druidae sibilis id dicunt in sublime jactari
sagoque opportere intercipi, ne tellurem attingat. Profugere raptorem equo : aerpentes enim insequi, donee arcentur aranis alicujus iftterventu, &c. Hist. Nat. L. XXIX. c. 3 As the person who had acquired this prize was styled a bull, it may be conjectured, that it was his privilege to represent the tauriform god in the solemn
procession.
578
Gwr
APPENDIX.
gwyllyas,
glas,
No. XIV.
gyrn
Med
Gwr
teirn
meitin,
vawr,
O blith porphor,
Porthloed bedin.
Bengwaed gwin
Yr
raed a favvryf,
Yd aethant aeryf,
Dros eu hawfin;
Bu
kyvyewin.
Tutvwlch ky vwlch,
A oreu vwlch,
Ar vann
caereu.
A'm maeth,
ys ineu
Angkyman
dull,
No. XIV.
APPENDIX.
579
And now
the
afflicter
a wave * bursts forth from the central region t of the world refused, from the inhabitants of
the land, and for the benefit of his train, four multitudes,-}* and four that were resigned, to the chace of the universal
hunter.
I
The shield is split into lath;J but his blade descends on the head of one selected from the quadrangle of that
horns, the great ruler, enveloped in purple, the supporter of the army.
The
in
dignified
became
full
of confusion.
princely Cynan had journeyed from Mona, to support the privilege of the higher order Tudvwlch, the bathence terer, had made breaches in the bastions of forts
:
The
My-
my
year^[ of sorrow.
Their
steel
p p 2
* This wave was of the Bards was Hengist and his Saxons. The imagination so wholly engrossed by their Diluvian lore, that they borrowed most of tlieir imagery from it.
t
The
excluded from the place of Hengist advised, that shields should be conference, as useless and inconvenient in a friendly assembly, he seems to have hewn his own shield into splinters, by way of enforcing his argument. Aneurin, in the Gododin, speaks of his leaving at a distance the shield that
When
was
Tudvwlth, whom Hengist selected for his own victim, and for that purpose this prince is deplored in the placed next to him at the feast. The fate of songs of the Gododin. Tlie mountain chief Vortigern the Venedotian, as in the Gododin. ||
was composed a year after the massacre ^J Hence it appears, that this poem of the nobles at Stonehenge, or about A. D. 473. Aneurin had witnessed the borrid scene, and the groans of the dying still sounded in his ears.
580
violence
APPENDIX.
their assortment in pairs
!
No. XV.
Those who carry no
Do
I not
still
hear the
No. XV.
the most curious productions of the ancient British muse, we may class those little poems, which are
Amongst
called
incantations.
else Gorchanau, In addition to the general lore of Druidism, these pieces bring forward certain mystical amulets, which were delivered to the patriotic warriors, as infallible pledges
of the protection of the gods; and which were evidently remains of the renowned magic of the Britons. The lan-
guage of these compositions is of difficult construction, and the subject, as might be expected, mysterious and obscure. Nevertheless, as an exhibition of them may be
deemed
oldest
essential in the
known MS.
GWARCHAN ADEBON.
Ex
vetusto codice
Ny phell gwyd aval o avail. Ny chynnyd dyual a dyvall. Ny byd ehovyn noeth en ysgall,
Pawb, pan ry dyngir, yt
;
ball.
of Cunobtline,
* There are three of these pieces preserved but I shall reserve the talisman till I offer some remarks upou the old British coins.
No.
XV.
APPENDIX.
y
ef carei anreithgar
!
581
A garvvn
Ny cheri
gyfofni gyvyeith.
swrn, gorn kuhelyn, adef tangdef, collit. Adef led, buost lew en dyd mit.
Am
En
am
Dyven
ar
warchan Adebon.
The
All
who
Should I
spoiler!
when exposed naked amongst when adjured. love him who could become the friend of the
die twice, will govern his
speech, as if he were
in fear.
The
word of peace, he was lost. Indirect was thy answer, and thou hast been brave in the day of battle. Concealed was that information which the
inquirer sought the dweller amongst the high stones,f the reaper of his foes, smiled upon the talisman of Adebon.
* In
tioners
this little
consideration whatever te divulge them. To seems, the protesting talisman would be of no avail. + In the original high stones, the reaper of HIS foes. This is an elliptical constructed of high stouet. phrase, implying the god who inhabited the temple,
it
poem, the mystagogue discriminates between those probasecrets with which they were entrusted, and
582
APPENDIX.
No. XVI.
GWARCHAN MAELDERW. Ex
No.
XVL
eodem.
That the reader may form some idea of the nature of this very obscure and mysterious poem, he must suppose that
some great public calamity had recently befallen the Britons'the same, apparently, which Aneurin deplores in his
Gododin,
Upon
this occasion,
to -.guard in future against such fatal accidents, devises a magical flag for the leader of the native forces. He is now
in the mystic
cell,
completion of this great work, and intermixing some hints for the conduct of a good general, with allusions to the history of his times,
1.
am
gaer,
Ymduhun am
galch,
am
aer,
glaer^-
Adwy
a dodet ny debit.
:
en wlyd elwit.
1.
Jn the dales where the courses surround the Caer,* soon arouses, who is partly covered and partly bright
the breach^ of slaughter be repaired.
HEf
shall
* I retain the original word, which implies a circle, or circular temple, as well as a military fortress.
*
Hu, the Helio-arkite god, who is repeatedly mentioned The great massacre which ha.d been recently
in the
poem.
perpetrated.
No. XVI.
APPENDIX.
583
Let the renowned, the enterprising,* be lulled in sleep ; and with speed let the variegated webf of heroism, with unbroken threads, be woven the breach which has been
made
toil
of conflict:
let
let
him
Hu
mildly
warm
him with
2.
Gwr
Terwyn
Nyt aruedauc
Molawt
e volawt.
Dyffryderas y vrascawt,
rin rymidhin,
rymenon.
Manon,
;
Ar rud
Dhreic,
Fud Pharaon,
may be
referred to Eidiol, or Ambrosius, whose actions are His sleep seems to Lave succeeded to the toils of
t Notwithstanding the extraneous matter that is interspersed throughout the poem, the great enterprise of the Bard is the construction of this web of he~
learn the following particulars respecting it. The figure of the leader of the army is interwoven in the work, together with those of Hu, or and of the red dragon. the sun, It is described as Brascawd, Magnum Sublatum, a huge, raised (standard), the glory of the great field of battle, which was to accompany the army, flying in the breeze. There was a flowing streamer attached to it, interwoven with the threads of wrath, and it was regarded as possessing a miraculous power of protection from military disgrace. By these circumstances, I deem myself justified in styling it a magical Jlng, or standard, though the Bard has not expressly introduced the phrase.
roism.
We
t These directions, as well as some of the same bind which occur in the next paragraph, manifestly refer to the delineation of the commander, upon the web of heroism and the Bard expresses himself, as if he imagined that the disposition of the figure mustinfluence the conduct and fortunes of the mao.
:
584
APPENDIX.
2.
No. XVJ.
rushes forth,
is
the bedfellow of
when the foe lie in ambush, him who rests in the narrow house, unLet him have the habit, but not the
!
disposition of the over-cautious.* Mix not thou the cruel with the brave
If the brave be
his
broken,
fair is his
unblemished character
fame
is
not
carried away.
have devised a huge standard the mysterious glory of the great field of battle, and its excessive toils. There the
I
view over Manonrf the luminary, the Arkite with the lofty front, and the red dragon, the Sudd (victory) of the Pharaon (higher powers) it shall accom-
Menit
e osgord,
Ar vor
ni dheli
The word
is,
connected with the masculine epithets, Disgleiriawr, the luminary, and Archawr, the Arkite. It is, therefore, a manifest title of the Helioarkite divinity, whom the Bard also styles Talachon ; which 1 interpret, with the lofty front : but the term may be of foreign origin, and imply Tal Chun, Sol Rtx.
in this passage,
it it,
Advaw,
No. XVI.
APPENDIX.
3.
585
should have perished! Even he who brought down ruin with his mouth,* by causing the army to halt on the march, when the ranks were drawn out, and his effective
train
He
was as a huge
wall,
spears.
In the fluctuating sea,f thou canst mark neither cooperation, design, nor counsel the front of the circling
mound
themselves, nor be delivered, before the barrier of Eidin. Kenan, the fair bulwark of excellence, set his sword upon
May.
Annavd Wledic,
gynnwithic,
Kynlas kynweis,
Kychwenychwy
Enlli weles,
inir edles,
A lenwis, miran
Ar
"
Hu
En
id ware
yngorvynt
gollet"
G wyr
goruynnaf, ry annet,
llvvrw
rwydheu ry
^ Collwyd,
medwyt menwyt.
* A gwyddei neb ae entu who made a fall with his mouth. This sarcasm is evidently aimed at Vortigern, who checked the ardour of his victorious forces, upon the second landing of Hengist, and ratified a friendly convention with the Saxons, as I have already observed in the notes upon the Gododin. From this circumstance, the British prince obtained the opprobrious epithet, Gwrtheneu, of the ill-omened mouth.
t Alluding to the votaries of Druidism, who were thrown into the utraast confusion by the sudden massacre which took place, whilst they were celebrating the solemnities of May; and with difficulty protected their lives within the mound of the great temple, till Kenan, the prince, that is, Eidiol, or Ambrosius, rallied them from their consternation, and planned the meant of defence. See the Gododin,
586
APPENDIX.
4.
No. XVI.
Beneficent was the exertion of the supreme the sovereign inclosed, for the unadvised, grey-headed chief ministers,
who devised deep counsels. The mixture of sweet* will not produce
the mutually
I have joined in the common wish, the general wish bitter of those who saw Enlli,-f filled with the fair aspect of re-
turning prosperity, in the sacred course, on a serene morning, when Hit sent forth his dancing beams, making this
demand
of those
"
require
liberal
ones
men to be born again,$ in consideration who will be lost !" Those blessed ones
5.
Gogled Run, Ren, rydynnit! Gorthew, a'm dychuel, dychuelit, Gorwyd mwy galwant no melwit.
Am rwyd,
Ystof
am
ry, ystof
lit,
Trybedavt y wledic,
E rwng
drem Dremrud
welet
Mor
eredic
Dar digeryd,
Kynnwythic lleithic llwyrdelw, Kyn y olo Goundelw, Taf gwr mawr y wael Maelderw.
* That
is,
which was sacred to the mysteries of the Helioarkite god, whom the Bard feigns to have foretold the recent calamity by an This Druidical oracle, accompanied with a prophecy of returning prosperity. fraud must have been very seasonable in the days of Aneurin.
island of Bardsea,
+ The
t The original is ry annet ; but I think my translation is accurate: it usual, in this ancient copy, to double the n, where the preceding vowel long] thus cann for can, gwynn forgwjn, &c.
is is
No. XVI.
APPENDIX.
5.
58?
Is it the
Northern Rhun,*
!
drawest forth
shall
The
gross chief, f
be forced
call,
more than for the circling mead. In the network J which surrounds the sovereign, dispose thou the threads of wrath. Dispose wrath in the flowing
streamer.
!
Irksome
in front
Let the sovereign stand firm, amongst the rays presence of the ruddy glancer the ruddy glancer, whose purpose cannot be viewed in perfect freedom whose purpose cannot be viewed, in a state of security, by those the sea.
who plow
By
a shout
which cannot be disparaged, the chief of aspect even he whose throne is involved in
j|
first convinced, before Gounddelw^f white image) is covered, that Maelderw (the proficient (the of the oaks) is a mighty operator.
6.
Delwat dieirydaf
Y erry par,
Rwysc rwyf
ar delw
bre,
Rymun Rymun
gwlat,
rymdyre.
* Probably the son of Einion. This Rhun Jived in the fifth century, and was styled one of the three haughty chiefs of Britain. He was the grandson of Cunedda, whose patrimony was in Cumberland and North Britain. + Hengist, who had returned to Britain his gross bulk is taken notice of bj Cuhelyn and Aneurin.
:
} The Bard returns to his web of heroism. The threads of wrath seem to denote some colour which was hoisted, when the army neither gave nor received quarter.
The phrases radiant presence, and ruddy glancer, must be referred to the Helio-arkite divinity, the patron of the pagan Britons.
P
tije
This seems to allude to the shout of determined vengeance, described Gododin, Song 15.
in
51 I
understand
this as the
name of
588
APPENDIX.
Nac ysgawt, y redec, ry gre. Godivveud godiwes gwlat vre ; Ny odiweud o vevyl veint gwre.
6.
No, XVI.
spear, imitating, in his career, the ruler* of the mount, the pervader of the land, by whose influence I am eminently moved. With active tumult did he descend to the
hills
ning shadow.
Whatever
fate
may
concludes.
What
follows in
the Archaiologia, consists of various fragments of the Gododin, and other pieces of the sixth century. In the
ancient
by
solar divinity,
who,
cell.
as
we
Bard an extraordi
visit in
the mystic
REMARKS
REMARKS
I dismiss the subject of Druidism, it may not be improper to take some notice of those singular coins, which have been ascribed to the ancient Britons, and examine how far the design of the engraver harmonizes with that national superstition, which has been transmitted to us by the Bards and mythological Triads.
OEFORE
It
is
known
to
published, as British,
most readers, that these coins have been by Camden and his editors, by Dr.
Borlase, and other learned antiquaries ; that repeated attempts have been made to explain them, and that, notwithstanding this, the peculiarity of their drawing has not been
satisfactorily
accounted
for.
reason of this difficulty, as it appears to me, is the earliest coins of the Britons, like those of most other nations, are impressed with religious, rather than with civil or military devices; and the imagery of their national superstition has not been hitherto understood by our medallists.
The
simply
this
who
are genuine monuments of some nations occupied ancient Britain, cannot be matter of doubt to the candid critic. They are often found in various districts of this island, and in no other country. It is observed, that they have a remote similarity to some old Gaulish coins, and yet retain a style and character of their own, sufficient to mark them as the property of a distinct people. This is just what might be expected, supposing that they are British, as our ancestors originally sprung from the same stock as the Gauls, with whom they maintained a religious intercourse to the very aera of the Roman conquest, though they had been for many ages locally and
590
politically distinct
REMARKS UPOW
from them. And lastly, Camden and liis have shewn, that many of these coins bear the names of British princes and cities, which are well known And the style and character of the pieces thus in history. ascertained to be British, as \vell as the figures with which they are charged, unite them indisputably with certain more rude and uninscribed specimens, and prove them to have been the property of the same people.
editors
As to the antiquity of these monuments, it may be remarked, that those which are inscribed with legends, generally present the names of princes who are known to have lived in the century immediately preceding the birth of
first century of our as present aera: Cunobelimis, Caractacns, Arviragus, Boa" And these have not only inscriptions in Roman dicia, &c. characters, but also display" a comparative degree of eleHere we may imagine gaiice in the design and execution. tiie drawing of the Briton corrected by the Roman artist :
Christ,
or in the
Cassivdhtunus,
who was
Upon the uninscribed coins, we generally perceive figures of the same kind; but they exhibit a drawing comparahence it is reasonable to infer, tively rude and uncouth that they are of somewhat higher antiquity than the more finished specimens; and that they were struck sometime before the Roman invasion; and consequently, were the production of ages, during which the Britons were independent, and their religious and political establishments as yet continued to subsist.
:
To him who is advanced a single degree in the study of antiquity, the symbols of heathen superstition upon several of these coins, must present themselves at the first glance. have here the figures of the sun and moon, well-known objects of British devotion ; the figure of Janus, the Saidi of the Britons ; the figure of dpollo with his harp, or the of the same people; with many others Beli and
We
Several specimens also present masks of equally decisive. different shapes, implying the mysterious -nature of the Hence it may be conjectured, that the Britons subject. did not intend these pieces for the common medium of trade, but that they were struck in honour of their gods, in commemoration of the solemnities of their great festivals,
Tydain
Britons could display nothing in this style of magnibut, if 1 mistake not, they have taken care to exhibit something that more immediately connects their here "find large medals with their national superstition. studded circles, occupying a considerable part of the field ; and these are often concentric with other plain circles, so that they give exact representations of those heathenish
ficence
:
The
We
temples, which abound in this island, and which generally consist of a circle of massy stones, either surrounded by a bank of earth, or else inclosing such a bank.
It may also be worthy of remark, that the curious gold coins published by Dr. Borlase, were discovered in the hill of Karn-bre, a place remarkable for its assemblage of almost every species of monument pertaining to British suThe learned author describes these monuments perstition. at large, and then recapitulates their names, as follows :
" In this hill of Karn-br, then, we find rock-basons, " circles, stones erect, remains of Cromlehs, Cams, a grove " oaks, a cave, and an inclosure, not of military, but " of structure and these are evidences sufficient of
having been a place of Druid worship; of which it " may be some confirmation, that the town, about half-a" mile cross the brook, which runs at the bottom of this hill, was anciently called Red-drew, or, more right!}'-, " Ryd-drew, i. e. the Druid's Ford, or crossing of the
its
"
religious
" brook."
