is significant, since in early belief life is associated
with what is feminine. Woman as the fruitful
mother suggested that the Earth, which produced and
nourished, was also female. Hence arose the cult
of the Earth-mother who was often also a goddess of
love as well as of fertility. Cerridwen, in all
probability, was a goddess of fertility, and Branwen
a goddess of love.[1287] The cult of fertility was
usually associated with orgiastic and indiscriminate
love-making, and it is not impossible that the cauldron,
like the Hindu yoni, was a symbol of fertility.[1288]
Again, the slaughter and cooking of animals was usually
regarded as a sacred act in primitive life. The
animals were cooked in enormous cauldrons, which were
found as an invariable part of the furniture of every
Celtic house.[1289] The quantities of meat which they
contained may have suggested inexhaustibility to people
to whom the cauldron was already a symbol of fertility.
Thus the symbolic cauldron of a fertility cult was
merged with the cauldron used in the religious slaughter
and cooking of animal food. The cauldron was
also used in ritual. The Cimri slaughtered human
victims over a cauldron and filled it with their blood;
victims sacrificed to Teutates were suffocated in
a vat (semicupium); and in Ireland “a
cauldron of truth” was used in the ordeal of
boiling water.[1290] Like the food of men which was
regarded as the food of the gods, the cauldron of
this world became the marvellous cauldron of the Other-world,
and as it then became necessary to explain the origin
of such cauldrons on earth, myths arose, telling how
they had been stolen from the divine land by adventurous
heroes, Cuchulainn, Arthur, etc. In other
instances, the cauldron is replaced by a magic vessel
or cup stolen from supernatural beings by heroes of
the Fionn saga or of Maerchen.[1291] Here,
too, it may be noted that the Graal of Arthurian romance
has affinities with the Celtic cauldron. In the
Conte du Graal of pseudo-Chretien, a cup comes
in of itself and serves all present with food.
This is a simple conception of the Graal, but in other
poems its magical and sacrosanct character is heightened.
It supplies the food which the eater prefers, it gives
immortal youth and immunity from wounds. In these
respects it presents an unmistakable likeness to the
cauldron of Celtic myth. But, again, it was the
vessel in which Christ had instituted the Blessed
Sacrament; it contained His Blood; and it had been
given by our Lord to Joseph of Arimathea. Thus
in the Graal there was a fusion of the magic cauldron
of Celtic paganism and the Sacred Chalice of Christianity,
with the product made mystic and glorious in a most
wonderful manner. The story of the Graal became
immensely popular, and, deepening in ethical, mystical,
and romantic import as time went on, was taken up
by one poet after another, who “used it as a
type of the loftiest goal of man’s effort."[1292]