UJ |
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o — UJB5 -j = O— ! |
^=_D |
m 1 |
|
(»— |
ru |
_J w = I—! |
= n~ = n |
OS |
— ^— i_i i Sr4 |
> = |
= JD |
a: = > — |
n- I |
D — |
= 01 |
^w«<i
^S
the pResence of this Book
in
thej.m kelly Library
has Been rru6e possiBle
thRouqh the qeneROSity
of
Stephen B. Roman
From the Library of Daniel Binchy
,j0B&&
BOOKBIHOtRS EUSTACE ST
kOljnv_\*V
I
IRISH TEXTS SOCIETY
cumctNN Na s^mbeaNN nsaeoicse
VOL. XXXIV
(1932) 1938
Printed at thb
By Ponsonby & Gibbs.
LEBOR GABALA ERENN
THE BOOK OF THE TAKING OF IRELAND
Part I
EDITED AND TRANSLATED, WITH NOTES, ETC.
BY
R. A. STEWART MACALISTER, D.Litt.
DUBLIN :
PUBLISHED FOR THE IRISH TEXTS SOCIETY
BY THE EDUCATIONAL COMPANY OF IRELAND, LTD.
89 TALBOT STREET
1938
CONTENTS.
Corrigenda
Table of Abbreviations
Introduction
v vi ix
SECTION I: FROM THE CREATION TO THE DISPERSAL
OF THE NATIONS.
Introduction |
1 |
First Redaction . |
'. 16, 17 |
Second Redaction |
. 24, 25 |
Third Redaction . |
. 40, 41 |
Verse Texts |
168, 169 |
Notes on Prose Texts |
200 |
Notes on Verse Texts |
257 |
CORRIGENDA.
p. xiii, line 23 : after R2 add — traceable in some quotations in R3.
p. xv, line 20: add — At the top of the first page of E there are two old library class-marks, A. 1. 8 and B. 35. Above the 8 there is the invocation Emanuel, faint but decipherable : between the two marks there is an illegible note, dia dui (?)... ib, with a date ending (1)753.
p. xvi, line 10 : add — P was probably meant to complete an acephalous copy already in its writer's possession : hence the abrupt ending.
p. xxiii, line 6 : after manuscripts add — I dare not flatter myself that these complex lists of variants contain no errors or omissions, but I feel confident that nothing of importance has been overlooked.
p. xxxiv, line 2 : for VA read \fV.
p. 8, line 6, below the table : for eleventh read twelfth. In line 8, after Madrid, add — 2M, likewise at Madrid, is of the eleventh century.
p. 12, line 21 : delete whether . . . importance. In line 24, after edge, add — The tear would have run in the opposite direction if it had been inflicted in the original act of pillage ; it must have been a later misdemeanour, to remove from the leaf matter not germane to its new context.
p. 163, line 14 : for Dula read Dala.
p. 223, footnote (29) : after version add of the Irenaeus text.
p. 239, line 15 : add — This poem is printed, Todd Lectures, iii, p. 46.
TABLE OF ABBREVIATIONS AND CRITICAL
SYMBOLS.
1 . Notation for Redactions : —
R\ R\ R3, the First, Second, Third Redactions.
Min or /<, the version called Mlniugud.
K, the modernised version of Micheal 6 Cleirigh.
2. Notation for the Extant Manuscripts : —
A : Stowe A.2.4. A : Book of Lecan, first text.
B : Book of Ballymote. M : Book of Lecan, second
/3: H. 2.4 in T.C.D. text.
/31: H.1.15 in T.C.D. P : P.10266 in National
j32: Stowe D.* 3.2. Library, Dublin.
D : Stowe D.4.3. R : Rawl.B.512 in Bodleian
E: E.3.5. no. 2 in T.C.I). Library.
F1 : Book of Fermoy. V1 : Stowe D.5.1.
F2: Stowe D.3.1. V3: Stowe D.4.1.
H : 11.2.15 no. 1 in T.C.D. V3 : Stowe D.1.3.
L : Book of Leinster.
R1 is contained in L, F.
R2 » „ „ A,D,E,AP,R,V.
R3 » „ „ B, /i p,ft\ H,M.
Min is suffixed to the copies of R- in A, R,V. To distinguish the portions of these MSS. containing the Min text from those containing the Br text? the symbols ^A, ^R, ^V are used for the former.
K is contained in a number of paper MSS., but for purposes of reference the authoritative autograph (23 K 32 in R.I. A.) has been considered sufficient.
•For the sake of brevity the shelf-marks of the Stowe collection are here stated in Arabic numerals, though Konian numerals are used in the Library.
ABBREVIATIONS AND CRITICAL SYMBOLS, vii
Where it is necessary to refer to any combination of
two of the j3 MSS., or to all three of them,
the formula fion (varied as required) is used
for brevity.
F1, F\ are parts of one dismembered MS. collectively
denoted by F. V1, V3, V3, are parts of one dismembered MS. collectively denoted by V.
3. Notation for Lost Manuscripts of Critical Importance : —
*a, *x, *w, *z.
*y B, the exemplar from which B was copied.
1/ B, the exemplar from which v/B was copied.
£/ B, a MS. in the ancestry of B at an unspecified number of steps back from it. (Analogous symbolism for the ancestry of the other
MSS.)
v/BH, the common ancestor of B and H. [But Hv/B means the extant MS. H in combination with v/B.]
oo R3, the autograph of the Third Redaction, or the compiler of the Third Redaction, according to the con Lex t.
oo L, the Manuscript in which the tradition repre- sented by L was differentiated from the other MSS. of the same Redaction.
v/R3, the Manuscript from which all the extant Manuscripts of the Third Redaction are derived (which may or may not be identical with ooR3). (Analogous symbolism for the ancestry of other MSS. and Versions.)
Note. — R alone denotes the Bodleian MS. ; R with a superscript numeral is to be read " Redaction."
4. Miscellaneous abbreviations : —
c : Correction, corrector (according to context).
g : Gloss, glossator ; a gloss incorporated in the text.
viii ABBREVIATIONS AND CRITICAL SYMBOLS.
g-: a secondary gloss, or gloss upon a gloss, also
incorporated in the text. 3 : a gloss which remains external to the text, super- script (sprs), subscript (sbs), or in the margin (marg) of the MS. s : Scribe : s\ s2, the first, second, scribe of a MS. y : Interpolation, interpolator, yc M is to be read " interpolated by a corrector of M." y sprs s M " interpolated, above the line, by the original scribe of M". (y is used in preference to i as being a more distinctive letter.) LG : The name of the text, Lebor Gabala. s., d. : in the translation, to be read " son of," " daughter
of." om, ins, in the lists of variae lectiones, to be read
"omit(s)," "insert(s)." sec. man. = secunda manu. R.I.A. : Royal Irish Academy. T.C.D. : Trinity College, Dublin. § : The sections of the book. II : The paragraphs of the book.
The glossarial or other interpolated matter in the text is denoted by the signs \ . . . || . secondary glosses being marked +1 ... II1 : these symbols are more fully elucidated, where necessary, in the notes. The columns on each folio of the MS. are denoted in the usual way by the Greek letters a /3 y S, the recto and verso being numbered thus contin- uously. In most cases a \6 are on the recto, 7 § on the verso. Except in the case of the MSS. H, f3, j3\ j32 the numeration is by folios, not by pages. In the translation, glossarial matter is enclosed in square brackets | ] ; the restoration of lost matter in angled brackets < > .
INTRODUCTION.
Lebor GabCila Erenn, a title which we can Lest translate literally, "the Book of the Taking- of Ireland," is a com- pilation which professes to narrate the history of the successive colonists of that country. The earlier Redactions have come down to us, in whole or in part, in fifteen mss. (counting F, V, as one each, but counting separately the two versions in the Book of Lecan). These have been enumerated in the foregoing table, and are more fully described below.
For critical purposes, however, the number has to be reduced to eleven. A is a direct (and very poor) copy of D, and gives us nothing that D cannot supply : while ft ft1 /32 are all derivatives from B, and are thus of no use except to restore one folio, which B lost at some time after they were written.
Although these manuscripts agree, on the whole, in the facts, or alleged facts, which they set forth, the words in which they state them differ profoundly. They fall into redactional groups, essentially at variance in the selection and order of presentment of the narratives, and in the language in which these are expressed. The editor has no alternative but to print them in extenso, independently of one another.1 A single composite text, with an unmanageably cumbrous sediment of variae lectiones at the bottom of the page, would be perfectly useless for any critical student of this important document and of its complex history. It may be said that this conclusion has not been reached without experiment.
1 There are a few places in which this is not necessary, but these are exceptional.
b
x INTRODUCTION.
The work is primarily paedagogic, for which purpose it is interspersed with mnemonic sets of verses, intended to be Learned off by heart. To the modern reader these verses are an un mitigated nuisance, rarely adding anything to what he has already learnt from the prose text; nevertheless it is clear that they are the foundation on which the whole work, in its present form, is based. The corpus of historical verse became the common reservoir of knowledge upon which the prose compilers drew ; and the selections which they made therefrom dictated the selection of facts which they set forth in the several redactions.
For this reason, the treatment of the verse has to be different from that of the prose : it has been found most convenient (again after experiment) to separate the verse texts from the prose, and to print them independently.
It is probable, indeed, that this is a return to the practice of the original prose redactors; that they did not write out the verse compositions in full, but merely jotted down as cues the opening words of each in the margins of their mss., in the confidence that their readers would already have these texts securely in their heads, as they themselves had. In fact, the manuscript R gives us no more than such jottings, incorporated, it is true, in the text, but not extending beyond the first quatrain of any poem. It is conceivable that this is not the mere shirking of a lazy scribe, but that it is an actual survival of a traditional custom.2 This suggestion is corroborated by the diversity of the formulae introducing the poems, even in mss. which otherwise have close verbal similarity. As dia chuimniugiid-sain: de quibus hoc carmen: [so-and-so] cecinit — these and similar expressions are used, even in nearly related mss., at random, making it clear that in this matter the scribes had no stereotyped exemplars to keep their copies uniform. We infer, therefore, that in the autographs these formulae of introduction were not present; and that they were inserted only after the scribes had realized that human memory is untrustworthy, and that it was wiser to write out the poems in full. The same conclusion is
2 Some few of the poems are written in full in fiB.
INTRODUCTION. xi
indicated by the divergent forms of proper names sometimes appearing in the verse texts and in the associated prose. Tims in B, ff 156 ff., we find several times the name ' ' Caithear, " but in the parallel poem no. XIV it appears as "Caicher."
The Extant Manuscripts.
There are in all five redactions of the text : Mm, R1, R2, R3, and K, the last being O'Clery's3 modernised version. Postponing the questions of their contents, origins, and mutual relationships, we may here briefly describe the manuscripts upon which an edition of the text has to be based.
Owing to the convenience of denoting a manuscript by a single letter only, I have taken the liberty of adopting symbols for certain well-known codices, different from those in ordinary use. Thus, I call the Book of Leinster L, not LL : the Book of Bally mote B, not BB : and for the two texts in the Book of Lecan, instead of Lee1 and Lee2 (which would be too clumsy for constant reference), I have adopted the symbols A and M. The latter may be read and explained (at the reader's pleasure) not as "em," but as "lambda two."
The First Redaction. Only two mss. of R1 survive, namely, L and F.
L. The Book of Leinster (T.C.D. Library, H.2.18), c. 1150 a.d. In this codex, which is too well-known to need description, our text occupies folios 1-13.
The folios measure about 12-7 X 9 inches4; and bear four columns, with about 51-53 lines of writing in each. The recto of the first folio must have for long remained unpro- tected by a binding, in consequence of which the writing is rendered partly illegible by dirt, wear, and other injury.
3
: I use the anglicised form here, because the genitive case of the native form cannot be accommodated to an English context : "5 Cleirigh's" is gibberish.
4 In this and the other mss. these measurements vary slightly from folio to folio; the vellum is not cut with mechanical uniformity.
xii INTRODUCTION.
The pest, ;is a whole, is readable enough; though the edges of some of the folios are frayed, and, throughout, many of the words and Letters are thus damaged or lost. A transcript of the first 1 1:> pages of the MS., line for line and page for page, was made in 1852 by Eugene 0 'Curry (L.5.20 in T.C.D. Library). This is often useful in restoring writing that has become illegible since his time; but it cannot be trusted with full confidence, and he has shirked the task of trying to decipher the first page, where his help would have been of the utmost value.
F. The Book of Fermoy (R.I.A. Library, 23 E. 29). The connexion of this copy of LG with the Book of Fermoy is factitious and partial only. It is written upon twenty-two folios of vellum, of which the first eight form a gathering, bound into the front of the Book of Fermoy : the remaining fourteen I had the good fortune to identify in one of the Stowe mss. (R.I.A. Library, D.3.1). The folios measure on an average 10-5X8 ins. There are 31 lines of writing in each column, and two columns on each page. The Fermoy fragment, and the first two folios of the Stowe fragment, are written upon in a coarse, bold hand, using very black ink and a broad-pointed pen on which the writer leans heavily. Dr. Best identifies the handwriting as that of Adam 6 Cianain of Lisgoole, County Fermanagh, whose obit is recorded in the Annals of the Four Masters at a.d. 1373. On the third folio of the Stowe fragment (fol. 11 of the complete book), in column a, after line 27, the handwriting appears to change abruptly: but careful comparison shows that the same scribe continues to work, using a pen with a finer point. On the same folio, however, column 8, after line 4, there is actually a change of scribe, s2 F has a rounder, and, on the whole, a better style of handwriting than s1 V. At first he decorates his capital letters with blobs of colour, though not on the later pages : he is fond of ending them with crudely drawn animal heads, which s1 F never does. A Her the change of the pen in the hand of s1 F, the number of lines in the column increases to 39. The whole work ends abruptly at 22 y 10, with the reign of Eochaid Qairches in the "Roll of the Kings." The remainder of
INTRODUCTION. xiii
column y, and the whole of column 8, of this folio were left blank, suggesting that the copy stopped at this point because the remainder was lost from a/F : an irrelevant anecdote about King David and a beggar has at some later time been scribbled into the empty space.5 An additional leaf, possibly part of the earliest binding of the book, originally blank, is also now covered with scribbling. As in the case of L, the recto of the first folio of F is in a very bad condition from wear, tear, and dirt. It was cleaned chemically during the progress of the present work by Professor Ditchburn, of T.C.D., with the satisfactory result that most of the text, which I had abandoned as hopelessly illegible, proved recoverable. It should be noted that the folios in the Stowe ms., as at present bound, are misplaced. The first, which follows immediately after the last folio of the Fermoy fragment, is bound in as the seventh folio of the Stowe book.6 The text carries on from there to the present end of the volume (eight folios) : then continues on the prefixed folios in this order — 6, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5.7
Of the lost mss. of the First Redaction, *Q and *X, which are of considerable critical importance, we shall speak when occasion arises. *Q was the copy used by oo R3, #X was used by one of the glossators of R2.
The redaction called Mlniugud, which is a form of R1, is more fully discussed below.
The Second Redaction.
The majority of the mss. of LG belong to R2. These are V, E, P, R, D, A, and A.
5 Edited by S. H. O 'Grady from two other MSS.; see Melusine iv (1888), col. 163. See also K. Meyer in Arch, fwr Celt. Lex. iii 321 for a different version.
6 The bottom margin of this leaf has been clipped off, apparently to remove some scribbled matter : there is similar scribbling on the bottom margin of the following folio, recto.
1 In references to this MS,, in the present edition, the folios are numbered in their true order, not in the haphazard order in which they are bound.
xiv INTRODUCTION.
V, a ms. in the Stowe collection (R.I.A. Library), now- divided into three volumes (V1 = D.5.1, V2 = D.4.1, and V3 = D.1.3). V1 consists of nine folios, with four columns of writing on each; size of leaves 11 '8 X 8 ins., 51-55 lines of writing in each column. At the beginning there is an elaborately coloured interlaced monogram of the word in : and throughout there are well-drawn initial letters. The whole is written in a beautiful neat hand, which, however, is rather cramped, and not perfectly easy to decipher. The ms. has undergone extensive re-inking, and it is not always certain that the restorer has done his work accurately. At the top of folio la of V1 there are two faint, worn lines of writing in Gothic lettering — apparently a library mark ; under ultra-violet light they seem to read M.onasterii Insi Putraic, but they are too far gone to yield with assurance even to that powerful solvent of palasographieal difficulties. V2 has eight, V3 six folios : they are on the whole better preserved than V1, wThich has suffered severely from wear. In V2 the wrriting stops abruptly at 8 8 9 (end of the poem Fland for Erind hi Ugh), after which the rest of the column is blank. We must infer that a gathering had been lost from V V, and that the scribe of V was unable to find means of filling the lacuna.8 The gap extends to the end of the 13th quatrain of the poem Gdedel glas in Min : with the 14th quatrain the text resumes abruptly, on the first folio of V3, and runs on to the end of Erin ardinis na rlgh, which finishes the ms. There are coloured initials in V1 and V2, but not in V3 : bat the style of the writing, the size of the folios, and the number of lines in the column, leave no room for doubt that the three volumes originally formed one book. Fragments of other books, in vellum and in paper, quite irrelevant in contents, are now bound up with the twTo later volumes.
8 The lacuna does not exist in the closely cognate copy a ; the text here runs on intact over rather more than 8 leaves of A which have no equivalent in V. This clearly shows that a is not, as has been supposed, a transcript of V: it must be derived from f V at latest. In /iV the Roll of the Kings originally stopped at Sirna Soeglach, and has been continued in a different but contemporary hand : fi A knows nothing of this, and breaks off at Sirna — another demonstration that the two MSS. are not in "mother-and-daughter" relationship.
INTRODUCTION. xv
E, a manuscript once bound up in separate folios scattered through a miscellany of scraps class-marked E.3.5 in T.C.D. Library (Gwynn's Catalogue, no. 1433, p. 308) : now collected once more into a single volume, and class-marked E.3.5., no. 2. It contains 16 folios, measuring 11-4 X 8-25 ins., with four columns of 48 lines of writing on each. There is hardly any ornamentation. The handwriting was recognised long ago by 0 'Curry (Battle of Magh Leana, p. 35, footnote) as that of Toma o Maeil-Chonaire, poet and historian to the earls of Desmond at the beginning of the fifteenth century : and this is confirmed by a scribal note at the bottom of folio 2 y. He wrote carelessly ; haplographies are frequent, usually corrected in the margin by himself or by a later reader. Many of the lenited letters, which were not dotted by the original scribe, have been dotted by a later meddler. On the other hand, there are many good readings, and the ms. is of considerable critical importance. A note at the bottom of fo. 9 verso claims ownership of the book for Muirges ruadh ua Maoil- Chonaire (a different person from the scribe of D), "wher- ever it may be found."
P, formerly in the Phillips Collection at Cheltenham, now in the National Library of Ireland, class-marked P. 10266. It has been described by Whitley Stokes,9 who has, however, not observed that the fragment of LG (which he does not appear to have identified as such) is only by accident a part of the book. It is a single quaternion, 10 X 73 ins., prefixed to a fragment from another ms. with folios of a rather larger size. Only the first two folios contain LG material, and there does not appear ever to have been any more of the text. The writing is minute, running across the whole page in a single column of 41 lines. Polio 1 recto is utterly illegible, the whole page having been reduced with gallic acid and dirt to a uniform dead brownish black. A large monogram of IN, extending down the whole height of the page on the left-hand side, and followed (apparently) by PRI, in unusually large characters, can be traced; but nothing further. The rest of
9 Martyrology of Oengus (Henry Bradshaw Soe. edition), p. ix If.
XVI
INTRODUCTION.
the texl is clear, extending from -\ nl derna fdilte (fl 5A) to risin mac mbec rugad (]} 119), where the scribe ceased abruptly from hjs work. Some parts of Folio 1 verso (the first nine lines and the poem No. 1) have been re-inked, not quite accurately. Though so fragmentary, the text is useful, as it helps considerably in the decipherment of some obscure passages in VE, the only other mss. which have preserved the firsl folio of the text of R2. There is no colophon: but Arabic figures are freely used in the text, and this and other indications suggest a date of about 1480-1520.
R, the only ms. of the older versions not in Dublin, is an early fifteenth-century copy contained in the well-known miscellany, Rawl. B. 512, in the Bodleian Library. This ms. has been described, and its contents catalogued, by Whitley Stokes10 ; and it is here needless to go over the same ground. The text of LG occupies foil. 76 recto-100 verso. The beginning of the book is lost : calculation shows that two leaves are gone; possibly three, if (as is improbable) the text contained the Nel-Moses pericope (|J 118 ff.) and the long poem V written out in full. Another leaf has disappeared between fifl 272-288. These defects took place before the addition of pagination to the ms., which ignores them. Two folios aro numbered 76, the second being distinguished as 76 A -. the first two folios are transposed in the binding. There are two columns upon each page, with 37 lines of writing in each column. At the end of the text of R2 there comes the copy of Miniugud here called [xR.
D, class-marked Stowe D.4.3 in the R.I. A. Library. This is a vellum ms., the pages being 9X7-5 inches, with two columns of writing upon every page except the recto of fol. 7, and the lower part of the recto of fol. 21, in which the writing runs across the page with about 56 letters in each line. The book seems to have been exposed to fire at some time: the lower and outer edges, and especially the lower
Tripartite Life of St. Patrick (Rolls Series), vol. i, p. xivff.
INTRODUCTION. xvii
outer angles, of most of the folios are badly scorched, and the writing on the parts affected is often difficult to read. The lines of writing are very irregularly disposed ; so far as I have counted them, they range in number from 29 to 41 in the column. Appropriately to this irregularity, the hand- writing is poor, sometimes not very legible. Forty-two folios remain : two have been lost from the beginning, and the end is also imperfect. The ms. is of considerable critical value, and has some remarkable readings11 : the scribe's name, Muirges (or Muirgius) mac Paidin, appears in scribbles at 17 y bottom, 25 /3 14, and 35 8 bottom. In the last place only has he given his father's name, and this has been partly burnt away. He is a grumbler : at the bottom of 8 y, in a note now difficult to decipher, he appears to complain that his ruler is too broad; on 11 y he is troubled because his light is bad ; at 17 y he has mislaid his cailc, that is, pre- sumably, the pumice with which he smoothed the surface of his vellum; and on 11 recto the shears of a bookbinder have silenced a reference derogatory, as we may suppose, to his parchment. In the present work the two lost initial leaves are counted in, in references to this ms. ; the first extant folio being numbered "3," in accordance with the old pagination. In the ms. a new pagination, starting from the first extant folio, has been substituted in roughly written numerals, the old pagination being sometimes either scratched out or written over.
The scribe was certainly the Muirges mac Paidin ua Maoil-Chonaire who made the transcript of the Book of Fenagh in the R.I.A. Library in 1517, and who died in 1543. Though the writing in the Fenagh volume is much more careful, comparison of the two books leaves no room for doubt that they come from the same hand. This being so, we may infer that this ms. is the same as "The Book of
"Among- these are a number of interpolations, evidently borrowed from a copy of R1, and all marked in the margin of the page as Slicht Libuir na Huidri, "An extract from (literally, [following in] The track of) Lebor na Huidri." This records the fact that a copy of LG, in the R1 Redaction, was included among the (now missing) contents of that MS.
xviii INTRODUCTION.
Bailc ui Maoil-Chonaire, written by Muirghes mac Paidln ui Maoil-Chonaire out of Leabhar na Huidhri," which 0 Cleirigh specifies as one of the sources of his own work. The marginal notes referred to in the footnote have misled him into supposing that the whole book was copied from LU. See further on the ms. A, below.
A, the first text in The Book of Lecan (R.I. A. Library, 23.P.2). The impending publication of a facsimile of this important volume makes it unnecessary to describe it here : in the published catalogue of the Royal Irish Academy's collection of mss. there is a full analysis of its contents. This text is at the beginning of the book, and has lost the first nine folios : they were already gone in 1724.12 In consequence the copy begins abruptly in the section relating to the FirBolg (in the middle of the poem appended to ff 292). The complete text, including the copy of Min. appended to R2 (here called /*A), covered 30 folios, with two columns on each page, containing 41-55 lines of writing, so far as they have been tested. It ends in the middle of column 30 8, with the following colophon, repeated im- mediately below by a later hand in a different ink: Finit. Adam o Cuirrtin do sgrib do Gilla Isu mac Firbissigh A. d'ollam o Fiachrach, Anno. Do', M° CCCC° xuiij°. "It endeth. Adam 6 Cuirnin wrote it, for Gilla Isu mac Fir Bisigh, the man of learning of the Ui Fiachrach, A.D. 1418." This is the most exactly dated copy of the text which we possess. Many of the folios have become semi-transparent by contamination with some greasy substance, and the writing on the one side shows through to the other, making decipher- ment difficult.
A is the only extant paper ms. (excluding some eighteenth century copies, mentioned below) of any of the pre- 0 Cleirigh redactions. It is Stowe A.2.4 in the R.I.A. Library, and
'-Bishop Nicolson, Irish Historical Library, p. 38. The leaves from this ms. now bound into H 2 1?, in the library of T.C.D., are not those missing from the beginning of the codex, as is stated bv an oversight in the catalogue of the T.C.D. Irish Manuscripts, p. 112.
INTRODUCTION. xix
apparently belongs to the seventeenth century. There are 47 leaves, 7-8X58 ins., some of them much tattered. I have collated this copy sufficiently to assure myself that it is a direct transcript of D. It reproduces slavishly the ortho- graphical and other peculiarities of D, except for the not infrequent mistakes of its own copyist. Some of these mis- takes can be explained, on reference to D, by obscurities in the script of the earlier ms. A is imperfect at both ends, and has no independent value for the criticism of the text : it has just the slight importance that in a few cases it does not reproduce corrections that have been made secunda iiianu in D, suggesting that these may have belonged to a time later than its own transcription. But sA was so incompetent that we cannot be sure even of this : he may have overlooked them, or omitted them intentionally. In the present edition of LG, A has been left out of consideration altogether.
Assuming that D was one of the sources followed by 0 Cleirigh, A was probably prepared for his use — not, how- ever, by him, as it is not in his handwriting. Some leaves of a different text, which though roughly scribbled appear actually to be in O'Clery's writing, are bound up in the same volume.
A lost ms. of this redaction, *Z, will be referred to as occasion arises. It was the copy of R2 used by a glossator of R3 (g R3). The Manuscript of R2 used by the compiler of R3 ( oo R3) we shall call *W.
The Third Redaction.
R3 is contained in two mss., B and M; and an important fragment of a third, H, is extant.
B, The Book of Ballymote (R.I.A. Library, 23 P 12). In this codex LG occupies folios 8-34 : on each page there are two columns of writing, with 55-57 lines in each. Folios 9, and 24-30 inclusive, are missing. The latter defect is of long standing; but folio 9 must have been lost after the middle of the eighteenth century, when two transcripts of the text
XX
INTRODUCTION.
were made from this jis. One of these, written in 1728 by Richard Tipper, here called /?, is fairly good, though not perfect ; and it is of great value for restoring the text of the missing folio. It is labelled on the binding "Book of Bally- mote," and class-marked H.2.4 in T.C.D. Library (Gwynn's Catalogue, 1295). The other is apparently lost, but two copies were made from it : (31, in a MS. written by Tadhg () Xeaehtain, in or about the year 1745, and dubbed upon its title-page Psaltair na Teumhrach, "The Psalter of Tara," though the binding is more soberly labelled "Miscellanea Bibernica, transcribed by T. O'Naghtan"; also in T.C.D. Library (H.1.15, Gwynn's Catalogue, 1289) : and ,82, a pitifully illiterate production, class-marked Stowe D.3.2 in the R.I. A. Library. These two mss. share a considerable number of mistakes and peculiar spellings, showing their descent from a common more or less inaccurate original (V/212) interposed between them and the ancestral B13 ; and they are both so much inferior to /?, that their only use is to corroborate some of its peculiar readings, and to show that tlu'se were really to be found in the missing leaf of B. In very few cases can we accept a divergent reading of V/312 in preference to [3. Where we have B intact, these three copies are useless, and are here ignored. Folios 21—30 were lost from B before any of them was made : /? does not attempt to supply the deficiency; but \//312 has filled it by copying from the still extant jjlV, for collation shows beyond the possibility of doubt that s\/ /312 has here and there been misled by peculiarities in /xV (misspellings, a badly set-out cor fa clxasdn, imperfectly legible writing, etc.). The version of this missing portion in (31 and /32 is, therefore, of no value.