Would
which was
be an unreasonable conjecture, that the gold of this consecarefully concealed in the centre
crated spot, and which bore evident marks of Druidical to the Druids of Karn-bre hill, superstition, had belonged and had been there deposited, when the order were comto consult their safety by a precipitate flight ?
pelled
These pieces, it is true, must have been some of their most portable property ; but if, like the glain and the egg,
if found they were viewed as badges of the order, which, them, would expose them to the fury of their eneupon mies \ or if the devices upon them were regarded as magical
592
REMARKS UPON
why
ists
and talismanic, we need not be at a loss to assign the reason they should have been left behind.
pieces of gold and silver, which they viewed in the several lights here suggested, and which answered the description of several of these coins.
1 have shewn at large, that the Welsh people, in the time of their native princes, and even in more recent ages, religiously kept up an imitation of the customs and institutions of their remote progenitors: and here a custom presents itself, which seems to intimate the real use of some ef
Mr. Owen, in his Dictionary V. Arian dlws, takes notice of certain silver medals, which were given as the reward of merit to the victors in poetical competition, and also in
public sports or games; and observes, that the prize for poetry was marked with a figure of a chair; and for music, with that of a harp.
Thus, the medal awarded to each candidate bore a symbol of the art, in which he had distinguished himself; and was therefore carefully preserved by him, as a memorial of the honour which he had acquired. Hence we may infer, that those pieces which bore an impression of the gods and temples of the Druids, were regarded as badges of Druidical
hoftours.
Taliesin, who, upon all occasions, is ambitious of proving himself a worthy successor of the primitive Druids, seems repeatedly to hint that this was actually the case. Thus he " With the circle of ruddy gems upon my golden says " shield, do I not preside over the area of blood, which is
"
?"
Here we find the splendid shield was the appropriate badge of the chief Druid and what can be implied by the studded circle upon the shield of the Helio-arkite god and of his priest, unless it was an image of Caer Sidi, the
:
celestial .zone,
and the circular temple the same, which appears upon several of these coins?
in fact,
Again
in the
"
and distinguished rank. precious device upon my piece of gold, lo, splendid one, who sportively come from the invading host of the Feryll."
The piece of gold seems to have been ostentatiously worn, as the public insigne of this heathen priest; for he is thus addressed in another poem " Come with me into the " and thou shalt have mead which I have prepared, " city, thou, with the pure gold upon thy clasp!"*
More passages to the same purpose might be adduced ; but, for the present, I leave it to the consideration of the reader, whether these hints do not furnish a just presumption, that some of the singular pieces which still remain, were a kind of honorary medals, which the Druids distributed amongst their disciples, according to their respective ranks and attainments: and if this be admitted, it will follow, that they were not designed as the medium of trade.
I shall, in the course of this Essay, produce some evidence, that certain pieces of gold or silver, which answer the description of several of these old coins, were also regarded as charms or talismans, and as such delivered to those votaries of Bardism, who took up arms when the Druids sanctified war, for the defence of the country.
But, first of all, let us attentively consider some of the extravagant images which appear upon these reliques of Let us select the figure of the horse, upon one antiquity. of the Karnbre coins, which Dr. Borlase thus describes.
" well proportioned, and neither destitute of spirit nor " expression and it is somewhat surprising, that an artist,
:
(see the annexed plate) is the best preserved as well as largest and most distinct, which I have coin, seen of the gold coins found in Cornwall. The profile is
so well, should draw the horse so very indifferently on the other side. The <' head has two rows of. curls above the laureated diadem, " and the folds of the garment rise up round the neck, close " to the ear. The reverse, a horse, a wheel, balls and cres" cents, as in the rest ; it weighs four pennyweights and " fourteen grains."
Q_S
Appendix, No.
8,
,
REMARKS UPON
Our author seems to impute the deviation from nature, in the figure of this horse, to the want of skill in the artist. But I think it impossible to suppose, that the person who drew and executed the human head, with its complex ornaments, should have wanted ability to delineate the more simple form of the animal with accuracy and neatness, had that been his real design.
we here find a horse with the head ancj a body bent downwards in the shape of a little groups of balls and leaves substituted for It is therefore evident, that something more is here legs. intended, than the mere delineation of a horse.
Instead of
this,
bird,
artists were capable of marking out their with a certain degree of precision, may also be design inferred, from a comparison of this coin with other specimens in the same series. Thus in No. XX. (see the annexed plate), we have the same monstrous figure struck from another die; and wherever the figure, called the horse, can be traced upon the Karn-bre coins, he constantly presents the head of a bird, and the body of a boat.
This grotesque singularity, in such a variety of specimens, cannot be wholly ascribed to the rudeness of the designer's art, or to the accidental wandering of an unpracticed hand. Such an uniform departure from the simplicity of nature, must have been the effect o choice, and therefore intended to convey some determinate meaning.
In this favourite figure, then, we are to view some complex symbol, some representation of a group of ideas, which the designer had in contemplation. must seek for the subject of this symbol in the civil, the military, or the religious affairs of the British people; and, as 1 have alrcadv hinted, we shall find it only in the latter department for as the symbols upon the British coins allude to religion in general, so they have a particular reference to that Helioarkite superstition, which we have already discovered in the ancient Bards and mythological Triads.* And I cannot regard the most prominent figure on these corns, namely, the monstrous horse, with the head of a bird and the body
We
* Hence the figures of the sun and moon, the frequent repetition of Apollo his^harp, the spica or eur of corn, the galley or ship, and the lunette, \vhicli represented both the nevy moon and a small boat.
and
of a boat or
This is precisely the image which Taliesin gives us of that mystical personage. have repeatedly heard him, describing her as a hen : and in giving an account of his initiation into her mysteries, he says of this portentous hen " On the edge of a covering cloth (the mystic veil) she " caught me in her fangs In appearance she was as large " as a proud mare, which she also resembled then she was " the waters into a dark re* out, like a " swelling she cast me ship upon she carried me back into the sea of ceptacle " Dylan" (W. Archaiol. p. 19. See also the preceding Essay, Sect. III.)
We
Here the astonished aspirant beholds the goddess Ceridin the complex form of a bird, a mare, and a ship. Such was her image in the sacred circle, or her portraiture upon the veil of the sanctuary. How could such a representation have been made in painting or sculpture, but by
wen
sketching a figure with the head, and perhaps the wings of a bird; by giving the body a certain bend, so as to resemble a boat, or the hulk of a ship; by adding the tail of a horse, and some substitutes for four legs; and by adjusting the parts, so as rudely to imitate the figure of a horsed
But by this contrivance, the identical figure on the British coins is produced. T.his figure, therefore, is no other than Ceridwen, the Ceres of our ancestors. The Bard and the engraver could never have coincided in this monstrous departure from the course of nature, without having the same imaginary being in view. But that the ideas, darkly conveyed by the mystical horse, were perfectly familiar to the persons for whose use the Karn-bre coins were designed, is evident, from the abridgements which were allowed, and the simple touches which often served to intimate the presence of the complicated figure. this subject, I shall adduce the words
Upon
of Dr. Borlase. " There is one thing more necessary to be observed, in " order to which is, that place these coins with propriety, " several of the Karn-bre coins have not the horse on the " No. XI. No. VIII. IX. X.
reverse,
(as
XL)
(Vide,
596
REMARKS
" plate annexed), but instead thereof, have several meinbcY* " and symbols adjusted together, in such a manner as t<>
" imitate the shape of a horse, and become, when joined " the emblem, rather than the figure of that together, " creature, which the first engraver knew ?io better how to " These several symbols are not to be explained, design. " but by comparing the coins in which we find the same " parts inserted in the composition of an entire figure, and " others, in which the same parts are detached and un" connected.
" The latter must derive their light from the former. For example in No. VIII. you find three of the figures marked in the table of symbols (Borlase's Antiq. No. I.) In No. IX. there are four of the same symbols. What should be the intent of placing such figures, in such numbers, on these reverses? Why, in No. XVIII. (see the plate annexed) and XIX. we find the legs of the horse made in this unnatural fashion; and it is observable, that where the horse is not, there these legs, the most useful
:
" "
<(
parts of this creature, are placed. They are two and t\vo, with a ball or wheel between them, placed
as in the coins
entire.
Between
them, the half moon (of which by and by) dips his convex part somewhat in the manner of the horse's barrel, above which, another crescent-like bunch forms the back; a round ball turns to shape the buttock, and on the fore part a thick handle of a javelin slopes upwards from the breast, to form the neck and crest of the horse." (Borlase's Antiq. of
Cormcall, p. 276.)
Thus far Dr. Borlase, who only contemplates the civil and military affairs of the Britons, and imputes ever}- deviation from nature to the rudeness of the engraver's artBut as I have shewn, that the entire figure, called the horse, was a symbol of the British Ceres, so it appears that each of the heterogeneous parts which enter into the composition of that figure, was symbolical of something in tie
invstical establishment of that O goddess.
/
Ked, or Ceridwen, was an imaginary genius, supposed to preside over the sacred ship ; and in these coins a detached lunette, or boat, is actually substituted for the body of the horse ; and in one specimen, that part presents the elevation of the Cromlech, Maenarch, or Maen Ketti, which
cell
composed of a
of that divinity; whilst the back of the crescent, the celestial symbol of
Instead of the hinder parts of the horse, we remark certain hollow circles* or ovals, exactly resembling those circular and oval temples which embellish the Antiquities of Cornwall, and to which the Bards so frequently allude.
As a substitute for the neck and crest, either a staff, or the branch of some evergreen, slopes upwards, from the direction of the boat, which constitutes the centre of the This staff or branch I regard as the gestamen of figure. the priests the Hudlath and ILudzcydd, or magical wand, mentioned by Taliesin; and the branch which was carried by the Bard, as the badge of his sacred character, and of which Aneurin says " That branch might whisper, before " the fierce onset, the effectual songs which claimed obe" dient attention the the assuager of songs of " tumult and battle, Then would Llywy, the sword retire to the ' left side, the warrior, with his hand, would support the " empty corslet, and the sovereign, from his treasure chest, " would search out the (Gododin, precious reward."
Song
KCft,
25.)
is,
of Cerid-
and the legs are composed of little strait bars, of equal length and size, which may be referred to those lots or tallies, so often mentioned by Taliesin and Merddin. These tallies are generally mounted at both ends by thick rings, or perforated globules, which I can compare to nothing but the sacred glains described in Camden's
Denbighshire.
This complete figure of a horse; therefore, as here depicted, seems to have represented, not only the person of the British Ceres, but also the whole of her mystical establishment. The belly was the sacred ship, of which that goddess was the representative genius. The back was the moon, her celestial emblem. The hinder part of the body
constituted the sacred circle, which inclosed the Maenarch, stone ark, or womb of the goddess, in which her aspirants
* In Camden's
coins',
which seem
to
Jhologists paid more regard to the simplicity of nature, circles distinct from the figure of the horse.
we
generally find he
598
REMARKS UPON
The neck was the mystical staff, or \vere regenerated. branch, carried by her priests, as the badge of their office
and authority. The legs were the lots or tallies, by which her will was interpreted, and these were guarded by the
mystical glains, the appropriate insignia of her votaries ; whilst the head and beak represented that bird, whose form she had assumed, with some allusion, perhaps, to the birds
Such is the whimsical fancy of heathenism. It is not my business to defend its various conceits, but only to point them out, and explain their meaning, as well as I can. I may, however, vindicate the cause of my countrymen so far, as to remind the reader, that the unnatural combination of parts, in the forming of sacred symbols, was not The pagans of most barbarous nations to them. peculiar had gods equally monstrous, and perhaps more inexplicable. The various symbols which make up the image of the British Ceres, are agreeable to general mythology. Mr. Bryant has shewn, that Ceres was the genius of the ark ; that a boat, or a crescent, was her symbol ; that she was the same character as Hippa, the mare; and that she was generally attended by her favourite bird.
Were the image of this goddess, with her British emblems, to be designed by a Greek or Roman, in the meridian age of their refinement, he might represent her as a venerable matron, seated in a boat, with her various attributes disposed about her in decent order. But the unrefined Britons were satisfied with a grotesque figure, which comprehended the various emblems of their goddess, and, as we learn from Taliesin, such figures were introduced into their
sanctuaries.
In the light with which I view the British coins, I cannot help admiring the precision with which they display the very same mass of superstition, which I had already contemplated in the Bards and the Triads. There I had traced the lore of Druidism in written language, which, though mystical, was seldom impenetrably obscure: here I read the same legend, impressed upon tablets of gold, and silver, and brass.
The reader will have gathered from the preceding Essay, that though the mythological horses of the Britons are not
ANCIENT
BHITJSII COINS.
599
invariably to be regarded as symbols of Ceres, yet they had always some reference to a sacred ship. Thus the black horse of the seas, which carried the eight mystical personages out of Caledonia into Mona, and the two others which are classed with him, have evidently this allusion.
The steed of the sun is repeatedly mentioned by Taliesin: but it must be recollected, that the solar divinity was honoured in conjunction with the Diluvian patriarch; that he presided in the same Caer Sidi, which was sacred to Ceridzcen; and that the great feat of his horse was to carry his master from the marriage feast of the ocean, and to make his path be perceived in the sea, and in the mouths of rivers; so that the whole tradition respecting mythological horses, refers to the history and connexions of that
mystical character, who appeared to every astonished and dismayed aspirant in the shape and size of a proud mare, yet swelled out like a ship on the waters, and actually set sail.
Instead of a horse, we are, then, for the most part, to contemplate a mare, the symbol or personification of the British Ceres, and the same as the mythological Hippa of the ancients.
intention to enlarge upon the subject of but merely to point out the use of Bardic imagery in their explanation: I shall, therefore, only consider the figure of the horse and his accompaniments, upon some specimens of Camden's collection.
It is
not
my
these coins
In No. 6, Tab. 1 (see the plate annexed), the drawing appears to be purely British. The obverse presents the rude figure of a horse, stooping under an enormous vase, which, laid upon his back, seems to rise immeinstead of being covers. This diately out of his body, which it completely a ridge of pearls round its border, corresponds vase, having with Taliesin's description of that famous emblem of Druidism, the sacred pair, or cauldron of Ceridwen, and the
.
ruler
of the deep.
Neud
" "
Is
Gwrym am
not
this the
is its
pair pen
ei
Annwfn
oror a mercrid
Pwy y vynud -
quality?
With
cauldron of the ruler of the deep! What the ridge of pearls round its border?"
600
As in the Karn-bre coins, the boat, the circular temple, the magic branch, &c. constitute the several parts of the mystical horse, so, in the present instance, we find that important vase, which was of indispensible use in the sacred mysteries, intimately connected with the person of the Arkite goddess.
symbolical animal supports upon its head a circle, or containing three small rings, or balls. These diminutive figures, which embellish most of the British coins,
disk,
The
must have had some definite import. The Ovum Angumum, described by Pliny, was esteemed in Gaul, Insigne Druidis, the peculiar badge of a Druid. The same was known in Britain, where it was equally respected hence the Bard " says Lively was the aspect of him who, in his prowess, " had snatched over the ford, that involved ball, which " casts its to a the of the
:
distance, rays splendid product adder, shot forth by serpents." (See Append. No. XIV.) I have shewn, that the gtain, or glass ring, was a similar mark of distinction amongst our heathen ancestors and I presume that the balls and small rings upon the British coins, are intended for some of those sacred trinkets; and that they are introduced as emblems of those characters who had a right to carry them. Hence the presence of the ovum, or glain, implies the presence of a Druid, or priest, And the three balls, inclosed within one circle, and supported by the mystical goddess, may be viewed as symbols of the three orders of the priesthood the Druids, properly so called, the Bards, and the Ovates^
"
Over the sacred vase is a large studded circle, raised upon the ground of the coin, and .inclosing another circle, with four raised studs in the centre. As in these coins we often
encompassing an appropriate part of and ambitiously exhibited, I conclude they also must have had some determinate meaning. Medallists have sometimes called them strings of pearl: but here is no appearance of strings, and the studs are, beyond all proporIt may also be remarked, that tion, too large for pearls. the studs are not adjusted as ornaments of the principal figures, nor thrown carelessly down, as if they were intended for the display of riches but, on the contrary, they are disposed on the field in regular order, as the outlines of
find similar circles,
the
field,
permanent demarcation,
I therefore
601
the coin before us we have, then, the circular temple, central Adytum, or sacred cell, inclosed within a raised mound, as we often find it in British monuments.
