CHAPTER XIX
THE MABINOGEON
THE BRITONS
THE earliest inhabitants of Britain are supposed to
have been a branch of that great family known in history
by the designation of Celts. Cambria, which is a frequent
name for Wales, is thought to be derived from Cymri, the
name which the Welsh traditions apply to an immigrant
people who entered the island from the adjacent continent.
This name is thought to be identical with those of
Cimmerians and Cimbri, under which the Greek and Roman
historians describe a barbarous people, who spread
themselves from the north of the Euxine over the whole of
Northwestern Europe.
The origin of the names Wales and Welsh has been much
canvassed. Some writers make them a derivation from Gael
or Gaul, which names are said to signify
"woodlanders"; others observe that Walsh, in the
Northern languages, signifies a stranger, and that the
aboriginal Britons were so called by those who at a later
era invaded the island and possessed the greater part of
it, the Saxons and Angles.
The Romans held Britain from the invasion of Julius
Caesar till their voluntary withdrawal from the island,
A.D. 420,- that is, about five hundred years. In that time
there must have been a wide diffusion of their arts and
institutions among the natives. The remains of roads,
cities, and fortifications show that they did much to
develop and improve the country, while those of their
villas and castles prove that many of the settlers
possessed wealth and taste for the ornamental arts. Yet
the Roman sway was sustained chiefly by force, and never
extended over the entire island. The northern portion, now
Scotland, remained independent, and the western portion,
constituting Wales and Cornwall, was only nominally
subjected.
Neither did the later invading hordes succeed in
subduing the remoter sections of the island. For ages
after the arrival of the Saxons under Hengist and Horsa,
A.D. 449, the whole western coast of Britain was possessed
by the aboriginal inhabitants, engaged in constant warfare
with the invaders.
It has, therefore, been a favorite boast of the people
of Wales and Cornwall, that the original British stock
flourishes in its unmixed purity only among them. We see
this notion flashing out in poetry occasionally, as when
Gray, in "The Bard," prophetically describing
Queen Elizabeth, who was of the Tudor, a Welsh race, says:
"Her eye proclaims her of the Briton line";
and, contrasting the princes of the Tudor with those of
the Norman race, he exclaims:
"All hail, ye genuine kings, Britannia's issue,
hail!"
THE WELSH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE
The Welsh language is one of the oldest in Europe. It
possesses poems the origin of which is referred with
probability to the sixth century. The language of some of
these is so antiquated, that the best scholars differ
about the interpretation of many passages; but, generally
speaking, the body of poetry which the Welsh possess, from
the year 1000 downwards, is intelligible to those who are
acquainted with the modern language.
[Welsh
Literature]
Till within the last half-century these compositions
remained buried in the libraries of colleges or of
individuals, and so difficult of access that no successful
attempt was made to give them to the world. This reproach
was removed, after ineffectual appeals to the patriotism
of the gentry of Wales, by Owen Jones, a furrier of
London, who at his own expense collected and published the
chief productions of Welsh literature, under the title of
the Myvyrian Archaeology of Wales. In this task he was
assisted by Dr. Owen and other Welsh scholars.
After the cessation of Jones's exertions, the old
apathy returned, and continued till within a few years.
Dr. Owen exerted himself to obtain support for the
publication of the Mabinogeon,
or Prose Tales of the Welsh, but died without
accomplishing his purpose, which has since been carried
into execution by Lady Charlotte Guest. The legends which
fill the remainder of this volume are taken from this
work, of which we have already spoken more fully in
the introductory chapter to
the First Part.
THE WELSH BARDS
The authors to whom the oldest
Welsh poems are attributed are Aneurin, who is
supposed to have lived A.D. 500 and 550, and Taliesin,
Llywarch Hen (Llywarch the Aged), and Myrddin or Merlin,
who were a few years later. The authenticity of the poems
which bear their names has been assailed, and it is still
an open question how many and which of them are authentic,
though it is hardly to be doubted that some are so. The
poem of Aneurin, entitled the "Gododin," bears
very strong marks of authenticity. Aneurin was one of the
Northern Britons of Strath-Clyde, who have left to that
part of the district they inhabited the name of
Cumberland, or Land of the Cymri. In this poem he laments
the defeat of his countrymen by the Saxons at the battle
of Cattraeth, in consequence of having partaken too freely
of the mead before joining in combat. The bard himself and
two of his fellow-warriors were all who escaped from the
field. A portion of this poem has been translated by Gray,
of which the following is an extract:-
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"To Cattraeth's vale, in glittering row,
Twice two hundred warriors go;
Every warrior's manly neck
Chains of regal honor deck,
Wreathed in many a golden link;
From the golden cup they drink
Nectar that the bees produce,
Or the grape's exalted juice.
Flushed with mirth and hope they burn,
But none to Cattraeth's vale return,
Save Aeron brave, and Conan strong,
Bursting through the bloody throng,
And I, the meanest of them all,
That live to weep, and sing their fall."
The works of Taliesin are of much more questionable
authenticity. There is a story of the adventures of
Taliesin so strongly marked with mythical traits as to
cast suspicion on the writings attributed to him. This
story will be found in the subsequent pages.
THE TRIADS
The Triads are a peculiar species of poetical
composition, of which the Welsh bards have left numerous
examples. They are enumerations of a triad of persons, or
events, or observations, strung together in one short
sentence. This form of composition, originally invented,
in all likelihood, to assist the memory, has been raised
by the Welsh to a degree of elegance of which it hardly at
first sight appears susceptible. The Triads are of all
ages, some of them probably as old as anything in the
language. Short as they are individually, the collection
in the Myvyrian Archaeology occupies more than one hundred
and seventy pages of double columns. We will give some
specimens, beginning with personal triads, and giving the
first place to one of King Arthur's own composition:-
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"I have three heroes in battle;
Mael the tall, and Llyr, with his army,
And Caradoc, the pillar of Wales."
"The three principal bards of the island of
Britain:-
Merlin Ambrose,
Merlin the son of Morfyn, called also Merlin the Wild,
And Taliesin, the chief of the bards."
"The three golden-tongued knights of the Court of
Arthur:-
Gawain, son of Gwyar,
Drydvas, son of Tryphin,
And Eliwood, son of Madag, ap Uther."
"The three honorable feasts of the island of
Britain:-
The feast of Caswallaun, after repelling Julius Caesar
from this isle;
The feast of Aurelius Ambrosius, after he had conquered
the Saxons;
And the feast of King Arthur, at Caerleon upon
Usk."
"Guenever, the daughter of Laodegan the giant,
Bad when little, worse when great."
Next follow some moral triads:-
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"Hast thou heard what Dremhidydd sung,
An ancient watchman on the castle walls?
A refusal is better than a promise unperformed."
"Hast thou heard what Llenleawg sung,
The noble chief wearing the golden torques?
The grave is better than a life of want."
"Hast thou heard what Garselit sung,
The Irishman whom it is safe to follow?
Sin is bad, if long pursued."
"Hast thou heard what Avaon sung,
The son of Taliesin, of the recording verse?
The cheek will not conceal the anguish of the
heart."
"Didst thou hear what Llywarch sung,
The intrepid and brave old man?
Greet kindly, though there be no acquaintance."
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