,: I allow this to stand, because it is still possible as a statement of the facts : but on subjecting my collations to a final revision, when I considered the relationship between these two mss. more closely, and noted a number of places where a peculiar error in f32 could be accounted for by careless penmanship in j3\ I became more inclined to regard /31 as a direct (though poor) copy of B, and /?= a yet worse copy of /31. The hypothetical V/312 thus disappears altogether, and /J2 loses all the little value that it might have had.
INTRODUCTION. xxi
M is the second text in The Book of Lecun, occupying folios 264-312.14 It is a very peculiar text, having some interpolations (notably the story of Partholon's faithless wife Delgnat) not found in any other ancient version. yM was apparently imperfect: certainly the latter half of the "Roll of the Kings ' ' was missing from it, and s M was compelled to supply the deficiency by a makeshift adaptation of a version of the saga of the Borama Tribute, differing in some respects from that in the Book of Leinster. The important lacuna in the first section of LG, to be described later, was also a serious imperfection in yM. The problems connected with this copy must, however, be considered as they arise.
The copyist of M was working against time. Even when he was called away for a few minutes, a deputy (s2 M) took his place, and wrote during his absence. The text is, so to speak, punctuated by short groups of lines in the very dis- tinctive handwriting of s2 M, which alternate with the work of the main scribe (s1 M), changing sometimes even in the middle of a line. There is never any crowding or over- running, as would be the case if s2 M were a later scribe, filling in gaps that for any reason had been left by a pre- decessor. Presumably the writers of M could not obtain the use of yM for more time than wTas just sufficient for their work. As in such a case they would not have leisure to hunt for extraneous matter, it seems probable that the inter- polations and other peculiarities of M were all transferred to that ms. bodily from yM. It is further possible that they were deprived of it before they were able to copy the wThole of the Roll of the Kings, and that this, rather than a deficiency in yM, is the explanation of the peculiarity noticed in the preceding paragraph.
H is a fragment of five folios, 13' 5 X 9- 6 ins., with two columns on each page, and 56 lines of writing in the column. It is bound into a volume of miscellaneous fragments (H.2.15, no. 1, in T.C.D., Gwynn's Catalogue, 1316).
14 Throughout this edition the old foliation of the Book of Lecan, in the upper right-hand corner of the recto of each folio, is used for reference, instead of the more recent pagination in square brackets in the bottom margin.
xxii INTRODUCTION.
Pour of these folios belong to the first section of LG, and
contain matter nowhere else extant. The fifth has a version
of tlir end of the Nemed section, cognate with that in K,
and differing profoundly from every other text of this part
of the book. With this the H copy of LG appears to have
ended, the remainder of the folio being occupied with other
matter. At the end of this folio there is a colophon which
would seem to date the MS. to some time before 1252 (see
Gwynn's Catalogue, p. 91), but the interpretation of the note
is uncertain, and the date seems, if anything, too early for the
Jan image and especially the orthography of the ms. It is the
pages, not the folios, in this miscellany which are numbered
(as under, in pencil).15 The first portion of LG occupies
pp. 97-104, but the folios are not in their right order — they
should run thus, 103-104, 97-98, 101-102, 99-100. The
Nemed fragment is in the first column of page 67. About
one-third of the upper portion of folio 103-104 has been torn
away and lost.
In preparing for publication the three prose texts, I have chosen L, V, and B as the standard copies of R1, R2, and R3 respectively; and the book is printed as it appears in those mss., except where some other fills a lacuna, or corrects an obvious error. Numerals, as well as the ordinary abbrevia- tions and contractions, are expanded silently ; and the marking of long vowels, which is quite haphazard in the mss., is reduced to some sort of order (with horizontal strokes). In the tables of variants, and in places where a passage depends on one ms. only, the marking of prolongation (with accent-like strokes), is reproduced as in the original16 : except on the
5 There is an older, now obsolete, pagination in ink, which we may ignore.
18 In a few cases marks of prolongation, inserted before I decided to give without such interference passages depending on a single lis., have evaded deletion and appear on the printed page. I have allowed them to stand, to avoid needless proof-correction: but these apart, the absence of such marks will be a useful indication to the reader that the text before him survives in one ms. only. In English contexts, meticulous accentuation has not been considered necessary.
INTRODUCTION. xxiii
letter i, where the accent-like mark is usually nothing more than a distinguishing mark, like the dot in ordinary print. This is here left out. I also omit the punctum delens placed over "eclipsed" letters. By repeated collations an effort has been made to attain to the ideal of recording every variant, however trifling, presented by the manuscripts. The three mss. specified have been chosen, less because they are the best copies of their respective redactions than because they are the most complete. In fact, F probably is nearer to co R1 than L ; and the late mss. of R2, DER, often give readings preferable to those in V. M is admittedly more complete than B, but it has too many eccentric readings and interpolations to justify its being selected as the standard for R3.
The verse texts cannot be classified into "redactions," and they have to be treated in a different way. Of these I have endeavoured to construct a text, giving the reader as full an apparatus criticus of variant readings as possible, to enable him to test, and, it may be, to improve upon it. I have not, however, attempted to standardize the orthography, which would involve an interference with the testimony of the mss. that I felt would be too drastic. The text does not need to be treated like a Greek classical composition, where it is of the first importance to recover the exact words of the literary master who wrote it. The ideal which I have set before myself is the humbler one, of making it possible for a scholar to whom the mss. are inaccessible to reconstruct the text of any one of them, except, in the matter of abbreviations and marks of vowel prolongation. To have attempted to reproduce all of these would have more than doubled the bulk of the lists of variae lectiones, with no very apparent advantage. This is not to say that they are unimportant : on the contrary, I have gleaned some valuable hints on the affiliation of mss. from a comparison of such extraneous matters as the ornamentation of initial capital letters, and the abbreviations or other peculiarities of the caligraphy (or cacography) of individual words.
In this connexion it may be said here that it is especially interesting to compare the initial letters scattered throughout V with those in D. In V they are neatly drawn and coloured,
XX IV
INTRODUCTION.
o
55
o « fa
w w w
<
INTRODUCTION. xxv
though in design they show only too clearly that the art to which they belong was already moribund or dead : in D they are badly drawn, in an ink outline only. But it is obvious that they are the same designs. As D cannot possibly be a copy of V, it is clear that the two mss. derive their ornamentation, like their text, from a common original. This fact, which gives us a new criterion for determining the affinity of manuscripts, may be illustrated by the specimens here repro- duced.,163 from tracings made with the kind consent of the Council of the R.I.A.
O'Clery's Redaction.
K has already been published as far as the Boll of the Kings, and need not here be repeated. It is of little critical value, having been much manipulated editorially, but there is enough to show that its compiler had access to mss. no longer extant. He has a long version of the Partholon- Delgnat story, differing from that in M almost throughout : and his Nemed text, though it has affinities with the unique text in H, displays a like independence. The chief import- ance of this version is its rich glossarial matter.
The last degeneration of the text is found in two nineteenth century mss. in the British Museum (Egerton, 101, 105), which give us O'Clery's version with some of the difficulties cut out and easy bits of Keating 's History substituted.
The Contents of the Book.
The book in its present form, in all the principal
redactions, falls into ten separate and independent sections,
as under —
I. From the Creation to the Dispersal of the Nations. II. The Ancestors of the Gaedil. III-VII. The successive invasions of Cessair, Partholon, Nemed, the Fir Bolg, and the Tuatha De Danann. VIII. The invasion of the sons of Mil, i.e. of the Gaedil. IX. The Roll of the Kings before Christianity. X. The Roll of the Kings after Christianity.
""■'The small 5, to the. left, and the upper O, O. VI are from V; the lower O. O, 1? and the large ft are from the corresponding para- graphs in D. (Notice the broken lines and loose ends in the first of
C
xxvi INTRODUCTION.
—and notwithstanding the profound differences in detail between the different redactions, they agree in the main lines of their contents.
Prof. A. C. Clark, in a work to whose teaching I gladly acknowledge my indebtedness,17 has laid it down as a principle that "a text is like a traveller who goes from one inn to another, losing an article of luggage at each halt." By this he means, that the text sheds passages piecemeal as it is copied from manuscript to manuscript ; so that when delivered to its reader at the end of a succession of transcriptions, it is shorter — often considerably so — than when it left the author's hand, to run the gauntlet of scribal carelessness, sleepiness, incompetence, and laziness. Other things being equal, a longer text is, therefore, to be preferred, by the critical editor, to a shorter text. That this principle is sound when applied to classical literature no one who has made a careful study of Prof. Clark's work can doubt : but it breaks down when applied to Irish texts. In Ireland, the philomath, eager to air his stock of erudite inanity, early made his baleful appearance. To adapt the formula of Prof. Clark's analogy, an Irish text is like a traveller who, as he passes from inn to inn, stuffs his portmanteau with the china dogs, the waxen fruits, the crochet-work antimacassars, and all the other futilities with which his successive lodgings are adorned. It is quite possible that when LG was drawn up by its first compiler, it was not longer than what would fill three or four sheets of notepaper. It has grown to its present dimensions by an extraordinary accretion of glosses, interpolations, and other amplifications. Certainly the old canon of New Testa- ment criticism, brevior lectio praeferenda verbosiori, is here applicable !
It does not require any great insight to see that the book is in reality a combination of two originally independent documents. The block of material, sections III to VII, has been interpolated; sections II and VIII run on continuously, and were no doubt at one time in immediate connexion. If we cut the interpolated sections out, we find ourselves left
these letters, showing that the artist, though a fair draughtsman, did not understand1 the principles which reg-ulated designs such as this.) 17 The Descent of Manuscripts (Oxford, 1918), at p. 23.
INTRODUCTION.
XXVll
with a History of the Gaedil, based upon the history of the Children of Israel as it is set forth in the Old Testament, or (perhaps more probably) in some consecutive history para- phrased therefrom. The parallelism, which can be displayed in tabular form as below, is too close to be accidental.
Old Testament.
Lebor Gabala.
The biblical history from the Creation to the Sons of Noah is borrowed by the Irish historians : after which —
Shem is selected and his genealogy is followed out . . .
until we reach Terah and his son Abram, upon whose family the historian specializes . . .
down to the two wives and the numerous sons of Jacob.
A servitude in Egypt begins with a friendly invitation from an Egyptian king . . .
and the children of Israel are delivered by the adopted son of an Egyptian princess.
They wander for a long time, beset by enemies . . .
and sojourn at a mountain (Sinai) where they receive the doom that not they but their children shall reach the Promised Land; so they wander . . .
till their leader sees the Promised Land from the top of a mountain afar off.
Japhet is selected and genealogy is followed out . .
his
until we reach Nel and his son Gaedel, upon whose family the historian specializes . . .
down to the two wives and the numerous sons of Mil.
An oppression in Egypt begins with a friendly invitation from an Egyptian king . . .
and the children of Nel are delivered by the son-indaw of the Egyptian king. This deliverer meets and almost joins forces with his prototype Moses.18
They wander for a long time, beset by enemies . . .
and sojourn at a mountain (Riphi) where they receive the doom that not they but their children shall reach the Promised Land; so they wander . . .
till their leader sees the Promised Land from the top of a tower afar off.
18 Some portions of this incident are probably due to later inter- polation : it is in essence, however, at least as old as Nennius.
xxviii INTRODUCTION.
Old Testament — con. Lebor Gabala— con.
Ee dies: but his successor con- lie dies: but his successors con- ducts the people to a subjugation duct the people to a subjugation of the former inhabitants of of the former inhabitants of Canaan, amid circumstances of Ireland, amid circumstances of marvel and mystery . . . marvel and mystery . . .
and to a successful colonization of and to a successful colonization of the country. the country.
The history then concludes with a The history then concludes with a brief record of the successive brief record of the successive kings (beginning with a partition kings (beginning with a partition of the country), allotting in most of the country), allotting in most cases not more than a single para- cases not more than a single para- graph to individual kings. graph to individual kings.
We infer that the book originally described only a single "taking"— that of the Celtic Irish, to whom the author him- self belonged, and in whom he was chiefly interested. This is why GabCda, in the singular number, still remains in the title of the book : it is not the "Book of Takings of Ireland," but "The Book of The Taking."
The intruded matter (§§ III-VII) may have had some historical basis, but much of it partakes rather of the nature of a Theogonia : see the introductions prefixed to each of the sections, where their relation to mythology and history is discussed. We shall see later that this group of sections is itself capable of further analysis into separate component elements.
These different histories appear to have been in existence, and (even if their combination had already been effected) to have been still available in their separate form, when Nennius wrote his Historia Britonum, about the end of the eighth century.19 He must have been able to refer to a literary source of information about the Pre-Milesian invasions : but for the history of the Milesians themselves he apparently had
"Historia Nennii, ed. Petrie in Materials for the History of Great Britain, p. 5'6 : ed. Faral in La legende arthurienne (Paris, 1929), vol. iii, pp. 11, 12. For convenience I assume the historical existence of "Nennius": after all, someone must have written the book which bears his name. Also for convenience I call him by the old-established form of his name, rather than by the less familiar "Nemnius. "
INTRODUCTION. xxix
to depend on the oral information conveyed to him by persons described as peritissimi Scottorum (and condemned by some of his glossators with the words, nulla certa historic oriyinis Scottorum continetur). His abstract of the Pre-Milesian invasions is analysed at a later stage of our work; the only point about it which we need notice here is the single word "Damhoctor" 20 — which Nennius wrongly supposes to be a personal name, denoting the leader of one of the invading troops whose progeny was supposed to be still in Ireland at the time when Nennius wrote. But evidently it is nothing but the Irish for ' ' a company of eight persons ' ' : this misunderstood word is a valuable testimony that for this part of the history Nennius had a written text in the Irish language at his elbow.
The Relation between the Redactions.
The relationship existing between (a) the Manuscripts and (b) the Redactions has been discussed by Thurneysen21 and Van Hamel.22 I may say that I refrained from making a close study of these most important contributions to the subject till I had formed my own conclusions, so as to arrive at an independent opinion.
The very simple stemma of the mss. drawn up by Van Hamel (op. cit., p. 115) is hardly an adequate representation of their inter-relationship. The facts, which are more complex, must be allowed to develop themselves as we proceed : for the moment it is sufficient to advise readers of Van Hamel's most valuable study, that the Miniugud appendix of V (which Van Hamel calls "S") is not lost: and that A (which Van Hamel calls "Lee I") is not a daughter MS. of his S, but, if we may further develop the genealogical terminology, a sort of "niece." Two of the many proofs of this have been given already. Likewise, F cannot be considered a direct copy of L; in many places it
20 We need not trouble ourselves with the variant reading Clamhoctor adopted in Petrie's edition.
21 ' ' Zur irischen Handschrif ten und Litteraturdenkmalern, zweite Serie": Abhcmidl. der k. Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Gottingen, neue Folge, xiv, no. 3, 1913.
■- "On Lebor Gabala." Z.C.P. x (1915), p. 97.
xxx [INTRODUCTION.
preserves an older and purer text. Moreover, V (Van Eamel's S) is nut an original text, but a faulty copy; in some places even the late MSS., E and P, give preferable readings.
As to the Redactions, both Thurneysen and Van Hainel recognise the five different versions, R1, R2, R3, Min, and K, as they are here called. Thurneysen calls them A, B, C, B III, and D respectively (B II being the synchronistic matter appended to R2). Van Hainel uses a similar s\ mbolism — A, Ba, C, Bb, U. Their distribution of the .mss. among' the redactions is the same as mine, except that Thurneysen counts F among the mss. of C (=R3). This Van Hamel corrects, and Thurneysen would probably himself ado] it the correction after another examination of the text. But he is not without justification : for R3 is based upon a lost ms. of R1, here called *Q, and F is in many respects much more closely akin to *Q than to L, the ms. adopted by all of us as typical of R1.
Van Hamel follows Thurneysen 's notation to avoid con- fusion; but he objects to it on account of the secondary place which it assigns to the B-group (R2). This redaction is, in his opinion, of primary importance for the history of the text, bringing us nearer to the original form than any other. "B" he considers to be fuller than "A"; and, although he admits that neither is a copy of the other, he regards "A" as a mere abstract of the common original, omitting, as irrelevant, details which from the first were included in the text, and which "B" preserves.
But on the principle laid down above (p. xxvi), in dealing with an Irish text, the fuller it is of extraneous detail, the more likely it is to be remote from the original version.
As for .Min, appended to the three R2 mss. V, A, R, it is obviously cognate with "A" (R1) ; but it is equally obvious that it is neither a copy nor an abstract of "A," but an independent version. Apparently it represents a stage of the IV tradition slightly earlier than that contained in the extant mss. of R1 ; but it certainly belongs to that group.
What, then, is the relation between these versions? As I understand it, it is as follows: —
We start with a Liber Occupationis Ilibcrniae, a sort of
INTRODUCTION. xxxi
quasi-historical romance, with no backing either of history or tradition ; an artificial composition, professing to narrate the origin of the Gaeclil onward from the Creation of the World (or the Flood), their journeyings, and their settlement in Ih < ir ' ' promised land, ' ' Ireland. This production was a slavish copy, we might almost say a parody, of the Biblical story of the Children of Israel. The germ which suggested the idea to the writer was undoubtedly the passage in Orosius (I. 2. 81), wrongly understood as meaning that Ireland was first seen from Brigantia in Spain, where (ibid., § 71) .there was a very lofty watch-tower. This suggested a reminiscence of Moses, overlooking the Land of Promise from Mount Pisgah : and the author set himself to work out the parallel, forward and backward. Incidentally Orosius gave trouble to Irish topographers, ancient and modern, by speaking of an Irish river Scena, setting them on a hunt for a non-existent Inber Scene. As sc conventionally represents the sound of sh (compare the Vulgate Judges, xii, 6, where the Hebrew word shibboleth is rendered scibboleth), we must pronounce this word as Shena, and it is then easily recognised as Orosius' version of Sinann (genitive Sinna) or "Shannon." Further, we must assume that this quasi-Israelite history was written in Latin.23
Next we must postulate a separate text, compounded out of a number of separate sagas (or rather a number of varieties of one saga), but with a much better claim to enshrine genuine traditional (though not necessarily his- torical) material. This document still existed as an inde- pendent entity in the time of Nennius — or, to be more exact, Nennius had access to a manuscript, possibly of some antiquity, which preserved it, or some of it, in its independent form. It was a brief treatise on the pre-Gaedilic inhabitants of Ireland : and as it contained the expression ddnih ochtair, "a troop of eight persons," which Nennius mistook for a proper name, it must have been written in Irish. It does not
23 A clear proof of translation from Latin is presented by some of the place-names, which have been transferred unintelligently into their Irish context in the accusative case. Thus in If 15'8, to cite but one of many examples, sech Albaniam . . . sech Ghothiam must have a Latin original behind them.
xxx ii INTRODUCTION.
appear to have contained the stories of Cessair and the other antediluvian colonists.
Liber Occupationis soon began to be taken seriously: and it was inevitable thai the small tract just mentioned should become combined with it, in order to make its historical record more complete. This changed its character, turning it into a history of Ireland, rather than a history of the people then dominant in the country. Nevertheless its title remained unchanged: it was still Liber Occupationis. The inter- polation spoilt the logical form of the history : for its readers, having at last after many vicissitudes reached Ireland, were now obliged to jump suddenly back to the beginning, both in time and in space, in order to follow out the second strand which had thus been interwoven with the narrative. But the earlier invasions were still of subordinate interest, and for a time were most likely differentiated by their language from the main current of the Latin story. If we could be sure that the opening paragraphs of Min have not been drastically compressed, the scanty notice there found of the earlier invasions would very closely resemble the form of this part of the book when it had reached this stage of the development.
At about the same time, the Cessair narrative (an old flood-myth mixed up with some Dindsenchas material) was committed to writing, but whether in Latin or in Irish is not very clear : presently it found a place in front of the inter- polation. See further the Introduction to that section.
The history of the text thereafter divided into two streams. Two schools of history, retaining its framework, each of them working independently of, and often at variance with, the other, added new material as they found it.
The next stage was inaugurated by translation from Latin into Irish. The first translation to be made wTas undoubtedly from the text underlying Min. The translator headed his work, very naturally, "An explanation of Liber Occu- pationis." By now the historical nature of the book was a fully accepted tradition: it was regarded as a true record of the past of Ireland and of her people: and in view of its importance ii was considered, desirable to make it accessible to students whose Latin was unequal to a study of the original text. The associated poems, at this stage not yet incor-
INTRODUCTION. xxxiii
porated with the written text, were of course in Irish from the first.
A generation or two later, the "A" text, with the additional material which had accumulated in the interval, was translated again (R1) ; as was also, now for the first time, the "B" text (R2).
This reconstruction explains all the phenomena completely :
(1) The parallel "Israel" and "Ireland" story.
(2) The short Nennius text, based on an original in Irish, enumerating the earlier invasions, but ignoring the Milesian colony.
(3) The mention of a single invasion in the title, though a large number of invasions are enumerated in the text.
(4) The general similarity of Min and R1, though the verbal differences forbid us to regard either as a copy of the other.
(5) The word mlniugud, "explanation" in the title of Min.
(6) The similarity of framework in R1 and R2, though the two texts are so profoundly different that they can never have had a common Irish original.
It may be further suggested that the Latin preface to Min, where a parallel is drawn between Ireland and Adam's Paradise, and where there are obvious reminiscences of Orosius, is actually the preface of the original Liber Occwpationis, at least in the form to which it had evolved at the time when the translation of Min was made. It was a preface, not an intrinsic part of the text: and subsequent translators passed it over altogether.
The next phase began when some owner of an R2 text, no longer extant, got hold of a copy of Min. Though R2 contains matter not in Min or R1, the contrary is also true : and R2 is especially unsatisfactory (from the point of view of a historian who wants to know everything) in the section con- taining the Roll of the Kings. I do not agree that this section, in its earliest form, is an addition to the original text. I believe that a germ of this record formed an essential part of the text from the first, and that it developed with the rest. The postulated scholar sought to remedy the defects of his version by appending an abbreviated version of Min to his copy of R2. Where Min contained matter already in R2, he left it out, merely writing ut supra dixi or the like : this is enough to show that Min, as we have it, is not independent
d
XXXIV
INTRODUCTION.
of the text to which it is appended. The MS. to which this addition was made we may call \/A AR. There is no evidence thai either E or I) was within its family, or ever possessed this supplementary appendix.
II3 is the pastepot - and - scissors work of a man who anticipated the systematizing labour of O Cleirigh. Vexed at the discrepancies between the twro traditions, and having a considerable library at his disposal, he took a text of R1 (*Q) and wrote it out with many interpolations, partly derived from R2 (*W), partly from other sources. As we shall see, his MS. of R1 was imperfect; it had lost the first page, as well as the Partholon and Nemed sections.
K is also an artificial re-handling of the text. The biblical introduction is, of set purpose, swept away, and the successive invasions are arranged in a more logical order. This redaction is based on R2 (D), though it shows some affinities with M; but the compiler certainly used a different copy of R3, no longer extant, and he took arbitrary liberties with the text. There are many genealogical and other inter- polations from sources outside the tradition.
It is my pleasant duty to express my acknowledge- ments to the Librarians and other officials of the Libraries in which the mss. are preserved, for unfailing help and courtesy : to Professors Bergin and Eoin Mac Neill, Dr. R. I. Best, the Rev. Paul Grosjean, s.jv Dr. Myles Dillon, and Miss M. Joynt, for permitting me to consult them on various linguistic and other questions that arose during the progress of the work; to Professor R. W. Ditchburn, Trinity College, Dublin, for his unfailing interest and patience in the trouble- some task of photographing illegible passages ; to the lamented Provost M. R. James of Eton College, and to the Venerable Archdeacon Seymour, for valuable help in some of the questions on Apocrypha which arose in the criticism of the Biblical prolegomena in Part I ; and to the Very Rev. Canon Boylan, litt.d., for his great kindness in putting at my service a copy of the Genesis volume of that magnificent monument of scholarship and of typography, the Vatican edition of the Vulgate text of the Bible.
SECTION I.
From the Creation to the Dispersal of the Nations.
Introduction.
In accordance with the artificial scheme of Liber Occu- pationis, the history of the world from the Creation to the Tower of Babel is first recapitulated. The original form of the text was probably something like this : —
"In the beginning God made heaven and earth. He gave the bailiffry of Heaven to Lucifer, of earth to Adam. Lucifer sinned and was cast into Hell. He was envious of Adam, for he was assured that Adam would take his place in Heaven. Where- upon he came and tempted Eve to sin, and Adam was driven out of Paradise. The children of Adam sinned thereafter, in that Cain slew Abel. Seth, the third son of Adam, is the ancestor of all the men of the world, for the Flood drowned the whole seed of Adam except Noah and his three sons, Shem, Ham, Japhet. Shem settled in Asia, Ham in Africa, Japhet in Europe. We Gaedil are descended from Japhet."
As we read the text in its present form, and compare the divergent versions, we realise that everything not contained in this bald summary must be a glossarial accretion.
This summary was drawn up before the Vulgate text of the Old Testament had become familiar in Ireland : certainly not later than the eighth century. The Biblical quotations are from an earlier text, as is shown in detail below, in the notes appended to each paragraph. The abbreviator of Min left out the Biblical portion of that version, so that it is lost to us : but it is still possible to recover something of the history of its evolution. We may safely presume that an early intrusion was ff 2 (in the form of a bare list of the works of Creation), fl 5 entered later; ff 6 was at first shorter than it is now ; and the genealogical matter ]\ 7-10 developed
l.g. — vol. i. B
2 SECTION I.
gradually from very small beginnings. The document upon which two of the interpolations in fl 9 are based was early in existence, but they did not enter the text till a late stage of its formation.
Besides LF, the extant mss. of R1, I recognise two im- portant mss., now lost, which have had an influence on the development of the text, These are *Q, *X. Both of these were good copies : *X, I am inclined to think, on the whole the better of the two. *Q began with a highly ornate initial IN, which occupied a large part of the front page : and the lettering of the remainder of the page, if not of the folio, was of extra large size. Some reminiscences of this arrange- ment, which may be ultimately derived from *Q, appear in VP. LB also have the large initial IN, and M has got large letters in its first column : but as will appear presently, these latter are not survivals of the *Q tradition. *Q existed in a mutilated form down to the time of oo R3, and it formed the chief foundation of his work.
The history of the mutilation is very interesting. It is evident that a/R2 had lost its first folio. One of the owners of that ms., to repair the deficiency, tore out and appropriated the first folio of *Q : this made possible the paheographical influence suggested in the preceding paragraph. By a chance, this produced continuous sense with the beginning of the second folio of V R2 ; though the sense is absurd. Only in this way can we explain the fact that R1 and R2 are practically identical for the first few paragraphs, and then, with startling suddenness, fly apart rather than diverge, and never again have a paragraph in common. Even the verse- extracts are often set in different contexts. It also explains the further significant fact that at the point where the texts part company, a statement is made in R2, inconsistent with everything that follows, to the effect that the Flood was a punishment for the murder of Abel. This statement has been accidentally produced by the combination of the first half of a sentence at the bottom of the first folio of *Q with the second half of a sentence at the top of the second folio of \/R2.
The continuous use of *Q by oo R3 begins immediately after this mutilation, proving that *Q was actually the copy
INTRODUCTION. 3
which he used. We shall see presently that oo R3, in his turn, repaired the damage to *Q by tearing out the opening- folios of a translation of the Book of Genesis, and substituting it for the missing matter. When this act of pillage was performed, or subsequently, one of the Genesis folios was torn across : and this accident has made it possible, as is shown in the proper place, to arrive at some approximation to an idea of the size of the folios of *Q, and the amount of literary matter that would go upon each. Now, the first of these folios must have contained the matter at the beginning, common to the two redactions R1 R2 (in the present form of the latter) : and it is insufficient to fill one of the ordinary folios of *Q. We infer, therefore, that much space must have been expended upon a large initial, and in letters of an extra large size upon the opening page.