On
with
its
On one side of this temple, and over the vase, is a figure resembling a rose, which probably alludes to the select plants and flowers employed in the preparation of the cauldron ; or to the flowers which the Bards and Druids wore at the solemn
festivals.
The reverse of this coin gives a duplicate of the mystical animal, as well as of the temple, and the disk with the three connected balls. But the horse is now delivered of his load, the season of the great solemnity, when the cauldron was produced, is now past. Two of the horse's feet rest upon a small chest, or some such thing; the disk is taken down from his head, and he is in the act of depositing a figure like the leaf of a trefoil, which was the symbol of union in the three orders. Ihis coin is wholly occupied by memorials of the worship of Ceres.
No. 8 (see the plate annexed) is, a gold coin which, in the figure of the horse, displays the free hand of the British mythologist, contemning alike the simplicity of nature, and the elegance of art. Though the group of heterogeneous members produce something like the rude outlines of a horse, just enough to procure it that name amongst antiquaries, nothing can be more dissimilar to that animal in all his parts.
This horse, like thdse on the Karn-bre coins, has the sharp beak of a bird so Ceridwen assumed the shape of a This horse, bird, and was emphatically styled the hen. upon his bird's head, has a high crest so Ceridwen was described as Idr ddu gopawg, a black, high-crested hen. This crest is divided so Ceridwen was Idr grafrudd, gribesgar a hen with red fangs, and a divided crest. And the divided crest is curved into the horns of a cow, or the shape of a crescent; but the cow and the crescent were symbols of Ceridwen.
The body of
the torse
is
bent downwards, so as to
re-
6'02
EEMARKS UPON
semble a boat, or the hulk of a ship. Thus Ceridwen presented herself to the eyes of the noviciate, in the combined form of a bird, and a proud mare; and, at the same time, began to swell out like a ship on the renters. That the curvature of the body is actually intended to imitate a ship, or boat, is evident from the Karn-bre coins, and several others, in which the simple and detached figure of a boat is substituted for the body of the horse. This is therefore the image which Taliesin contemplated with dread arid astonishment, upon his entrance into the mystic hall of
Ceridwen.
Instead of feet, this horse, like those of the Karn-bre has short, detached figures, resembling billets, or tallies of wood, and these are headed with the sacred glains. Such feet, as I have already hinted, seem to represent those tallies or lots, so often mentioned by the Bards as means of and the divination, or of discovering the will of the gods the glains, were the interpreters. priests, symbolized by
coins,
;
This grotesque horse holds in his mouth a luniform figure, resembling a covered coracle, or British boat. It may be recollected that Ceridwen, the mare-bird, covered her aspirant in a small coracle, and carried him into the sea.
Three Ova are suspended from the tail of the horse, and These are, to the ground. appear as if they were dropping the Ova proceedprobably, the three orders, symbolized by in^ from the mystical sanctuary, which is described as the
womb On
of the goddess.
each side of the neck is the trefoil, or emblem of union amongst the three orders. These seem to have fallen from a coracle, which is reversed or emptied under two circular temples.
belly of the horse, we remark a plain circle, a wheel. In the same situation, we sometimes inclosing find a studded circle, or concentric circles, and sometimes a female figure rising to view.
Under the
Mr. Walker, in his notes upon Camden's coins, says , " The wheel under the that horse, amongst the Romans, " intimated the making of an highway for carts, so many " of which being, in the Roman times, made in this " well deserved such a memorial." Upon which
1
remarks" What
ANCIENT BRITISH
" " " " " " "
COINS.
603
among
the Romans, I shall not dispute; but it could not be inserted in the British coins (as he seems to imply) for that purpose; for there were no Roman ways made in Britain till after Claudius^ conquest, and we find the wheel common in Cunobelin's coins, and in Cassibelan's and also in the Cornish coins, which, from all their characters, appear to be older than the rest."
These circles, wheels, and female figures, are, probably, various representations of Arianrod, the goddess of the silver wheel, the Iris of antiquity, of whom we have had some are account in the poem called the chair of Ceridwen. there told, that when Avagddu, the son of Ceridwen, wanted a rampart to protect him from the repetition of the deluge, Gwydion (Hermes) composed this sacred character of certain flowers, and adorned her with the bold curves, and the " Then the virtue of various folds. goddess of the silver " wheel, of auspicious mien, the dawn of serenity, the great" est restrainer sadness, in behalf of the Britons, speedily " throws roundof hall the stream his of the IRIS; a stream tf which scares away violence from the earth, and causes the *' bane of its former state, round the circle of the world, to " subside"
We
implement
name from a wheel, that regarded as her proper emblem. But instead of a wheel, we often find two concentric circles, one studded, and the other plain, or an image of those temples which consist of a circle of massy stones, and an
As
this character obtained her
may be
The reason of this may be collected from the passage I have just quoted. This auspicious goddess was protectress of the circle of the world, or mundane circle, which is a well-known name of the Druidical sanctuary. In this situation, therefore, she still poured the mystic stream round her Arkite votaries, and thus kept aloof the demons of mischief from the hallowed precinct. She is stationed
beneath the mystic horse, because she and subservient to the genius of the ark.
is
connected with
The reverse of this coin exhibits nothing remarkable but the word Bo DUO, probably of the same import as Budd, ene of the names of the British Ceres; whence Buddiig,
REMARKS UPON
the goddess of victory, a of the Iceni.
title
For my own satisfaction, I have examined most of the symbols on the ruder and uninscribed coins, and found them, in general, consistent with Bardic imagery but for the present, I shall only request the attention of the reader to a few specimens which present inscriptions in Roman characters, and which appear to have been struck between tha Hera of Caesar's invasion, and the full establishment of
;
the
Roman government
in this country.
the designs are' more elegant and simple. may suppose that they were executed by Roman artists, or else that the British engravers had improved by their intercourse with the Romans. It may be curious to ascertain, whether these carry any marks of the national superstition, which appears in the older specimens.
We
of this description in Camden's collection, which the figure of the horse, is No. 3, Tab. 1. (see the plate annexed.)
first
The
carries
This is a gold coin, attributed to Cunobelinc, a British king, who lived in the reigns of Augustus and Tiberius. On the one side, we read the word CUNO, which has been considered as an abbreviation of this prince's name; and on the other, CAMU, implying Camulodunum, his principal
city.
But here it must be remarked, that CUNO is found upon coins that bear a great variety of heads, sometimes female heads; and upon others which have no head at all.. Hence it may be presumed, that this inscription has a close affinity with the British word Cun. a chief, or sovereign personage, which may be translated Domimis, or Domina, as the case
shall require.
Instead of the head of Cunobeline, the coin before us displays an ear of corn, which was an attribute of Ceres, even amongst the Britons for she is styled by the Bards, Ogyrven Amhad, the goddess of various seeds: and we are " The told dragon chief of the world (the Diluviari pa" triarch) formed the curvatures of Kyd (her sacred boat), " ..which passed the dales of grievous waters (the deluge), " having the fore part stored with corn, and mounted aloft,
:
605
with the connected serpents." In the mystical process, the Arkilc goddess devours the aspirant, when he has assumed the form of a grain of wheat : and that aspirant says of himself, that he had been a grain of the Arkites, which had grown upon a hill. Hence the priests of this goddess are styled Hodigion, hearers of ears of corn; and it was the office of Aneurin, her distinguished votary, Amzfyn ty*' to protect the ear on the height. gortirot of' corn
Thus it appears, that this symhol was sacred to the Arkite goddess : it cannot, therefore, have represented Cunobeline as a British king, or have appertained to him, unless
he was one of her
mysteries.
priests, or,
at least,
an adept in her
On
is
Hippa, or mare, whose form this divinity had assumed. The animal does not here exhibit the wild extravagance of
mark
it
carries
certain
emblems
to
Over the back is a small ring or ball, from which ajiame appears to ascend. Close to the mouth is a second ball, and at the other extremity a third.
infer that the
or Glain being the symbol of a priest, we may Ovum over the back of the horse, with its ascending flame, represents the presiding priest, who kept up the perpetual fire of Ceres. To this fire we have frequent allusions in the Bards, particularly in the songs of the
The Ovum
Gododin.
As for the other two balls, or Glains, their peculiar situation seems, especially when compared with the ruder specimens, to allude to a certain process in the British mysteries.
These
figures being regarded as
emblems of devotees, we
may
own
recollect, that both Taliesin, and the tale which describes his initiation, represent the mystical mare as de-
Under the
we remark a studded
circle,
* It may be proper to apprise the mythologist, that Tywysen, the Spicw, also implies a general, but obscene symbol of heathenism. The curious may
sec an example, Camb. Reg. V. II. p. 307.
6*06
REMARKS UPON
This
inclosing a protuberant mass, or else a concentric circle. I have already remarked, as a symbol of the goddess of' the silver wheel, who guarded the limits of the British
temple.
This coin, therefore, relates solely to the honours of the British Ceres, and to those characters which superstition had placed in her retinue.
No.
5,
Tab.
1. (see
is that of the prince who bore this title, or that of the British Apollo, must remain a question, as it has no It must be understood, that Cun implies peculiar attribute. a lord or lady ; and Belin is the name of the British Apollo, or of the Helio-arkite god, the same as Hu: (see Append. No. XI.) so that Cunobelinm is nothing more than Dominns Belinus, or Dominus Sol.*
name CUNOBELINE
the plate annexed), is a silver coin, which at full length: but whether
I have had occasion to observe in the preceding Essay, that it was a general practice amongst the old British princes, to assume some title of the god to whom they were devoted : and it must have been in consequence of this custom, that we had a celebrated prince, in the reigns of Augustus and Tiberius, styled Cunobelinus. This does not seem to have been his real name, but merely an assumed title; for we are told he was the father of the renowned Caractacws. (See Baxter's Glossary. V. Caractacus.) Yet the Bards and Triads always mention the father of that prince by the name of Bran, Brennus, or the raven.
On the reverse of this coin, the horse is accompanied by a crescent; whence it may be inferred, that he is merely the representative of a character, of which the moon, or a But boat, in the form of a crescent, was also an emblem. Mr. Bryant has shewn, that the crescent, whether referred to the moon or the boat, was an emblem of the Arkite goddess. The same thing appears in our national mythology.
* That the Batons understood this as a title of their Apollo, is evident, from No. 7 of this table> where Apollo appears playing upon his harp, with the inscription Cunobe ; and from No. 23, which presents the same figure of Apollo, with the name CUNOBELI, Dominus Bell. So Merddin mentions the seven S'icred fires (q. planets?) of which Cunobehne was the first. (Append. No. IX.) And in the poem called the Talisman of Cunvbelinc, he is represented as a
.
demon -god.
60,7
L/oer, the moon, and Cwrwg, the boat, were symbols which pertained to the British Ceres. (See the poem called the Chair of Taliesin.) The horse upon this coin is, there-
And it has occurred to me as a general remark, that those coins which have either the name or symbols of Belin, the Helio-arkite god, on one side, constantly discover some emblem of the Arkite goddess upon the other side; and thus connect the two great objects of superstition, which were worshipped in conjunction with the sun and moon.
Thus we find that the devices upon those specimens, which combine the native thoughts of the Britons with the simple elegance of Roman art, have a marked allusion to the worship of Ceres, and to that peculiar kind of superstition, which runs through the works of the Bards and the
British Triads.
also add, that the legends * appear strictly approto the mythology of the engraver, and confirm the priate idea I have suggested, as to the mystical nature of his
may
design.
To
Whoever
Cam-
den's tables, will perceive' that the ear of corn, that favourite attribute of Ceres, is frequently depicted upon the coins which have the image of the horse. But on No. 13, the mystic animal appears without his discriminative symbols; oh the reverse, however, we find the word DIAS inclosed within a curious frame. This w ord, in the Irish language, implies an ear of corn: it is therefore introduced instead of that sacred symbol.
r
word Tasc occurs more frethan any other upon the British coins. Tasc, in quently the language and orthography of the ancient Bards, sigIn the present nifies a pledge, or bond of confirmation. Welsh it is spelt Tasg, and in Irish Taisg; and both dialects
It is remarkable, that the
have preserved
.
its
meaning.
tribes
* The legends or inscriptions are, undoubtedly, in the dialects of the several by whom the coins were struck. These dialects may have varied in their oithography and inflexion in the course of eighteen centuries yet it may be presumed, their radical words are to be found in the two principal branches of the ancient Celtic, namely, the language of the ancient Bards, and that of
:
Irish
MSS.
REMARKS UPON
To Tasc, the letters ia, ie, or io, are often added. In order to account for them, 1 must observe, that De, Dia,
and Dio, in several Celtic dialects, implied, God, of God, The Irish language supplies them all, sacred, or divine. either as distinct words, or in composition: and in this language the d is silenced by a point, or an h; so that TascTasc-dhia, Tasc-dhio, would be pronounced Tascie, It may fairly Tascia, Tascio, the divine or sacred pledge. be presumed, that our engravers spelt their legends as they
dhe,
were pronounced.
The reader will recollect that the Arkite goddess presided over corn; that she was represented as a gigantic woman, and that her favourite symbols were a mare, a bitch, and a sow. shall find the word Tasc enter into the composition of legends which allude to her worship, under each of
We
these symbols.
Thus
in
Camden's
first
table,
No. 23, we
this goddess,
In the composition of Irish words, Bhan, pronounced Van, implies a woman or lady; and Ith, anciently It, is corn. In Welsh composition, Wen implies a lady, as in the sacred titles, Cerid-wen, O\-wen, &c. and Yd, anciently It, is corn:
so that Tasc
Van
It imports, pledge
of the lady
of corn.
goddess appears under the combined image of a teaman and a mare, with the legend Tasc 'la No Van It.
this
which
Naoi, in Irish, implies a ship; and I have shewn that the Bards use Nazo in the same sense, and thrft Aw, in a hundred instances, are contracted into o. Tasc ia no van it,
implies, therefore, the sacred pledge of the of corn.
SHIP of
the lady
The same author has published a coin,* on which a child appears mounted upon a dog, with the abbreviated legend, Tasc No Va pledge of the ship of the lady.
This must appear obscure, till we recollect that Ceridwen assumed the form of a bitch, chaced the aspirant, represented as an infant, and in the mystical process caught him, and inclosed him in the sacred boat.
See Hist, of Manchester, V.
I.
p. 342,
and V.
II. p. 67.
2d
Edit.
609
in
tale,
which
lady, or her ship, is represented under the name and And in Camdcn's table, No. 22, we see figure of a sow. the image of the mystical sow, with the legend TASC NO VAN IT, pledge of the ship of the lady of corn.
and the same mystical character? On Camden's coin, No. 16, we have the horse in his natural shape, and in good proportion, but without any peculiar attribute, excepting the inscription ORCETI. This evidently consists of two British words: OR is a limit, circle, or sanctuary ; and Ced, anciently written Cat, is one of the most familiar names of the British Ceres. It often occurs in the passages which I have quoted, and in the Appendix. This goddess was also called CETI, or Cetti: thus I have shewn that the Cromlech, which covered her sacred cell, was called Muen Cetti,
the stone of Cetti. The Roman engraver having, for the pake of neatness, omitted the studded circle, or temple of
How shall we account for these similar inscriptions upon such a variety of devices, without referring to the national mythology, which ascribed these several symbols to one
which generally accompanies the mystical horse, thought proper to identify his subject by adding the legend, Or Ceti, the sanctuary of Ceti.
Ceres,
On another of Camden's coins, No. 32^ we perceive a female head, with the legend DIRETE. History mentions no queen or city of this name ; but in our old orthography, Direit, and in the modern, Dyrreith, is a title of the mystical goddess, who is introduced by that name in the tailsman of Cunobeline, where she assumes the form of a horse, and carries the generous hero to battle and victory.
These inscriptions, combined with the various symbols which have been remarked, are to me demonstration sufficient, that these coins arc to be explained only by the mythological imagery of the Bards. But almost every medallist who has taken them up, perof the symbols I have mentioned, the of warriors, pieces of armour, and other military figures
ceives, exclusive
implements.
All this seems perfectly to accord with one of the uses
t
B R
GlO
REMARKS
UPO3T
I have promised to produce some evidence, that, certain pieces of gold and silver, which answer the description ot several of these coins, were regarded by the old Britons as charms or talismans, and as such delivered to those votaries of Bardism, who took up arms, when the Druids sanctioned What I have now tear, for the de-fence of the country. to add, will shew the high probability of this curious fact, if it will not ascertain its absolute certainty.
Part of Taliesin's poem, in which he commemorates the mythological horses, has been presented to the reader. (See Append. No. V.) The Bard introduces the subject with a which he mentions the steed of that hymn to the sun, luminary, and concludes the poem with a recital of certain symbols of Diluvian lore whence it may be inferred, that the matter which occupies the intermediate space, pertains
to the
same
lielio-arkite superstition.
