coast: they had no message of interpretation
for him, no potent electric thought to light up the
mystery of his nature. For the mystery of the
Celt is the mystery of Amergin the Druid. All
nature speaks through him. He is her darling,
the confidant of her secrets. Her mountains
have been more to him than a feeling. She has
revealed them to him as the home of her brighter children,
her heroes become immortal. For him her streams
ripple with magical life and the light of day was once
filled with more aerial rainbow wonder. Though
thousands of years have passed since this mysterious
Druid land was at its noonday, and long centuries
have rolled by since the weeping seers saw the lights
vanish from mountain and valley, still this alliance
of the soul of man and the soul of nature more or
less manifestly characterizes the people of this isle.
The thought produced in and for complex civilizations
is not pregnant enough with the vast for them, is
not enough thrilled through by that impalpable breathing
from another nature. We have had but little
native literature here worth the name until of late
years, and that not yet popularized, but during all
these centuries the Celt has kept in his heart some
affinity with the mighty beings ruling in the unseen,
once so evident to the heroic races who preceded him.
His legends and faery tales have connected his soul
with the inner lives of air and water and earth, and
they in turn have kept his heart sweet with hidden
influence. It would make one feel sad to think
that all that beautiful folklore is fading slowly
from the memory that held it so long, were it not
for the belief that the watchful powers who fostered
its continuance relax their care because the night
with beautiful dreams and deeds done only in fancy
is passing: the day is coming with the beautiful
real, with heroes and heroic deeds.
It may not be well to prophecy, but it is always permissible
to speak of our hopes. If day but copies day
may we not hope for Ireland, after its long cycle
of night, such another glory as lightened it of old,
which tradition paints in such mystic colours?
What was the mysterious glamour of the Druid age?
What meant the fires on the mountains, the rainbow
glow of air, the magic life in water and earth, but
that the Radiance of Deity was shining through our
shadowy world, that it mingled with and was perceived
along with the forms we know. There it threw
up its fountains of life-giving fire, the faery fountains
of story, and the children of earth breathing that
rich life felt the flush of an immortal vigour within
them; and so nourished sprang into being the Danaan
races, men who made themselves gods by will and that
magical breath. Rulers of earth and air and fire,
their memory looms titanic in the cloud stories of
our dawn, and as we think of that splendid strength
of the past something leaps up in the heart to confirm
it true for all the wonder of it.