The importation of "Iofer Niger" into fl 4, derived from the Latin Life of St. Juliana, gives us another chronological hint. If the Old Latin Biblical excerpts suggest an eighth- century date at latest for the compilation, the name of the demon suggests a ninth-century date for the beginning of glossation, the date of the Juliana text being about 800 a.d. As Iofer Niger exists in L (corrupted), *Q (first folio, trans- ferred to R2) and *X, a ms. which underlies some glossarial matter in R2, he must have been found in yLF *X *Q. This manuscript, therefore, contained the full text as we have it, except for such interpolations as were afterwards incor- porated. (Though it will afterwards appear that *Q probably lacked the Partholon and Nemed sections.) F knows nothing of Iofer Niger; he must, therefore, have been still glossarial in yF and passed over by s F.
The history of the gloss in ff 1, of the Iofer Niger inter- polation in fl 4, and of the interpolation |f 5, as summarized in the notes on these passages, is all self-consistent. It shows that three stems branched off from yLF *X *Q, be- coming respectively the parents of L, *X, and F *Q, The F* Q tradition is slightly the oldest of the three, but the *X tradition is nearly as old, and in some cases preserves better readings; it is a pity that we have so little of this ms. F is a curious text, a mixture of L and *Q ; but though very closely cognate with *Q, it has too much in common with L
1
SECTION I.
to be divorced from it altogether. Though actually a later ms. than L, it preserves an older stage of the tradition, and has not travelled so far from it as L has done.
After the extant portion of the original form of R2 begins, the two redactions have nothing in common. This can be shown by a summary in parallel columns : —
R1. TT 1. Genesis I 1.
2. List of "Works of Creation.
3. Lucifer and Adam : revolt
of Angels.
4. Envy of Lucifer. The Fall.
5. Sentence on Adam.
6. Cain and Abel.
R2
Taken over into R2 with the first leaf of *Q.
7. Genealogy of Shem :
Flood mentioned.
8. Dispersal of Nations.
9. Genealogy of Noah. 10. Genealogy of Magog.
the II 11. The Flood.
12. Details of the Flood.
13. Effects of the Flood.
14. The Raven and the Dove.
15. Noah comes out of the Ark. Dispersal of Nations.
16. Genealogy of Gaedel Glas.
17. Chronology.
18. Nel goes to Egypt.
19. A poem on the foregoing
history.
It must surely be evident that the brief mention of the Flood in R1 is original, while the long and laboured paraphrase of the Biblical story in R2 is imported. The details of the genealogies are taken from different and mutually contra- dictory sources. Without doubt, the lost beginning of R2 differed in a like degree from the first six paragraphs of R1 which were substituted for it : we can have no direct knowledge of what it may have contained, but we may be absolutely certain that it emphasized the divine command on the Sethites to abstain from intermarriage with the Cainites, and that this command, and the disobedience of it by the Sethites, came after the R2 narrative of the death of Abel, and was the original antecedent to the Flood narrative — not improbably as we have it in fl 53, which may come, either from Sex Aetates Mundi, or from R2 through *Z.
INTRODUCTION. 5
The redaction R3 is not, like R1 and R2, an independent work. It is essentially a composite, based on the two pre- ceding redactions. The foundation of it is R1, but it is swelled with large interpolations from R2 and from other sources.
The manuscript of R1 used by co R3 was unquestionably *Q, after it had suffered the loss of its first leaf. For the text of R1 as it appears in R3 begins, as we have said above, immediately after the lacuna thus caused. To supply the deficiency, oo R3 tore the opening leaves out of an Irish trans- lation of the Book of Genesis,1 thereby killing the translation, of which no other copy survives, and which would have been of enormous linguistic value. This, with its extensive inter- polated glosses, occupies Iffl 20-85. The relation between the remainder of R3, § I, and the previous redactions is set forth in the following table : —
Source.
Poem no. V.
R\ An appended interpolation
from Comestor 's Historia
Scholastica. R1. If 7. R1. TT 8- Interpolation from Sex
Aetates Mundi. Apparently a different but parallel
text. Sex Aetates Mundi. W. f8. R2. f 15. R\ IT 9. Sex Aetates Mundi, with many
interpolations from Isidore,
etc. Comestor.
Some other source, not identified. R1. H9 (end). R1. H 10 much interpolated.
The paragraphs marked with an asterisk, if read con- tinuously (omitting interpolations) will give the text of this part of R1 as it appeared in *Q.
*If not of the whole Old Testament, or even the whole Bible.
igraph. |
Found in MSS |
86 |
H |
87 |
MH |
*88 |
BMH |
*89 |
BMH |
90 |
H |
91 |
H |
*92 |
BMH |
93 |
H |
*94 |
BMH |
95 |
H |
96 |
H |
97 |
H |
*98 |
BMH |
*99, 100 |
BMH |
6 SECTION I.
The Biblical Excerpt.
Reviewing the Biblical excerpt, and its relation to the text as a whole, we naturally ask first if it was prepared ad hoc by the compiler of R3, or borrowed by him from some trans- lation previously in existence. To this question there can be but one reasonable answer. Much of the matter in the Biblical chapters was altogether irrelevant to the purpose of oo R3 : a short abstract, such as is given by R\ would have served him as well, or better. The translator expended much trouble over his work ; the evidence that he collated the Greek Septuagint with the Vulgate text cannot be set aside; to do this merely as a preface to a historical tract relating to Ireland would involve a heavy expenditure of time, trouble, and valuable parchment. Collation of texts in the Middle Ages, without the easily read printed page, and without alphabetical indexes and other apparatus, would have been a much more formidable task than it is to-day. Certainly the scribes who have transmitted R3 appear to have found much of this preliminary matter wearisome and out of place, as is shown by the reduction of the frequent repetitions of the original (as, for example, I 25, and the list of creatures preserved in the Ark). Another point is the difference in literary style that we feel between the Biblical excerpt and its present context. The translator has certain peculiar mannerisms, to which attention is drawn in the critical notes, and which give him an individuality.
On the other hand, it would be so easy to tear from another MS. the pages required, that we are obliged to accuse co R3 of having committed this crime, to save himself the trouble of otherwise replacing the missing first page of the exemplar before him.
Some examination of the nature of the text wThich formed the basis of the translator's work now becomes necessary.
For purposes of reference we shall denote the Latin ms. which lay before the translator by the symbol A. (New Testament critics have appropriated this symbol to the ninth- century Greco-Latin Codex Sangallensis ; but as we shall here have no occasion to refer to that ms., there will be no con- sequent inconvenience.) A was certainly a copy of the Vulgate ; from the translation it is possible to restore some of its readings with sufficient assurance to determine its
INTRODUCTION. 7
affinities. The chief passages in which A deviated from the Standard Text, as constructed in the Vatican Variorum edition, are enumerated below, with a list of the mss. (not including early printed texts and editions) agreeing with it:
I 2. erant: GGAHXncD2(,BA<I>v*©AM**BDF20SM
T 2. Domini: AHB
I 4. Dens: G^TM^aszgvp^m
I 4. atenebris: GCAHnCD20BT3>BA2ZGVPP2tfF2M0M
I 12. facientem: AHriCDQS
I 14. et: CXnCD2OM$vp®AMP*BDF2OSJM
I 1 6. omit ut praeesset : 2M
I 18. atenebris: AHIICI)<I>VP2
I 20. reptilia : C4>RAZG
I 21. motabilem: C2AL2HnD*20BTM<J>BAzGsn'02®AM
px^BDFMQSJM
I 26. omit que : CXncr>2TOM0*F*
II 2. sexto: 2T2*F*
II 2. Deus: O
II 4. sunt: AL2HX2<DV*BUF
II 11. Fison: CAHX2T0MB
III 8. omit Dei: X
III 9. ins. Adam : CX®am
III 11. ins. Deus : C*AH2TOM*F2fiJ
III 20. Eua: CALXnD2TOMBT^RAZGVPo©AM2p^DMfiSJM
IV 1. Euam: CALIIXnD2TOMBT4>BAzGVF®AM*DMOSJ IV 15. Cain in signum : AB2OMB<S>RAZGVPP2OS2M IV 17. iws.filium nomine: X2T0M VI 8. Deo: 5MTM4>RA(-VP®M**M VII 17. ins. xl noctibus : AhX2t2P*m«S2M
V1IL 7. ins. non: AHX2nC2D220M2BA2$Z2V2Pp#^MOSJM
V~III 17. ins. -que: (jCAHX2T0Mfis XI 20. Saruch: X2TO**BDFMOS
XI 22. Nachor : ALHXnc2°T2M<i>BAZ2GVPP*BDFMOsJM XI 26. Nachor: AL«nD220T2M2#BAZGVPP*BDPMfiSJM XI 26. Aram: AK*mOm
In the above and the following tables, an asterisk denotes a reading abolished by a corrector : these must be reckoned,
- For details about the manuscripts indicated by the symbols, reference must be made to the Vatican edition; it may be said, how- ever, that the large letters denote families, the small letters individual MSS.
8
SECTION I.
for they presumably belonged to the original tradition of the family to which the ms. belonged. Readings denoted by 0), (2) are corrections prima maim and secunda maim. Though they are noted here, they are not taken into account in classifying the mss. for our present purpose. Some of the above readings may possibly be due to LXX influence. Dis- regarding, however, this possibility for the moment, we now arrange the Vulgate mss. in the order of their frequency in the foregoing table, as follows : —
2° 15+ 1* |
<£>R 10 |
C 7 + 1* (l2) |
GG 4 |
AH 15 |
<£G 10 |
no 7 (i2) |
M 3 (1U2) |
X 13 (22) |
B 9 |
*B 7 |
0 3 (l2) |
<f>v 12+ 1* (l2) |
#D 9 |
P 6 + 1* (:i2) |
A 2 (Is) |
^M 12 |
no 8 + 1* (22) |
^F 5 + 2* (42) |
®G 0 |
fts 11 (22) |
$A8}1* (1») |
T 6 (22) |
©H 0 |
2M 11 (1*) |
2T 8 (22) |
©^ 6 |
G 0 |
$p 11 |
3>z 8 (22) |
®M 4 + 2* (l2) |
|
n^ n |
I2J 8 |
AL 4 (22) |
The standard text of the Vatican editors is based chiefly upon three important mss., lettered 0, A, G : and it is a logical consequence that in a list of deviations from the Standard Text in any other ms., the number of agreements with these three copies should come at the bottom of the list.
X°, which heads the list, is a Madrid ms., of the eleventh century. AH, which runs it close, is a twelfth-century ms., also at Madrid. The "cousin" of the latter, AL, though derived from a common source, is two centuries earlier, but evidently is much less closely related to A. If now we reckon these mss. by families (counting in the starred readings) we shall find, as the average of agreements,
35 Agreements with the 2 group J (16 + 11 + 8) = — = 11|
A group \ (15 + 4)
2 2
30 fl group \ (11 + 11 + 8) = — = 10
Y group 1(13 + 9 + 7 + 7) = — = 9
4
0 group \ (6 + 6)
12
= T= 3
INTRODUCTION. 9
This may be a rough-and-ready method of reckoning, but it gives us a definite and apparently satisfactory result. We may leave the O group out of account; it consists of three mss. of French origin, now at Paris, and of the 13-14 century : later, therefore, than any probable date for A. The * group is Italian, entirely 12th century — again rather late to have served as the model for the Irish text. The % and A groups are both Spanish : and we infer that A was also a ms. of Spanish origin.
But the translator did not adhere slavishly to the Latin text before him. He had access to, and could use, a copy of the Septuagint; and the influence of this is shown by the following readings : —
I 11. Insert 6 6*6%
I 22. do.
I 26. do.
I 29. Tot? TreTeii'ots in plural II 1 . rrj CKTrj II 8. ku( rjKOvaav
II 10, 13. Similarities indicated in the notes.
Ill 15. Kal e\6pav
III 22. 6 6*6%
IV 8. 8l*\6u)fJL*f *l% TO TTfBlOV
IV 9. 6 6*6%
V The ages of the Patriarchs in this chapter.
VII 1. irp6% Nw£
VII .3. The insertion of the clean and unclean birds.
VII 6. Nwe • 6 KaTa/<Auo_/i.os
VII 16. Klf$Z>TOV
VIII 1. Kal ... 6 6*6%
Some of these, taken by themselves, are not very im- pressive : but their evidence is cumulative, and the reading in VII 3 is conclusive. The figures in chapter V are less so, for they could have come from Isidore (Etym. V. 39) : but the unequivocal cases of reference to the Septuagint strengthen the probability of the use of this authority, even where an alternative source is possible.
10 SECTION I.
It i$ at least a coincidence that this combination of a knowledge of Greek, with some Spanish connexion, meets us again, in the North of Ireland. In the cemetery which contains the few remaining relics of the Monastery of St. Mura at Fahan, Co. Donegal, there is a large slab, bearing beautifully-designed interlacing crosses on each face. On one side there is a pair of human figures, standing with the cross-stem between them, and bearing upon their vesture an Irish inscription which does not here concern us. On the edge there is an inscription in Greek uncials —
AOHA KAI TIME (sic) IIATPI KAI YIO KAI IINEYMATI AITO
" Glory and Honour to Father and to Son and to Holy Spirit."
This is the first versicle of the "Gloria Patri, " in a Spanish form, though in the Greek language. The formula "Glory and Honour," without the second versicle (sicut erat, etc.), was sanctioned by the Council of Toledo, and adopted in the Mozarabic liturgy. Thus we find someone who was at least a superficial Greek scholar, cutting, on an Irish tomb- stone, a Spanish liturgical formula, in letters resembling those of a Greek uncial ms. : and someone else translating into Irish a Biblical text from a Spanish copy, and able to check his work with a copy of the Septuagint. We have no authority to go further, or to suppose that the translation was actually executed in Fahan. This is not impossible, though the translation could hardly be as old as the slab. But in any case the number of uncial mss. of the Septuagint available in Ireland can never have been very large.
It is for us a fortunate circumstance that the matter of Genesis XI 10-32 is misplaced in our text, being inserted between the verses VIII 19 and 20. There is no logical reason for this : the cause must have been mechanical, and due to the misplacement of a loose folio.
It follows that the matter wrhich now comes after these verses was contained in a folio which ran from VIII 20 to XI 9. As we do not possess the translation in its original form — there are both omissions and interpolations — a count of words would lead us to wrong conclusions about the size of the folios, or the extent of the matter upon each. But a
INTRODUCTION. 11
count of the corresponding words in the Vulgate text will enable us to estimate this with tolerable accuracy. If I have counted aright,
A. Genesis VIII 20-IX 27 in the Vulgate text contains 503 words.
B. „ IX 28-X 31 „ „ „ „ „ 382 „
C. „ X 32-XI 9 „ „ „ „ „ 170 „
B is missing from the translation as we have it, but it must have been there originally. Its omission would leave C, the Tower of Babel story, as a small detached narrative, too short for a folio of any reasonable size. It is easy to believe that the LG copyists, who pared away the redundancies of the Flood story, would have "jibbed" at the task of transcribing the tiresome list of incomprehensible names in the "Table of Nations" (Genesis X), which has nothing to do with the Taking of Ireland, and would use up much costly parchment.
ABC together amount to 1,055 words. If the trans- lation of this passage was written upon one folio of vellum, with two columns on each page, there would be the equivalent of about 26-1 words in each column : or what would fill about 35 out of the 55-60 lines in a column of the Book of Ballymote.
I have not counted words back to the beginning of Genesis. But taking a printed edition, not complicated with inter- spersed references, and omitting the chapter headings, I find that
Genesis I 1-VIII 19 covers 70| inches of type. Genesis VIII 20-XI 9 „ 22£ „ „ „
The number of words in this printed copy is not evenly distributed : one column in Chapter III, in which the verses are long, contains 252 words, and another, in Chapter V, of exactly the same spacial length, contains 232 words. There is thus a sufficient margin of possible adjustment to permit us to say that the material preceding VIII 19 could have been written on three folios similar to that which we have postulated for VIII 20-XI 9. We infer from this that the matter appropriated by oo R3 covered a complete gathering of four folios, or two diplomas (pairs of conjugate folios), and
12 SECTION I.
the detached first folio of the next gathering. When a man carries off such a gathering and one extra folio, nothing is more natural for him to do than to slip the loose leaf into the gathering, to prevent it from being lost : and if its proper place is just after the last folio of the gathering, he will slip it in just before that folio. And this is exactly what he has done, to the confusion of his copyists.
Numbering the five folios of this Biblical MS. 1, 2, 3, 5, 4, in the order in which they ultimately became incorporated in Rf, we see that 4 must have ended with the words3 Hae sunt generationes Sem (XI 10), which, however, were dropped by the copyists, as they had no meaning in their new context. 5 a began Sem erat centum annorum (ff 69) and ran on to ueneruntque usque Haran et habitauerunt ibi (XI 31). This is a little longer than the allowance of 264 words to the column ; but the matter of these verses contains many numerals and stereotyped repetitions, which could be much abbreviated : and in any case column (3 must have begun with (XI 32), Et facti sunt dies Thare. For we must now notice the further fact, that the lower part of folio 5 was torn away (whether in the original act of theft or by some later accident cannot be ascertained, and is of trifling importance). This tear ran upwards obliquely, from the bottom inner edge to the top outer edge. It carried away from the first column (5 a) parts of all the verses after XI 26, and it left nothing intact in the second column except this one verse, XI 32. The copyists could not, or at least made no attempt to, extract any sense from the remaining fragments of the mutilated lines; and thus it comes about that the misplaced extract from Chapter XI, in fl 77, jumps from v. 26 to v. 32, and then stops abruptly. The verso of the folio must have con- tained, in the first column, a few lines of the story of Abraham hiding his relationship to Sarah in Egypt, and in the vsecond column the end of the story of Lot in Sodom and the be- ginning of the Battle of the Four Kings with the Five. These fragments were so utterly disconnected with the matter in hand, and with each other, that the copyists left them out.
3 Meaning, of course, the Irish translation of these words ; and similarly for the other quotations in this paragraph.
INTRODUCTION. 13
This reconstruction of the original form of the Biblical translation is more than a mere curiosity; for as it was possible to attach the Biblical folios to *Q, we may infer that the sizes of the two manuscripts were much about the same. And every scrap of information that we can discover about *Q is of importance, for the history of R3.
The Chasm in B, M.
B has lost, as already stated, its folio 9, beginning after the words ocus ro hoslaicit (Gen. Ill 7, ]\ 32), and extending to U 138 in § II. This mutilation took place after 8 and V/?1/?2 were copied; and a count of words shows that the matter with which they fill this gap would exactly cover a leaf of B. Therefore one folio has been lost, and no more, at this place; a conclusion which accords with the old pagination.
The fragment H almost exactly fills the gap. If the top of the first leaf of this fragment had not been torn away, it would have filled it with suspicious exactness. Suspicious, because it suggests the deduction that the leaves of H were actually torn, from the MS. to which they belonged, by an owner of B, anxious to make his own property complete. They certainly present the appearance of having been pulled out violently.4
But the matter in H is considerably longer than what would fill a folio of B, and it contains an extensive passage ignored by the derivatives of B. We infer that there was a lacuna in yB, due to the loss of leaves in an ancestral ms., of which s B was unconscious.
When we look up M at this place we find a similar lacuna. It is less extensive ; there is some matter common to M and IT but unknown to B. Unlike s B, s M was aware of the defect in his exemplar, and he left a half column blank in the hope,
4 It is likely that copies of this lengthy and important text were few, and were much in demand : and that Irish book-collectors were not any more conscientious than the rest of the fraternity. The total disappearance of the copy in Lebor na Huidri (ante, p. xxi) was. probably the result of someone having been left for a few moments, alone with that precious codex.
14
SECTION I.
never to be fulfilled, of finding a more perfect copy from which to supply the missing matter.
We may represent the relative lengths of the missing portion in tabular form thus: let a represent the quantity of matter surviving in M, between the beginning of the lacuna in B and the beginning of the lacuna in M. Then we have —
i. A length of a, absent in B, present in M, present in H. ii. A length of 5a, absent in B, absent in M, present in H. iii. A length of 2a, absent in B, present in M, present in H.
The third of these sections is the poem Athair catch, and a few lines intervening between it and the resumption of B.
The explanation is perfectly simple. B, M, H all derive from mss. copied independently from an ancestor, yBMH. There can, therefore, be no common ancestor of any two of these mss. excluding the third : this is an assured fact of fundamental importance in the criticism of the mss. of R3. The first of the ancestral mss. to be copied was oo H, the second oo M, the third oo B. Between the transcribing of the first and last of these a gathering of four diplomas dis- appeared from yBMH piecemeal. Each folio of yBMH contained matter equal in quantity to a. Here is a diagram of the gathering —
r~
The whole gathering was intact when oo H was copied. Then the diplomas 4-5, 3-6, as well as folio 2 disappeared ; after which oo M was copied. Folio 7 was now loose : it contained the beginning of Athair cdich, which must have begun at the top of folio 7 recto and ended near the end of folio 8 verso. There are 57 quatrains in this poem, so that the folios of yBMH must have been quite small : each page
INTRODUCTION. 15
could not have held more than 15 quatrains. Folio 7, as well as the last diploma 1-8, disappeared before oo B was copied.
The impression which a study of the language of the translation leaves is that the latter is not much earlier than R3, with which it is incorporated. Like the O'Clerys and the Four Masters, the translator affects an archaistic style, which he presumably thought was more consistent with the dignity of the text on which he was working. His language, when he is natural, is Middle Irish ; his archaisms are Wardour-street revivals rather than survivals.- He uses a deponent form for the verb whenever he remembers to do so. He invents forms like bar?iimdaigther, fl 24, which he has for- gotten in fl 25, where we find "dentar bar n-imdugad." It is more than probable that the MS. which oo R3 mutilated was actually the autograph of the translation, and that this was, as we have said, killed by the transaction.
It is clear that the glossators had no idea that they were dealing with a Scriptural text. One of them had to reassure himself that the reference to the Holy Spirit in fl 20 is not profane: and another (fl 30 y2) quotes "Holy Scripture" to corroborate the passage from Holy Scripture upon which he is working !
16 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
6
SECTION I. First Redaction.
(L 1 a 1 : F 1 a 1) («)
1. In principio fecit Deus celum et terram, .i. ^oringne Dia nem i talmain ar tfis, X i ni 2fil tossach X' na forcend ||' fair-3seom 4fein ||.
2. xDoringne chetns in maiss 2nem-chruthaig, i soillsi aingel, X isin 3cetna 4Domnnch ||. 5Doringne
firmament \ isin Luan ||. 7Doringni 8talmain i muire X 9sin Mairt ||. 10Doringni grein i esca i X1renna Nime t 12sin Cetain ||. "Doringni enlaithe $ ind aeoir || i 14tonnaitecha $ in mara || t 15sin Dardain ||. 16Doringni anmanna $ in talman || 17archena, i Adam do 18follom- nacht foraib, J 19isind Aine ||. Ro chnmsain larum t Dia || $ 20issin tSathnrn || 21do foirbthingud dnla nuaT % i ni 6 18Iollomnacht 22itir ||.
3. Dobert | ^arsain || 2archinnchecht Nime do 3Lncifiur, co 4noi ngradaib angel Nime. Dobert 5archinnchecht talman do Adam J i do 6Ena cona claind ||. 7Imromadar J larom || Lucifinr (sic) 8conid bni ( ?) toesech trln sluaig angel. 9Rothimmarc ( ?) in Ri e co trian in sliiaig angel leis i nlfrinn; i asbert Dia
1. All variants from F unless otherwise stated. ' dorindi 2 fuil tosach 3 siuni 4 fein added sec. man L
2. 1 dorigne cetus 2 n-ecruthaig : above very faint traces of a gloss ne?nfaics(ide) F 3 om. 4 -nach 5 dorigne 6neam .i. firmamaind isan ' dorigne : this word is abbreviated to D in the following sentences in L 8talam -\ muir 9isan F; sin Mairt om. and ins. cL 10 dorigne grian -] esga " randa 12 isin Cedain F : om. and ins. cL 13 dorigne enlaithi " tondaitheacha 15 isa Dardain F: om. and ins. cL 16 dorigne "at first written chena, and the ar monogram squeezed in "before it sec. man. F
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 17
First Reduction
1. In principio fecit Deus caelum et terram, i.e., God made Heaven and Earth at the first, [and He Himself hath no beginning nor ending].
2. He made first the formless mass, and the light of angels, [on the first Sunday]. He made Firmament [on the Monday]. He made earth and seas [on the Tuesday]. He made sun and moon and the stars of Heaven [on the Wednesday]. He made birds [of the air] and reptiles [of the sea on the Thursday]. He made beasts [of the earth] in general, and Adam to rule over them, [on the Friday]. Thereafter God rested [on the Saturday] from the accomplishment of a new Creation, [but by no means from its govern- ance] .
3. [Thereafter] He gave the bailiffry of Heaven to Lucifer, with the nine orders of the Angels of Heaven. He gave the bailiffry of Earth to Adam [and to Eve, with her progeny]. [Thereafter] Lucifer sinned, so that he was leader of a third of the host of angels. The King confined him with a third of the host of
18 follam- (bis) 19 dia Hainediden, et ro 20 isan tSatharnn 21 o oipriugad 22 ins. sec. man. in small capital letters in L marg. In the text in *Q : om F
3. 1 iarsin 2 aircinchacht 3 Luidsifir 4 nai 5 aircindacht
s Eaba > ' imroimadar 8 obscure in both L and F : in F looks
lilce for nim cona sluag angel leis .i. na demna 9 cor hindarbad and om. co trian sluaig angel
(a) For the text of *Q see Second and Third Redactions. L.G.— VOL. I. 0
18 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
fri muintir Nime : J Dlumsach inti Lucifer ||, 10uenite "ut confundamus consilium eius.
4. Ro formtig Hra Lucifer fri Adam, ar derb lais isse no bertha, linad Nime tar a eisi, do. Conid aire sin doluid 2t Iofer Niger || 3i ndeilb in athrach, 4co ro aslacht imarbus for J Adam i || 5Eua, im "thumailt 7ind ubuill don chrund ergartha. 8Conid aire sin ro "innarbbad Adam a Pardus 10hi talmain coitchind.
5. aDolluid in Comdiu cucca iarsain, i atbert fri Adam .i. 2Terra es et in Herram ibis t -i- Do thalmain 4don- ringned i 5hi talmain raga ||. In G sudor e uultus tui comedes 7panem tuum | .i. Ni 8fuigbe sasam cen8 saethar ||. 9Asbert dana frisin mnai .i. Cum 10dolore et gemitu ^paries filios tuos 12et filias tuas X -1- 13bid co ngalar . . . dolulaing (?) tuisema do maccn ||.
L
6. Ro immarbaigestar eland Adaim f larom || .i. sinser mac (n)Adaim, .i. Cain miscadach, ro marb a derbrathair Aibel [ . . tria formud(?)] i tria saint, lasin ( ?) cnaim ehamaill, mar adberat eolaig .... tinnscnadar ( ?) fingail in domain.
F
Iarsin tra do feallsad clann Adaim for uail i dimus i imarbus i fingal, .i. Cain mac Adaim in sinser, ro marb-sidi a derbratair .i. Abel tria saint i formad, co fid cnama camaill. $ Con aire sin dorad Dia dilinn tarsin n-uili doman. I
illegible in F: apparently et dixit Deus is inserted before uenite
et
4. 'iarsin 2 Iarngir L om. Iofer Niger F 3 a neilb nathrach
1 coreaslaig b for Eba 6 thorn- 7 intl ubaill 8 con de sin
"hinarbad 10isin
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS.
19
angels in his company, in Hell. And God said unto the Folk of Heaven : [Haughty is this Lucifer], uenite ut confundamus consilium eius.
4. Thereafter Lucifer had envy against Adam, for he was assured that this would be given him (Adam), the filling of Heaven in his (Lucifer's) room. Where- fore he [Iofer Niger] came in the form of the serpent, and persuaded [Adam and] Eve to sin, in the matter of eating of the apple from the forbidden tree. Wherefore Adam was expelled from Paradise into common earth.