This part of the poem is filled with an account of certain celebrated horses ; and the Bard does not mean the living animals, but mere figures, which were the subject of magical preparation ; for thus he brings forward his catalogue.
Nid mi gwr
llwfr llwyd,
And as it may be presumed, that these magical figures are the same to which the Bard alludes in other passages, it is evident that they were impressed upon pieces of gold and silver; for Taliesin tells us (W. Archaiol. p. 28)
Atuyn cant ag ariant amaerwy Atuyn march ar eurgalch gylchwy.
" Beautiful
"
is
is the circle with its silver border the horse on the gold-covered circle"
Beautiful
As
certain
for
name of
famous
art comprised the formation of these talismans, whatever they were and to this the same Bard evidently alludes, when he says (W. Archaiol. p. 34.)
:
ANCIENT BRITISH
A
Gwneynt eu
pcrion
COINS.
6ll
proceeds to recite the mythology of the Helio-arkite god and the Arkite goddess, to whom these horses pertained.
But to go on with the song of the horses. The talismans which presented these magical figures, were of small compass.
one person's hand into that of another O'm Haw ith law " Out of dyt dwp dim my hand into thy hand put on the " whatever it be;" covering,
Hence it may be assumed, that these were the Artoyddon, or tokens, which the Helio-arkite god, or his priest, delivered to his votaries, and of which he demanded the exhibition, at the solemnities of his great festival-:
are the three chief ministers, who have defended the country ? are tht> three experienced men, who, " having preserved the token, are coming with alacrity to " meet their lord ?" (See Append. No. IV.)
*
"
Who
Who
but that they were the same as the or small pieces of gold, which the Cabiric priests displayed, as credentials of their office and authority. (See Append. No. VII.)
not only
so,
And
Eurem and
Etirell,
The proprietors of these magical horses are the gods, or have distinguished votaries of the old superstition. here March Mayawg, the horse of Maia, the great mother, March Genethawg, and the horse of the damsel K.o^ t or
We
Proserpine
tcit/riawg,
and
the horse of Caractacus, characterised by his ring. After these, come the horse of Arthur, of Taliesin, and of Cezdiaw, the mystical father of Gwenddoleu ;
Ac
eraill,
tir
yn
rin,
*
Rac
aHwyn. B R 2
6'12
REMARKS UPON
affliction
" And others of mysterious power, against the " of the land." Let us
and
consider the shape of these talisinanic horses, be convinced, that they are precisely the same monsters which are exhibited in the tables of Camden and Borlase.
\ve shall
now
The first pair are described as Deu dich far dicliwant, " the two hen-headed, unbiassed steeds" These are the horses " the of the old coins. Then comes Pybyr Hal llwynin, " strenuous horse of the the grove" a name which gloom of marks his connection with the prevailing superstition. To him is subjoined, Cornan cynneifawg, " the accomplished " horse of the crescent." This is the same which carried Ct/nveli/n and his companions to see the sacred fires of the IJruids. (W. Archaiol V. II. p. 20.)
To this succeed Tri charn aflazcg, " three horses, having " the hoof, or foot, secured with a band" They seem to be of the same kind as Carngrajf, the horse of Bran, or Cnnobcline, which had the ring, or band, round his foot. (W. Archaiol. p. 167 ) And the same as Cam Gajfon, " the " horse which was hoofed with a circled mentioned in
staff,
the talisman of Cunobeline. And thus Ajiawg describes those horses, whose feet consisted of little staves, capped with thick rings, such as I have remarked in the
Cam
in
some of Camden's
collection.
Ano-
" Hideous, the horse of Ceidio, which has the horn of " Avarn" Whatever the word Avarn may imply, I have remarked in Camderi (Ta,b. I. No. 8. see annexed plate), u horse which truly answers the name of Ceithin, hideous, or monstrous, with a pair of large horns. This is a gold coin and the Bards speak of the gold of Avarn (see Owen's
;
Diet, in voce), as having a power to arrest or pervert judgment these tokens may have had the same influence, ad victorias litium, as the Ovum Anguiiunn, described by Pliny.
These remarks upon Taliesin's Canu y Meirc/i, may serve to prepare the reader for an attentive perusal of the curious " THE TALISMAN OF poem, called Gwarchan Cynvelyn.
613
Iii the introductory section of the proinserted some passages of this poem in Mr. Owen's translation but not to dwell on the freedom of his version, which is not sufficiently close for a dwOj.uisiij.qn of this kind, I observe, that the text of the original, as;
given by Mr. Owen (Gent. Mag. Nov. 1790), is essentially different from the old copies, cited in the Welsh ArcltawJones. I gia, as well as from the still older MS. of Mr. with scrupushall therefore give the text from the latter, as the idioms lous accuracy, and add as literal a translation of the two languages will admit the singularity of the subject demands a few pages of introduction.
:
This poem has been generally ascribed to Taliesin; but it^ of appears from internal evidence," that it is the production Anenrin. The author speaks of himself as having been waspresent at the fatal banquet of Catraeth, where he wounded and made prisoner, and from whence he narrowjy escaped with his life. This was the peculiar fate of Aneurfn, as we learn by his Gododin.
date of the composition must* be, somewhere in the and interval, between the massacre of the British nobles, the death of for the Bard deplores the fall of the Hengist ;
The
to excite the spirit of the Briupon their enemies, and to assert their own With this view the Bard, whether in compliindependence. ance with his own fanatical delusion, or as an artful manager
The design of
the
poem
is
tons, to retaliate
of the prevailing superstition, enlarges upon the awful consequences that would ensue, were he to practise certain magical rites in the exhibition of a charm or talisman. Whilst
descanting upon this subject, his indignation bursts he has recourse to his mystic art, and the talisman is produced. The power of this spell is declared to be such, that it would safely guard the patriotic warrior through every hazardous enterprise, and ensure the destruction of the treacherous foe. With this solemn mummery, our magician mixes some elogia upon certain distinguished characters, who had bravely defended their country, or gloThese parts I riously fallen in the assertion of its cause. shall pass over at and offer some remarks upon the present, connection of the Bardic talisman, with those uncouth figures which appear upon the ancient British coins.
is
he
forth,
614
REMARKS UPON
In the opening of the poem, the Bard announces hig charm, as comprising, 1 Gorchegin, the high shoots, such as were used in the formation of lots, or omen-sticks; 2. Gzceilging, the wand or gestamen of the divining Bard; and S.
.
coil.
This word generally implies the "wreath or torques of gold which the noble Briton wore about his neck ; but Aneurin uses the term, to describe the diadem or wreath Torchawr am ran: that surrounded the temples of a prince and it is here called the wreath of the unobstructed per-r vader; that is, of the solar divinity, whose laurel wreath so frequently occurs upon the old coins, together with the lots, and the sacred wand or branch.
Mr. Owen's copy, instead of Trychdrz&ydd, the title of the Helio-arkite god, reads Twrch Tnvythf the boar of the spray, a personage often introduced in the ancient tales. But whether this variation is. from authority, or conjectural amendment, it comes nearly to the same point. The my^ thological boar and sow were the Arkite god and goddess. The boar of the spray was the son of Taredd, the pervasion ; and An Taredd is a name of the deluge. (See Appendix, No. XII.) Edward Llwyd quotes the following passage relative to this character, out of an old mythological narrative,
Ny
ladavd
namyn
tin parchell,
o voch
Tvrch Trvyth.
"
:<
*'
Twrch Trwyth, only one little pig was inquired of Arthur, the import of that hpg; and he replied, He was a king"
the swine of
slain.
Of
The men
But what figure were the shoots, the wand, and the wreath or circle, when duly adjusted, to produce upon the face of the Bardic talisman ? find it was the figure of a horse. This horse, however, was of the same monstrous shape as those which we often upon {he ancient coins. contemplate
We
In the first place, he is named Try-Chethin, thoroughly monstrous or hideous, which is the same as the Cethin of
.,*
Yst.
K. ab KiJjdh. Archaioi.
Brit.
p.
2^
615
He is described as cut off at the haunches these are distinguishing features of the figure upon the Karn-bre and some other British coins. He is
called
fon,
Gajfon his hoof or foot consisted of the Cafwhich was guarded at the end with a band or ring, or else staff of fear : this must imply, either the divining lot, or me augural staff; both of which appear in
stick,
Cam
the
Nummi
Britannia.
The talismanic horse had short, detached Esgyrn (bones}, or, according to the copy in the Welsh Archaiology, Esyrn, legs: and this is also a mark of the figure upon the mysterious coins.
By this phrase, intended the lunettes, gtains, and trefoil leaves, so often found upon the back of the horse in the British coins.
Again
:
it
had
may have
And
to fix at once the character of the talismanic horse, bill of a bird. This is evidently the
coins,
which
have already
particulars hitherto related, are found in the Bard's he comes in the next paragraph introductory boast. actually to produce his talisman, it appears that the first
The
When
the rods, or the formation then exhibits the mystical horse, which was to be delivered to the patriotic warriors severally, together with the nail or rivet, the border, the high-rimmed vessel, and the gem or glain, figures which may easily be recognised in the old medals. And these symbols were to be conveyed to them, upon the gold which was distributed. Hence it is clear, that the characters of this talisman wereimpressed upon a piece of gold, or gilded metal, and that the device was not confined to a single copy ; but that a sufficient number of duplicates were procured for those persons who had a claim to receive them. And we are told in the conclusion of the poem, that the sons of the awful omen, or those who had a right to approach the sacred hrer
He
possessed
them
in
common.
The charm
and
616
REMARKS UPON
ehan Cynvelyn, the talisman of Cunobeline. It rtiust then have consisted of certain pieces, ascribed to Cunobeline, which contained a magical device. It is known to every antiquary, that this is the name which most frequently occurs upon the British coins and as it implies Dominus Belinus, sc. Sol, those specimens which exhibit the attributes of the solar divinity, though they want the title, may be deemed sacred to him.
:
This talisman was regarded as the highest acquisition of rites, and as the shield of the sacred festival, with which the man of fortitude repelled the affliction of his
magical
country.
To this reputation it must have had an undoubted claim, could the Bards have made good all their assertions in. its favour. For it was announced as an infallible pledge, that Cynvelyn himself (here the magician must mean the demon god), and a goddess,- named Di/rraith, would assume the forms of horses, and carry the. patriotic heroes through the perils of battle; whilst the Gicyllion, or GuUkentc, those mysterious priestesses, or island nymphs, who had the
power, III. c.
pleased,
se
in
qua
velint
animaUa
vertere
(Pomp. Mela, L.
their
8.)
to
blessing
would attend the expedition, and pronounce upon the sanctified cause,
is here associated with the Helio-arkite described as of equal rank with J\Ior-ion, Janus god, Nauta. As her name implies she was the goddess of fate, or necessity, the same who conducted the Ogdoad through the deluge (see Append. No. 111.), and therefore the Arkite^ goddess, who was venerated in the form of a mare.
DYRRAITH, who
is
Dyrraitli is, undoubtedly, the same name winch appears upon the old coins, under the softened orthography of I)jKETE. Her head is that of an unadorned female, and the reverse has the horse, with some complex figure upon his
I.
Jso. 32.)
When it was requisite for the defence of her votaries, the British Ceres assumed the character of a fury, and in that
department she appropriates a variety of names.
Mr. Baxter
Andrasta,
lias
(Glossar, Antiq. firitan.), under the article remarked the following Htiam hodie An-*
6l7
"
" Amongst our Britons, even of the present or Andras is a popular name of the day, goddess Ma/en, " the that call Y Fauna whom the "
"
" "
"
"
"
" " "
is, Vail, vulgar the Devil's dam, or Y Wrach, t Some regarded her as a flying That name corresponded not only spectre. with Hecate, Bellona, and Eni/o, but also with Bona Dea, the great mother of the gods, and the terrestrial Venus. - - - - In the fables of the populace, she is Vad Dda Hull, that is, .Bona Furva Fffera; styled and, on the other hand, Y Vad Velen, that is, Helena, or Pona Flava. - - - Agreeably to an ancient rite, the old Britons cruelly offered human sacrifices to this Andrasta; whence, as Dion relates, our amazon, Vondicca (Boadicia) invoked her with imprecations, previous The memory of to her engagement with the Romans. this goddess, or fury, remains to the present day; for men in a passion growl at each other, Mae rhyw Andras,
fady,
Drwg
arnochwi,
you."
And
Minerva.
" Malen is a popular name amongst the Britons, for the " fury Andrasta, or, as the vulgar call her, the Devil's " dam. Fable reports, that she had a magical horse, called " March Malen, upon which sorcerers were wont to ride " the air. Whence the common proverb seems to " through have taken its rise A gasgler ar Varclt Malen dan ei dor " ydd a What is gotten on the back of the horse of Malen, " zcill go under his belly."
This magical horse of tradition is, undoubtedly, the same which our tuneful wizard is conjuring up in the poem before us and, from the description of his points, he may surely \)e recognized in the portentous monsters, which are found upon the old British coins. Here it may be remarked, that the office of our Bard was not to design the figure of the horse, or to strike the talismanic coins. They had been already formed and deposited in a sacred stream,* from
:
sinlc
I have remarked (Sect. II.) that it was a custom of the Celtse, mergere, to As this rite was or deposit their gold and silver in sacred lakes or streams. performed under the direction of the priests, or Druids, they knew undoubtedly where to find their treasure again, when it was wanted. Thus the Bard
618
whence he was,
REMARKS UPON
ritually, to procure them, and deliver them, But let us hear auspiciously, to their respective claimants. his words.
GORCHAN KYNVELYN.
1.
Pei mi brytwn, pei mi gauvvn, Tardei warchan, gorchegin, Gweilging, torch Trychdrwyt.
Ry veluodogy on
CUNOBELINE'S TALISMAN.
l.
that I performed the mystic rite were it I that a talisman would spring forth the high shoots, the sung, wand, the wreath of the unobstructed pervader.* The most hideous form, even that which is cut off from the haunches, should be procured in the river, rather than his beautiful
:
Were it
steeds.
The
(horse),-)-
which
is
stick,
strutted pervader, who was the same as Cunobeline, Dominus Sot ; and it is remarkable, that he prefers as must efficacious, those which resemble the Karaore coins ; and ^exhibit the monstrous figures, cut off at the haunches. These pieces, then, were deemed magical, and duly congealed by the Druids, in order to be re-produced upon some urgent occasion.
* That is, the solar divinity, who is often described by similar epithets. See Append. No. II. It appears from this poem, that he was the same as Kynvelyn. + As it is the property of this kind of poetry to be dark and mysterious, the 'word March, horse, is not introduced ; but the korsc~ho<ifs t liorse-tailt,
619
With
Jieroisin,*
Ryt gwynn
rae Eingyl,
Yawn
Had.
Yawn
vriwyn
vri wyal.
Rac canhwynawl
cann,
bob dewr dy
sel,
Trwy hoel, trwy hemm, Trwy gibellawr, a gemm, Ac eur ar dhrein. A galar dwvyn dyvyd
Y wynnassed velyn,
E
greu oe gylchyn, Keledic ewyn
Med, mygyr,
The
blessed ford f against the Angles, slaughter dignified rods J have been duly broken.
!
is
just.
Before him who carries the mystery of song, a gleam of light shall conduct the warrior, endowed with power, to descend into every brave enterprise, which his eye shall ken by the nail, and the border, and the high-rimmed vessel, and
woe
the gem, with the gold 'which is distributed. And deep shall accrue to the yellow-haired afflicter, who is covered with clotted gore, concealing the foam of the rewhich are connected with the mystical figure, unequivocally explain the meaning of the Bard. I may add! that the figure is here named Try-Chethin, which is a compound of Cethin, hideous, the title of the mystical horse, in Taliesin and the Triads. * who comes under similar of the Gododin. in the
Htngist,
descriptions
riders,
songs
t The Bard has now approached the sacred stream, which he propitiates, prder to procure his charm, with auspicious rites.
ift
J The Bardic
lots, so
often mentioned.
(J20
REMARKS UPON
Again
?
shall
he be covered
will*
Teyrn
tut
anaw
Yw
gwarchan Kynvelyn.
3.
Cunobeline the indignant, the lofty leader of wrath, pamperer of the birds of prey, and that divine allurer, Dyrreith, of equal rank with Morion, shall go under the thighs of the liberal warriors. In equal pace shall the Gwyttioa proceed, with the benign blessing.
Supreme ruler f of the land or harmony It is mine to lament him, till I come to the day of silence. Hewer down of the foe, the weapon should have been stretched forth. Amongst the splendid acquisitions of the mystic lore, tlie most majestic is the talisman of Cunobeline.
!
4.
and deplored by
tali*-
Hy
thus intermixing lamentations for the dead, with the eulogia of his
man, the Bard seems to insinuate, that the woful catastrophe might teen prevailed, by a tiailjr exhibition of his vaunted charm.
liavtt
621
Pan vyrywyt
arveu,
The
talisman of Cunobeline
man
The brave are lamented ; and let the Caer of Eidyn f (the living one) bewail the blue-vested, | illustrious men, who were martyred together. Yet fair is thy ruddy genius,^ island, meriting the glowing hymn, the mead and the
steeds.
Does not the furze bush burst forth into a blaze has not the talisman of Cunobeline, upon Gododin,|j a sufficient commemoration, with a direct impulse?
And
made
As
for
to
me
* Hengist had excluded shields from the festival ; but, it seems, this charm would repair the injury which ensued upon that occasion, and enable the paout the invader of their country. must have often deceived the wearer; but an illomened expression, or the slightest instance of misconduct, was always sufficient to account for the accident, and support the credit of the solemn impostor.
triotic warriors to drive
Such
infallible
trinkets
It
distinguished
by
the presiding divinity. should seem, that the Bard imputed his escape from the feast, and consequently the opportunity of composing his Gwdodio, jto the tutue of fc
spirit,
or intelligence
II
talisman.
REMARKS' UPON
covered circle,* may it be for the benefit of his soul \ H<% the son of Tecvan,f shall be honoured* in numbering, and the grandson of the horn of battle-r-thstin distribution of sun-beams. When weapons were hurled over the pillar heads of the wolves of battle, with speed did he come fortvard in the day of distress.
5.
A minheu,
o'm creu, dychiorant Mab coel kerth, vyg werth y a wnaethant; O eur pur, a dur, ac aryant. Evny ved, nyt nodet, e cawssant :
Three heroes, and three score, and three hundred, % wen? of those who presented to the mixed assembly of Catraeth themselves in haste before the distributors of mead, none but three returned, namely, Kynon, and Cadreith, and Cathlew, of Cadnant I also, with my bloody wound, was bewailed by the sons of the awful omen (sacred fire), who contributed my ransom in pure gold, and steel, and silver.
:
The
tained.
portable sacred pledge, unobserved, have they obCunobeline's mystic talisman they possess in
common.
Thus ends the poem upon the talisman of Cunobeline.
Being now about to take my leave of the reader, T would request his attention to these memorable facts. The old Britons, as their own writings testify against them, in an
* This shaft was piobably the Htidlath, magic viand, or the Cangen, brancli, which was carried by the divining Bard. t Perhaps an error of the copyist for Tenevan, the traditional father of
Cunobeliue.
fall is
mourned
in the
Gododin
which see
As to the nature of the charms to which they had recourse, I have shewn, from Taliesin, that they had certain magical figures of horses, impressed upon small pieces of gold and silver, which were delivered to the deluded people as pledges of supernatural assistance; that these figures were sacred to the gods of heathenism ; were deemed efficacious for the defence of the country, and were precisely of the same form, as the monsters which we find upon the ancient British coins.
To
this I
for the protection of the patriotic warrior, and the destrucThis talisman had those very symbols tion of the foe.
which we discover on the coins, and they were so adj usted, as to constitute the figure of a horse, of the same monstrous form which the coins exhibit, and with the same accompaniments. This talisman was impressed upon gold ; many duplicates of it were provided, and it was emphatically Its preparation was styled the talisman of Cunobeline. deemed the highest effort of British magic; it was the shield of the solemn festival, sacred to the Arkite god and goddess, whose names and attributes appear upon the coins; and it was given to the warriors as a certain pledge, that these divinities would attend them in their enterprise.
If all this will not produce conviction, that many of the British coins, published by our antiquaries, are the identical talismans intended by our Bardic magi, I have nothing more to urge. Yet I trust, however this may be determined, that the candid critic will acquit me of having taken up the idea upon slight or improbable grounds, and that he will acknowledge, that the Britons ascrbed supernatural virtues to some trinkets, of similar device.
But whilst I leave the original use and application of these coins to the judgment of the public, I must declare own conviction, that the symbols and inscriptions which I have remarked, agree so minutely with the lore of
my
624
REMARKS,
&C.
the Bards and Triads, that it is evident, our writers and engravers had precisely the same system in view. And tin's unity of design gives the strongest support to the credit of*
The
modern device
; but, in my opinion, they may now he regarded as consistent, not only amongst themselves, but also, allowing for local peculiarities, with the most ancient and general system of mythology, developed by two of the first antiquaries of our age.
The Bards, the mythological Triads, and the coins, are therefore proved by mutual evidence, in which there can be no collusion, to be genuine monuments of the heathenish superstition of Britain.
And they unite in their testimony, that this superstition, notwithstanding the singularity of a few minuter features, could boast of no great and fundamental principle, which was appropriate to itself. Like the general error of other nations, it consisted of certain "memorials of the preservation of mankind at the deluge, and some perverted reliques of the patriarchal religion, blended with an idolatrous \rorship of the host of heaven.
INDEX.
INDEX
TO THE
Adar Ban,
Addvwyn
Adytum
Ape, sacred, 122, 568 Aphorisms of the bards, 75 Apology for the ancient triplets, 76 for Arkite mythology, 90 Appeal from the chair of Glamorgan to ancient documents, 36 Apple-tree, symbolical, 11, 284 Apple-trees of Merddin, 465, 480
Arawn
417,- 420
Aedd, the arkite god or his priest, 122, 259 Aeddon, 117, 348 elegy of, 553 Aeron, the splendid one, 338 Aervre, battle of, 343 Aethereal temple, 353 Agitators of fire, 531 adur, a sacred title, 528 *AXac Mtyai, 237 Allegory relating to mystic rites, 419 Amber, 339 wreath of Hengist, 327 Ambrosial stones, 385 Amhrosius poisoned by Eppa, 344 Amreeta, the water of immortality, 227 Anachronism of the chair of Glamorgan, 33 Analogy between the British and Greek and mysteries, 262 rites, 220, 221
Arbor
frugifera,
23
Arcol, a mystical character, 414, 415 Arderydd ag Eryddon, battle of, 463, 474, 480. Area of blood, 544 Aren, the ark, 193
Arenees, temple of Apollo in the, 194 Argat, the ark, 200 Argoed, men of, made a league with Hengist, 379 Arianrod, 205, 266 the rainbow, 268 daughter of Don, 205 of Beli, 447 Ariant Gwion, 275 Ark, worshipped in conjunction with the moon, 90 symbolized by islands and
154, 160 deified and represented as the mother, the consort, or the daughter of its builder, 178 Ark of Aeddon, 118, 554 of the world, a name of the bardic temple, 113, 369,
rafts,
Ancient bards, 2 Andras, Andrasta, a British goddess, 617 Aneurin, an ancient bard, Si not degraded for having seen naked swords, 62 mythology of, 113 a North Britou,
his age,
393
arkite,
584
317
authorities
and
vouchers of, 322, 347 wounded, 341 a prisoner, 356 corresponds with released by a son of Taliesin, ifc, Llywarch, 357 takes a retrospect of historical events, 377 is a half pagan, 386
Arkite cell inclosed fire, 199 arkite goddess, 175 venerated by the Ger179 of the druids, 183 god, mans,
titles of,
559
memorials,
170
Angar, 52
son of Ladon, 526 Anghen, the goddess of necessity, 188 Angor, a sacred title, 116, 367
Angues, druids, 18
Anpuinum, 208, 209, 419, 577 Animal kept by the druids, 138, 524
sanctuary, 157 temple in Monmouthshire, 434 theology of the druarose from the corruption of ids, 492 the patriarchal religion, 495 why incorporated with Sabian idolatry, 493,
537
&c.
Arliites styled just ones,
Annwn,
Anwas,
racter,
the dep, the abyss, 198, 206 the winged, a mystical cha-
118
288
8 8
Arthur, a mythological character, 187 188, 199, 202, 394, 404, 432, S22
626
Arthur's llyn llion, 143
lech,
INDEX.
stone, a cromtion,
16
questions, 52
vow, 285
396 Arts of the pheryllt, 215 Ascending stone of the bards, 250
table,
.
394
ence, 283 Aspirant, a mystical infant, 230, 233 swallowed by the arkite goddess, 230 "Bards, an order connected with the drucast into the sea, ib. constituted judges, 12, 19 ids, 11 Associates, the society of bards, 369 priests disciples of the druids, 9, 84 the Astronomical principles 'remarked in of the ancient Britons, 387 professed British temples, 302, &c. to recant before magic, 42 promised their death, 283 sometimes warriors, Astronomy of the druids, 53, 217 the antediluvian continent, 148 63 works of, genuine, 3 consistent Atlantis, Auchinleck MS. 447 with history, 88 town of, in Angleof Beli, 457 of the housesea, 399 Augur, hi the act of divining, 512 of the middle ages, 9 hold, 271, 272 Augury of the druids, 44 by birds, 39 Bardsea, 164, 503 Authenticity of the mystical poems, 5 Authorities from the bards, why inserted Bath, mystical, 218 at length, 86 Battle of Gwenystrad, 62 -of mystery, of 133 Authority of the arch-druid, 57 Bear, representative of Arthur, 187 princes, supported by the bards, 59 of the small sprigs, or lots, 487 i Beaver, 129 emblem of Noah, 267 see Avanc. Avagddu, son of Ceridwen, 190, 203, 204 the same as Elphin, 241 Bed of mystery, 422 bed dilan, 193 regenerated, 263 Avallen beren, arbor frugifera, 23, 483 Avauc, 95 the shrine of the patriarch, 142, 267 the beaver, an emblem of the patriarch, 129 Avaon, 135, 200 Avenue to Stonehenge, 371 Awen, o bair Kyrridwen, 20 origin of,
Tidain, 16
ries, ib.
Bedwen, a may-pole, phallus, &c. 539 Bedwyr, son of Pedrawc, a mystical character,
340
phallus, 441
40 renders the aspirant complete, 256 a mystical character, 468 the bardic muse, 528 Awyr, the sky, a name of the open temple, 353
Bees, deposited by the mystical sow, 426 symbols of arkite ministers, 433 Belenus, a Celtic god, 116 temple of, in the Areuees, 194 Beli, name of Hu, the helio-arkite god, 116, 121, 143, 562 son of Manhogan, 436 herds of, 352
Beliagog, 457 Benefits of initiation, 252
Bacchanalian rites, 169 Bacchus worshipped in Britain, 89 the helio-arkite Noah, 127 inventor of agriculture, 128 styled a bull, 127,
174
BairvXia, conical stones, which represented the gods, 389 Bala, the going forth, 192
Balls and rings on British coins, 600, 605
Berwr Taliesin, 275 Beverage of the festival, 509 Bird, transformation of Gwion, 230, 235 of augury, 509 of Gwenddoleu, 463 of wrath, 266, 287, 560
Birth of Taliesin, mystical, 239 Bitch, transformation of Ceridwen, 232 Black horse of the seas, a sacred ship,
Ban
carw, battle
of,
359
Bard
slain at the feast at Stonehenge, 313, 317, 326, 353, 362 Bardd Cadair, 25, 200 Caw, 165
475 Black stone, 427, 437 Blanche Flour, a mystical lady, 447, 455 Blessed ones, Menwyd, 172 Blue robes of the bards, 14 Boar, arkite symbol, 425, 442 of the spray, 614 Boar's heads, arms of Sir Tristrem's knights, 450 Boat, attribute of Ceridwen, 186, 237 of Red, 176 vale of the, 418 boat
of glass, 211, 277. Boiling of the mystical cauldron, 213 Books of astronomy, 213 of the diuids, 266 of the pheryllt, 213
Ogyrven, 17 Bardic senigmas, how to be, expounded, 405 mount of assembly, 489 peti-
INDEX.
Botany of Ceridwen, 213 Brad wen, Rowena, 354, 361
Branch, sacred. 206 of the bards, 371 Bread and wine offered by the druids, 280 Breaking of sprigs, 339, 359 Brengvvam, Bronwen, Proserpine, 452
62?'
battle,
Brewer of the mystical cauldron, 279 Brindled ox, 138, 523 British Ceres, 184 council, over ruled by Vortigern, 361 'documents, 1 corroborated by mutual evidence, 624 British mythology, how far investigated by the author, 85 analogous to that of early heathens, 123 arkite, 289 Britons addicted to magical rile*, 37 hyperboreans, 131 Bro yr Hud, land of mystery, 417 Bronwen, daughter of Llyr, 400 Bryant's heathen theology, 90
286 Caer Conan, 352 Echiiiig,335 Pedryvan, 517 Rheon, seat of the northern druids, 478 Seon, 169, 448, 546, 547 Caer Sidi, 201, 292, 299,407, 615, 516 represented as a floating vessel, 154 implied the ark, 293 the zodiac, ib. the druidical temple, 294 circle of revolution, 294 sanctuary of Ceres, 295 form of, 296, &c. pourtrayed on the sacred shield, 514 Caer VVydyr, name of the ark, 212, 52 i Caers which represented the ark, 516 sacred, 531
Cassar's accurate information relative to
name of the sacred ship, druidical sanctuary, 154 Caer, or sanctuary of Ceridwen, 285,
and
Brychan 462
instructs
the
Welsh
in
the
the druids, 45
Cainc yr ychain Banawg, 1 29 Caledonia, forest of, the haunt of Merddin, 73, 552 Caledonian druids, respected by the
southern Britons, 475 wood, beat of the northern druids, 409 Cantref y Gwaelod, 241
506 Buanawr, a sacred title, 539 Buarth Beirdd, 136, 535 BQdd, victory, a sacred title, 364, 584 Budd, Buddugre, titles of Hu, 116 Bud Ner, god of victory, 468 Buddud, Luddug, goddess of victory, 314, 317 Buddvan, horn of victory, 344 Buddwas, a title of Hu, 118, 557 of battle, 116, 133, 351, Bull, 127, 200 Beer lied, 120, 137, 537 359, 363 of brass, 131 Beli, 134 demon, 135, 478 emblem of the patriarch, 131 of flame, 137 of fire, 537 of the host, 347, 373 mystical, 465, 577 of the sphere, 133 sovereigns, 134 Bull, title of the god, or his priest, 172
slain,
16.
judgment, 101
Cat, paluc, 427 Cathedral bard, 272 Cath Vraith, 438
Bull and dragon, sacred to Hu, considered as Bacchus, 128 Bulwark of battle, sacred title, 362 Bun, the maid, the British Proserpine,
327,445,468,484,488
Buto, sacred lake
Cabiri,
of,
159
C
216 Cabiritic divinity, Noah, 216 rites, arkite, ib. Cad Goddeu, a mystical poem, 100, 538 Cadair Ceridwen, 260 Teyrn On, 120, 527 Taliesin much older than the sixtli century, 280 Vaelgwn, 22 Cadair, an amicable knight, 199 CadeiriaithSaidi, 199, 292, 324 Cadvaou, conference of, 488 s s 2
place of conference with Bengasi, 331 of Awen, Cauldron, mystic, 16, 21 530 of Ceres, 222 of Ceridwen, 20, what it im26, 185, 213, 265, 502 divided, 214 an emblem plied, 217 of the deluge, 225, &c. Cauldronof the ruler of the deep, 119,165 warmed by the breath of nine damcauldron of five plants, 279 sels, 518 Cave of the arch diviner, 73 sacred,
456
Cedig, title of the arkite goddess, 464 Ceidiaw, mystical father of Aurelius, 377 Celestial circle, name of a druidical temple, 41, 138, 550 Cell of Ked,372 of initiation, 236, 390 of the taurifora god, ystical,537
137
Cells pertaining to British temples, 301
INDEX.