5. Thereafter the Lord came to them, and He said unto Adam, Terra es et in terram ibis [i.e., of earth was he made and into earth shall he go]. In sudore uultus tui comedes panem, tuum [i.e., he shall not obtain satisfaction without labour]. He said further unto the woman: Cum dolore et gemitu paries filios tuos et filias tuas [i.e., it shall be with . . . insufferable pain that thou shalt bring forth thy sons].
6. The progeny of Adam sinned [thereafter] , namely, the elder of the sons of Adam, Cain the accursed, who slew his brother Abel . . . (through his jealousy?) and through his greed, with the bone of a camel, as learned men say. (In this manner ?) began the kin-murders of the world.
But thereafter the pro- geny of Adam wrought treachery, by way of pride, of haughtiness, of sin, of kin-murder — Cain son of Adam, the elder, he slew his brother Abel through his greed and his jealousy, with the shaft of a camel- bone. [And therefore God brought a Flood over the whole earth] .
5. 1 doluid in Coimdi chuca iarsin i adbert
4 dorignid
6 sudoire
panam
2 tearra 3 tearaim
8-8 f uigbed biad
can
9 adbert dono
10 doloire
pcmras
12 om. et
filias tuas
13 bid congneid i galar do'fuisema do claindi
20 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
7. aSeth imorro, in tres mac 2Adaim 3J aca mbai eland i || is 4nata atiat fir 5in domuin uile :
y1 .i. Noe mac 6Laimiach meic Mathusali meic 7Henoc meic 8Iared meic Malalel meic 9Cainan meic Enos meic 10Seth meic Adaim :
iiair is e Noe in tAdam tanisi, cusa mbertar fir domain "uile. 12Uair ro baid in 13dlliu sil Adaim 14uile, acht Noe cona tii macaib, .i. Sem, Cham, Iafet, acus a cethri mnaa .i. Cobba i Olla i Oliba i Olibana.
y2 150 dorat larom Dia dilind darsin uile ndomuin, ni therna di doenib in domuin on dilind acht mad lucht na hairce sin .i. Noe cona tri maccaib, i ben Noe, i mnaa a
mac.15
Ut dixit poeta,
Sluag ndd chide cua-chel ....
8. aSem didiu ro gob i nAsia, Cham i nAfraic lafeth i nEoraip —
Sem rogab i n-Aisia n-ait . . .
Tricha mac 2batar ac Sem, im 3Arfacsad, im Asur, 4i im Persius. Tricha 5mac 6ac Cam, im Chus 7i im Chanan.7 A coic dec imorro oc lafeth, im Dannai, im Gregus, im 8Hispainius, im 9Goimarus.
10No is moirfeisir ar fichid do macaib badar ic Sem.
7. ' Beth mac Adaim 2 airigda da bi ac Adam 3 this gloss
am. F 4uad ataid 5 om. in: domain uili 6 Lamiach
'Enog 8Iareth 8 Cainain 10 Seith "uili 12ardo " dili 14 uili ,5"15 om. F, and substitute Imroimadar clann Adaim f ri Dia ( ?)
co tard Dia dile tarsin uile domain co nach terno nech beo eisti acht
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 21
7. As for Seth, one of the three sons of Adam [who had progeny], of him are the men of the whole world :
Noe s. Lamech s. Mathusalem s. Enoch s. Iared s. Malalahel s. Cainan s. Enos s. Seth s. Adam.
For it is Noe who is the second Adam, to whom the men of all the world are traced. For the Flood drowned the whole seed of Adam, except Noe with his three sons, Sem, Ham, Iafeth, and their four wives Coba, Olla, Oliva, Olivana.
Afterwards, when God brought a Flood over the whole world, none of the people of the world escaped from the Flood except it be the people of that ark — Noe with his three sons, and the wife of Noe, and the wives of his sons.
Ut dixit poeta,
Poem no. I.
8. Now Sem settled in Asia, Ham in Africa, Iafeth in Europe —
Poem no. II.
Sem had thirty sons, including Arfaxad, Assur, and Persius. Ham had thirty sons, including Chus and Chanaan. Iafeth had fifteen, including Dannai, Gregus, Hispanius, Gomer.
Or it is twenty-seven sons that Sem had.
lucht na hairce .i. Nae cona tri macaib Sem, Cam, Iafeth, cona ceitri mnaib .i. Coba, Olla, Oliba, Olibana, amail asbert in file
8. ' Sem dana rogab an Aissia, Cam isan Adfraic, Iafeth asa nEoraip 2 badar ic 3 Airf ecsat " om. i 5 om. e aili co Cam im
Cuss ^ om. 8Esbainus 9 -mer- 10 This gloss in F only
22 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
T rich a mac mm monar ngle ....
9. xIafeth \ tra mac 2N6e ||, is uad 3tuaiscert-leth na Haisia, .i. 4Aisia Becc, Armenia, Media, Fir na Scitia ; i is 5uad lucht na 6Haeorpa uile.
y1 Greens mac Iafeth, is uad in 7Greg Mor, i in 7Greg 8Beec, i 7Greg na Halaxandracli. 9Essbainus mac Iafeth, 6 tait 10Hispana. Goimerns mac Iafeth, da mac laiss, Emoth t Ibath. Emoth, is uadh fine thuascirt in domain. Ibath, da mac leis, .i. "Bodb i Baath. Bodb, dia.r bo mac Dohe.
y2 Elinus mac Doi, tri meic leis .i. Armen, Negua, Isacon. Armen on, coic meic leis, Gotus, Cibidus, Uiligotus, Burgantus, i Longbardus. Negna, tri meic leis, .i. Saxsus, Boarus, Uandalus. Hisicon imorro, in tres 12mac Eline, ceitre meic lais, 13Romanus, Francns, Britus, Albus.
y3 Is e in tAlbanus dogab Albin ar ttis cona chlaind, ~\ is uadh ainmnigter Albo : cor indarb a bratair tar Muir nlcht, conad uad Albanaig Leatha Hoidia.
10. ^lagoth mac Iafiath, is dia chlaind-sin na tfiatha tancatar Erinn ria nGaedelaib : .i. 2Parthalon mac Sera meic Sru meic Esrti meic 3Bimbind meic 4Aaitheclia meic Magoth meic Iafeth; 4i Nemedh mac Aglmumaid meic mPaimp meic Tait meic Sera meic Sriu; i clanna Nemid, .i. Gaileoin, i Fir Domnan, - Fir Bolg, i Tuatha De Danann. Amail isbert in fili,
9. 1 Iafiatli 2 Nae 3 tuait siar-deise na Haisia L tuas-
cert-leth na Aisia F 4 Aissia Beg i Armen i Fir na Sgeiaithia
5 uadh 6Horpa uili 7 Grec (ter: in the first the scribe
began to write Grec; but discovered his mistake and stopped half -way) 8 beg "Hispanus L. From this point to the bottom of the page
(down to and including Poem IV, quatrain 1) L is illegible save for faint traces, sufficiently decipherable to shew that except some ortho- graphical differences the text is identical with F, which is here followed.
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 23
Poem no. III.
9. [With regard to] Iai'eth [son of Noe], of him is the northern side of Asia — namely Asia Minor, Armenia, Media, the People of Scythia; and of him are the inhabitants of all Europe.
Grecus s. Iafeth, of him. is Grecia Magna, Grecia Parva, and Alexandrian Greece. Espanus s. Iafeth from whom are the Hispani. Gomer son of Iafeth had two sons, Emoth and Ibath. Emoth, of him is the northern people of the world. Ibath had two sons, Bodb and Baath. Bodb, who had a son Dohe.
Elinus son of Dohe had three sons, Airmen, Negna, Isacon. As for Airmen, he had five sons, Gutus, Cebidus, Uiligothus, Burgundus, Longbardus. Negua had three sons, Saxus, Boarus, Uandalus. Isacon, moreover, one of the three sons of Elenus, he had four sons, Romanus, Francus, Britus, Albanus.
This is that Albanus who first took Albania, with his children, and of him is Alba named : so he drove his brother across the Sea of Icht, and from him are the Albanians of Latium of Italy.
10. Magog son of Iafeth, of his progeny are the peoples who came to Ireland before the Gaedil : to wit Partholon s. Sera s. Sru s. Esru s. Bimbend (sic) s. Aithech s. Magog s. Iafeth; and Nemed s. Agnomain s. Pamp s. Tat s. Sera s. Sru; and the progeny of Nemed, the Gaileoin, Fir Domnann, Fir Bolg, and Tuatha De Danann. As the poet said,
F sometimes uses "■" and sometimes "u;" to represent final us: thus "Got;", but "Uiligotu;". It has not been thought necessary to preserve this trivial distinction in printing. 10 Hispania L
11 Written Bod | db, divided between two lines F ,2 om. mac F;
the word can be detected in L 13 Written Roman us, the space
large enough to hold an n
10. * See % 9 note (9) 2 Partholon L 3Bi(?)amin L
4 Fatocht L 4 om. i L
24 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
Magog mac an Iafeth . . .
Second Redaction.
(Viol :Elal :Plal :D3al first two folios lost.)
(The opening paragraphs are numbered to correspond with R\ being derived from *Q, a lost MS. of that Redaction; and are distinguished by a suffixed asterisk.)
1*. 'In 2principio fecit Deus celum et terram .i. dorighne Dia 3Neam i 4talmain ar tfis.
2*. 'Dorigne 2cetunms in 3maiss 4n-ecruthaigh, i soillsi aingeal, J 5issin cetna Domnuch ||. 6Dorigne firmaimint J 7is'in' Lfian ||. 8Dorigne ta'lmain' i muir t 9issin Mairt ||. 8'Dorigne' grein -\ 10esca i 'renda' Nime J "issin Cetain ||. Dorigne 'enlaithe' % 12ind aeoir || i 13tondaitheehu J na f'airrge' || J Dia "Dardain [|. Dorigne anmanda t 'in tal'man || 15olchena, i 16Adam do "follomn'acht' foraib, J 18issin nAendidin ||. R'o chiunsain' | 19Dla || larom J 20issin "tSat'hurn'd || o 22oipriugad a dula ima, %' i dorad bendachtain foraib ||, linio 23ollomnacht etir ||.
2 a. y1 Is ^mlaid 2dorona Dia na duile : 3.i. araile co Hossach i cen crlch, amail 5aingliu ; araile imorro 6co tossach i co crlch, amail anmanda indlightecha i 7toirrthe in 8talman; araile 9dana co 10tosach i co "forcend -\ cen forcend, amail atat na 12daine, .i. tossach 13for a ngenemain 14corpdai i forcend for n-a corpaib-sin, -\ cen 15forcenn for a n-anmandaib.15
1*. ' A space left in E for an initial monogram, never filled up 2 prindcipio fecid VE 3 nemh E 4 tal&main E
2*. All variants in these opening paragraphs from E unless other- wise stated. Hns. A. V: doirighne E 2 cedamus 3 mais *sic VE but changed by a re-inker to re cruthaigh, V 'isin ced domh- "dorigni fiormamiint (doubled i due to change of line) 1 words marked ' ... ' lost by a tear in the vellum of V s dorighni (bis) 9 isin mh- 10 esgai " isin cedaoin y2 an aoeoir " -aithecha na fairrghe " -daoin " oleena V 1S Adamh om. and sprs. cE
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 25
Poem no. IV.
Second Redaction.
1*. In principio fecit Deus caelum et terram, i.e., God made Heaven and Earth at the first.
2*. He made first the formless mass, and the light of Angels, [on the first Sunday]. He made Firmament [on the Monday]. He made earth and sea [on the Tuesday]. He made sun and moon and the stars of Heaven [on the Wednesday]. He made birds [of the air] and [marine] reptiles [on the Thursday]. He made beasts [of the earth] in general, and Adam to rule over them[, on the Friday]. Thereafter [God] rested [on the Saturday] from the accomplishment of His new creation [, and gave them a blessing, but by no means from its governance].
2 a. In this wise God made the creatures : some with beginning and without end, as Angels ; some moreover with beginning and with end, as irrational beasts and fruits of the earth; some further with beginning and with termina- tion and without termination, as are men — a beginning to their bodily birth and a termination to their bodies, and no termination to their souls.
11 -amhn- 1S isind ain- ,9 om. 20 isin. 21 -arnn
22 oipriudug V 23 f ollamhnacht itir
2a. j amhlaid 2 doroine 3 om. .i. 4 tossuch apparently V,
but in the handwriting of this MS. it is sometimes difficult to distinguish between u and open a : tosach E 5 ainghliu a go tosach
7 toirti an 8 talmun V 9 imorro 10 tosuch V " f oircend
(second time abbreviated to fcend) 12 daoine " forainngenemain
V for a ngeinemain E " chorpda 15~15 -cend : a n-an. om. and ins.
26 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
y2 Is amlaid dana doronad 16in duine sin .i. 17Adam: a
corp(a) do talmain l8choitehend ....
a chend do 18tir Garad, a 20braindi a tir Arabia, a 21bru a Lodain, a 22cossa a tir 23Agoria :
.... a fuil t 7 24a alius || do 23uisci 26in aeoir, a anal dond aeor, a 27thes do 28tenig, a 29anam do 30thinfiud De.
y3 Isin treas 31tiair lar 32cruthugad Adhaim, ro 33teipead Eua 34assa taeb. 35I n-aess trichtaig ro cruthaiged Adam; 3Gi n-aess da bliadan dec ro 37cruthaiged Eua.
3*. Dobert i Dia || 1airc(h)indeacht Nime do 2Luicifiur, con nae 3ngradaib aingel 4imbe. Dobert t Giarsain j| 6air- cindecht talman do 7Adam t 1 do 8Eua, cona 9chlainn || . Ro 10immarbsaigestar xlLucifuir for 12Nim ar 13uail ~\ 14dlumus fri Dia, co ro hindarbadh 15i cinaigh in 16dlumsa sin do 17Neimi, ± 18co triun sluaig aingeal 19laiss ||, 20in nlffrinn. Conid andsin 21asbert Dia fri 22muintir 23Nime : | Ro-24diumsaich 25inti 26Lucsifiur (sic) \\ : 27et dixit, uenite ut 28uideamus 7 29confundamus consilium eius, .i. 30tait co ro 31fegum 7 co ro 32melachtnaigium comairle 33indi Lucifiur. 34Issi cet breath rucad 35riam sin.
4*. Ro ^ormtigh 2iarsain Lucifir fri Hadum, derb 2lais isse dobertha $ i ffochraic3 do |. 4lmadh Nime dar a 5esi. GConid aire sin doluidh 7J Iofer Nigher || 8i ndeilb nathrach % co curp 9seim ||, co ro aslacht 10in imarbus for "Eua, im 12tomailt 13ind 14ubaill don 15chrund aurgartha, Ji co ro 16aslaich 17Eua for Adum || . . .
cE in upper margin ie an " Adanih 18 coitcend 39 thir
20 bhruinne 21 bruo 22 cosa -3 -oir- 24 a luais V
25usci V uisgi E 2G iud 27 tes =stein- 29 aaim V
30 thinf uidh V teinfi- 31 om. V 32 crutugh- 33 teiped Eba
34 asa thaobh 33 ind aois triorhtaige 36 ind aois 37 -aigh- here
and above
3*. '-edit neimhe 2 Lucif. 3 ngradh- 4 immi 5 iarsin
'sic E, airecht V 7 Adhani hie et semper E 8 Ebhe 9 cloinn
10 l'mmarbusaigestar iar sin " Lucifer " nimh 13 uaill
11 diora- 1! hi cion- ,0 dimusa " nimh 18 co dtriun 19 lais 20 and Ifernn conadh 21 adbert 22 muindt- 23 -mh- "dioumsaid * anti 26 Lucifer 27 om. et dixit 2S uidiamus V
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 27
In this wise, further, was that man, Adam, made : his body of common earth,
his head of the land of Garad, his breast of the land of Arabia, his belly of Lodain, his legs of the land of Agoria :
his blood [and his sweat] of the water of the air, his breath of the air, his heat of fire, his soul of the breath of God.
In the third hour after the creation of Adam, Eve was drawn out of his side. At the age of a thirty years' space Adam was created, at the age of twelve years Eve was created.
3*. [God] gave the bailiff ry of Heaven to Lucifer, with nine orders of Angels about him. [Thereafter] He gave the bailiffry of Earth to Adam [and to Eve with his progeny]. Lucifer made an assault upon Heaven, by reason of pride and haughtiness against God, so that he was expelled, for the crime of that haughtiness, out from Heaven, [with a third of the host of anjgels in his com- pany], into Hell. So that then God said unto the Folk of Heaven: [Over-haughty is this Lucifer]: et dixit, Venite lit uideamus et confundamus consilium eius, i.e., Come and let us see and put to shame the counsel of this Lucifer. That is the first judgement which was ever pro- nounced. 4*. Thereafter Lucifer had envy against Adam, (for) he was assured that this would be given him [as a reward], to fill Heaven in his room. Wherefore he [Iofer Niger] came in the form of a serpent [with a tenuous body] and persuaded Eve to the sin, in the matter of eating of the apple from the forbidden tree, [and Eve persuaded Adam] . . .
uidemusE 29 confunndamus 30taoid 31 f egham 32melachtem
comairli 33 inti 34 is hi ced breth rugad 35 -mh
4*. 1 f oirmtig 2 -sin 3_3 leis ise doberta hi bfochraic 4 lionad nimhe 5 eisi 6 -adh 7 initial I erased, E 8 a 9 ins.
aieorda : the text was originally natrach (sic) aieorda seimh. cE inserted co curp seim interlined, and then, observing that seim was already in the text, scratched this word out. 10 indiumurbus a correction prima
manu of indium;. The "m;" was scratched out, and m re-written in blacker ink with v sprs. " Ebha 12 -mh-, the -final t erased
-bh- ,5-and argarta " 'f asl- "Ebha
i*
(a) This word should of course be chorp : but here and elsewhere I have preferred to let the mss. speak for themselves without fussy corrections.
28 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
5*. Ocus aisbert Dla friu : De terra 2es et in terrain ibis; t .i. Do thalmain Batai-sra i hi talmain 4rega ||. Et dixit, In sudore Buultus tui comedes '■/xincin tuum; X -i- 7Bid a "hallus do gnuisi "domela do bairgena. || Asbert dana fri 10Eua : Cum "dolore et gemitu paries filios tuos $ et filias tuas || : t >i- Bid co 12crait i 13galair tuisema do 14maceu i' i t'ingena ||' ||.
5a. Ro thaisbenta na duile 'corpta do Adam, (<*)i ni derna 2failte friu. 3Conid 4aire 5sain "tarlaicedh 'cotlud fair. 8Isin cotludh sin "iartain 10ro "delbud "Eua, "iar n-a teipe don tsechtmudh "asna ,5assa "toeb. "Conid "andsin "asbert "Adum : Ecce "os de -ossibus meis et -3caro de "came mea $ .i. f 25is cuma || ' 28atchim-si "cnaira 28dom 29chnamaib -\ feoil dom 3l,feoil31. || t 32In 33chet- "ghaire 35dernad 36riam 37indsin, 38i in 39chet-failte. 88|j
4* resumed . . . aIar 2cintaib 3ind 4iomarbais, ro 5hinnarbad larsin Adam a 6Parrdus 7issin talmain 8coitchend, $ ar na 9toimled 10tuirthe "in 12Chraind 13Bethad 14i Parrdns; ar dla 15toimled, ni 16fnigbed 17bass co brath, 18acht 19slainte i 20cenn 21fri 22cotlnd ||.
6*. Eo Hmarbasaigestar 2Iarsain 3clann Adaim .i. 4sinnser mac nAdaim .i. 5Cain 6misgadhach, do marbndli a 7brathar i. 8Abel mac Adaim 9tria 10fornmd 1 "drunras. $ 12Cet 13fmgal 14in domain "sin ||. Do lecain 16chamaill 17dana ro 18marb Cain a brathair.
c
5*. ' adbert 2 eis VE 3 ataoisi 4 raga B ultus
painim tuam ' bidh 8 hollus 9 -meala 10 Hebha
11 doloire i geimitu pairieis filieos 12 craid 13 galur 14 maca
5a. »corpda E 2 f ailti EP 3conadli EP 4 airi E
s sin EP 6 tarluic- E : the word changed by ignorant re-inldng to
tarbiset P 7 codl. hie et semper EP 8 is isin P 9 iarom P
10 do P " dealb- EP 12 Ebha hie et semper EP " ar P : thcipedh E
" assna E, esna P 15 asa EP 16 thaobh E taobh P " -adh P
18 ansin P : the re-inker has missed the stroke over the n ,9 adbert E
aspert P 20 Adh- hie et semper E 2I oss V 22 oisibus E
21 caireo E 24 carni V cairne EP 25 om. is cuma E 26 adcimsi E
docimsi P 27 -mh E: cnaim dom dittographed V 28 domh E
doma P 29 cn-EP, -mh P 30 feoil E feoilsi P 81 ins. fein E
32 an P 33 ced EP 31 choibche V eaibhgi E 35 ins. i an
cet failti P: dodorondod (sic) E, doronnad P Mriamh E 37 inisin V andsin P 38"38 om. P 39 ced-f ailti E
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 29
5*. And God said unto them : De terra es et in terrain ibis, [i.e., Of earth thou art and into earth shalt thou go]. Et dixit, In sudore uidtus tui comedes panem tuum, [i.e.. It shall be in the sweat of thy face that thou shalt eat thy loaves]. He said further unto Eve, Cum dolore et gemitu paries filios tuos [et filias tuas, i.e., It shall be with tor- ment and sickness that thou shalt bring forth thy sons and thy daughters].
5a. The corporeal creation was displayed to Adam, and he accepted them not. Wherefore a sleep was cast upon him. In that sleep thereafter was Eve fashioned, after being drawn from the seventh rib out of his side. And then said Adam : Ecce os de ossibus meis, et oaro de came mea [i.e. (.b) it is as it were that (?) I see a bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh. That is the first laugh which was ever uttered, and the first welcome].
4*. ... After incurring the guilt of the trans- gression, Adam was then expelled out of Paradise into the common earth, [lest he should eat the fruits of the Tree of Life in Paradise; for were he to eat, he would never die, but have health and ease of mind(c) (!)].
6*. Thereafter the progeny of Adam committed transgression, to wit, the elder of the sons of Adam, Cain the accursed, by the slaying of his brother Abel son of Adam in his envy and haughtiness. [That was the first kin-murder of the world]. With the cheek-
4*. ' EP are punctuated so as to append the first four words to the preceding f: aE 2 centaibh P 3 and E an P 4 irnarb- P
-uis P 5 innarbad V hiondarbad E 6 Pardus E Parrthus P
7 isin EP 8 -cend EP 9 -mhl- EP : -dh P 10 tor- E toirthi P
11 an EP 12 chroinn E cr- P "irgairti pui i Parrtus P "a
Pardus air E 15 dtoimh- E toimledh P 16 f uig- E -bedh P
17 bas EP 18 ach P 19 -nti EP 20 cend EP 2I fria P
22 codl- EP
6* J imarbaighesdais E imarbai^ftsistair P 2 -sin E om. P
3 eland E clanna P 4 sindser E sinser P s Cadin changed sec.
man. to Caim E Caidin P 6 miscadac P 7 bh- E 8 Aibel E
0 tri P 10 -ad E, at P "dio- E, diu- P 12 ced EP » -cc- P
"an P 1Bsain V om. E 16 camh- P (E here illegible) " om. P
(a) Here P becomes legible.
(b) Is cuma is meaningless: see the note on this fl.
(c) See the note on this H.
30 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
$ 19No mar 20atberat araile, fo 21intamail 22marbtha na 32n-idhbart, 24issl a 25glacc ro 26iad immo 27braigid. ||
Here ends the matter on the leaf derived from- *Q: the- original text of R2, as we hare it, begins at this point.
11. . . . 'conid desin 2tuc Dia 3dlliu Mar in domain 5iniaille, 6connach tenia bed dib acht 7N6e 8cona 9mnai, t .i. a 10sinr "fodesin ||, 1 12cona "thrib macaib, $ i batar 14iat-sidlie fir a tri n-ingen, || 15i cona 16thrlb ingenaib, J i 17badar 18iat-side mna na 19tri mac ||.
12. Ocus ba he 'fochond a 2saertha sech each, ar 3nlr ehumascsat cairdes fri 4clainn 3Cain ; i 6dia 7lmad 8in 'domain 10doridissi. Cethracha "laithe don 12dllind 13ic sllind. Se cet bliadan 14aess 13Nae 16in tan dochnaid 17ina 18aircc, % in tan "tarnaic 20do Xoe enmtach i 2,ecor na hairci lar 22forcedal De %' i. 23deda do 24inglan, 25treda 26imorro %" no 27sechta ||" do glan, 28daig 2Pidparta deis 30na 31dilind ||' ||. Lnid 32dana 33Nae cona 34macaib % i cona ingenaib || 1 cona 35seitchib 36ina 37aircc(«), hi 38sechtmad dec 39esca 40Alai. % For 41non 40Mai lotar isin 42n-airec. || Da cnbat deg din . . . uas na 43sleibtib 44ata 45airdiu.
13marp P ,9o?n, no . . araile P 20 adberad E " innamh- P
"marta with b sprs. V -bhth- P =3 n-idhbartai P :4 no asi P
"ghlac P 26hiadh ima P "bradaid E br-aid P
11. " conadh P » tug E 3 dili EP 4 tars EP 5 om. P °E illegible: conach tucad beo {changed by re-vnker to bed) diph P • Xaoi E Naei P 8 -nai P 9 mnaoi E ,0 s not dotted P " badesin E fodeisin (changed by re-inker to -siu) P 12 a (om. con) P 13 tri mic P " iadside E iad sidie P " om. i P 16 tri hinngenaiph P "batar E ,s iadsidie P 19 dtri E
12. " ins. so P : fochand E focul (changed by re-vnker to foeui) P 2 saortha E saorthai P 3 -ad cairdes E : ni ro cumusca a geairdus P •cloindE 5CaidinP ° do P 7 lion- EP 8 an P 9domuin V 10 -dhisi P " -thi P 12 diliim E: dilin (changed
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 31
bone of a camel Cain slew his brother. [Or, as others say, after the likeness of the slaying of the sacrifices, it was his grasp which he closed around his neck] . . .
11. . . . so that it was on that account that God brought a Flood over the world altogether, so that none thereof escaped alive except Noe and his wife, [his own sister], and his three sons, [who were the husbands of his three daughters], and his three daughters, [who were the wives of the three sons].
12. Now this was the reason for their deliverance to the exclusion of all others, for that they mingled no friendship with the progeny of Cain; and for their replenishing of the earth again. Forty days was the Flood a-raining. Six hundred years was the age of Noe when he went into his ark, [when there came to Noe the construction and ordering of the ark in accordance with the teaching of God : pairs of the unclean, triple pairs (or sevens) of the clean, for the purpose of sacrifice after the Flood]. So Noe went with his sons [and with his daughters] and with their wives, into his ark, on the seventeenth day of the moon of May. [On the nones of May they went into the Ark.] Twelve cubits [was the water] above the highest mountains.
by re-inker to dilui) P 13 hie E ag P 14 aois EP 15 Naoi
E .ix. (sic) P 1G an P 17 om. -a P 1S aire P 19 tairnig
E tra tairnic P 20 om. E, do .ix. P : cumdadach E, cumhdach P
21 ecor E egor P : hairce V 22 bf- P foire- E 23 -da erased P
24ning- V 25treada E tredha P 26 om. P "seeht EP
28. gh p 29iodbar- E idhb- P ™ om, na E 3I -end EP 52 dono P 35 Naoi E Naei P 34 macaibh . . . ingenuiph P 35 -cibh P
,iom.-aP 37airr . P 38 seeht P 39esgaEP "MaoiE (6is)
41 noin P "om. n- E: aire EP 43 sleibi V sleibhttfcft E
sleipti P "ita E 45 hairdi E a hairdi P
(a) E inserts a full stop here, and begins a new sentence with the following Hi.