Celtae,
had Cabiritic rites, 216 were governed by their priests, 386 Celtic glory, deplored by Aneurin, 379 J Cenig y Gododin, 321
Cerddglud Clyd Lliant, 467 Cerdd Ogyrven, 14
of arkite procession, 537 of the bardic feast, 370 of degradation, 64 -of drawing the avanc out of the
lake,
Circle of Anoeth,
Ceremony
314 of gems, 544 of the mystical tree, 489 of Sidin, that is, the zodiac, 296 of stones, 12J, 486 of twelve stones, 302 a term for a British temple, 313 of the world, name of a bardic temple. 113, 266, 369 circle with its cromlech, 513
circle and wand of the magician, 42 Circles of rude stones in druidical temples,
129
meaning
of,
170
387
Ceres worshipped in Britain, 89 of the Britons, 184 symbolized by the moon, 279 -worshipped in the twelfth century,
Circular dance, 172 entrenchment, 300, 585 temple, with its central cromlech, 395 temples, sacred to the sun
Cities of Cantre'r
286
Ceridwen, 175, 205 the Ceres of Bridescribed as a fury, tain, 185, 289 as 229, &c. 260 as a botanist, 213 as a githe first of womankind, 184 as the goddess of corn, 8 antess, 256 as as the modeller of youth, 285 the moon, 270 as a mystic goddess, 18 as ruler of bardism, 20 as a sailing vessel, 256 transformed into a cauldron and sanctuary of, bird, 390
Bacchus, 175 Clergy and monks persecute the bards, 283 Clydnaw, ship-bearer, a mystical character, 364 Code of the chair of Glamorgan, 32
502 extraordinary endowments of, various emblems of, 257 169, 265
how described
284
objections to the authority of, 33 Coelbreni, 43, 490 Coins, British, 589 display the image
Ceugant Beilliawg, 247 Chain of the sacred oxen, 111, 129, 141 of the diluvian patriarch, 137, 515 of Caer Sidi, 292,295 Chair, bardic, 502 of Caermarthen, 33 of Ceridwen, a mystical poem, 265 imitated by Meilyr, 10 of Glamorgan, 32, 35,
of the solar divinity, 523, 56, &c. 531 of Taliesin, 73, 269 Challenge from the chair of Glamorgan,
of Ceridwen, 257 antiquity of, 590 impressed with sacred symbols, 589, 590 exhibit druid temples, 591 found at Karn-brS, 591 regarded as druidical badges, 591 impressed with magical devices, 591 talismanic, 593, 610 design of, consistent with bardic imagery, 598 legends of, 607. Se*
Horse.
'
a CorColl, son of Collvrewi, 426, 428 nish mystagogue, 429 foreigner, 446
Collar of the sacred ox, 138, 524 Colours of the glains, 211
64
Character of Ceredig, 346 of Ceridwen, 183, &c. of Hu, compared with Noah, 111 of the patriarch, in British mythology, 105, &c. of Taliesin,
mystical, 239
Community of
Characters
priests,
supported
by the mystic
bards, 473 Complete system of druidism exhibited by Taliesin, 58 Completion, a mystical term, 288
289
Compound
257
259
Chest of the aspirants, 255 Chief druid, sovereign of Britain, 119,122 Chief singer of Not, 114 Child of the sun, 488 of Teithan, that
the helio-arkite god, 114 Chinese, tradition of the deluge, 149 Christianity of the Welsh bards, blended with druidism, 17
is,
im-
INDEX.
appellative of a druidical temple, 299 Cdr Kyroeth, Stonehenge, 3lO Coracle of Ceridwen, 230, 237 symbol of the ark, 24 of initiation, 161 on
Cor, circle,
a god, 630
talisman
of,
British coins,. 602 Cordelia, the British Proserpine, 206,401 Cormorant, a bSrd of ill omen, 512 Corn in the eaij, carried by the druids,
504 corn stacks, 345 Cornan, crescent, a mystical horse, 476 Cornish mysteries, foreign, 432, 438 probably Phoenician, 429 introduced into Wales, it, and several parts of
Britain,
460
256
emblem of the
Cursus at Stonehenge, 315, 370 Cwch, the boat, 198 vale of, 414 Cwn Annwn, hell-hounds, 420, 546 Cwy, the diluviau patriarch, 138 Cycles, marked in British temples, 302 at Stonehenge. 304 Cylch balch Nevwy, 41, 299 byd, 266, 299 names of the druidical temples 299 Cyngrair, the same, 392 Cymry, represented as Aborigines of Britain, 97 Cynddelw, 11 a half pagan, 19 Cynhaval mab Argat, 134, 200 Cynvawr cad Gaddug, 133 Cynvelyn,42 a sacred fire, 552 a god 616 Cyverthwch, cliff of, 427 Cyvylchi, temple of Ceridwen in, 286
Cradle of the innocent preserved, 146 Craig pen peichen, 536 Crair Gorsedd, name of the cromlech,392 Crone, 132, 161 sacred to the sun, 245 Creation, bardic question relating to, 52 Creirwy, 175, 205, &c. the British Prothe symbolical egg, 210, serpine, 196
D
Dadeni haelon, 21 Daemons of wanton
animation,,
and of
212
Crescent, mystic horse, symbol of the sacred ship, 477 on British coins, 606
Cresses, purifying, 220, 273 Cromlech, various opinions respecting reancient names of, 392 the, 391 garded as a druidical altar, 391 -obdeemed jections to that opinion, 392
sepulchral, but not always so, 392 attached to druidical temples, 391, whether it contained the 397, &c. cell of initiation, 391 a mystical tomb, 392 distinguished by the names of the arkite god and goddess, 396, &c reputed a prison, 399-*-sacred to Proserpine. 400, &c. called Maen sacred to Ceres, 393 Ketti, 401
constituted
Dallwyr, Mvrxi, Dance of the druids. 16, 171, 172 in the orgies of Bacchus. 173, 175 sacred, 528, 530, 568, 576 Dark receptacle, the boat of Ceridwen,
432
the mystic cell of that goddess, 403, 408, 410 in Gower described, 394
in
Nevera
described,
395
Cub
of Hu, 122,
171 Cudd, the ark, 171, &c. Cuhelyn, 7, 8, 185 son of Caw, 310 Cul Vanawyd Pryain, a mystical character, 444 Cuno, import of, 604
Cunobcline, a British king,
60-1
title
of
256 Darkness of the ark commemorated, 521 Daronwy, molester of Mona, 427 Darter of rays, 488 of light, a sacred title, 543 David ab Gwilym, 64 Dawn Dovydd, Selago, 280 Death typified in the mysteries, 231 and revival of the aspirant, 259 Dedwydd, EWOOTTIJ?, 252 Dee, a sacred river, 152-^-worshjpped, 153 Deep water, the mystical bath, 280 Defect of information in the chair of Glamorgan, 34 Defence of the mystical poems, 5 of the triads, 27 Delos, a floating island, 160 Deluge, British traditions of the, 95, &c. sacred, 142 'represented in British in what light regarded by rites, 161 the Britons, 226 extended to the votaries of bardisnt, 285 universally acknowledged, 500 memorials of the, 534 traditions of the, 542 Demolishing of circles, 486, 513-v-of groves, circles, 6cc. 486
INDEX.
Deon, Hu, the diluvian god, 119, 121, 504, 506 Deo Mouno Cad, 134
Derwyddon,
22
Description of the masteries, 231 Design of a druidical temple, 298, &c. Destruction of druidical temples, 138 Deucalion's deluge, 97
Danwantarce, Indian name of Noah, 228 Dewrarth Wledig, 241, 246 Dialogue between Rowena and a Briton, 360 Dien propitiated, 273 Dignity of the bards, 24 Diluvian imagery, 41 god, 117 lake, 192 mythology, 506 Din, mighty lord of the, title of the sun, 534 Din Breon, 6 Drei, 355 Dinas Affaraon, 427, 435 Beirdd, 473Cerddorion, 23 Diachor, 508 EraPharaon, or Emrjis, 436 rys, 215, 243 Dinbych, a sacred isle, 155 Diogenes Laertius, druidical triad recorded by, 75 Dionusus, Noah, 258
AupviK, 258, 5^8 Dirge over the body of Hengist, 342 Discipline of the probationer, 286 Distributor, a sacred title, 247 Divination of the druids, 44 by lots,339r 359, 483, 532 by victims, 544 Diviner, son of Semno, 340 Divining magician, 42 staff, 528 Diviaticus Aeduus, a druid, 44 Diwyth a Gorwyth, 407 Doctrine of the mysteries, 252, 254 Dogmas of the chair of Glamorgan, 55, 60
Dew
cromlechs,
ib.
prediction
of^
571
Drum, mystical, 221 Essyd, 362 Drws porth Uffern, 518 Drych eil Cibddar, a mystic character, 429 Duw Celi, a title of Hu, 110
Dwelling of the wood, sacred grove, 24 Dwyvan and Dwyvach, 95, 105 Dwyvawr and Dwyvach, 152, 192 Dylan, son of the sea, 99, 194, 542 the wave of, patriarch Noah, 100, 102 285 r Dyrraith, a m} stical character, 609, 616 rank of, 620 Pyved, Demetia, 198 Dyvynawl Vrych, Hengist, 376
Dogs introduced
in mystical exhibitions,
Each
Eagle
triad a whole,
30
119
of
;
232, &c. why emblematical of heathen priests, 234 of battle, warriors, 331 mystical, 419, 452, 454 of the
leads
the
procession,
wood or grove, 489 Done, banks of the, 376, 383 Door of the ark, how regarded, 231 of the ark, and arkite temples, 520 Door-keeper of Godo, a mystical character, 199 Dor-Marth, the British Cerberus, 234 Dovydd, a sacred title, 272, 542 Dragon, 16, 24, 67, 127, 562 chief, the name of Hu, helio-arkite god, 11 8 121 ruler of the world, 122 afflicted by the deluge, 168 a sovereign, 279
dragon gyrchiad, 133 dragons of Snowdon, 243 of Dinas Pharaon, 436 7 alluded to solar worship, 437
Gwvdien, 353 of mythology, 434 in of Brynach, 462 mystical, 488 althe sky, 508 eagles' nests, 163 lurer, 343 eagles of Snowdon, 21 eaglet deposited by the rnvstical sow, 427 Ear of corn protected, 355 on British coins, 604
Earth, bardic questions relating to the,
52
moves
to,
in
an
orbit,
55
propitiat-
ed, 276
relating
51
Ebriety, sacred in the British festivals, 119 of Seithenin, 198 Echel with the pierced thigh, 199 Effects of initiation, 240 Egg, symbolical, 205, 207 of the ark,
INDEX.
207, 208, 419
631
solemn preparation
of,
418
Eiddilig Corr, a mystical character, 429 Eiddin, Vortigern, 337" Eidin, 585 the same Eidiol, 113, 308, 309, 313, 315 as Ambrosius, 309, 331 the harmoactions the placid, 372 nious, 369 sacrifice of, 365 of, 343, 362, 364 gyr, the mother of Arthur, 187 the Eisanie as Ceridwen, 403 Eirin Gwion, 275
Fangs of the mystical hen, 256 of the Festival of the arkite god, 170 tauriform god, 537 the Fire, sun worshipped in Britain by name of, 120, 533 preserved in the druidical temples, 154, 295 by the bards, 271 Fish, a transformation of Gwion, 229 Flag of truce sent byHengist, 352
Floating islands represented the ark, 154, sanctuary, 507, &c. 158, 159, 160 Flood of Dylan, 102 Flowers exhibited at the festivals, 278 FlQr, a mystical character, 447 Foam of the ocean, used in purification,
Elementary
treesi
505
of,
220
Foreign attendants of the mystical cat,
233
Elgan, 138, 550 ElidyrSais, 2;
437
221 Formulary, previous to initiation, 287 mystical, 250 of introduction, Fortitude inculcated by the druids, 75 Fountains, mystical, 23, 50 564 Fragment in an unknown language, Freckled intruder, Hengist, 376, 383 Fruit-bearing tree, 23
Banawg Gwidawl Malen, 135 Elmur, a name of the tauriform god, 134 a sovereign bull, 200 Elphin, 20, 204, 259 a mystical character, 238 sovereign of the bards, 246 the same as Avagddu, 246 the honours of, 504 delisun, 247, 351 verance of, 532 Emrys the sovereign, 242, 344 a name of the helio-arkite god, 384 Enchantment ascribed to Hu, 120 Englynion Misoedd, 82 Enigat the Great, 49 Enumeration of Vortigern's auxiliaries, 338 Epilogue to the mysteries, 253
Ellyll
E'ZrosT-/!?,
G
GallicentE, Gwyllion, 168 priestesses Ked, or Ceridwen, 169 battle of, 344, 348 Galltraeth,
ot
what, 254 Equality, whether a doctrine of the bards, disavowed by them. 83 57, &c. Equiponderate mass q. whether the earth or the Logan stone, 135 Erch (bee), a mystical horse, 478. Errith a churrith, 549 Eseye, the arkite goddess, 114 wor-
Etruscan Janus, Noah, 159 Etymologies of Mr. Bryant, &c. 90 Euxine, mythological tale of its overflowing, 98 Eve of May, 576 Exorcised spot, 277 rexorc'ums, 541 External purity required, 250
Garden, sacred, 155 Garlands of the mystics, 576 Garwy Mr, 199, 286 Gate of sorrow, a mystical dog, 234 of hell, 518 Gauls consecrated their gold in a lake, 144 were initiated into Cornish mysof teries, 458 espoused the gods Cornwall, 459 of, Geirionydd, 157 aethereal temple 566 Genius of the ark, names of, 184 of the rainbow, 264 Gentilism preserved some principles of the patriarchal religion, 498 Genuiness of bardic mythology, 258 the Gauls and Geographical triad* of Britons, 28 geography of the druids, 53 ab Erbin, 444 comGeraint, 199 mander of the British fleet, 379
German mythology,
luvian, 148
179-
Eye
of the light, 72
Glain,
how produced,
164
455 an emarti-
F
Faher's heathen theology, 90 Fair family, 156 Fame of Stouehenge, 364
glains,
212 how distinguished, 455 Glass, sacred amongst the druids, 211 enclosure of, 522
633
Glewlwyd Gavaelvawr, guardian sacred gate, 587 Glyn Cwch, vale of the boat, 418
INDEX.
of the
title
the pa-
Dall-
wyr, vale of the mystics, 432 God of war, 120 of victory, Buddugre, 365 gods of the druids, what they were, 87 of the heathens, all referable to the sun, 124 deified mortals,
254
385
and
Godde Gwrych, a
in North Britain, 468 bird of ill omen, 511 Goddess of various seeds, 186 of death, 230 of the silver wheel, Ceridwen, character and office of, 266 god-
515 Gwaith Emrys, a name of Stonehenge, 384, 402 Gwal y Vilast, 396, 397 Gwalchmai, 10 a mystical character, 199 Gwarchan Maelderw, 538, 582 Gwarthawn, an evil principle, 48 Gwawd Eludd, 121, 563 Gwely Taliesin, 398 Gwenddolen, H mystical character, 487 Gwenddoleu, who, 463 family of, 464 cannibal birds of, 463 a bull, 465 chief of the northern princes, 466
triarch,
sacred
fire
desses of paganism referred to the ark, the moon, and the earth, 178 Godo, 199 appellative of a British
476
fair
Gwenddydd Wen,
Gwenhwyvar, the
ark, 187
temple, 324 Cododin, 113 poetical work of Aneurin, 317 subject of, 318, 384 why obscure, 318 consists of a series of songs, 320 meaning of the term, 322, song 1. 326 how composed, 356 place of conference with Hengist, 330 name of the great sanctuary, 348 Gododin, gomynaf, 362 Gold chains of the druids, 13 of the British nobles, 341, 368 pipes, a plant, 275 gold shield of the chief 544 trinkets, 545, 547 druid, Goronwy, 41, 199 a mystical character,
Gwgan Lawgadarn,
a mystical personage, 393 Gwln a Bragawd, 219 Gwion the Little, 21 3, 229, 275
544
Gorthyn, Vortigern, 381 Gorwynion, imitated by Gwalchmai, 10 Governor of the feast mounted on his
horse,
375
Grain of wheat, transformation of Gwion, 230, 235, 256 of the arkites, 257,
390, 573 grains mystical sow, 426, Grannawr, a title the British Apollo, Grauwyn, a title of
Gwrawl, Aurelius, 376 Gwreang, the herald, 213 Gwrgi Garwlwyd, a mystical cannibal, 454, 463, 474, 477 Gwrtheyrn Gwynedd, 340 Gwrthmwl the sovereign, 478 Gwrvorwyn, 197, 205 Gwyddno Garanhir, 161 the same as Seithenin, 244 the same as, Tegid, 251 office and character of, 250 poems of, 249 wear of, 238 mystical father of Ambrosius, 346 Gwydion, son of Don, Hermes, 118, 204,
contends 263, 353, 429, 504, 541 with the birds of wrath, 266 Gwylan, the sea-mew, 110 Gwyllion predict the deluge, 157 what
of
Apollo, 508 Great cathedral, Stonehenge, 303 tuary of the dominion, 313
sanc-
they were, 166, 606 Gallicense, 168, 223 song of, 566 Gwyllionwy, mystic river, 41 Gwyn ab Nudd, the Pluto of the Britons, 206 lord of the lower regions, represented in the mysteries, 288, 466 contends with Gwydduo, 249 Gwynedd, title of Vortigern, 340 Gwynvardd Brecheiaiog, 140 Dyved,
Greidiawl, a mystical character, 440 Greyhound bitch, a transformation or symbol of Ceridwen, 229, 396 Grey stones of the temple, 138 Grove of Diarwya, 418 druidical, 483,
414
Gwythaint, birds of wrath, 267 Gyvylchi, temple of Ceres in, 299, 337,
&c. Guardian
spell,
42
436
Gwaednerth, the British Mars, 368 (jwair, a mystical prisoner, 404, 406 son of the great tempest, 406, 441
H
Haearndor, iron
door,
name of
560
the ark
and
INDEX.
Haid, swarm, a mystical horse, 478 Hall of Ceridwen, 255,390 of the mysof mystery, 458 terious god, 286 Hanes Taliesin, 186 Chap. ii. 213 Chap. iii. 229 Chap. iv. 238 Harbour of Jife, 162, 250 Hare, a transformation of Gwion, 229. Havgan sumniershine, a mystical character,
635
420
Hawk
of may, 199 transformation of Ceridwen, 235 Headband of the sacred ox, 138
478, 599 ofElphin.the bardic chair, of Gwydduo, 214, 251 mystical, 544 mythological, 476 of the sun, 528, 534 symbolical, 594 on the British coins, 593 image of Ked or Ceridwen, 595, 601 figure of, abridged, 595 parts of, described, 596 parts of, symbolical, 597 Horses, magical, 610, 614 House, shrine of the patriarch, 171 of glass, a sacred ship, 212, 522 Howel, Dda, triads of, 29 of Liandin-
239
Heathen
sanctuaries
appropriated
to
gad, 64
140 Heathenism, wherein criminal, 496 Hebraic origin of bardic lore, 94 Heifer a symbol of the ark, 131, 425
Christian worship,
Hn.
patriarch and god of the bards, 24 Gadarn, 9,5 the deified patriarch, 106 how described in the triads, 106
Heilyn, a name of the solar divinity, 162 the impeller of the sky, 250, 261
feeder,
how described by lolo Goch.108 Emperor of land and seas, 180 the
life
261,528
Helanus, the lunar divinity, 145 Heiio-arkite god, a comprehensive chaidentified with a racter, 123, 126 bull, 135 superstition, 90
Heliodorus, Hen Velen,
flat
or paient of all, 108 man, after the deluge, ed and worshipped, 109 god 110 worshipped in
a husband-
109
deifi-
the greatest
ifr.
name of a
cred amongst the Britons, 236 with red fangs and a divided crest, 259, 574 Hengist, described by Cuhelyn, 313 by Aneurin, 327 freckled, 359 death sarcastic of, 352 elegy upon the death of, 381 Hen Wen, old lady, a mystical sow, 426the great mother, 430 Herald of peace, 60 of mysteries, 214privilege of the mystical, 440
Hrcules, history of, helio-arkite, 416 Herds of the roaring beli, 352 master of the fair, 549
Hewr
Eirian, splendid mover, title of the sun, 119, 509 Hierophant attended by three priests,288
High
Hippa, mare, the arkite goddess, 258, 443, 445 Hippos, horse, an arkite symbol, 442
History of Taliesin, a mythological tale,
and circle of the world, 113, 169 was called JVb'e, 114 the lord of the British Isle, 115 the god of Mona, 118, 554 the father ot man120 the winged, 121 the kind, the Bacsovereign of Heaven, 121 chus of the Britons, 126, 289 a bull, 136, 137, 139 a benefactor, 428 a patriarch and god, 495 sacred isle titles of, 461 of, 479 Hiicin, name of Hu, the sun, 115 Hudlatb, magic wand, 41 hudwydd, the same, 268 Huge stones of the temple, 171 sacred to Ceres, 389 Human sacrifices, 463, 466 Hunt, mystical, 229, 418 Husbandry taught by Hu, or Noah, 109 Hwch, sow, the British Ceres, 414 Hydranns, the mystical baptist, 214, 220 symbolized by an otter, 235 Hygre, 143 Hymn to Bacchus, 127 to the sun, 367 chaunting of, 509
186 Hodain, a mystical dog, 452 Hoianau, a poem of Merddin, in a uorthen dialect, 469, 470, 490 Holme, sacred, 172 Moly sanctuary, 507, &c. Honours of the ancient bards, 14 Horn of the lustrator, 171, 530 of the heraid, 419 horns carried in procession, 172
Horse, emblem of a ship, 252, 443, 475,
Hyperborean Apollo, temple of, atStonehenge, 303, 528 Hywel Voel, 23 son of Owen, 283,301
I,J.
Janus, 199, 201 Icolmkil, 164
Idaii Dactyli,
216
Identity of heathen gods, 125 goddesses,178 mythological perons,203 Images of British gods, 388 Imitation of Tsliesm, 15 Impaller of the sky, 167 Imprisonment of the aspirant, 259 of
634
Aneurin, 356
INDEX.
KistVaen, 394
Kitten deposited by the mystical sow,427 Knight of the inclosure, 313 knight* of Ejddin, 338 Kud. cell of, under a flat stone, 408
prison of, 404 Kwe?, dogs, symbols of heathen gods, and their priests, 234 Kyd, the vessel of the patriarch, 122, 563
of the of Gwair, 408 diluvian patriach, 515, 516 ot' Arthur, 527 Inauguration Incantation, 4'2 of Cynvelyn, 63 Incircled mount, guarded by mystical
characters, 288 Incloser of flame, 199 Inclosure with the strong door, the ark,
Kykeon, the
Inundation, mystical, 506 Insigne druidis, 208 Interpolation of mystical poems, 269
lolo Gocb, 108 lona, probably the seat of the northern
druids,
16r,
479
title,
a sacred
313, 3l5
Avagddu,
423
as a lady,
Island, sacred,120 symboloftheark.aud of the mount druidieal sanctuary, 154 of debarkation, 161 of Hu, 164 sacred to Bacchus, 173 of the cow,
Lacus Cespitis, 157 Tegeius, 191 Ladon, Latona, 526 Lady of the silver wheel, 205 .mystical, 423 Lake of Llion, 95, 226 sacred, 119, 171, 508 symbol of the deluge, 142 of of consecration, 143 adoration, 143 , of the grove of I6r, 143 ofThousacred to the moon, 145 louse, 144 of Lomond, 158, 163 of Vadimon, 158 of Buto, 159 of German mytho179 containing the arkite logy, of the Arenees, 195 gods, 191 saBritish mythology of, 142 Lakes,
cred amongst
the
continetal Celtoe,
of German mythology, 179 with the strong door, 165, 167, 520 islands venerated island temple, 160 by the ancients, 161 see floating of Islets, sanctuaries of the Gauls, 14-4
177Scilly,
165
Jurisprudence of the druids, 74 Just Ones, arkites, 118, 557 Ivy branch, 122, 574
Kara bre, a
593
591
of,
description
8,
Kd,
title
of Ceridwen,
119
122 antiquity, 114, daughter of the patriarch, 122, 176, of the patriarch, 176 571 the ship
ceto
of
the the
Kedwidcdd, 266
boat,
549
144 swallowed up cities, 145 of Snowdon, 157 inhabited by theGwyllion, 157 Lampoon, by Trahaearn, 66 Land of mystery, 198 Landing place of th bards, 251 stone, 162 Language of the mysteries, 90 of the chair, a mystical character, 199 Law, of the inclosure,200 of Ceridwen, laws 256, 265 of mysteries, 511 of How el, 74 Leader of the din, 365, 534 Leaves of plants discriminated, 51 Legends of the British coins, 607 Levelling principles, 56, &c. Libation of honey, 276 of wine, 279 Liberation of elphin, 247 Liberty and equality, 56 Lights, or torches of Ceiidwen, 261 Lion, title of the sun, 116, 127, 364 Little song of the world, 54 Living ox, emblem of Hu, 139 herd, 172 Llad, the arkite goddess, 175 274 Llan, the sacred ship, 257 dingad, 67 Llech, Titleu, 344 Leuca, battle of, 359 yr ast, a cromlech, 397 y gowres, 398 Vaelwy, 512 Lien gel, veil of mystery, 198, 417 Carthen, 256 lliw ehoeg, 510 Llereni, a sacred river, 151 Llevoed, a moral bard of the 10th century, 83
INDEX.
LHon, the ancient, a mystical character, 415, 417 Llogell Byd, name of the circular temple, 393 Llonnio Llonwen, 427 Lludd Haw Eraint, 206 Llwch Llawinawg, 288 Llyn Llion, diluvian lake, 142, 143 LlvnCreiui, Urddyn, Gwyddior, 143 Savaddan, 146, 151 Tegid, 152 y Dywarchen, 157 ab Erbm, 508 Llyr, a mystical name, 206 Llediaith, 404, 405 sons of, 501 Llys Ceridwen, 255 Llywarch, ab Llywelyn, 19 Hen, 31, 60, 357 Llywy, the British Proserpine, 175, 196, 205, 342,371 daughter of Ceridwen, sister of the aspirant, 285 venerated in the temple of Gyvylchi, 286 in Mona, 559 steeds and shields of, 372 Local traditions of the deluge, 147, 148 Locality of ancient tradition, 97 Lofty one, Hu, 141 Lord of thunder, 198 of the water, 199 Lore of the druids, preserved in Wales, 9 professed by Taliesin, 117, 279 delivered in Hebrew, 573 of the deluge, 545 Lots, magical, 43 Bardic, 490, 532 Lustration, diluvian, 142, 226
635
Manawyd and
ManawPryderi, 295 ydan, son of Llyr, 188 Mangling dwarf, a mystical character,
title, 584 March, horse, a mystical character, 439 prince of Cornwall, 442 master of ships, 444 Mare, hippa, a transformation of Ceres, 258, 445 symbol of the ark, 425 Marwnad, Dylan, 102 Aeddon, 553 Massacre at Stonehenge, 306, 321, 363, 579 how occasioned, 348 Master of song, an office claimed by the druidical line, 13 of the ox-herd, 138 Math, son of Mathonwy, a mystical cha-
Eunydd,
sorce-
268, 554
Matholwch, farm of worship, a mystical king of Ireland, 452 Maurice, remarks of Mr., upon Stonehenge, 303 Maurigasima, 149 Maxims, druidical, in the form of triads, 28 May day, 163 festival of, 369 eve,
121
333
men
414
569
title,
Mab
how
far useful,
Meini, Hirion, a circular temple, 398 Kyvrivol, ib. Meirig, a mystical personage, 414 Melistae, the muses, arkite priestesses,
Mabon, a mystical
character,
287,288
'inab
224
Madien, Bonus Janus, Seilhenin, 116, 367 Maelgwn, destroys the temple of the
druids, 137 -confines Elphin,
246
reprobated, 504
druids,
a persecutor of the
549
flat
Maelwy,
stone, of,
of,
513 393
Maen
Maes Beli,
the cromlech, 392 352 Magic of the druids and bards, 37 how to be understood, 39 wand, 41, 268, 42 flag or standard, 55,5 spells,
Llog,
name of
battle of,
582. &c.
silver,610
617
Mater, 165, 175
Magna
counterfeited, 481
636
Merin, a sacred
rien,
title,
INDEX.
116
son of
Mo-
367
Merit of the aspirant, how ascertained, 251 Merlin, no prophet nor conjuror, 38 Mervyn Gwawdrydd, 80 Metre of the triplets obsolete, RO Meugant, 6 character of, 38 Mic Dinbych, a mystical poem, 507 Mighty bear, title of Gwyddno, 246 Military devices on the British coins, 609
2S2 Mystical poems, Mr. Turner's opinion the best documents of British of, 4 26 goddess, 18 cauldruidism, coradron, 40 ingredients of, 282 river, 235 cle, 162 grove, 285 process, 240 personages of a British Ogdoad, 475 formation of the arch
druid,
540
Milk
offered
and bulls 31 Mythological tales, oxen, 130 Mythlogy of the Britons, genuine and
'
arkites, 262 Minyas, 147 several names of, 281 Misseltoe, 280 Moch, swine, mystical, 414 Modes of mysticism, 428 MohynCad, 134 Molesters of Mona, 427 Mona, 503, 554 the island of Hu, 117 named frora a cow, 177 Monks reproached by Taliesin, 525
ancient, 112
Moon, worshipped
in conjunction with the ark, 125, 280 emblem of Ked or Ceridwen, 176, 284 priests of, 277 Moral philosophy of the druids, 74 instructions of the bards, 75 stanzas,
N. Nadredd, druids, 210 to the god and his voNames, common borrowof the Dee, 152 taries, 134 ed from mythology, 194 of the ark, 510 Natural philosophy of the druids, 44, 45 Nav, the diluviaa patriarch, 105) 444 Naw, a ship, 245, 535 N.aw Morwyn, 517 Neivion, Neptune, 105 Ner, god of the ocean, 19 Nereus, 163 the deluge, 539 Nevydd Nav Neivion, 95, 105
Night, bardic questions relating to, 51 nightly solemnity, 273 Nine damsels of British mythology, 166, of Egypt, 225 nine 219, 223, 518
maids, monument so called, 166 Noah, worshipped with the sun, 90 the how regreat god of the druids, 181 presented in mythology, 107 truth of his religion virtually acknowledged, 500 Nocturnal mysteries, 72, 183 Noe, name of Hu, 114 of the arkite god, worshipped at Stonehenge, 350 Northern druids visited by the South Britons t 476 Number, sacred, 79, 482 potent. 528 of the British nobles who were slain, 341
80 Morda, ruler of the sea, 213 Morien, Janus Marinus, 115, 349, 350,
354, 361
115, 384
fire,
charac-
Most ancient, powerful, sacred titles, 354 Mother of mankind, the ark, 184 Mount Baris, 207 of debarkation, 161
192 of the assemblies, 402 Mountain of Fuawn, the visible world, 49 of Mynnau, 47 mountain chief, Vortigern, 332, 366, 368
Mundane
121 rampart, the circle, temple of Hu, 122, 568 egg, 207 represented at Stonehenge, 304""
O
Oak, symbol of Taronwy, 299 sacred, 539 Oar, implement of Ceridwen, 229, 232 Oath of the initiated, 119 of admission, 287, &c. Obscene language disallowed in British mysteries, 285 34 Obscurity of the chair of Glamorgan, Octa, lampoon addressed to, 381 Oeth ag Anoeth, 404, 406, 515 of new milk, Offering of wheat, 273 dew and acorns, 503 Office of Taliesin, 271
Mydnaw,
ter,
of the druids, 273 Mysteries of the Cabiri, 90 of the Gentiles, diluvian, memorials, 183, 255 greater and less, 237, represented the adventures of the patriarch, 248 consisted of scenical or symbolical representations, 257 of Ceres, cele-
INDEX.
Ogdoad of
Taliesin,
637
226 584
94
arkites,
121
Pestilential wind,
inclosed in
Phallus, 539
Pharaon,
Ogyrven, 502 Amhad, 8, 186, 432 Oian a phorchellan, 469, 484 Old lady, title of the British Ceres, 426 Olwen produced trefoils, 448, 465 Omen sticks, 43, 453,490 fire, 376, 383 Oracle of a Gaulish deity, 168 Orchard, mystical, 453 of Merddin, allegorical, 481 Orgies of the British Bacchus, 172 Otter bitch, a transformation of Cei idwen, 320 Outlawry of druidism, 488 Ovum Anguiimm, 18, 208 carried in procession, 172 Owen Cyveiliawg, 14 an ancient bard slain at Stoneheuge, 327, 371 Ox stationed before the lake, 119, 508
higher powers, 435 Pheryllt, priests of the Cabiri, 215, 216, 435, 546 had a seminary at Oxford,
215 148
books
of,
Phle^yae, 147
180 Phoroneus compared with Hu, 107 Physiology of the druids and bards, 44
Piece of gold, a credential of the druids,
545, 593 Piercing or cutting the thigh, 170 Piety inculcated by the druids, 75 Pig deposited by the mystical sow, 427 Pillars of the twel ve signs, 298 attached to the circular temples, 387 Planetary hours observed by the bards, 40, 213, 238 Pledge of faith towards the clergy, 70
emblem of
130
the ark, revered as a deity, a British emblem of Noah, 133 of German mythology, 179 of the
V^
194 brindled, 523 stall of the, oxen of Hu, 95, 128 seen in a thunder-storm, 111 roared in thunder, and blazedTn lightning, 137
ship,
120
patriarch,
pledges mutually communicated, 279 Plemochoe, a mystical vase, 222 Plot of Hengist, 328, 358 Plurality of gods maintained by the druids, 88 Pluto of Britain, 206 Poetry of Taliesin, mythological, 513
Poets multiplied the gods of the gentiles,
Paganism
similar, in
some
points, to the
Jewish religion, and why, 498, &c. Pair, Prydain, 17 Awen, 21, 213 a
cauldron, figuratively expressing the druidical system, 217, 218 Pum-
124
Points of sprigs broken, 339 of trees, 472 of trees of purposes, 278 Poison of the mystic cauldron, 214 of the air, 555 Pole of the wear, a phallic symbol, 238,
wydd, 218
Ogyr-
ven, 529 meaning of, 219 cat of Mona, 437 Paluc, sons of, 427 Paradise of the druid in the southern
472
Politics of the chair of
Glamorgan, 55
hemisphere, 53 Ilaro?, the cell of initiation, 391 Path ef Granwyn, 508 Patriarch, received divine honours, 105 was forewarned of tke deluge, 149
Patrick's causeway, 162 Peace of the plough, 70 Pearls round the mystic cauldron, 219
of the bards,
ib.