32 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
Decc 46cubait don aircc 47fo 48usce, 49i fiche 6s 50usce : 51i is aire 52is a decc fo 53usce, 54.i. da-deg don 55dilin 6s 56in 57tsleib as 58airdi, ar daig na 59hairci, ar is decc cubat dl fo 60usce :49 i nlr bo furail 61da cubait 62dana do usee 63etir druim na 8*hairci i mullaige na 65sliab. 66Conid aire sin 67ita 68da cubait decc 69ind airdi 70na huisci os 71cech 72sleib 73airdd.
13. Ro abaidh 2in 3diliu 4na huile 5daine i 6anmanna 7archena, aclit lucht na 8haircce, $ i 9Enog, fil 10hi Parrdus do "chathugud 12ria 13Hainnticrist, i 14Findtan mac 15Boclira. 16Isse 17adfeda na 18scela-sa do each, lar ndiliun. |]
14. Hi acind 2coicad laithe ar cet 3rogabsat na "husce 5sercadli. Secht 6laithe 7nchet i secht 8miss 9dind "aircc 5 "thuinn do 12thuind, 13co ndesidh for 1+sleib Armenia. Ro 15sergsat na 16husce 17cosin .... "dechnrad 19miss 20atchessa mullaige na 14sllab. Hi 2,cind secht la cethrachat lar sin ro 22oslaic Noe senister na 23haircce i 24faitte 25in fiach 26immach; i ni 27thanic :'8i frithissi. Ro 29leic in 30colum 31iar na 32barach, i :!3tanic 34ar 35culu, ar ni fuair airm 36ind anadh. 37F6idis 38Noe 39doriss 40hi 41cind secht 42laithi, i 43doluid la 44fescor, i 45gessca 46ola-chrainn cona 47dhuillib ina
^cubaid E " f on uns fo us (bungled in re-inking) E 4S uisqe P
4*-4*om. V 50uisqe P 51o»t.iP 52 as P 53 uisqe P "ifor.i. P "-inn P 56an P " -eiph. P 5S airde P M-ceP
60 uisqe P 61 ins. dana E coic for da EP 62 om. dana do usee E :
dono do uisce P " itir E 64 -ee P 65 sliabh P 60 -adh E -ad P 67 iata E, it P «» .u. for .ii. E : eupait P 69 in airde P ,0 an us- E ind us- P " gach EP " sleiph P " aird EP
13. " baid E ■ an P 3 dili E dile P 4 ina P 5 daoine E
8 -nnai P ' -cena E 8 -ci E -ce P ° Eneog E Enogh P ,0 a E " cath- P ,2fri E 13hancr"V hainnticr E ain xp" P "Pint. E
-nnt- P "BocraP 16 ise EP " atf ed E -eta P 18scel;aE
sccai so P
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 33
Ten cubits was the ark under water, and twenty above water : and this is why it was ten under water — the Flood had twelve above the highest mountain, for the sake of the ark, for it (the ark) had ten cubits under water. So that two cubits of water would not be excessive between the keel of the ark and the tops of the mountains. Therefore the waters were twelve cubits in depth above every lofty mountain.
13. The Flood drowned all the men and beasts together, except the people of the ark, [and Enoch, who is in Paradise to fight against Antichrist, and Fintan son of Bochra. He it is who should relate these stories to all men, after the Flood].
14. At the end of a hundred and fifty days the waters began to dry up. Twenty-seven days and seven months was the ark (moving) from wave to wave, till it settled on a mountain of Armenia. The waters dried up until the < tenth month : on the first day of the> tenth month the tops of the mountains were seen. At the end of forty-seven days thereafter, Noe opened a window of the ark, and he sent the raven forth ; and it came not back again. He let the dove out on the morrow, and it came back, for it found no place where it should stay. Noah sent it forth
14. 1 cinn E gcimi P 2 chaogad E .la. P 3 -a changed to -ad
oE -bhsat P 4 huis- E -scedha P 6 serg- E sercc- P 6 -thi P
7 -at P 8 mis EP 9 don EP 10 aire P " tuinn EP
12 tuinn E thuinn P 13 con-deis- E -deisigh P u sliabh P (bis)
15 sergtsat V apparently -gsat changed to -gsad cE -gsat P 16 huis- EP 17 gusan E 1S deem. E 19 mis EP 20 adcesai E atceassa P
21 cinn P 22 fosgail Naoi seinistir E, fosloig Naei feinister P
23 hairci E hairce P 24 f aiti EP sanP 26amach EP
27 tainic EP 2S for cula a bf ritisi E, i f rithisi P 29 leig E leicc P
30 colaim E 31 ar P 32 maraeh P 33 tain- EP 34 for E
35 cula EP : ifuair E 36 an an E, ar n-anf ad P 37 faidis E
38 JNTai E 39 doridisi P 4n a E 41 gc- EP 42 -the E 43 -dh P
44 fesgor E feascc- P 45 gesga E gescai P 40 alo-cr P 47 duill- P
l.g. — VOL. I. D
34 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
4Sbeolu. Ocus ro 49faid 50hi cind secht 51la doridissi, i ni 52tanic 53ar 54culu.
15. Ro ^aid Dla fri 2Noe 3tiachtain 4assin 5n-aircc, 6lii sechtmad 7la fichet 8escai 9Mai, % for "pridnoin °Mai, || isin "cetna bliadain ar se cetaib 12aisse 13Noe.
y1 14Tossach na ir,haeisse 16tanaiste 1Tin domain. lsCo i9gen 2oj^|3rajra ro iigaioh j. da bliadain 22nochat ar dib
23cetaib iar 24firinde na 25nEbraide, larsin 26Septin imorro is da bliadain cethrachat ar 27ocht ccetaib.
2SDorone 29Noe larsin altoir do 30chumtach do 31Dia i .i. in 32cetna 33altoir iar 34ndilind ||. 35Coica ar 36trl cetaib bliadan 37bai 29N6e 38i mbeth'aid iar 39nd'ilind : 40ocus 41ro 42rand 43Noe "in domun 45hi 46trib rand'aib 47itir' a 48maccu.
y2 49Anmand mac 50Noe, .i. 51Sem, 52Cam, Iafet. 53Anmand V mban iarum, Olla, 5401ibana, Oliua : de quibus dicitur 55hoc carmen
Sluag ndd chide cua-chel . . .
Cam tra, 56ro gab-side in 57nAffraicc i 58deisscert-leth na 59Haissia. 60Sem for 61niedon 62Aissia, o sruth Eofrait co tracht airthir 63in 64bethad. Is 6 65Iafeth
4j-la E -lau P 4afaoidh E faidh P 50 a gcenn E hi cinn
51 la yc V sprs: doridisi E, -dhisi P 52 tainicc P 53 f or E
54 gcida P
15. 'raidh P 2 Naoi E Nai P 3 teacht P 4 assind E as
in P 5airc EP (om. n-) 6 om. hi P ' om. la VE se?gai E
escca P 9MaoiE(6ts) 10prittnoin P " cedna E ,: aois EP
'-3 Naoi E .ix. P M tossucli V tosach EP 15 haoisi EP 16 tanuste P " an E ,8 go E ,s gein EP w Apraim P :1 soicli P
-■ nochad E " -aiph P " bf- EP -5 nEabr- E nEpr- P
MSeibtin E " dcccc. P M -oine E ='J Naoi E Nai P {bis)
30 cumdach E qmhdach P 31 Dhia P 32 cedna E 33 h-alt- P r4 -inn E 35 caoga P 36 written tri .ccc. E 37 baoi E M ina E : words
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 35
again at the end of seven days, and it came with the evening, having a twig of an olive-tree with its leaves in its beak. And he sent it forth again at the end of seven days, and it came not back.
15. God said unto Noe to come out of the Ark, on the twenty-seventh day of the moon of May, [on the day before the nones of May,] in the six hundred and first year of the age of Noe.
The beginning of the second age of the world. To the birth of Abram it reached, two hundred ninety and two years according to the Hebrew verity, but according to the Septuagint it is eight hundred forty and two years.
Thereafter Noe caused an altar to be builded to God [, the first altar that was made after the Flood] . Three hundred and fifty years was Noe alive after the Flood : and Noe divided the world into three parts among his sons.
The names of the sons of Noe : Sem, Ham, Iafeth. The names of their wives thereafter : Olla, Olivana, Oliva(°0 : de quibus dicitur hoc carmen:
Poem no. I.
As for Ham, he settled in Africa and the south side of Asia. Sem over the middle of Asia, from the river of Euphrates to the eastern border of the world. Of
and letters marked thus ' . . . ' torn away V 39 -inn E 40 occus P
41 do E 42 rann EP 43 Naoi E 44 an P 45 a E 46 trip P
« etir P 48 -ca E 4a -nda E -ndai P 50 Naoi EP : ins dana E
55 Seimh E 52 Camh E Camm P 53 -nn EP 54 Oilibai
Oilibana E : Oliua Olibanu P 55 hocc cairm- P Ba -bhsidhe P
57 Affraicc E -aic P : (om. n-) 58 deisc- E dq P 59 Haisia EP
60 Seimh EP 6I -medhon EP 62 Aissai E Aisia P ™ om.
in E ; an P M betha EP G5 Iathfedh E Iaf eith P
(a) EP give the names of these women in the correct order : Olibana was the -wife of Iafeth.
36 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
tra tuaiscert-leth na 66Haissia, i lucht na Heorpa uile : i dia 67clainn <i8duinde 69in n-ar 70nGraidelaib.
16. 'Gaidel Glass ar sen-athair, mac-2side Xiuil meic 3Feniusa Farrsaidli meic 4Eogein meic 5Glunimd meic 8LamJind meic 7Etheoir meic 8Thoe meic 9Boidb meic u'Sem meic Mair meic "Aurthacht meic Abuith meic Ara meic 12Iarra meic Sru meic 13Esru meic Baaith meic "Kifaith 15Scut, 16o tait "Scuit. Ocus 18isse 19Rifath 20Scot "tucastar 22Scotic on Tur, ar ba 23se in sesed prim-24thaiseeh ro 25bai i 26ccumtach 27in 2STuir 'Nemroith.
Is follus de sin nach 29raibe 30Fenius 31hi cumtach in Tuir, mar 32atberat na 33senchaide een 34comsmiudh 35chomhaimseraid. Is aire 36so on, ar 37isse 38Foenu Farsaid in 39seised fer dec do 40sll 41Riafaid 42tuc 43Scotic on 44Tur.
17. Da bliadain 1sescat 6 2scailiud 3in Tuir co 4flaitli Xin meic 5Peil. Ceithre bliadna dec ar 6trib fichtib ar ocht cetaib o thus 7flatlia Nin co 8deirid flatha Tutanes, 9rig 10in domain. xlFria lind-12side ro toglad 13Troe 14din thogail 15dedenaig. Secht mbliadna larsin thogail sin, co 16tuc 17Aenias t mac 18Anaciss || J 19Lauinia || 20ingen 21Latin meic Puin : 22conid tri bliadna cethrachat ar noi cetaib o 23scailiud in Tuir co 24tuc
c0Haisia EP 67 cloinn E 6S -nne EP 69nar (om. i) P
10 -eal- E nGaidheal- P
16. a ins. .i. EP ; Gaoid- E 2 -dhe VP 3 Feiniusa Fars- EP
4 Ebir E Eimhir P 5 Gluin- EP, -mi E 6 Lamh"f - E Laimhf- P
' Eothoir E Ei- P 8 Taoi EP 9 Bridliph P 10 Seim E
" Urthacht E Aurtachtt P 12 Iara EP " Essru E " Rif baidth
(d expuncted) E " Scot E Sgot P ,6 odtait P " Sguit P
18ise E ase P ,9 -aith E 20 Sgot P :1 ins. tucc (an incorporated
gloss on tucastar) V : tugustar EP " Scotig E Sgoitic P 23 se in
seised E, he an seisedh P 21 -tuis- V -thoiss- E primh-tois- P * bui EP :<s cumdach P 2' an P 28 Tur (with subscript i added sec. man.) P 20 roibe E raiphe P 30 Foenius E Feinius P 31 i ecumt-
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 37
Iafeth is the north side of Asia, and the people of all Europe : and of his progeny are we who are Gaedil.
16. Gaidel Glas our ancestor, he was s. Nel s. Feinius Farsaid s. Eogan s. Glunfhind s. Lamfhind s. Etheor s. Thoe s. Bodb s. Sem s. Mar ,s. Aurthacht s. Aboth s. Ara s. Iara s. Sru s. Esru s. Baath s. Rifath Scot, from whom are the Scots. Now it is Rifath Scot who brought the Scotic Language from the Tower, for he was one of the six principal chieftains who were at the building of the Tower of Nemrod.
From that, it is clear that Feinius was not at the building of the Tower, as the historians say who have not harmonized the synchronism. This is why we say so, for Feinius was the sixteenth in descent from Rifath, who brought Scotic from the Tower.
•■s?1
17. Sixty- two years from the dispersal of the Tower to the princedom of Ninus son of Belus. Eight hundred seventy and four years from the beginning of the princedom of Ninus to the end of the princedom of Tutanes, king of the world. Toward his time was Troy taken for the last time. There were seven years after that capture, till Aeneas [son of Anchises] took [Lavinia] daughter of Latinus s.
E hi cumdach P 32 adberad E (the d yc E) adberait P 33 uide E aidhe VP 34 chomsiniud E -sinedh P 35 comaimsiraid E comhaimsire P 36 seo E 37 ise EP 3S Foenius E Feinus (with subscript i added sec. man.) P 39 seissed E seisedh P 40 siol P 41 -aith E :
wis. Sguit P ■ tucc E 43 -ice E, Sgoitic P ** Tor P
17. 1 -ccat E -Ixx- second x expuncted P 2 sgaoil- P 3 an P
4 dtucc Aenias written here and expuncted P 5 Pheil E 6 tri EP
7 flaitusai P 8 derid V deired E -edh P 9 ri EP 10 an P
" ins. i P 12-dhe VP » Troie V Trai P 14 din tog- E don tocc- P 15 -aigh E deighean- P 18 tucc E dtucc P 17 Aneas E Aeinas P
The glosses following this word are gg in VP, frfi in E. 1S Anachis E Aincis P 19 Lauina EP 20 ingin E 21 Lathin P " conadh P
23 sgaoil- P : in Tuir yc V 24 tucc Aeneas ingin E : dtucc Aeinas- P
38 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
Aeniass ingen 25Latin, i 25Latin 2fidorone 27a cuir 28friss.
29Is follus as sin conach cert-30tiaghait 31lucht 32ind 33Auraiccepta, 34combad he 35Laitin in 36seissed prim- 38th5isech 39ind Tuir, -\ a 40fot 41antiass 42etorru 43cethracha bliadan, o 44scailiud in Tuir co 45tanic 46Foenius Farsaidh 47attiaidh asin 48Scithia cona 49scoil, do 50iarraidh na 51mberla : ar do-52rumenatar 53fosgebtais 54and, ar bith 55as ass ro 56scailit. 57Da bliadain lar 58tiachtain do 59Fenius atuaid 60corice Nin.
18. Is 2e Nel mac 2Feniusa Farsaid 3asrubrnmar forcongart 4Forand 5Cincris ri 6Eigipti 7ar imad a 9fesa i a 10eolais i a "fogluma : i 12dobert 13Forand 14ferann do, i 15dobreath a 16ingen 17.i. 18Scota a hainm.
19Ocus asberat araile 20comadh aire 21adbertha "Scota" 22fria, ar ba 23"Scot" ainm a fir, -\ 24"Scuit" ainm na 25tuaithe dia 26rabe 27in fer; unde dicitur 28"Scotus" 7 28" Scota."
19. aConidli 2do sin 3asberar 4so 5siss —
" Laitin P (bis) 26 ins. f ein. E : doroine P 27 acuir written as one
word VP, but om. a E 2S f ris P 29 iss E 30 -aid E 31 luicht E : luf changed by re-inker to ais {the I can still be traced faintly) P
32 na P 33 auraicepta E nuraicp P 34 comadli P * Latin E
86 insseiss- E .uii. mad P 38 -tois- P 39 in E an P 40 f ot E f od P
41 -as P 42-orrai P 43 .lx. E ** sgaoil- P « dtanic P
46 Feinius P " -aid assin E 4S Sgeithia P 49 sgoil P B0 iaraidh V 61 -lae E -lai P 52 -att changed to -atar V ruimnetar P 53 -dais P
B4 ann EP : ar dittographed owing to change of column V 55 is E
50 sgaoilsit P " .XL. V 68 ti.cb.tam (om. do) E 59 Foen- E Feinius P 60 -ricce P
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 39
Faunus : so that there are nine hundred forty and three years from the dispersal of the Tower till Aeneas took the daughter of Latinus, and Latinus made his treaties with him.
From that it is clear that the authors of the Auraicept do not reach a correct conclusion, that Latinus was one of the six chief leaders of the Tower, seeing that the length downward between them is forty years, from the dispersal of the Tower till Feinius Farsaid came from the north, out of Scythia with his School, to seek for the languages : for they thought that they would find them there («) inasmuch as it was from thence that they were dispersed. There were two years after the coming of Feinius from the north until Ninus.
18. It is the aforesaid Nel son of Feinius Farsaid whom Pharao Cincris King of Egypt invited, for the greatness of his skill, his knowledge, and his learning : and Pharao granted him an estate, and his daughter, Scota her name, was bestowed.
Some say that the reason why she was called "Scota" was that "Scot" was her husband's name, and "Scots" the name of the people from whom he came ; unde dicilur "Scotus" and "Scota."
19. So that the following is said of those matters —
18. * he E 2 Foen- E Fein- P 3 asrubramar E asrubartamar P
4 -nn E 5 Cinciris P 6 Egipt EP ' ar immed E ar imat P 9 "f essa E f eassai re-inked to f eaisai P 10 eolusa E " -lumma E -gh- P 12 dober V tuc P 13 -ainn E -aim P 14 ferand E feron {changed, by re-inker to f erch-) P 15 dobertha ycE dobretli P 10 irigin E " om, .i. E : ins. do P 18 Sgotai P 19 om. i E 20 combad E 21 asbertha E atbertha P 22frie E pvmctuated, fria arba. Sgot by re-inker P 23 Sgot P M Sguit P 25 -thi P 26 raibe E raibhi P 2T an P 28 -tt- E (bis): Sgota P
19. ' Conid E conadh P 2 de E s asbert P * om. so E
5 om. siss EP
(a) i.e. at the Tower.
40 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
Athair cdich, Coimsid Nime . . .
Third Redaction. (B 8 o 1 : M 264 a 1 : H 103 o 1 :
from fl 32 ; j3 32 . 13 : /31 32 . 22 : (i2 6 . 28.)
I.
The beginning of the Third Redaction is a translation into Irish of the first eleven chapters of the Book of Genesis. For the history of this translation, and of its connexion with the text, see ante, p. 6. In the following pages the Biblical text is printed in larger type (the verses being numbered);
BOOK OF GENESIS
Chapter I.
20. (1) In 1principio creauit Deus celum et tenant A. ro 2thuissimh Dia 3Neanih i 4talinnh 5ar tus.
yi -j nj eju^ tossaeh fair-Tsimh 8feisin, na foircearid.
y2 Is amhlaidh Morighni Dia na 10dtiili : aroili dib co "tosach i cen chiich, amhail aingliu; 12araili dibh 13cu 14tossaeh i co 15forceiid, amhail 16anmanda, iiidlighthe - 17toirrthe in talman; 18araile dibh imorro co 19tossach i co 20foircend i 21cen 22foircend, amail 23atait daine, .i. 24tossach for a 25ngeinemain 26corpardha i 27forcend for a 28corpthaib, T 29gan 30forcenn for a n-anmaiiclaibh.
y3 Isin Domnach 31dorighni Dia in mais 32n-adhbul- mhoir 33nemhcruthaigh t -i- 34adbhur na ndul 35corparda i' .i. 36tene i 37aeor, 38talam 7 usee ||', || $ hi .xn. kallann 39 April dono do reir Ebraide 7 4r'Latinda, || \' cen co tucadh
20. Variants from M unless otherwise stated. It may be said here, once for all, that the lenition of b, d, g, m, is almost invariably left unmarked in this MS. ' prindcipio 2 thuisini 3ins. A. in t Athair Neamda * talam 5 om. ar tus: ins. isin tosach .i. isin Mac 6 f uil tosach T-seam 8 na foireeand f eisin B 9 doroinde 10 duile
aroile M tosach a -oile 13 co M tosach " foireeand M ;
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 41
Poem no. V.
Third Redaction.
at the end of each chapter is a restoration of the text of the Latin MS. from which it was translated, with textual notes. The numerous glosses and interpolations are printed in smaller type, and all necessary annotations are given in the com- mentary at the end of this section of the entire work.
BOOK OF GENESIS
Chapter I.
20. (1) In principio creauit Deus caelum et terram i.e., God created Heaven and Earth at the first.
And He hath no beginning Himself, nor ending.
In this wise God made the creatures : some of them with beginning and without end, as Angels; some of them with beginning and with termination, as irrational beasts and fruits of the earth; some of them moreover with be- ginning and with termination and without termination, as are men — a beginning to their bodily birth and a ter- mination to their bodies, and without termination to their souls.
On the Sunday God made the immense formless mass, [the materials of the corporeal creatures, fire and air, earth and water, upon the fifteenth of the kalends of April according to Hebrews and Latins, although no sun
a dot over c erased B 16 -nna aindligthecha 1T toirthi 1S -oile
19 tosach. ~° -ceand 21 cean 22 -ceand 23 itait na daine 24 tosach
23 -earn- 20 chorparda " f oirceand 2S sic M, corp B 2a cen
30 f oirceand 31 doridne 32 -bal-moir 33 -aich 34 -bar 15 sic M ;
corpdha changed by late corrector to corpdhada B 3S tened 3T aeoir 38 usqi -\ talam 39 Aibril w Laitinda
42 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
grlan 41i"or rith co se ||'; is and "dorighni Dia 43tindscetal denma na ndiil. Isin Luan, | hi .xiiii. kallann 44April, |j dorighni Dia Ncam. 45Isand Mairt, 46t hi -xiii. kallann "April, || 48dorighni Dia in talam, -\ 4Utug muir ina 50timceall. Isin 51Cetain, $ hi .xii. kallann 52 April, || 53dorigni Dia grlan "\ csca i 54reltanda 7 55renda nimhe. Isin Dardain, X -i- in -xi- kallann 56April ||, dorigni Dia na hanmanda 57muiridhi 7 58eathaidi in 59aeoir. G0Isan Aine imoiTo | 61.i. hi .x. kallann 62 April, || 63dorigni Dia Adham -\ na huili anmanda talmaidi. Ro 64cumsain Dia imorro 65isan 66tSatharrnd | .i. hi .ix. kallann 67 April ||, .i. 686 69oipriugadh dula niia.
(2) Iar tuismeadh tra, 70nime i talman, is amhlaidh 71bai in talam, i se dimain cen 72torrti, i se 73fass 74falum cen 75aitreabhaidhe. Oeus no bidis $ in tan sin || 76dorchata 77dluithi for 78dreich na 79haibhisi —
.i. 80adbur 81coitchend na ndul —
■; 82no fortairctha 83Spirut in 84Comdedh for na 85huiscib.
Ni 86locdacht 87tra raiter 88sund don 89Spirut Naem, acht 90dearrscaithi i miadhamlaeht de, seacha dtiilibh.
(3) Ocus ro raidh Dia J .i. in tAthair Nemdha ||, Dentar 91in tsoillsi. Ocns 92dorignedh in tsoillsi.
(4) Ro therba i ro 93deiligh Dia in 94soillsi [s2M] ona £5dorchadaibh. (5) Ocus dorad ainm "Lae" don tsoillsi, i tuc ainm na 96"Haidhchi" do na 97dorchaib. Ocus doronadh amlaidh sin 98feascoir i "maiden .i. in 100cet la.
41 frith stroke of abbreviation over f added sec. man. B 42 doroinde
43 -eadal 44 Aibril 45 isin 46 ins. dono " Aipril 4S doridne
49 tuc 50 thimcliell 51 chedain am, hi 52 Aip- 53 dorinde 54 retlanda 55 reanda M Aip- " -ide 5S -ide 59 a point over the e M M isind 61 ora. .i. m Aip- M doroinde °4 chumson w isin ee -arnn
41 Aib- M om. o 69 oibreadugad 70 nimi " ins. ro " toirchi
73 fas '4 -am 75 -ebaide 7S -ada 77 the 1 written in rasura as
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 43
was set upon its course as yetj ; it is then that God made a beginning of fashioning the creatures. On the Monday, [on the fourteenth of the kalends of April,] God made Heaven. On the Tuesday, [on the thirteenth of the kalends of April,] God made the earth, and brought Sea around it. On the Wednesday, [on the twelfth of the kalends of April,] God made sun and moon and stars and heavenly bodies. On the Thursday, [on the eleventh of the kalends of April] God made the marine beasts and the birds of the air. On the Friday, moreover, [on the tenth of the kalends of April,] God made Adam and all the terrestrial beasts. Moreover God ceased on the Saturday, [the ninth of the kalends of April,] from the work of a new creation.
(2) Now, after the creation of Heaven and Earth, thus was the earth; fallow without fruit, bare and empty without indweller. And thick darknesses were at that time over the face of the abyss —
the common material of the creatures —
And the Spirit of the Lord was borne over the waters.
No wickedness is spoken here of the Holy Spirit, but excellence and honour of Him, 'beyond the creatures.
(3) and God [the Heavenly Father] said: Let the light be made. And the light was made. (4) God separated and divided the light from the darknesses. (5) And He gave the name 'Day' to the light, and the name 'Night' to the darknesses. And thus were made evening and morning, the first day.
is also the eich of dreich B 78 dreikh 79 -beisi 80 -bar. A dot
written over the b, afterwards scratched out, and later re-inserted, B 81 cheand 82 no forchairthea 83 -rud 84 Choimdead ^ hus-
86lochtach 87thra 88 sunn 89 -rit Naeim w dears- 61 inn
preceded by an erasure that would hold about 4 letters. 92 doridnead 93delidh n4 thoillsi 95 dorchaib 9G -dche 97 sic M -caib B
98 -scor "maidean an .i. with in written sec. man. above the .i. M
100 om. cet B
44 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
21. (G) Ro raidh ldana : Dentar 2in firmamint a meadhon na n-usci, 3i fodlad na n-usci3 o na 4huiscib. (7) Ocus 5dorigni Dia 6in firmaimint, i ro fogail na usci ro 7batar fo Firmaimint 6 na 8huiscibh ro 9batar 6s Firmaimint : i "doirigneadh amlaidh sin. (8) Ocns "tug 12Dla ainm 'Nimhe' 13do Firmaimint, i "dorigh- nedh 15feascoir i "maiden, .i. 17in laa tanaise.
22. (9) Ro raidh imorro Dia : 1Tinoilter na 2husei atait fo Nimh 3i n-oen inadh, 4i artraigeadh 5in tirim : - dorigneadh amlaidh sin. (10) Ocus 6is e ainm 7tug Dia don 8tirim, i. 9Talam : acus ro "gairmeastar Dia 11comthinola na 12n-uisci, 13Muiridhi. Ocus 14atconnairc Dia cor bo maith. (11) Ocus 15atbert Dia : 16Clandaigeadh 17an talam fer n-uraide, i fer dogena sil; i clannaigeadh17 18crand toradh- 19tairctheach, dodliena toradh do reir a 29ceineoil, i a mbia a sil and fein for 21talmuin. (12) Ocus ro leig "in talum fer n-uraide trid, i fer dognidh 23sil do 24reir a 25ceineoil; i ro 26lec 27crand dognid torad, i no 2?thechtadh 29gacli sil do reir a 30earnaili. Ocus 3Tadconnairc Dia sin, cor bho maith. (13) Ocus C2dorighnedh 33fescoir i 34maiten, .i. 35in tres laa.
23. (14) Ro raidh 1imorro Dia : Dentar 2lespairedha solus-3thaitneaniacha 4i firmaimint 5indimhi, [5aj\l] i Meilighead 7la i 8aidhchi : i 9blt i 10comartaibh i i a,n-aimsiribh, i 12l-laithedhaibh i i 13mbliadhnaibh, (15) co ro 14taitneat i "firmaimint 16ind nimi, i co ro
, 21. 1 dono 2 annirmaimint 3_s ora. B. 4 husc- 6 -gne
6 annirmaimint 7 baclar s husc- 9 badar ,0 doridnead " tuc
12 Di B M donirmaimint 14 -gnead 15 -cor 16 -dean " om. in
22. ' -tear 2 us- s an en 4 -\ ar- dittographed owing to change of column B 5 an a as ' tuc 8 talvmin B 9 tirim (tirim
acus written tir iniacus) B: acus here also in M 10 -estair n coim- thinola (a g written and erased after the second o) 12 n-usci
13 muirige 14 adchonnairc ,5 adb- I0 clannaigead "-" om. B
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 45
21. (6) Further He said : Let the firmament be made in the midst of the waters, and let it divide the waters from the waters. (7) And God made the firmament, and divided the waters that were beneath Firmament from the waters that were above Firmament : and thus was it done. (8) And God gave the name of 'Heaven' to Firmament, and evening and morning were made, the second day.
22. (9) Moreover God said : Let the waters that are under Heaven be collected into one place, and let the Dry appear : and so was it done. (10) And this is the name which God gave to the Dry, 'Earth': and God called the assemblages of the waters, 'Seas/ And God saw that it was good. (11) And God said : Let the earth bring forth green grass, and grass that shall make seed; and let it bring forth the fruit- bearing tree that shall make fruit according to its- kind, and that shall have its seed within itself upon earth. (12) And the earth put forth green grass, and grass that maketh ,seed according to its kind, and it put forth the tree that maketh fruit, and that hath every seed according to its species. And God saw that to be good. (13) And evening and morning were made, the third day.
23. (14) Moreover God said : Let brightly shining lights be made in the firmament of Heaven, and let them divide Day and Night : and let them be for signs and for times, for days and for years, (15) that they may shine in the firmament of Heaven, and
ins. a
w thairceach 20 a chel no a cenel 21 -main 22 an talam
r,el 25 cheinel 2G leig 2T crann 28 -eaeht-
29 gan B 30 ernaile 31 -chonn 32 -gnead 33 f eascor : feascoir .i.
deireadh lae written in top marg. in 18th cent, hand B 31 maidean 33 an treas la
23. 'Dia imorro 2 -eada 3 -tait- 4a fir- 5 mime
0 deligthear ' lae 8 -dche "bid 10 -arthaib " -sir-, the i
ycB " -ead- " mbliadain " thaitnead 15 -mam- 36 indimi
46 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
17soillsiget in 18talani. Ocus 19dorignedh amlaidh sin.
(16) Ocus doroindi 20Dia da 21leaspaire 22solus-mora : dorighni am in lespaire is mo J .i. in 23grein || co 24ropdanaiged don 16, i in 25lespaire is luglm isin 2r,n-aidhci J .i. 27ind esca ||. Ocus 28dorigni retlanda,
(17) i ro 29suigidli iat 30i firmaimint 31indimi, co ro S2taitnidis for talmain, (18) 33i co ro aptainigdis 34do lo i 34do aidhchi, i co 33ndeilightis 36in 37soillsi 6 na dorchaibh. Ocus 38atconnaic Dla 39sin, 40cor bo maith. (19) Ocus "dorignedh 42fescoir i 43maitin, 44.i. in 4"'cetramadh laa.
24. (20) Ro raidh Mana Dia : 2Turgbhat na 3huisci 4tondaitechu na hanma 5beoaigheas, i 6foluaimneachu fo firmaimint 7indimi. Ocus 8dorigned amlaidh sin.
(21) Ocus ro 9thuissim Dia 10bleidhmila mora J muiridi ||, i lxind uili n-anmand mbeothach i 12so-cums- caightheach ro 13turgbatar na liusci i n-a 14n-ernailibh. Ocus ro 15tuissimh Dia 16in uili 17foluaimneaclm do 18rer a 19ceneoil, i 20adconairc Dia 21cor bo maith sin.
(22) Ocus ro 22bennai[ge]stear Dla doibh, -\ ro raidh: Foirbridh i 23barnimdaighter i llnaidh usci in mhara, *! 24imdaighthear na heoin for talmain. (23) Ocus 25dorigned amlaidh sin 26maiten i 27fescoir, 28.i. in 29cuicedh la.
25. (24) Ro raidh Mono Dia, $ .i. 2in Tuismeadh || : 3Turgbadh in 4talmun (sic) na hanmanda 5examla lar n-a 6cenel imchubhaidh, .i. iuminti i 7tondaitechu, i
"s-ged 18 sic M, tal- B 10 doridnead -° om. Dia 21 lesbairi
22 solusda mora 23 grian 24 rapdanaided 25 -airi 26 -chi
27 int. 28doridni 2<J suigig 30 a 31 indimo 32 thaitnidis
33 1 (obscured by a blot) con apdanigis 34 don (bis) ** -gdis
36 om. 37soll- 3S adchondaire 3S om. *• apparently go mbo
changed sec. man. to gor bo M 41 -ead 42-cor "-ten " om. .i. 45 ceathrumad la
24. ' Dia dono 2 turcbad 3 husci 4 tonnaichu 5 ses
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 47
may illuminate the earth. And thus was it done. (16) And God made two bright and great lights : He made the greater light [the sun] that it might rule over the day, and the lesser light in the night [the moon]. And He made stars, (17) and set them in the firmament of Heaven, that they might shine upon the earth, (18) and that they might rule over day and over night, and might divide the light from the darknesses. And God ,saw that to be good. (19) And evening and morning were made, the fourth day.
24. (20) God said further : Let the waters bring forth reptiles of the life that quickeneth, and birds under the firmament of Heaven. And so was it done.
(21) And God created great [sea] -monsters, and every living and mobile beast which the waters brought forth in their species. And God created all the birds according to their kind, and God saw that to be good.
(22) And God blessed them, and said : Increase and be ye multiplied, and fill the water of the sea, and let the birds be multiplied upon the land. (23) And thus were morning and evening made, the fifth day.
25. (24) Further God [the Creator] said : Let the earth bring forth the different animals after their fitting kind, cattle and reptiles, and the beasts of
6 -echu * -ime 8 doridnead changed by late corrector to dorignead
in marg. M 9 tuisim ,0 -ili " inn 12 -caith- 13 thurcbadar
"hern- B 15 written c'pnii (an abbreviation which would more
naturally suggest tursimh) B, c;im M. ,6 inn " -each 18 reir
19 cheniuil 20 -chond- 21 sin cor bo maith 22 beandachais
23 -gth- 24 -gther 25 dorignidh B doridnead M 26 maiden " -cor 2iom. .i. 29-ead
25. *Dia dono 2 om. in B : t;m. M. So lower down in the %
th;im. 3 turcbad * -muin 5 ecs- 6 -eol ' -aithechu
48 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
8blasda in 9talniun iar n-a n-earnailib imchuibhdibh ; - 10doridned amlaidh sin. (26) Ocns do raidh Dia : ^Denum 12in 13Duini "for n-imaigin i for 15cosmhailus foden, i remliapdanaighed do lascaib in mara, i do 16foluaimneaibh indimi, i do 17bhlastaibh in uili 18talman. (27) Ocus ro 19thuissim Dia in Duini 20fo imaigin foden —
Is amlaidh tra dorigni Dia in duine, .i. a 21corp do 22talmain %', 23.i. a 24chend a tir Garad, a ucht -j a bruindi a tir 25 Arabia, a bra a 26Lodam, a 27cossa a tir Agoiria, ||' a ruil do usci % in 28aer ||, a anal do aeor, a 29teas do 30teinidh, a 31anam do 32tinfedh De. Is amlaidh sin 33atat na 34ceithre dnili 35i ngach duini.
— ro thuisim 36em fear i mnai fo imaigin De. Ro thuisim 37iat (28) i ro 38bennach doibh i ro raid : Forbrid i dentar bar n-imdugadh, i linaidh in 39talmuin, i fomamaigid diiibh hi, i 40tigernaigid do lascaibh in mara i do 41eatliaitibh inime i do na huilibh anmandaibh 42for tahnain. (29) Ocus 43ro raidh Dia : Doradus daibh co follus in uili 44Iear 45tairgis sll for talmain, i na huili 46crondu 47techtait indtibh foden | silni a 48ceineoil |(a) 49comchubhaid, ardaigh eo 50mbeadh sin daibh a mbiadh i a n-aileamain : (30) i do uilibh anmandaibh in talman, i do uilibh 51eathaitibli in 52nimi, i do na huilibh 53da fil 54cumscugadh i talmain, i is 55inntibh ata 56ainim beoighes, co ro t7techat co tomultus. Ocus 58dorigned amlaidh sin. (31) Ocus 59adchondairc Dia na huili 60dorigni, % i £1do bhadar ||, 62comdar maithi co 63hadhbul. Ocus e4dorighnedh 65fescoir i 66maiten, in seiseadh la.
8
-sta 9 -man 10 dorigni B " denaid 12 om. in 13 duine
14 foim maigin (second word in rasura) B fornimaigin M 15 cosmailis
16 "foluaimneachaib innimi " piastaib 18thal- "tusim Dia in
Duine 20 f oi maigin B 2I chorp -2 thai- 2* i for .i.
24 cheand 25 Araibia 26 Lotain " chosa 28 aeoir 20 theas
30 thenid 31 ainm B anim M 32 thinfead 33 itat 34 -thri M in each duine 36 aen 'fear B 37 ins. imorro : iad 3S beandach
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 49
the earth after their fitting species; and so was it done. (25) [This verse missing.] (26) And God said : Let us make the Man under our own image and likeness, and let him have dominion over the fishes of the sea, and over the birds of Heaven, and over the beasts of the whole earth. (27) And God created the Man under His own image —
Now in this wise did God make the Man : his body of earth [his head of the land of Garad, his breast and bosom of the land of Arabia, his belly of Lodain, his legs of the land of Agoiria], his blood of [the] water [of the air], his breath of air, his heat of fire, his soul of the breath of God. Thus it is that the four elements are in every man.
In truth He made man and woman under the image of God. He created them (28) and blessed them and said : Increase, and let your multiplication be accomplished, and fill the earth, and subdue it unto yourselves, and lord it over the fishes of the sea and the birds of the Heaven and all the beasts upon the earth. (29) And God said : See, I have given you all the grass that bringeth forth seed upon the earth, and all the trees that have the seed of their proper kind within themselves, that they may be for food and sustenance unto you : (30) and unto all the beasts of the earth, and unto all the birds of Heaven, and unto all that have motion upon the earth, and that have within them the soul that quickeneth, that they may have them for nourishment. And thus was it done. (31) And God saw all things that He had made [and that were], that they were wondrous good: and evening and morning were made, the sixth day.
39 talam 40 tigernaidhi B 41 -dib 42 ins. f uilet 43 om. vo B
44 1 er 45 -rceas 4G chrunnu " -taid intib f odein silne 48 chen-
49 comcubhaib B 50 mbeith 51 -dib 52 nime 53 do fil Si -gud
55 intib 56 ainm beoaiges 57 thechtad 58 -ghnidh B doridnead M
59 otconairc B 60 dorigne 61 ro badar 62 comdartha B 63 -dbal 64 -ridned e5 -cor 66 -den.
(a) These 3 words s- M
L.G. — VOL. I. E
50 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
20. (l)(a) In principio 1creauit Deus caelum et terram. (2) 2 [Terra autem erat inanis et uacua] et 3tenebrae 4erant super faciem abyssi : et Spiritus 5 Domini ferebatur super aquas. (3) Dixitque Deus : Fiat lux. Et facta est lux. (4) G[Et uidit Deus lucem quod esset bona,] et 7diuisit 6Deus lucem 9a tenebris. (5) Appellauitque lucem 'Diem,' et tenebras 'Noctem.' Factumque est 10<ita> uespere et mane, dies "primus.
21. (6) Dixit quoque ^Deus] : Fiat firmamentum in medio aquarum, et diuidat aquas ab aquis. (7) Et fecit Deus firmamentum, diuisitque aquas quae erant sub 2firmamento 3ab aquis quae erant super firmamentum : et factum est ita. (8) Vocauitque Deus firmamentum 'Caelum,' et factum est uespere et mane, dies secundus.
22. (9) Dixit uero Deus: Congregentur aquae quae sub caelo sunt in locum unum, et appareat aricla : factumque est ita. (10) Et uocauit Deus aridam, Terram; congregationesque aquarum appellauit Maria. Et uidit Deus quod esset bonum. (11) Et ait 1<Deus> : Germinet terra herbam uirentem et 2facientem semen, et lignum pomiferum faciens fructum iuxta 3genus suum, cuius semen in semetipso sit super terram. 4[Et factum est ita]. (12) Et protulit terra herbam uirentem et 5facientem semen iuxta genus suum, lignumque faciens fructum et habens unumquodque sementem secundum speciem suam. Et uidit Deus quod esset bonum. (13) Fac- tumque est uespere et mane, dies tertius.
23. (14) Dixit autem Deus: Fiant Huminaria in firma- mento caeli, 2et dividant diem ac noctem, et sint in signa, et tempora, 3[et] dies, et annos, (15) ut luceant in firmamento caeli, et inluminent terram. Et factum est ita. (16) Fecitque Deus duo magna luminaria : luminare maius ut praeesset diei, et luminare minus 4[ut praeesset] nocti : et 5<fecit> Stellas, (17) et posuit eas in firmamento caeli, ut lueerent super terram, (18) et praeessent diei ac nocti, et diuiderent
(a) Italics in the Latin text denote readings differing from that followed in the Vatican variorum edition of the Vulgate (here called ST = Standard Text). [Square] brackets mark words in the Latin not represented in the Irish trans- lation. <^Angled^> brackets denote words presupposed by the Irish translation, but not represented in any of the mss. of the Vulgate used in the Vatican edition.
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 51
lucem 6a tenebris. Et uidit Deus quod esset bonum. ( 19) Et factum est uespere et mane, dies quartus.
24. (20) Dixit etiam Deus : Producant aquae 1reptilia animae uiuentis, et Hiolatilia 3 [super terram] sub firmamento caeli : <Et factum est ita>. (21) Creauitque Deus cete grandia 4<marina>, et omnem animam uiuentem atque 5motabilem quam produxerunt aquae in species suas. Et 6<creauit Deus> 7omnia uolatilia secundum genus suum, et uidit Deus quod esset bonum. (22) Benedixitque eis s<Deus>, dicens : Crescite et multiplicamini, et replete aquas maris, auesque multiplicentur super terram. (23) Et factum est 9<ita> uespere et mane, dies quintus.
25. (24) Dixit quoque Deus : Producat terra 1animalia diuersa in genere suo, iumenta et reptilia, et bestias terrae secundum species suas; factumque est ita. (25) 2[This verse missing.} (26) Et ait 3<Deus> : Faciamus hominem ad imaginem et similtudinem nostram, et praesit piscibus maris, et uolatilibus caeli, et bestiis universae4[que] terrae 5[omnique reptili quod mouetur in terra]. (27) Et creauit Deus hominem ad imaginem suam. 6Ad imaginem Dei creauit [ilium] masculum et femiham. Creauit eos, (28) Bene- dixitque illis 7[Deus] et ait: Crescite et multiplicamini, et replete terram, et subicite earn, et dominamini piscibus maris et uolatilibus caeli et uniuersis animantibus 8[quae mouentur] super terram. (29) Dixitque Deus 9Ecce, dedi uobis omnem herbam adferentem semen super terram, et uniuersa ligna quae habent in semetipsis sementem generis sui, ut sint uobis 10in escam : (30) et cunctis animantibus terrae 11omnisque uolueribus caeli, et universis quae mouentur in terra, et in quibus est anima uiuens, ut habeant ad uescendum. Et factum est ita. (31) Viditque Deus cuncta quae fecit, et erant ualde bona : et factum est uespere et mane, dies sextus.
Notes on the Biblical Text, Chapter I.
The following abbreviations are used in these notes: —
Heb. — The original Hebrew text.
LXX. — The Greek rendering, commonly called the Septuagint.
OL. — The Old Latin version or versions.
Vulg.— The Vulgate.
52 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
ST — The Standard text, as set forth in the Vatican variorum edition of the Vulgate. (For the apparatus criticus of the Latin text, reference must be made to this comprehensive work.)
A — The MS. of the Vulgate used by the Irish translator.
Tr. — The Irish translator, or his translation.
R3, sR3— The Third Redaction of LG; a Scribe of the Third Redaction.
fl 20. 1creauit, not fecit, as in R1 R2, showing at the outset that we have now to deal with a Vulgate text. 2The bracketed words are paraphrased only in the text of Tr. : possibly by sR3, who inserted some of the long interpolation just pre- ceding, in order to complete its incorporation with the text. It may be worth noting, as a coincidence, that the sense of the paraphrase resembles the possible alternative reading of the well-known syntactic ambiguity at the beginning of Heb. (on which see any standard commentary, such as Driver's or Skinner's). These opening words can be, and probably ought to be, translated "In the beginning of God's creating . . . the earth was without form ..." To this version the sense of the Irish text approximates. 3The plural dorchata, corresponding to the Latin tenebrae, is an illustration of Tr.'s almost slavish literalness. On the other hand, he never hesitates to strengthen his rendering by inserting synonyms or adjectives (as here dluithi). ^Erant, rejected in ST, but contained in many mss. Nobidis shows that it was found in A. In tan sin corresponds to nothing in any ms., and is presumably an incorporated gloss. 5Dei in ST, Domini in two mss. only. 6Either Tr. or sR3 has committed hap- lography. Possibly Tr.'s eye wandered unconsciously from et uidit to et diuisit. 7One of the commonest mannerisms of Tr. is to render one Latin word by two synonyms, as here, ro therba i ro deilig. sDeas rejected by ST, but supported by a few mss. as well as Heb. and LXX. 9Ac tenebms ST : but numerous mss. have a tenebris. 10No authority for ami aid sin in any version or ms. ""One day" in all versions and mss. : "the first day" in Tr.
H 21. 1Deus omitted, probably by a scribal error induced by dana following. 2Under the influence of the Latin text Tr. has dropped the article before finnamentum in the later verses of this fl, as in the earlier redactions. 3Ab his in ST. Only one ms. (which also has the rare reading Domini, U 20 note5) has ab aquis. The point is not of much critical
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 53
importance, as Irish idiom would almost require the repeti- tion of the substantive.
ff 22. 1Deus not in any Vulg. MS. It is, however, found in LXX (ko.1 direv 6 deos). 2No authority for the repetition of fer in Tr., but it is practically required by Irish idiom. 3A chel no a cenel, the variant reading in B, recalls the LXX Kara y«Vo? kou Kafr' 6/xoioTrjTa. 4The bracketed words probably dropped by sR3. 5Adferentem in ST f orient em in OL, also found in a few Vulg. mss.
fl 23. 1Lespaireda solus-taitnemaclia, is a good illustration of the tendency to verbosity which Tr. displays, for all his literalness. 2Ut in ST, but there is considerable support for et. 3No authority for the omission of et. 4Ut praeesset omitted by one Vulg. MS. only. 5No authority for fecit here. 6Ac tenebras in ST. Two mss. have a tenebras, and several a tenebris. One has ac tenebris.
fl 24. ^Reptile in ST : reptilia in a few mss. and some quotations. The plural also in LXX. Wolatile in ST. Vulg. follows Heb. idiom in using a neuter singular collectively, and there is no Latin authority for the plural here. LXX, however, has the plural TreTctvd. 3Haplography by sR3 : probably pcalfri lost before pmcum. 4No authority for marina, presupposed by the Irish muiridi. The latter is probably a gloss. 5Mutabilem in ST, but motabilem has much support. 6No authority for these words. 7As before, the plural is used for singular collective. 8Deus not in Vulg., but LXX has o 0eoS. 9Note (10) in fl 20 applies here also.
ff 25. 1Animam uiuentem in ST : nothing like rendering in Tr. in any version or ms. : possibly Tr. misread uiuentem as diuersam. 2As verse (25) is almost literally identical with (24), it could easily have been passed over by a careless or lazy scribe. 3Deus not in Vulg., but LXX has o <9eos. 4There is some ms. authority for the omission of que. 5This sentence lost, presumably on account of the repetition terrae . . . terra, or its Irish equivalent. 6The punctuation of the Latin text presupposed by Tr. is different from that usually followed. 7No authority for the omission of Deus, or 8of quae mouentur. 9Co follus or is f alius is Tr. 's bad but invariable rendering for ecce. 10In escam rendered by a mbiad 7 a n-ailemain: a good illustration of Tr.'s fondness for piling up synonyms. ^Omnique uolucri in ST. No authority for the
plural in Vulg., but LXX has -n-aai to!? ireT€ivol<;.
54 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
Chapter II.
26. (1) Eo aIoirbthighid didu na 2Nimi i in 3talam - 4a n-uili cumdach. (2) Ocus ro 5comhslanaighstear Dia isin 6seisead 16 in uili gnlm doroindi ; i ro cumsain Dia isin 7tsechtmadh lo on uili gnim issed on ro 8forbhthighthestar. (3) Ocus ro 9bennachas Dia in seaclitmadh laa i ro 10naemastar he, uair ro "cumsain ann on uili gnim ro 12tuissimh.
27. (4) Is iad so tra Huismeadha in Nimi i in talman, in tan do 2tuisinit imalle, isin 16 3a ndearnai 4an Coimdi Dia 4Neam i 5talum, (5) resiu na thurcbad in talam 6uili 7fualascaigh in 8feraind, i resiu 9ro clandaighedh in talam fer in 10feraind; uair "nuchu dearna Dia fearthain for talmain, i m 12ro bi and in tan sin 13duini ro 14oipredaigheadh in talam. (6) Acht na freasgabad on talmuin 15topar, ro 16fliuchadli i ro bocadh "uili dreach in talman. (7) Ro 18crutaigli dono Dia 19duini 20do criaidli in talmun coitcliind, i ro ?1thinfeastar Dia tinfeadh beathadli i n-a gnuis, i 22dorignedh in 23duine, i n-anmain na 24beoaigheadh.
In tan 25cloronad duine i nach 26raibi ainm fair, con- debhairt Dia re 27cheatra hainglibh dul d'iarraidh anma do. Ocus dochuaidh Michel dochum in airthir, -j 28adcon- daircc retlaind .i. 29Anatoile a ainm, -\ 30dorat leis cet litir 31in n-anma sin. Ocus 32docuaidh Raphel 33fodhess, -\ atconnaic retlaind 34ann .i. 35Dissis a hainm, -\ 30dorat a cet litir36. Ocus dochuaidh 37Gaibriel 38fotuaidh, t 39atconnaic in 40retlaind 41dianadh hainm Arethos, •] 42dorat
26. 1 -tigid 2 Nime 3 talman 4 in uili MSS. 5 chomslan- aigestair 6 sesed 7 seachtmad . . . ised s orbtigeastair 9 bennachastair 10 -astair " cumsan and 12 thusim
27. 'tjmeada indime 2 thuismit M t;im M 3 om. a ndearnai B 4-4 in Coimdiu .i. Dia nemda 5 talam i resiu na thurgbad M : talam na turcbadh resiu B 6 uile ' -caich 8'f eraind 9 1 instead of ro (resiu i eland, in rasura) B 10 'f eraind " nocho I2 roibi
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 55
Chapter II.
26. (1) So the Heavens and the earth and all their adornment were completed. (2) And God finished upon the sixth day all the work which He did; and God rested upon the seventh day from every work which He accomplished. (3) And God blessed the seventh day and hallowed it, for He rested in it from every work which He created.
27. (4) Now these are the generations of the Heaven and the earth, when they were created together, in the day when the Lord God made Heaven and earth, (5) before the earth was raising up all the plants of the field, and before the earth was producing the grass of the field; for God made not rain upon the earth, and there was not there, at that time, a man who should till the earth. (6) But from the earth would rise a spring, to moisten and to soften all the face of the earth. (7) So God created a man out of the clay of the common earth, and God breathed the breath of life into his face, and the Man was made, a soul that was quickened.
When Man was made and as he had no name, God said to four angels to go in search of a name for him. Michael went to the east, and saw a star, Anatole its name, and he brought with him the first letter of that name. Raphael went southward, and saw a star there, Dusis its name, and he brought its first letter. Gabriel went northward, and saw the star called Arctos, and brought with him the first letter of the name. Uriel went westward, and saw a star
3duine 14 aitrebad 15 tobar " I liuchad " om. uili : drech
18 eliruthaich 19 duine 20 don criaid in talman choitchind 21 -tair 2 doridnead 23 dune 24 mbeoaiged 25 dorondad dune 20 roibe
ceithri 28 atcondairc 29 Anathole a hainm 30 dorad (bis)
31 an anma (bis) 32 dochuaid 33 -deas n adchonnairc 34 om. ann
35Dessis 3sins. les "Gabriel 3S f othuaid 39 adcondairc
40 retla 41 dianaid ainm 42 dorad les
27
56 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
leis cet litir 31in n-anma sin. Dochuaidli 43dana Uriel slar, 1 44adconnaic *5retlaind isin 4Gfuinedh 47diana hainm Mesimbria, i 48tug leis in cet litir. Ocus 49adbert Dla : Legh, a 50Uriel, na litri-sea. Ro raidh 51Uiriel : Adham. Ocus adbert Dla : Bldh amlaidh52.
28. (8) Ko ^hlonasdar imorro Dla Parrthus na 2Toili % .i. 3locc na n-airirdacht || on 4tossach, i is and ro suighidh in duine ro 5cruthaigistar, J .i. Adham ||. (9) Ocus ro 6thairg Dla i ro tusim 7don n-uir in 8uili crand socraidh alaind o 9f eghadh, i in uili crand 10ailgin co "tomultus. Ro suidhigh 12dana Dla Crand Bheathadh 13a meadhon 14Parrthuis, i 15Crand 16Feassa Maithusa i Uilc. (10) Ocns no 17theigeadh sruth t8sechtair 19a Parrtus, co 20ceitri cennaib fair, do 21moethugadh i do 22bocgucadn Parrduis, i in 23talman 24uili co 25coitcend.
y1 Is 26iat so imorro 27anmanda na 28ceitri 29cend sin, 1 na 30ceitri sruth 31filit $ 32sel || 33seachtar eistibh, fo 34ceitri airdibh in 35domum ; .i. 36Fisson t Geon, 37Tigris - 38Eofraiteis.
(11) Fisson imorro, $ 39risinabar sruth nGaind, sair 40gach 41ndiriuch 42teidside || — is e in sruth sin 4?timchellus uili 44talmain 45Euilath .i. inadh sin 46a ngeinidar or 47logmur lan-alaind; (12) i is andsin fogabar 48boellium, i in 49leg logmar 50eli 51dianadli ainm onichinus.
.i. cloch gabhus 52inti clelba na 53mblath. 54Boelliiim 55imorro .i. 56leg 57logmar 58lan-solusta, issi fogebh in
43 dono 41 atcondairc 45 ins. in 46 fuinead '" dianad and om.
hainm 48 tuc les 40 d^eart 50 Uiriel 51 Urel 52 ins. ol se
28 ] clandustair 2 Tole 3 log 4 tosach 5 cruthaigestair
8 thairc 7 do nuir 8 uile crand sochraid 9 f egad 10 ailgen
11 -alt- 12Dia dono 13i "-d; 15 -ann 10 fesa
" -ged 18 seach- 19 om. a Parrtus ;o -thrib cend- 21 maeth-
22 bogugad 23 tal- B, taiman corrected prima mann to talnian M
24 uile a -cheand 26 iad 27 anmand M -thri 29 crand
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 57
in the sunset called Mesembria, and brought with him the first letter. God said : Uriel, read these letters. Uriel said : Adam. And God said : So be it.