&c.
Polytheism, origin of, 124 Pontifical character of Taliesiu, 272 Porchellan, litile pig, a mystical title, 414
Pedigree, mystical, 405, 414, 464 Pclagius, a half pagan, 387 PemWe raeer, 152, 189, 191
Penance of the aspirants, 255 Penarwen, a mystical female, 444 Pendaran Dyved, 198, 414, 417 Pendevig mawr, a sacred title, 525
Penliyn, residence of Tegid Voel, 189 People, condition of under the druid, 58
Peril of violating the mystic laws, 288 Perpetual fire, 215, 362 of Persecution of the druids, 485, 549 the Sabian divinities, 495
commemo-
Preserver, Ceridwen, 266 preservers, the Cabiri ol Britain, 509 Presidency of Ceridwen, 265 presiding
bard, 200 Priest of Aedd, lives and dies alterof the ship, 161, 245 nately, 122
Priests of Ceridwen, ancient, IbB of the noon,277 assumed the names of their
638
gods, 216
priestesses of Bacchus.
INDEX.
Hu, 120, 559
251
obtained by
were called dogs, 419 173 Primary oxen of mythology, 152 Primitive bards, 20 religion of the Cymry, 412 primitives of mythological language, 92 Primroses exhibited at the fes'ival, 278 Principles of Celtic and Greek superstiof the author, tion, the same, 89 founded in British documents, 94 of words, 483 Prisoners, mystical, 404 Privacy of the druids, 72 of the bardic branch, 371 Privilege Procession, sacred, 119 of the arkite god, 172 of the druids, 508 Proclamation, bardic, 136, 537
Profligacy of mankind punished by the deluge, 102, 104, 149 Progeny of Hu, 137 Promontories sacred to diluvian rites, 161 Prophecy communicated by the mystic watef, 214 prophetic maids, 167 Proprietor of Britain, 118 of Heaven
Gwyddno,
pursuit of, 423 Ramus aureus, 280 Rape of Proserpine, 206 Raven of the sea, 1 89 of slays the bull, 172
Noah, 202
mystic
cell,
Re-animation, place
of, the
537
Reaper, the dilnvian patriarch, or his priest, 122, 259 Recapitulation, 85, 180, 289, 492 Red book, 33 bony giant, 429 dragon,
584
Regeneration, mystical, 236 Rehearsal of ancient lore, 509 Reign of serenity, 279 Religion of Hu opposed to that of Christ,
109
Remarks on
British mythology,
title
182
of Hu, 117 Renovation by the mystic cauldron, 218 Repository of mystery, 537
Reraunerator, a
proprietor, 524
titles
by
Vorti-
Republican principles, 60 Rhe'en rym awyr, 260 Rheiddin, the radiant, title of the sun, 365
Rheonydd,
478
232
Prospectus of druidical theology, 86 Prototype, son of the ark, 134, 200 Proud mare, symbol of Ceridwen, 256 Prydain, name of Hu, 121 son of Aedd, 243, 436 Pryderi, a mystical swineherd, 414
character,
Rhuvawn Bevyr,
cred
title,
a sa-
Rhwyv Trydar, 534 Rhydderch, the liberal, champion of the faith, 470 country and family of, 472 persecutes the druids, 487 Rhyvoniawg, the place of Vortigern's retreat, 380 Ring, mystical, 450, 456 rings and balis on British coins, 600, 605 Rites of the Britons, 85, &c. 561 of the
druids, similar to those of Samothrace, 89 of Bacchus, celebrated in Britain, 131 of the British Bacchus, described by an eye witness, 172, 576 of the
transformed, assumes the government of the deep, 421 and Pryderi, 516 Pyr of the east, a mystical personage,
415
Q
Quadrangular caer, 165 area, 313, 315 inclosure, 518, 520 Quagmire of hell, 122, 571 Questiones druidicae, 49
of druidisru, laws, 283 River of spectres, or the Gwyllion, 41 of the mysteries, 235 divine, 15'J rivers worshipped by the druids, 143 sacred to the diluvian patriarch, 151
restrained
by Roman
Raft, symbol of the ark, 150 sacred, 155, 160 Rainbow, 203, 205, 266 the girdle of
Roaring Beli, herds of, 136 Robes of the druids, 14 green, of the ovate, 510 Rock, sacred, 161 to arkite rites, 163 of the supreme proprietor, 537, 539 Rod of the bard, 363 of Moses, a poem, 427 rods broken, 619.
INDEX.
Romance
459
of Sir Tristrem, mythological,
contrives the death of VortiBowena and Vorti-
639
Semno,
Rowena
Rude
father of the diviner, 310 Sena, sacred island, 16'8 Senate of twelve gods, 298 Seneschal of the mead feast, 358 Seon, a sacred island, 118 with the strong door or barrier, 167, 553
priestesses so called,
Rueful steed, 251 Ruler of the deep, title of Hu, 119 cauldron of, 219 ruler of the sea, 122 of the mount, 266 S Sabian idolatry blended with arkite snadventitious in Britain, perstition, 90 181 of the druids, 492 Sared fire, 476, 552 preserved in clruidical temples, 114 at Stouehenge, 304, 345, 349, 362 grove of the Germans, 179 islands, emblems of the ox, staark, 161, 168 lake, 158 oxen tioned before the lake, 171 employed in British rites, 129 rivers, or petrse in 152 rock, 162 rocks Loch Lomond, 163 terms of the bards, 93 to Sacrifice on the banks of lakes, 145 the deep, 251, 252 carried round the omen fire, 376, 383 sacrificer, name of the diluvian patriarch, 121 name of the patriarch, 197 Saidi, 199 Samolus, a sacred plant, 274 Samothracian rites in Britain, 89 tradition of the deluge, 98 Sanctuary of the bards, 17, 19 of iniof Ceridwen and Lly wy, tiation, 255 301 Sarcastic elegy upon Hengist, 381 Saturnalia, ib. Saturn, Noah, 197,201 Saxon auxiliaries of Vortigern, 338 Saxons reproachfully described, 348 involved in flames, 350 Schism of the chair of Glamorgan, 33 Sculpture of Ceres and Proserpine, 298 mystical, 468 Sea, how divided, 53 overwhelms the land, 198 represented the deluge, sea-drifted of Dylan, 256 248 sea-mew, myswolves, Saxons, 328 tical, 510, 544 Season of serenity, 489 Seat of presidency, 422 Seaxes, Saxon daggers, 330, 339, 374 Segyrfug, a sacred plant, 277 Seissyll, a descendant of the druids, 12 Seithenin Saidi, 417 son of Seithin Saithe drunkard, 242 Seithin di, 198 Saidi, 197, 324 king of Dyved, 242, 243 Seithwedd Saidi, 197 Selago, a sacred plant, 280 Seminary of druids iu the north, 462
167
devoted to Bacchus, 169 Sena, 168 Caer Seon, 546, 547 the same as Hiv, 116 emblem Serpent, of the sun, 131,367 symbolical, 208, 210, 536 serpent's egg, 208 serpents drew the car of Ceridwen, 186 Sessions of the druids, 72 Seven score aud seven, a mystic number,
inhabiting
524
Severn boar, 143
Severus, a planet, 53 Shield struck by ancient warriors, 327 shields excluded from the conference with Hengist, 328, 375 into
split
lath,
579
Ship of Nevydd, 95 of Dylan, 100, 542 of the earth, 231 of Janus, 201 of initiation, called Llan, 257 symbol of Ceridwen, 256 represented as a horse, 475, 478 as a sow, sacred symbol of the ark. 430, 431
431
Shrine of Agruerus, 142 of Hu, drawn by oxen, 139 of the patriarch, 142 drawn forth, 171 of the arkile
dess, drawn by cows, 179 Shout, mystical, 539 SioV), the arkite goddess, 202, 292, 557 Signs of the zodiac, the grand assembly of twelve gods, 298 Silence observed by the aspirant, 422 Sir Tristram, 439 story of, 446 Sky, name of the open temple, 508 skies, seven, 53 Slaughter, the mother of spoliation, 365 Sleep, bardic question upon, 50 Srnoke, bardic question upon, 50 smoky recess of probation, 259 Snow of the mountain, 80
god-
dilu-
Solar superstition at Stonehenge, 305 worship, 457 Son of the Creator represented in the mysteries, 287 of partition, Vurtisons of harmony', bards, gern, 329
227
Sorcerers, 268
er,
266
640
rite of, 532 Sortilege, 43, 453 Soul, bardic question upon, 51
INDEX.
Supreme Being' acknowledged by the
bards, 496, 502, 506, 507, 515, 526 cause, declared in the mysteries, 254 mount of the bards, 374 proprietor, a title of Hu, 120, 136, 537 Swelling sea of knights, 361
Source of energy, a sacred title, 115, 354 Sovereign of the power of the air, 261 Sovereignty of Britain conferred upon
the chief druid. 119, 506 Sow, sacred to Ceres, 413 symbol of the ark, 426 tale of the mystical, 426
related to the history of a ship, 430 Sparrow-hawk, a transformation of Ce-
Swine, mystical, 414, 470 swineherds of mythology, 413, 439, 460, 469 Sword, when to be unsheathed, 64, 456 carried in procession, 172 of the
chief druid, 542 Symbol of the egg, 205 of the deluge, 250 symbolical ima gery,131 death, 163 Syw, a diviner, 272, 467 sywed Ced, 505 Sywedydd, 271, 272
ridwen, 230 Speech of Hengist, 314 Spheres, seven, 53 Splendid mover, title of the sun, 119, 509 Spoils of the deep, a mystical poem, 137, 513 Sprigs, mystical, 472, 484, 511, 537 broken into tallies or lots, 532 authority of, 487
Sprinkling, a sacred rite of purification, 219, 220 Sprites of the gloom, 42 Staff of Janus, 201 Stall of the cow, 122, 177, 568 of the
ox,
Tair Orian, three hymns, 505 Tale of the sacred oxen, 139 of a lake in Brecknockshire, 155 of Loch LoTaliesin, 2,
mond, 163 200 poems of, mythological, 4 genuine, 9 publisher of bardic lore, 18, 20 taught druidism, 26
professed natural philosophy, 52 contemplated battles, 62 mythology a mystical infant, of, druidical, 181
535
Stanzas of the months, 82 Steed with illustrious trappings, 264 of the ruler of the sea, 284 steeds,
ships,
569
Stone, cell, of the sacred fire, 345 pillan, 360 ark, 393 Stonehenge, a great druidical temple, 303, 385 described by Diodorus, 303
a title of the sun, 296 was present in various ages, 505 poetrj' of, characterized by Mr. Turner, 513 Talisman of Cunobeline, 613, 618
239
divinity,
41
of,
celebrated by British writers, 306 described by Cuhelya, 313 by Aneuthe great stone rin, 349, 364, 384 fence of the common sanctuary, 350 not older than the introduction of helio-arkite superstition, 384 why selected for the place of conference with
the,
170 473
Hengist, 385
called
Hen
Velen, Old
Belennium, 502
Story of Gwyddno, mythological, 241 of Llyn Savaddan, 146 of Pwyll, 418 Strata of the earth, bardic question upon,
115
52 Stream of life, 152 Studded circle on the sacred shield, 592 on the British coins, 600 Styx, an emblem of the flood, 153 Subject of the Gododin, 321 Submersion of cities, 145 of islands, 148, 149 of Cantre'r Gwaelod, 242 Sues, swine, a title of heathen priests, 413 Suffocation of the aspirant, 256 Suiumershine, a mystic character, 420 slain, 422 Sun worshipped in conjunction with Noah, 125 titles of, 336
28
Thigh pierced or cut, 199, 505, 537, 544 Third rank assigned to the solar divinity, 526 Three fountains, 47, 48 ministers, 287 hymns round the fire, 295 stories cranes, 245 erect, 300, 302
INDEX.
T itaresius,
Thrice born, 240, 253, 258 a sacred stream, 153 Titles of the British gods, 350
ridwen, 403
641
life,
190
Vortigern, 329
treachery
of,
335,
&c
Ceres, 299
Traditions of the Britons, where preof the of the deluge, 95 served, 31 oxen of Hu, 129 of the changes of
deposed and re-elected, 341 parricide and usurpation of, 342 over-rules the British council, 361 character and death of, 373 elegy upon the death of, 380 Vortimer, elegy upon the death of, 336
341
druidism, 411
age and character of, 65 outdisgraced, 69 lawed, 70 curious poem of, 67 Transformations, mystical, 229 of Taliesin, 573 Transmigration, 15 on British Trefoil, a sacred plant, 448 coins, 601, 602 Triads, ancient, 3 mythological, 27 mentioned by Aneurin and Taliein, 29 derived from ancient bardic lore, 30 systematical, 200 derived from the Triplets, moral, 75 school of the druids, 79 Trystan, a mystical personage, 439, 440 Tumulus of the egress, 193 Twice born, 258 Twrch, boar, a mystical title, 414 Trwyfh, 614 Ty Gwydrin, 212 Tydain Tad Awen, Apollo, 193, 526
Wand
druids, 61 of the splendid mover, a sacred song, 510 war song of the Britons, 374 warriors praised by Taliesin, 62 Warburton's account of the mysteries,
254 Water of
214 inspiration, 40, 185, 213, of immortality, 227, 228 of the cauldron, why poisonous, 220 of puwater-dweller, Henrification, 250
gist,
328
Weapon
not to be held naked in the presence of a bard, 60 Wear of Gwyddno, 238, 248 Web of heroism, a magical standard,
Un Duw
Uchaf, 103
Vncovered temples, 305 Unity of God, 87, 103 Unspotted weapon of the bard, 326 Universal peace, 60 Urien of Reged, 59, 502 Uthyr Bendragon, 120, 187, 429, 557 Utter darkness, 190, 203
V
Vale of the beaver, scene of a mystical conflict, 266 Vadimon, or Vandiruon, Janus, Noah, 158, 159 Veil of the temple, 171, 562 of the mystical lots, 483, 489 Venedotian, Vortigern, 361 Vervain, use of, 43 a sacred plant, 220 exhibited in the festival, 273 used in casting lots, foretelling events, &c. 275 several names of, ib. an ingredient in the purifying cauldron, 276 Vessel with the iron door, 120 Viaticum of Llevoed, a moral poem, 83 rT
cell, 394, 395 Welsh, not wholly converted to Chris282 tianity in the sixth century, princes patronized the bards, 25 tolerated druidism, 282 Wheel on the British coins, 602 a symbol of Arianrod, 603, 606 White robes of the druids, 23 dogs, 546 Wild boars hunted by Hengist, 382 Wind of purposes ? 53 Wolf of mythology, 434 of Merddin, 485 Woman composed of flowers, 264 Wonderful supreme ruler, a sacred title, 287 World, an animal, 46, 47 ascending from the deep, 47 the arkite family, 207 Wort contributed for the festival, 273 Wren, a transformation of the aspirant, 235 Writings, druidical, 511
INDEX.
Yuys Pybyrddor, 519 Yoke of the sacred oxen, 129
of Hu, of the arkite god,
137 of gold, 463 560 Ys Golan contends with Merddin, 471 burns British books, 472 Ysgrifen Brydaiii, 510
Yssadawr, the consumer, 121 Ystre, the course, at Stonehenge, 385 Ystwyth, the Styx of the druids, 251
2
.
Zodiac represented by the druidical pies, 293, &c. Zones of the earth, 53
tern-
ERRATA.
Owing
to the Author's
':e
distance
from
the Press,
and the
defect
of
nis
vision,
errors
hare escaped,
Printer.
The following
line
page
for
read
7
7
6 8 13 13
hwy bieuvydd
Demetia
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Area
Twedor
is
Tewdor
its
14
expatiate gwastraeth
bedeirwedd
title
Teutones
Tarw
Bellona
procession Britons flower
Britains
populous
EJ<ipopo-5j
3 farmer 13 Gravny
faruer
Grawn y
Berries topic
allusion
14 Borues
13 2 14 26 17 8 19 20 31
opic
illusion
haruspex
ddogyu
complete
.
dhogyn
complex
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