28. (8) Moreover God planted a Paradise of Pleasure [i.e. the place of delights] from the beginning, and it is there that He set the man whom He had created [, Adam]. (9) And God prepared and created of the clay every tree pleasant and fair to see, and every tree sweet to taste. Also God set the Tree of Life in the midst of Paradise, and the Tree of Knowledge of Good and of Evil. (10) And a river would go past out of Paradise having four branches, to moisten and to soften Paradise, and the whole earth in general.
Now these are the names of those four branches, and of the four streams which are [a space] beyond, out of them, through the four quarters of the earth; Phison and Geon, Tigris and Euphrates.
(11) As for Phison, [which is called the river of Ganges, eastward straight it goeth] . It is that stream which surroundeth all the land of Euilath, that place where gold is generated, precious and most beautiful :
(12) and there is found bdellium, and the other precious stone which is called onyx,
a stone which receiveth within itself the figures of flowers. Bdellium, moreover, is a precious, most brilliant stone,
cend, the former word stroked through and expuncted B 30 cethri
31 -lead 32 om. sel 33 sechtair 34 cheithri h- 35 -main
36 Fison hie et semper 31 ins. i 38 Eof raites 39 f risin- 40 each
"-rech ^teitside 43-chillis "thalmuin 45 Euibath B
48 angenend 47 -mar 48 bo eill- 49 leag 50 ele 51 -naid
52innti E3 carelessly written so as to loolc like nibJath B
54 bo ellium 55 om. imorro 56 leag 57 initial 1 in rasura
extending back to g of preceding word B E8 lan-solusda isi
58 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
59mairgreit isin 60ucht; i in baili 61a faghaibh hi, nl theit seici, aeht anadh 62isin inat sin.
(13) Geon imorro, J frisinabar Nilus, || in smth. 63tanaisse J i 64fothuaidh 65tlieitsidhe || i is e in smth sin 66timcellns i 67tacmaiglieas uili talmuin 68na Heitheoibi. (14) In 69tres smth imorro .i. Tigris 70$ siar 71teit-sidhe 72gach 73ndirmch || fri tirib 74Asardha. In 75ceatramad smth imorro .i. 7CEufraiteis, % 77fodhess 78gach 79ndlriuch 80theidside, co roith80 tre lar 81mBabiloini. ||
Tobar Parrduis, buan a blad . . .
29. (15) xRug larom Dla leis in 2duine $ i. Adham, |i I' lar n-a 3dhennm i Tar n-a cruthngad3, ||' i ro snigidh he i 4Parrthns na Toili, ardaigh co 5n-oiprigeadh $ .i. co n-aireadh 7 co mbenadh, 6gan alius 6gan 7torrsi ||, -1 co 8coimetadh, J .i. co ro 9selbadh 10Parrthns lxgan samgadh 12timna 13i aithni De ||. (16) Ocus ro 14athain Dla do ar raidis ris : Tomhail i caith 15a 16thomdh gach craind fil i 17Parrthus, (17) Ni ro 18chaithea do 19toradh Craind Feassa Maithusa i Uilc imorro, uair 20cibedh la a caithfea ni do thoradh in 21craind sin, 22atbela 6 bhas.
y1 Uair ro bo 23chindti 24demin 25bass do, on 15 ro chaithfeadh : is airi ro raidhidh 26so.
y2 Is airi ro 27thoirmisc Dla toradh in ehraind sin do 28ehaiteam, co 29feasad Adham a bheith fo cumachta 7 fo smaeht in 30Coimdhedh.
69 -ret 60usin B (a misreading of up) 61 i fagaib 02 isa ninat sin 63 -usti 64 bo- M theid- 66 -chillis 6I tacmainges uili talmain
68 na Theoipe B e9treas ™ ins. i "theid "each
73 -rech 74 -rrda re ceathrumad 76 Eof raites 77 fa B f o M :
deas M 7S each ,9 -reach 8°-80 om. B : thre 81 mBaibiloine.
29. 1 rue 2 dune 3~3 denam . . . chru- 4 -dus 5 -ged
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 59
which findeth the pearl in its bosom : the place where it [the stone] findeth it [the pearl] it goeth no further, but abideth in that place.
(13) As for Geon, [the which is called Nilus], the second river, [northward it goeth] and it is that river which surroundeth and encompasseth the whole land of Ethiopia. (14) As for the third river, Tigris, [westward it goeth straight] toward the Assyrian regions. The fourth river, Euf rates, [southward it goeth straight, so that it floweth through the middle of Babylonia.]
Poem no. VI.
29. (15) Thereafter God took with Him the man [Adam, after he was fashioned and created] and set him in the Paradise of Pleasure, that he might till it [i.e. that he might plough and reap, without sweat and without weariness,] and keep it, [i.e. that he might possess Paradise without transgressing the covenant and commandment of God]. (16) And God commanded, having said to him : Partake and eat of the fruit of every tree that is in Paradise, (17) howbeit thou shalt not eat aught of the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and of Evil, for whatsoever day thou eatest aught of the fruit of that tree, thou shalt die the death.
For sure and certain was death for him, from the day in which he should eat : for that reason said He this.
The reason why God forbade the eating of the fruit of that tree, was that Adam might know that he was under the power and authority of the Lord.
6 ceii (bis) 'toirrse 8 -edad 9aisebad 10 -dus " cen
"tinma B thimna M " na haichne De 14 aithin 15 om. a
18 torad each " -dus 1S chaithi 19 thorad chraind f easa
maithiusa 20 ce la i caithf ea 21 chraind 22 adb- 23 chinti
24 written as though deinin B 25 bais 26 seo 27 thair- -s -thim
29 feassam B 30 Choimdead.
60 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
30. (18) Ko raidh Dla Mana : Ni maith duine do beith 2aenar. Denum desidhe do 3fortachtaighidh bus 4cosmail fris. (19) O 5ro cruthaighidh didu uili anmand in talman do criaidh, 7 uili 6foluaimhnigh in Nimi, tug Dia 7leis iad co Hadhamh, co 8feghadh 7 co 9fessad ceti anmand o 10ngairfidh Adham "iat. Uair is e ainm 12fil for 13gach 14aumand, in t-ainm o ra ghair Adham he 15annsin. (20) Ocus ro 16gairmeastair Adhamli 6 17n-anmandaibh 18fein na huili amnanda 19sin, i 20uile foluaiinnechu Nime, 7 21huili bhiasta in talman. 22Nuchu n-agbadh Adliamh imorro in tan sin fortachtaigh da chosmail 23fein. (21) 24Ronfuid didhu Dia suan 25sadhal sir-codulta in Adam, ioro 26chodail Adhamli, 27ro thogaib Dia 28oen asna 29da asnaibh, i ro lln o feoil a inadh.
Is 30aire ro aslaigh Dia cotludh for Adamh, comad as 31aiti tuigsi na neichi splradallta 7 32fiss na todochaide; 33ar ro lln Dia he o 34spirud eagna 7 35faistini 36fochetoir isin 37cotludh sin.
(22) Ocus ro 38cumdaig Dia in t-asna dorad a Hadhamh, co mbo 39bean etrocht 40lan-alainn 41lan- denmach, 7 dorad leis co Hadham. (23) Ocus ro raidh Adamh : is follus 42conid 1 cnaim dom 43cnamaibh 44i 45conidh feoil dom 46feoil-sea 1 is 1 seo cet 47faitsini dorighni Adamh || ; 7 bidh 48de a sloind-seo uirago, uair is do fir 49doronadh.
Is 1 50so cet eoibhti 7 cet 51faistini dorigni Adamh, amail indistear isin 52seriptuir diadlia .i. Ecce r':ios de 54ossibus meis, et caro de came 55mea.
30. ' dono 2 aenur 3 fortachtaidi 4 chosmail 3 ra chruthaid
6 'f oluaimneach inime tuc 7 les 8f edad 9 f easad 10 ngairf ead
11 iad 12 fuil 13 each " anmanna B I5 and- 16 -ist-
" om. n- 1S f en 19 om. sin 20 uili foluaimneacha "uili piasta
22 nocho 23 fen 24 ro 'find (sic) B 25 sadail sam-chotalta
29 chotail " oen do thocaib (sic) 2S aen : in written in marg. in
late hand before oen, and then scratched out, B 29 dia M airi ro
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 61
30. (18) God said further : It is not good for a man to be alone. Let us therefore make for him an helper that shall be like unto him. (19) Now when every animal of the earth was formed of clay, and every bird of the Heaven, God brought them with Him to Adam, to see and know by what name Adam would call them. For this is the name that every animal hath, the name by which Adam called it at that time. (20) And Adam called all those animals by their own names, and all the birds of Heaven, and all the beasts of the Earth. But Adam could not at that time find an helper like to himself. (21) So God sent a quiet sleep of lasting slumber upon Adam, and as Adam slept, God took one of his ribs, and filled its place with flesh.
This is why God enticed a sleep upon Adam, for it [sleep] is the chosen teacher of spiritual matters and of knowledge of the future : for God filled him forthwith with a spirit of wisdom and of prophecy in that sleep.
(22) And God fashioned the rib which He took out of Adam, so that it was a bright woman, perfect in comeliness and in shape, and He brought her with Him to Adam. (23) And Adam said : Lo, this is bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh [this is the first prophecy which Adam made] ; and therefore let her name be uirago, seeing that it was of man that she was made.
This is the first bride-gift and the first prophecy which Adam made, as it is related in the Holy Scripture, Ecce os de ossibus meis, et caro de came mea.
"f oslaic 31 aidi tuicsi na neichid spiritalta 32 fis na togochaidl
33 aro 34 -rait 35 -tine 3S -doir 37 -tlad : a dot with no
significance over the t, B 3S -daid 39 ben edrocht 40 -aind
41 -tenm- B 42 con i B, conid (om. following i) M 43 clmamaib
44 om. i B 45 conad 46 feoil-sea so cet B : om. sea M 4' "fait sine
dorigne 48 he 49 doronnad 50 seo cet choibchi 51 'f aitsine
dorisne 52 scribtuir B3 oss B M osibus M 55 om. mea
62 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
(24) Is airi sin r,Gfuicfis in duine 07a athair i a mathair, m, lenfas da setigh, i 58beidid dlas an aen cholaind, % arai gradha, no ar 50tusmidh cloindi ||. (25) Is amlaid imorro bal 60ceachtar de na 61deissi sin, i 62siat fl3nochta, .i. Adanih i a G4seitigh : t nir bo 65nar leo.
26. (1) Igitur perfecti sunt caeli et terra et omnis ornatus eorum. (2) Compleuitque Deus die 1 sexto opus 2<omne> [suum] quod fecerat ; et requieuit 3<Deus> die septimo ab universo opere 4<id> quod patrarat. (3) Et benedixit <Deus> diei septimo et sanctificauit ilium, quia in ipso cessauerat ab omni opere [suo] quod creauit [Deus ut faeeret].
27. (4) Istae 1sunt generationes caeli et terrae, quando 2<simul> creata sunt, in die quo fecit 3Dominus Deus caelum et terrain. (5) ''Antequam oreretur in terra omne uirgultum agri, et 5antequam germinaret <terra> oiimem herbam : non enim pluerat 6Deus super terram, et homo non erat qui operaret terram. (6) Sed fons ascendebat e terra, 7inrigans uniuersam superficiem terrae. (7) Formauit igitur [Domi- nus] Deus de limo terrae 8<uulgaris>, et inspirauit in faciem eius spiraculum uitae, et factus est homo, in animam uiuentem.
28. (8) Plantauerat autem 1[Dominus] Deus Paradisum Voluptatis a principio, in quo posuit hominem quern forma- uerat. (9) Produxitque [Dominus] Deus de humo omne lignum pulchrum uisu, et <omne lignum> ad uescendum suaue. Lignum etiam Vitae 2<posuit Deus> in medio Paradisi, Lignumque Scientiae Boni et Mali. (10) Et fluuius egrediebatur de 3Paradiso ad inrigandum Paradisum [qui inde diuiditur in] quattuor capita. (11) 4[Nomen unij
50 ifuicfeas " a mathair i a athair 58 biaitdit B 50 1 ; mead
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 63
(24) Wherefore shall the man leave his father and his mother, and shall attach himself to his wife, and they shall be two persons in one flesh [for the sake of love, and for begetting of progeny.]. (25) Now in this wise were both of those twain, naked, to wit Adam and his wife : and they counted it no shame.
5Fison : ipse est qui circuit omnem terram Euilath, ubi nascitur aurum. [(12) et aurum terrae illius] optimum [est] : ibi inuenitur 6bdellium et lapis onychinus. (13) [Et nomen] fluuio secundo, Geon : ipse est qui circuit omnem terram Aethiopiae. (14) [Nomen uero] fluminis tertii Tigris : ipse uadit contra Assyrios. Fluuius autem quartus, [ipsa est] Euf rates.
29. (15) Tulit ergo [Dominus] Deus hominem, et posuit eum in Paradiso Voluptatis, ut operaretur et custodiret ilium. (16) Praecepitque ei 1<Deus> dicens : Ex omni ligno Paradisi comede, (17) de Ligno autem Scientiae Boni et Mali ne comedas; in quocumque die comediris ex eo, 2morte morieris.
30. (18) Dixit quoque [Dominus] Deus : Non est bonum esse hominem solum. Faciamus ei 1<igitur> adiutorem similem sui. (19) Formatis igitur [Dominus] Deus de humo cunctis animantibus terrae, et uniuersis uolatilibus caeli, adduxit ea ad Adam ut uideret quid uocaret ea. Omne enim quod 2<tunc> uocauit Adam animae uiuentis ipsum est nomen eius. (20) Appellauitque Adam nominibus suis cuncta animantia, et uniuersa uolatilia caeli, et omnes bestias terrae. Adam vero 3<tum> non inueniebatur adiutor similis eius. (21) Inmisit ergo [Dominus] Deus 4soporem in Adam; cumque obdormisset tulit unam de costis eius, et repleuit
60 cecht- n desi 62 siad 63 nocht 64 set- 65 nair
64 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
carnem pro ea. (22) Et aedificauit [Dominus] Deus costam quam tulerat de Adam in mulierem, et adduxit earn ad Adam. (23) Dixitque Adam : r°Ecce os ex ossibus me is, et caro de carne mea ; haec uocabitur Virago, quoniam de uiro 6facta est. (24) Quamobrem relinquet homo patrem suum et matrem, et adhaerebit uxori suae, et erunt duo in carne uno. (25) Erant autem uterque nudi, Adam scilicet et uxor eius, et non erubescebant.
Notes on the Biblical Text, Chapter II.
]\ 26. ^eptimo ST sexto OL. LXX, one Vulg. ms. prima manu and one secunda manu. 2No authority for omne. 3 Deus found in one ms. only : no other authority. 4No authority for the emphatic form issed on.
ft 27. 1Sunt not in ST, but has fair support. 2No original for imalle in any ms. 3Dominus rendered here, but not later : see notes on this fl. In the Latin mss., Deus is occasionally omitted in the combination Dominus Deus, but not Dominus. 4The order of words in ST and all mss. and Versions is Et omne mrgultum agri antequam oreretur in terra, omnemque herbam regionis 2^usQuam germinaret. sPriusquam, ST. One ms. has antequam, which corresponds more closely to the Irish repetition reslu . . . reslu. But we can hardly lay any critical stress upon this. * Dominus Deus in ST and mss. : see note (3). Unrigans is represented in Tr. by two Irish words, ro fliuchad "\ ro bocad. This mannerism is so constant in Tr. that it is hardly necessary to call further attention to it. 8Coitcliend, which has no original in the Versions or mss., is most likely an incorporated gloss.
1j 28. xSee note (3) in preceding ff : no further note need be taken of this point. 2No authority for these words. 3De loco uoluptatis ST and all Vulg. mss.: i$'ESe/x LXX. No
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 65
authority for de Paradiso. 4This part of Tr. has suffered to such an extent from the intrusions of scribes and glossators that the Latin original cannot be restored with certainty. 3Spelt Phison in ST, but several mss. have the spelling with P. GThe Irish boellium is the pardonable blunder of a copyist. The verbosity of the rendering of ct lapis onychinus may be original, but is more probably a scribal modification, meant to make these hard words clearer.
fl 29. *One ms. has Dominus here : Kvpios 6 #«os LXX, Dominus Deus O.L. 2Literally rendered, atbela 6 has.
Y\ 30. 1Dcside in Tr. : no authority in Versions or mss. 2A.nnsin : no authority in Latin Vers., but conceivably Tr. looked up the Greek and misread idv as wda. The rendering of this verse is less literal than usual. Animae uiuentis is treated simply as animal, and omne is transferred from the " names" to the ''animals." sIn tan sin: no authority in Versions or mss. 4Note the intrusive adjectives in Tr. here and after ben in the following verse. These may be due to the original Tr., but are more probably interpolated. See fl 31 note (1). 3Is follus, as already said, represents an original ecce. Ecce also appears in the Latin quotation in the gloss, and it must have been familiar from some earlier version which also influenced R2 (fl 5 A). It is not found in any Vulg. ms. ST has hoc nunc, LXX tovto vvv. GSumpta in ST and all authorities.
l.g. — VOL. I.
66 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
Chapter III.
31. (1) Ro bai $ in tan sin || nathair ba acelgachu J i b'2amaindsiu i ba tuaichliu1 || o uilib 3anmandaibh in 4talmun Moroinde Dia.
y1 Ro 6formthigh Lucifear fri Hadhamh, dearbh leis is e dobert[h]a in Neam tar a 7eis, dia lmadh : 8conidh airi sin dochuaidh 9a ndeilb 10naithreach, eo ro "faslaigh 12imurbus for 13Eua, im thoradh in 14craind ergartha do thomailt; co ro 15faslaigh Eua for Adamh.
y2 Is I seo cet 1Gcheist i cet 1Timcomarc 18dorigni diabui isin domun. Cur precepit etc.
Ocus $ is I in athair sin || ro raidh 19risin mnai : Cid di'a 20forcongair Dia duibsi 21gen nl do 22chaitheamh do nili 23crand 24Parrthuis ? (2) Ro 25reagair in bhean 26don nathraigh : 27Caithmit % 1 28no sastar || do thoradh na crand 29atat i 30Parrthns; (3) ro 31forchongair Dia 22dtiin imorro na ro 33chaithmis do thoradh in 34craind ata, 35a meadon 36Parrthuis, i na 37ro taidlimmis he, 38na 39ro aiplinm o thircur. (4) Ro raidh imorro 40in nathair 41frisin mnai : 42Nuchu n-eipiltaisi etir 6 bhas. (5) Do-43fuicfmd Dia imorro 44secip la chaithfithi-si do 45toradh in craind sin, co 46n-oslaicfiter bar ruisc % .i. 47im nilc || .i. co mbeithi amail aingliu i tuicthi maitli 1 olc.
32. (6) 1Atconnairc didu in bean cor bo maith in crand re 2tomultus i re 3chaithium, i 4cor bo socraidh
31. 1_1 cealgachu i fa hanmaindi i fa hamaindsiu i ba tuaithli 1 amaimsiu B 3 a dot over the d without significance M 4 -man
B ins. do neoch; dorindi 8 'f oirmdig ' esi 8conad 9i
10 nathrach n faslaich 12 imarbuss 13 Eba " cliraind
15 'f aslaid Eba ,0 chest M qist B " -inch- " -gne " f risin
10 ro loreh- 21 cen " chaithim -3 chrand -l -duis f esin :
a bhaili here written in marg. in late hand B 25 'f recair 26 da
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 67
Chapter III.
31. (1) [At that time] there was a serpent, the wiliest [, the craftiest, and the subtlest] of all the beasts of the earth which God made.
Lucifer was envious against Adam : he was assured that the Heaven would be given to him in his [own] room, to fill it. Wherefore he went in the form of a serpent, and enticed sin upon Eve, in the matter of eating of the forbidden tree; so Eve made enticement upon Adam.
This is the first question and the first enquiry which a devil made in the world. Cur praecepit etc.
And [it is that serpent which] said unto the woman : For what reason hath God forbidden you to eat aught of every tree of Paradise? (2) The woman answered the serpent : We eat of [and are sated with] the fruit of the trees that are in Paradise; (3) but God hath commanded us not to eat of the fruit of the tree that is in the midst of Paradise, nor even to touch it, lest we die by a chance. (4) But the serpent said unto the woman : Ye shall not at all die the death. (5) But God knoweth that in whatsoever day ye shall eat of the fruit of that tree, that your eyes shall be opened [concerning evil] — that is, that ye shall be as angels, in good and evil fortune.
32. (6) So the woman saw that the tree was good for eating and for partaking, and that it was pleasant
nathair " an inserted i sprs. above m in late hand B cai |
thmimait M |
|
28 nar B 29 itait 30 |
-dus 31 it'or- 32 -nd |
33 caithis B |
34 chraind 33 i medon |
38-dais 37 ra thaidlimais |
38 ins. i |
39 ra aibleam M : thirchur B |
40 an athair " f orsin |
42 noclio |
n-ebeltaisi itir M fuicind |
44 seichip 45 thorad in chrain |
d 40 -ther |
47 in n-ulc |
||
32. ' atchondairc M |
2 thomaltos M 3 -earn M |
4 ro bo |
68 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
so-airfiteach 6 roscaibh i 6 5feghadh : i dorad $ in bean || m do thoradh in ccraind dia 7indsaigi, i ro 8chaitheastair, i 9dorat da fir $ i. "Adamh || i ro "chaiteastair. (7) Ocns ro 12hoslaicit (fl) | ruisc J "meanman i 14aigenta || na 15deisi sin % 1Gfri 17fios 1 18eolas in 19pecaich, 20na 21dearnsiat 22gos in 23n-uair sin || ; i o 24ro tuicsedar a mbeith 25nochta, ro 26Iuigsitar 27duillinna na 28fidhci i 29dorinsetar 30fuathr6ga doibh % 31do na 32dnillinnaibh ||. (8) Ocus adchualadar-somh 33$ .i. Adamh i Eua imorro || gnth 34an Choimhdia % .i. De || 35a n-imthigidh $ a 36ndealbh 37aingil || 38a bPairrthuis, 39a bhfoghra gaoithi dearmhairi 40Iar meodhon lai. Eo 41Jolaigh 42he i a 43setigh 44a | 45medhon(&) chrainn Pairrthnis.
33. (9) aAgas ro 2gairmeastair Dia Adhamh 3| 6
gnth aingleagda || i ro raidh4: A 5 Adamh, cait atai?
(10) Ro 6frecair 7imorro 8 Adhamh i 9ro raidh :
10Adchualadhns do "ghuth 12a bPairrthais, i
13romghabh 14eagla, 15or bham 16nocht, i ro 17foilgios
me. (11) Ro raidh Dia : Cia 18ro inndios 19dhuit do
bheith 20nocht acht Me fein? 21In ro 22chaithis 23torad
sochraid M 5 ifegad M 6 chraind M ' hindsaigid M s -ist- M 9 dorad M 10 dAdam M " -thist- M " hoslaicid a M
13 menman M/?2 14 aicinta M aigennta (31 -nntadh f32 15 desin M
18fria f3" " fis M '8 eolus (3m 19 -aid M pheeaidh /?12 (-ea- (3-)
20 nach /?2 21 dearnsad M dernsat (31 ndern siad /?2 22 cus an M gus an (3- 23 om. n- M/312 " ra thuicistair M ro tuigset ar /31 ro tuigsat ar /32
23 nocht M noehtadh fj" 26 fuigseadar M fuigsiodar /3" 27 dtiillinda
M duillionnadh j3i2 28 fice M ndhcidh /312 29 -rindsedar M rinnsetar /312 30 fuathrogadh /?12 (-gh- /J2) 31 don na /312 32 -eannaib M -enn- /312
33 om. this gloss /?" 34 in Choimded M in Choimhdia and om. .i. De /312 35 na imthiged M .i. deanam thigidh (31 ag denamli clmcadli (3- 36ndeilb M deailbh {32 S1 svc M aingeal /? aingila /31 aingilia /32
a Parrdus M om. /?" 39 i fogur gaithi M, a bhfoghradli (g /?2)
gaoithe dermhaire f3u w iar meadon M iar mhedhoin (d (3*) (3i2
38
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 69
and agreeable to eyes and to sight : and [the woman] took of the fruit of the tree to herself and she did eat, and gave to her husband [Adam] and he did eat. (7) And the eyes [of mind and understanding] of those twain were opened [to a knowledge and perception of sin, that they had not committed until that hour] ; and as they realized that they were naked, they sewed the leaves of the fig-tree and made them aprons [of the leaves]. (8) And they [Adam and Eve] heard the voice of the Lord [God] a-walking [in the form of an angel] in Paradise in the sound of a violent wind, after midday. He and his wife hid them in the midst of the tree-growth of Paradise.
33. (9) And God called Adam [making use of an angelic voice], and said: Adam, where art thou? (10) Howbeit Adam answered and said : I heard Thy voice in Paradise, and fear laid hold on me, for I was naked, and I hid me. (11) God said : Who told thee that thou wast naked, other than Myself! Hast thou eaten fruit of the Tree which I forbade thee? (12) And Adam said : The woman whom Thou gavest
a falaid M f olaidli /312 42 Adhamh /31 Adamh /32 43 seitigh (312
44 ins, iad /312 45 i meadon chraind Parrduis M a medoin (dh (32)
chrainn (cr- (32) Pharrthais /312 : m(e)duin H (throughout H, the lenition of b, d, g, and m is rarely indicated)
33. ' i M Ocus /32 2 -mist- M -mest- {312 3 this gloss in M only : there does not appear to be sufficient room for it in H * ms. fris MH
5 Adaim M e freagair M f regair /312 7 om. imorro (3" 8 Adam
H a Adhamh (3 9 ra raid H J0 -adus M -asadh /312 " guth-su M
12 i Parrdus M om. f312 " romgob M gab H ro in ghabh f3 roghabh /31 doghabh f32 14 egla H J5 oir for ar hie et semper H, ar M,
oram (312 16 anocht (32 " Mlg- M -ghas (312 1S ro indis MH
(ra for ro hie et semper H) dinnis /312 19 duit M /31 duid H 20 nocht. Acht (sic) M nochtadh as ft12 21 ni ro M nior /? nuar (31 mar a (32
22 chaithios (3 -es /312 23 torrad M (3
(a) Text as printed from this point follows (3, as a folio has been lost from B. (6) H here begins. Owing to the torn condition of the first leaf of H, only words that are here underdotted remain in the opening lines.
70 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
24in "chrainn 26do ro tairmioscios iomut? (12) 27Agas do 28raidh Adhamh : 2!)In bhean 30doraitaisi damhsa 31in 32aentaidh dorad 33domh 34do 35chrann 36i ro -'chaithius. (13) Ocus ro raidh Dia frisin 38mnal : 3nCia dia ndernais anl so? Is 40ead ro 41freagraistair 42in bhean43 : In 44nathair nimhe ro 45mheallastair me, 1 46ro 47chaithius.
34. (14) 'Ocus ro raidh in 2Coimhdhi ris in 3nathair : Uair 4dorighni[,s]-siu in m 5so, 6isat mallaclita 7eidir 8uilibh anmandaibh i 9blastaibh in 10talanili.(a) Bidh iaar do 12bhruinni 13imtigfea, -\ bidli talamh 14caithfea 6 15uilibh 16laethibh do "bheathadh. (15) Ocus 18suighidhfetsa 19naimhdenus 20edrut i in 21mnai, i 22eadar 23do si] i 24siol na mna23 : 25tiiairgndh 26in bhen do 2Tchenn, i 28intledaiglifesu disi 29i leith a cosaibh. (16) Ro raidh 30dana don 31mnaoi : 32Imdaigh-
24 an H ft™ 23 -nd MH crann fi- 26 om. do : ro thairmisc
umut M: do ro thoirmisgis ionium /?12 "ocus ro M: om. - ; ra H
28 radh (3" 29 ins. fos f$" : an ben da- H an bhean (32 aorad-
aisiu M -radaisidh (31 -radaisi /32 : dhamhsa /?12 31 im M
32oentaid H aon- (3i2 33 dam MH damn /?12 34 don MH
do don /?12 35 crand H 36 ins. in torad M 3,ehaithis
M -thes f3" 38 mnaoi /?2 39 cid dia ndearnais inni seo MH : anni /?12 ■"edh /312 41 raid M; 'fregair f312 42 an ben. An athair H in bheinn
(3 in bhen /312 43 ins. oga freagra M 44 nathar /?12 : om. nimhe MH
45 mellastair MH mheall /?12 40 om. ro fi1 4; ehaithis torad in ehraind M: chaithes /3".
34. ] om. i M 2 an for in M : Coimdiu f ris in MH Choimdhe /312
(mh /?2) 3 athraid M athair H nathar fi" 4 doridnis (om. sin) M
dorignis H rinnisigh /31 rinnighsidh /82 5 seo M 6i isad mallachta M
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 71
me as companion gave me of a tree, and I ate. (13) And God said unto the woman : Wherefore hast thou done this thing? What the woman answered was : The serpent deceived me, and I did eat.
34. (14) And the Lord said unto the serpent : In that thou hast done this thing, thou art accursed among all the animals and beasts of the earth. It shall be upon thy breast that thou shalt go : it shall be earth that thou shalt eat, for all the days of thy life. (15) And I shall set enmity between thee and the woman, and between thy seed and the seed of the woman : the woman shall stamp upon thy head, and thou shalt lurk aside from her, hiding from feet. (16) Moreover He said unto the woman : I shall
isath j8012 -chtadh /?' -cht /?2 7 itir MH idir /?12 8 uile
anamaibh /?12 9 piastaib M biastaib H 10 talnian M " air /32
12 bruindi H -nne J31 -ne /32 13 -mth- MH imtigfedh /?12 u chaithfea MH eaithfedh /?12 J5 uile /31 16 laithib M laoithibh /3" (-oth- /31)
"-eth- yS12 18 suigid feadsa M suighf edsadh /312 19 -deanus M
-denas /31 20 eadrud M edrud H 21 mhnai /31 22 itir M idir /?*
edra [i- 23~23 bhur siol p'2 24 sil MH 25 tuaircfid MH -argf ad /312 26 an ben H : an also /32 " cheann M chend H cenn ft2 28 intlaed-
faigfea-su M -fe-su H : dissi f3 : indleadaigh fesu disi ^12 (fes a /32) 29 i leath o chosaib M illeth o cossaib H i leit a cosuib /?2 so dono
Dia MH dan dia don mhnai /312 31 mnai M mnai om. y sprs. c H
32 -feadsa M -fetsa H iomadfadsa /?12
(a) The 0 mss. treat talamh as indeclinable.
72 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
feadh-sa 33t'atliaisi, i 34bidh 35i ngalair i i 3Gngoirtius tuismeadha do 37chompiortha i do 38chlanna % A. 3fliomad 40galar mlsda "dhuit || i 42bidh fo 43chumhachta
(fl)44jir 45bia? 1 46biadh a 47thig]iernUg 48^ ^ Rq
raidh 49imorro Dia 50go Hadhamh : 31tjair 52atchuala- dhus guth i aslach do 53setchi, i 54an uair ro 55chaithis don "chroinn ro "thoirmiosciusa "ionrat, is 59mallaehda in talamh 60id'gnimh : i 61bidh a saethraibh i a snimhaibh 62chaithfea biadh 636'n uilibh 64laethibh do C5bhethadh. (18) Ocus 66clannaighfidh 67in talamh dit spine 68gera i 69drisi 70deilgneacha, (19) i 71bidh in alius do ghnuisi $ 72i i foghnamh do 73chuirp i do ■4cholla || 75caithfea 76luibhi i 77toirrthi 78in 79talainh, i 80notsasfar 6 81bhiadhaibh : 82cen cor athadchuir fon 83ialmain d'indearna Dia thii. Uair is do luaithread ■: do83 thalmain 84doronadh, i is 85fae 86ragha.
35. (20) Ocus ro ^hairmeastair 2Adhanih 3ainm a "setchi .i. 5Eua, 6Iar ,sin ni ro bhal, 7gor blio mathair
33thathaisi M tataisi /?' daithaisi /?2 34 biadh (31 biaidh /32
35 ingalar M /312 angalar H 3S ngoirtes thuis- H -ort- fi2 :
tuismedh (ed /31) do chomhphrechadh /312 37 coimpeart:'. M
-perta H " clanda M clannadh (ch. /J1) (312 39 imad galair MH
40ghalar miostadh /3i2 41 duid MH 42 biadh /31 biaidh /32
4J cumachta M cumhachtadh /?12 (comh- ,82) 44 tfir (312 « om. bia j312
46 biaid MH biaigh /31 biaidh (3* " -earn- M tig- /32 -as /?' 4S fort MH 49 om. imorro Dia /312 50 co MH 51 oir /312 52 adchualadus M
adchualaidais (ais sprs yc) H -asadh /?" 53 seitchi H seitche /312
54 om. an MH 55 chaithios /? : do for preceding ro H 56 chrund
MH chraim /31 crann /32 " thairmis-ciusa M -cusa H -casadh (2™
58 ummut M umut H iomad ft12 59 -chta M -chtha H -achtadh /31 -acht /32 00 ad H it /? : nim /? nimh /?12 61 bid a saetraib H biodh a sethraibh /?12 G2 caithfi H caitfedh /3" « o uilib MH on uile /32 M laithib MH
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 73
multiply thy shames, and it shall be in sickness and in distress that thou shalt bring forth thy offspring and thy progeny [i.e. thou shalt have many monthly .sicknesses]. And under the power of a man shalt thou be, and his lordship shall be over thee. (17) Moreover God said to Adam : In that thou hast hearkened to the voice and incitement of thy wife, and in that thou hast eaten of the tree that I forbade thee, cursed is the earth in thy deed. It shall be in labours and in tribulations that thou shalt eat food, for all the days of thy life. (18) And the earth shall bring forth for thee sharp thorns, and spiny brushwood, (19) and it shall be in the sweat of thy face [and in the servitude of thy body and of thy frame] thou shalt eat of the plants and fruits of the earth and shalt be satisfied with victuals, till He shall have laid thee again under(&) the earth from which God made thee. For it is of dust and of earth that he was made, and under it shall he go.
35. (20) And Adam called the name of his wife Eua, by reason of the fact that she was mother of all living
85 beathad M 66 clandaigfead M clanaigfi H "anH /31 6S geradh (312 69 drise M -sedh /31 -sa ft2 70 delglecha M -necha H -nechadh /312 " biadh /?12 : an for in H "ia f odnum H ag f ognamh /312 73 choirp (31 M colla ft2 75 chaithfea M chaitlifi H -feadh /312 76 luibi H luibhibh /312 ,7 toirthi MH toraibh j312 78 an H na talmhan /312 ™ talman M 80 notsastar M nodsastar H notfasfar ft12 81 bi- /32 82 cein MH gen go
rathadhchuir /?12 (in {32 radh corr. to rath) 83_83 om. f3012 Si -nnad M 85 f ai H 86 radha /32
35. ' gairmistair M -m;t- H -ester (312 2a Adhamh /312 (Aadh. /32) sainim /312 4 seitchi MH (se- M) seitche /312 5 Eabha /?12 6 iarsani H 7 eorbo MH gor ba ^812
(a) From this point the text of H is continuous till the end of the column.
(b) Following the reading of M.
74 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
na 8n-uili 9mbeo % A. na ndaine ||. (21) 10Doroighni 1Jdana Dla do 12Adhamh 13i da 14seithigh 15tonochu i inaru "croichnidhi (sic)17, i ro 18eit iat.
36. (22) Ocus ro raidh Dla : Is follus Moronadh Adhamh 2amail 3aen fiaine, go fios 4maithiosa i rule 5aigi — ■
6Mar 7bhadh ed 8adberadh Dla : Ni 9uair Adhamh 10an ni rob ail aileis .i. bheith 12amail 13oen 14tiame. Ro 15malairt 16imorro 7 ro 17seachmhaill in 18maithius 1 in 19glaine mbunaid i ndemad he.
2nDichuiremh tra 21anoissa 22a 23bPairtbas, 24na 25ro cliaithea ni 26do 27Chrann 28na 29Beathadh, i 30nara bed be tre 31bhithadb. (23) Ko 32dhichuir imorro Dla Adhamh 33a Parrthus na Toile, 1 ro 34suidhigh he isin 3Ftalmhnin coitchenn dla 36ndernadh 37e. (24) Ocus ro 38ordaigh Dla 39Hirnfm 40a bhiiaghnuisi 41Phairrtuis, i 42cloidheamh teinntighi 43i n-a laimh, do 44choimhed Parrthais i 45slighidh Crainn 46na 47Beathadh.
8 nuile M (3J2 9 beo H in blieo /? dhuine i and om. gloss /?12
30doroindi M daroigni H dorighnedh /?12 " dono MH om. /312
"Adamh /31 13 is (312^ "setig M seitchi H seitche /312
15 donacha imaru /3 donacha ionnara /312 ie croicind M croicend
changed by corrector to -eand H craicnedh /?12 M ins. endatha H
18eid iad H.
36. ' dorondad M -ronn- H : dAdam H 2 ainim aon uaine ,G12 3 oen uaindi co fis M aen uainni co fis H 4 maithiusa M maithusa H -sa /?] 5 aici MH aigi /312 6 ins. .1 MH 7 bad M bud ead H badh /312
8 -ered M -eiread H adbh- /?2 9 fuair H ,0 in ni MH /?12 indi ro
bail /3 "ris /312 "amhuil /31 "eon M aen H aon /31
14 uaindi M uainne H 15- lart M mhal- /?' "om, /J2 17 seaehmall M seehmall H sechmhail /312 18 maithus H maithiosa /? mhaithesadh /3"
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 75
[i.e. of mankind]. (21) Moreover God made for Adam and for his wife tunics and mantles of hides, and clothed them.
36. (22) And God said : Lo, Adam hath been made as one of us, having a knowledge of good and of evil —
As though what God would say was : Adam obtained not the thing which he desired, to be as one of us. But he changed and neglected the goodness and the original purity in which he was made.
So let us drive him now forth from Paradise, lest he should eat aught of the Tree of Life, and lest he should be alive for ever. (23) Wherefore God drave Adam forth from the Paradise of Pleasure, and set him in the common earth of which he was made. (24) And God ordained a Seraph in the forefront of Paradise, with a fiery sword in his hand, to guard Paradise and the way of the Tree of Life.
1S glaini H ghlainni mbuneadh indearnad M ghloine in buined inderna (Z12 (buinedh /32) 20 -earn M -em H, diochuradh and om. tra /?12
21 anosa M anossa H anosadh /312 22 ins. Adam MH 23 Parrdus M
Parrtus H Parrtas /?12 24 no /32 25 ra chaithi H chaithedh /312
26 don j3 27 chrunn M crund H chrainn f3 2S om. na MH
20 bethadh /312 30 nar ba M 31 bithu MH e tre bhiadhadh /3"
32 dhiochuir and om. imorro /312 33 a Parrdus na Tole M Toili H
Pharrthas natolia /?12 34 suigid M f uigid H suigh /312 35 talam
choitchind MH (-inn H) ; talamh /?12 36 -earn- M nderna /31 ndernada f32 37 om. e MH 38 ordaid M -aidh ,81 3a om. /312 4U hi fladnaisi M
hi fiadnaissi H -fiadhnuise /31' 41-d; M -th; H Pharrthais (-art ^2) /?12
42 claidem M claidim H -emh /312 tendtigi M tentigi H -ighe /3n
43 i laimh aingil /312 44 choimet Parrduis M Pharrthus H om. Parrth. t (3" 45 sligheadh H slighe /?12 : Chraind M Craind H Chrainn /312 (Cr. /32) 4G om. na MH. 47 bhethadh (31 betad 0-
76 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
31. (1) Sed et serpens erat ^allidior eunctis animantibus terrae quae fecerat [Dominus] Deus; qui dixit ad mulierem : Cur praecepit Deus uobis ut non comederitis de omni ligno Paradisi! (2) Cui respondit mulier : De fructu lignorum quae sunt in Paradise- ueseemur, (3) de fructu uero ligni quod est in medio Paradisi praecepit nobis Deus ne comederemus, et ne tangeremus illud, ne 2forte moriamur. (4) Dixit autem serpens ad mulierem : Nequaquam morte moriemini, (5) scit enim Deus quod in quocunque die comederitis ex eo, aperientur oculi uestri, et eritis sicut 3angeli, scientes bonum et malum.
32. (6) Vidit igitur mulier quod bonum esset lignum ad uescendum, et ^ulchrum oculis, aspectuque deleetabile; et tulit de fructu illius et comedit, deditque uiro suo qui comedit.
(7) Et aperti sunt oculi amborum, cumque cognouissent esse se nudos, consuerunt folia ficus et fecerunt sibi perizomata.
(8) Et 2audiuerunt voeem Domini 3[Dei] deambulantis in Paradiso 4[ad auram] post meridiem. Abscondit se et uxor eius 5[a facie Domini Dei] in medio ligni Paradisi.
33. (9) Vocauitque [Dominus] Deus Adam et dixit : x<Adam> ubi es? (10) 2Respondit uero Adam dicens : Vocem tuam audiui in Paradiso et timui, eo quod nudus essem, et abscondi me. (11) [Cui] dixit 3<Deus> : Quis [enim] in- dicauit tibi quod nudus esses 4nisi egometl Ex ligno de quo tibi praeceperam ne comederes comedisti? (12) Dixitque Adam : Mulier quam dedisti sociam mihi dedit mihi de ligno, et comedi. (13) Et dixit [Dominus] Deus ad mulierem: Quare hoc fecisti? 5Hoc est quod respondit mulier: Serpens decepit me, et comedi.
34. (14) Et ait Dominus ^Deus] ad serpentem : Quia fecisti hoc, maledictus es inter omnia animantia et bestias terrae. Super pectus tuum gradieris, et terrain comedis eunctis diebus uitae tuae. (15) 2[Et] inimieitias ponam inter te et mulierem, et 3 [inter] semen tuum et semen illius. Ipsa conteret caput tuum, 4et insidiaberis calcaneo eius. (16) Mulieri quoque dixit: Multiplicabo aerumnas tuas et
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 77
5coneeptus tuos : in dolore paries filios, et sub uiri potestate eris, et ipse dominabitur tui. (17) Ad Adam vero dixit 6[Deus] : Quia audisti 7uocem [et temptationem] uxoris tuae, et comedisti de ligno ex quo praeceperam tibi ne comederes, maledicta terra in opere tuo : in laboribus comedes 8e[se]am cunctis diebus uitae tuae. (18) Spinas et tribulos germinabit tibi, et comedes herbas terrae, (19) in sudore uultus tui uesceris 9pane, donee reuertaris in terram de qua 10fecit tc Deus, quia puluis es, et in puluerem reuerteris.
35. (20) Et uocauit Adam nomen uxoris suae xEua, eo quod mater esset cunctorum uiuentium. (21) Fecit quoque [Dominus] Deus Adam et uxori eius tunicas pellicias, et induit eos.
36. (22) xEt ait 2<Deus> : Ecce Adam f actus est quasi unus ex nobis, sciens bonum et malum : nunc ergo, ne 3 [forte mittat manum suam et] sumat etiam de Ligno Vitae, et comedat et uiuat in aeternum, <emittamus eum de Paradiso>.
(23) Emisit 5<ergo> eum [Dominus] Deus de Paradiso Voluptatis Get posuit eum in terra de qua factus est.
(24) 7[Eiecitque Adam] et collocauit <Deus> ante Paradisum [Voluptatis] Cherubin, et flammeum gladium 8[atque uer- satilem] ad custodiendam uiam Ligni Vitae.
Notes on the Biblical Text, Chapter III.
fl 31. *On the adjectives qualifying this word in Tr. and on the representation of the simple word qui by is i in athair sin, see the notes on this ][. 20 thircur, which means "from a chance, accident," and in a good sense "from a windfall," suggests that the translator did not completely understand the Latin forte. I am indebted to Miss M. Joynt for some references to passages containing this word. 3Dii in ST and all mss. Oioi LXX. The rendering "angels" is a piece of
78 SECTION I.— PROM THE CREATION TO
Jewish exegesis, possibly conveyed to Tr. by some com- mentary. Skinner quotes Abraham ibn Ezra, t c. 1167.
U 32. xTr. has missed the elegant chiasmus of the Latin. 2Cum audissent in ST and Vulg. mss. Tr. here follows LXX in making the clause independent (as in Heb.) : k-ai ijk-ovaav Ti)i> (j}fri)v k.t.X. 3By exception, Domini is here translated. Only one Vulg. MS. omits Dei. 4Ad auram has been curiously misunderstood by Tr. "'These words must have been lost from the Irish text at an early date by some carelessness, which in this case it is impossible to explain.
fl 33. \LXX and a few Vulg. mss. insert Adam here. 2Nearer to LXX (koi tlntv uvto)) than to Vulg. (qui ait). Adam may or may not be here an intrusive gloss. sDeus rejected by ST, but found in several mss. and ancient quotations. 4In Vulg., quod nudus esses, nisi quod ex ligno, etc. (so in LXX, rig avi'iyyttXiv <toj ... 1 1 fin k.t.A.) This must have been the reading in A, but quod must have been written in such a way that Tr. misread it as a contraction for egomet, thus producing the nonsense acht Me fein, which, naturally, has given some trouble to his copyists. He then began a new sentence with Ex ligno, thus accidentally falling into accord with the Hebrew punctuation. 5Slightly closer to LXX (k-al ilnev ?j ywi)) than to Vulg. (quae respondit).
fl 34. 2Only two mss. omit Deus. 2No authority in Vulg. for inserting et, but LXX has koi. It also has (like Tr.) Ixfyoai'in the singular, unlike Vulg., in which inimicitiam has very slender authority. 3No authority for repetition of inter in Vulg., but found in LXX. This point is of no critical importance, howrever, as the repetition is practically required by Irish idiom. 4As suggested in the notes to this fl, Tr. does not seem to have completely understood this passage : his rendering is rather free. 5Tr. seems to have regarded conceptus tuos as linked to the following words, governed by paries rather than by midtiplicabo, and to have supplied in imagination et before filios. 6No authority for Deus here. 7i aslach is possibly another instance of Tr. 's
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 79
fondness for duplication, but it may also be an intrusive gloss. seam in Vulg., avri,,- in LXX. Apparently Tr. took earn for a contraction of escam. 9A gloss has ousted the original translation of this simple word. 10Sumptus eo, Vulg. For a similar translation compare II. 23.
ff 35. 1Hauam in ST, but there is plenty of authority for Eua, as well as some for Aeua, Aeuam, and Euam.
fl 30. 1This 1| has suffered considerably in translation or transmission. 2No Latin authority for Deus, but LXX has Kvpioi; 6 Bsog. 3The equivalent of these words was lost early, presumably because two consecutive sentences began with na ro. 4There is an effective rhetorical aposiopesis in the text here, in all versions from Heb. downwards. But Tr., assuming that something had dropped from the text, has made an attempt at filling the gap! 5No authority for imorro, but LXX and a few Vulg. mss. have nal, et. aUt operaretur terrain de qua sumptus est in ST. Tr. has here gone altogether off the rails. We have already seen reason to suspect (fi 33 note (4) above) that the handwriting of A was not perfectly clear to him, and it is conceivable that ut operaretur was so written as to be read carelessly as et posnit eum in. Once more we see sumptus translated as though it were f actus (cf. II 23, III 19). 7Possibly Tr. or one of his copyists thought these words superfluous after ro dhlchuir, just before. 8I n-a laimh appears to be a gloss that has ousted the Latin atque uersatilem.
80 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
Chapter IV.
37. 'Is follus 2as so, 3inn airt 4ro bhadar "a bPairrthus Georptar 7oca.
(1) Ro 8etargnaigh imorro 9 Adhamh6 10Eua a "seitigh.O) Ro "choimpir si, i ro "thuisimh Cain 14do.
Chain 14> 15poseissio no 1Glamentacio "interpretatur, .i. is e 18mlnughadh i ciall fil isin 19bhi'ocail sin, 20.i. Cain .i. 21sealbh : i 22is do 23foillsighadh na 24ceilli sin ro raidh Adhamh 25Caneithi .i. —
ro 2Gsealbhus duine tre 27Dia. (2) 280cus ro Z9thuissimh 3r'dana Eua 31dorighissi mac 32eile, .i. Abel. Is 3;amhlaidh 34imorro 35bhaoi 36Abeil, 37na 38aoeghairi caoirach 39he, t Cain .i. 40tirfreacuirti eiside. (3) 41Dorighnidh imorro lar 42laithedaibh 43imdaibh 44con n-edhbradh Cain 45maini do 46thortibh in 47talamh do Dhia : (4) 48dorighni dono 49Abel 50iodlibartha do "phrlomhgheinibh 52derrscaidhthechaibh a 53treoit do Dhia. Ocus ro 54fegastair 55in 56Coimlidhia 57co 58Habel go maoinibh, (5) ni ro 60fegastar 61imorro 62go Cain no 64go 65maoinibh.
Is as ro 66thuigestar Cain 67gor tholtnachset maoini Abel do Dhia, 68ni ro 69toltnaighsetar 70imorro 71a maoini feinr
37. 1 as f3'2 2 aso M ais so (3 3 inairet M indaired H as follus
as so ar (air f32) a ndibirt /J12 4 ra badar H 5i Parrdus M a
Parrthus H i Pharthas (312 6~8 gur torrchadh (torrchad /?2) i dergnaidh Adhamh i [3" 7 occa H 8 etargnaid M eadargnaid H • Adam H 10 ins. agus : Eabha j312 u a setig M; a. seitig H, om. a seitigh ro
choimpir si (3i2 (but not (3) 12 comper M " tuismedh j312
14-14 do Cain M a (fa (32) chialluighes (ci- (32) (3" 1S posesio M possesio /31
18 -tio M /32 " om. j812 (&) 18 mineagud M ciall i miniughadh /31
19 focol M bhf ocal (3n 20 is M (3 om. /?12 21 selb M seilbh /J1 22 om. /312 23 f oillseagad M sealbhughadh (312 24 -le /31 25 canei (3 canai me (3™ 28 selbus M -as 13" 21 Dhia /3 28 agas (312 29 tusim M (the im sprs. s M) : toismidh f312 30 om. M 31 doridise M om. /?12 32 aile .i. Aibel M 33 amhladh /312 34 om. J31- (this word almost invariably om. by the /? mss.) ** bai M bin /?" 28 Aibel M Abel (312 3T om. na (3 3S aegairi chaerach M aoidhire /J1 aoidhre f32 : caorach /?12 ** om. (3™ 40 tirfrecnairc frechuirthig esige (a d sprs over the g) M : tir-f reacuirthe eisidhe f312 41 -ridned M
., 59 63
»
u
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 81
Chapter IV.
37. It is evident from this that so long as they were in Paradise, they were virgins.
(1) Now Adam knew Eua his wife. She conceived and brought forth Cain to him.
Cain, possessio or lamentatio interpretatur, i.e. this is the explanation and meaning which is in that word, "Cain"; i.e. "possession." And to set forth that meaning Adam said "Caneithi," i.e.
I have acquired a man through God. (2) And Eua brought forth again another son, Abel. Thus was Abel, a shepherd of sheep, and Cain, an husbandman was he. (3) It came to pass, moreover, after many days, that Cain would offer gifts of the fruits of the earth to God : (4) but Abel made offerings of the choice firstlings of his flock to God. And the Lord looked upon Abel and upon his gifts, (5) but He looked not upon Cain and upon his gifts.
Thus did Cain understand that the gifts of Abel were acceptable to God, but that his own gifts were not accept-
-nedh and om. imorro /?" 42 laitheadaib M laidhidaibh j3 laidhidegh
/312 (-eg /32) 43 iomdh- /?12 " conedbrad (tho d y sbs c) M go
n-iodhbaradh and om. Cain /312 45 maine M maoine /?12 46 thoirthaib M thoraibh /312 47 talman M 48 doridni M do (om. righni dono) /?"
49Aibel M Abeal /31 •° edbarta M -barthadh /?12 (-arr- /?')
31 primgenib M priomhghinibh (312 52 dearrscaitheachaibh M derscaidh- thechaibh /?12 53 threoit M -oid /?12 34 a very faint dot over the f M
55 an (3>2 56Coimdi M 57 go /312 5S Haibel M 59 co a mainib M da m. /312 60 fegastair M n om. /3,= w om. M, do /3". e5na M 04 da j812 65 mainib M mhaoin- (S™ M thuigistair M 6T cor
tlioltnaigsead maine M gur tholtnach siad maoinibh /312 w nior ro /?
°'' tholtnaigsedar M toltnach siad /312 70om. /?12 71 a ye M:
12
(a) Here a lacuna in H begins.
(b) Not om. in 0, but a corrector who thought it ought to be there but did not notice it inserted it in marg. It is written as an abbreviation (an i and a p crossed) and probably was so written in R, in such a way that it could easily be overlooked.
L.G. — VOL. I. G
82 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
72ar "tioeth 74teine do 75Nimh 78for "eadhbartaib Abel, 78ni 79tigedh imorro 70for 80iodhbairtaibh 81Cain.
Ocus ro 82fergaidh Cain 83go 84dearmhair, i 85dorochair a 8Gghnuis $ a 87t-toirsi i 88in dubha ||.
38. (6) JOcus ro raidh 2in 8Coimlidliia 4go Cain : 5Cidh ar 6ar 7feargaighais, i 5cidh ara 8torchair do ghnuis 9% i t-toirrsi ||! (7) 10Cidli on, ar Dia, nach "fuidbheasu a "comain madh maith 13doghneis? "Madh olc 15dono 13dogneis, bidh 16fogus a "indeochadh 18fort. (8) Ocus 19adubhairt Cain 20co 21Habel, go a bhrathair : Tiagham amach isin 22bhfearann. 23Iar 24toclitain 25daibh 26isin 27bhferonn ro 28comheirigh Cain 29an aghaidh 30Aibeoil 31a bhrathar, i ro 32mairb he—
y1 33.i. isin 34cathraigh 35danadh ainm Damascus. y2 36Abel dono, ced marb in domain, -\ rob e Aibel 37in cet 3smairtir(«) ro 3!)bai ariam, i 40ba(&) toltanaeh ro adaimh a martra40.
(9) (c)Ocus ro raidh Dia 41go Cain : 42Cait a 43bhfnil 44 Abel do bhrathair ? Ro 45f regair Cain : Ni 46f eidar ; cidh on, % 47ar Cain ||, in 48missi 49is 50coimhedaigh dom' bhrathair50?
maine M mhaoine /312 " i /312 " teigead (ge in rasura) M
tigedh /312 74 tene M " neimh /312 T0 f o M (bis)
" iobarrthaibh /31 ioilhbarthaibh (32 ™ ins. i M 70 thiced M
80 idbartaib M iodhbarraibh /312 SI Chain [i ,2 f eargaidead M
fergadh (312 83 co M 84 derrahar /312 83 ro chuir /312 (om. do-)
80 gnuisi M 87 toirrsi M ttuirsedh /312 w andubha p"
38. ' This word spelt agus, agas indifferently ftu 2 an J3V1
3Coimdi M -mhdia /?2 4 co M Bcia f3'2 (bis) ° om. ft"
7 fergaidis y sprs. s M Jergais /312 8 ttor- ft- ° an interropation-
marl: ins. here /32 : i toirrsi M attuirscd j32 10 ced M cia /?12
11 -bhesa /312 " chomain M -aoin /31- a dognes M doghnidhis (31- (bis) "ma fi'- "om. M /J12 ,6 i'ocus M " ineochad /3"
18 om. M fert /8" "adurbairt M wgo/3" 21 Haibel co M : om. go /3M "ferann M bhfer- /?12 23om. /312 24 tiachtain M
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 83
able — in that fire would come from Heaven upon the offerings of Abel, but would not come upon the offerings of Cain.
and Cain was exceeding wroth, and his countenance fell % in distress and in gloom. ||
38. (0) And the Lord said unto Cain : Wherefore wast thou wroth, and wdierefore hath thy countenance fallen [in distress] ! (7) How now, said God, shalt thou not obtain its equivalent if thou doest well ? But if it be evil that thou doest, vengeance for it shall be nigh unto thee. (8) And Cain said unto Abel his brother : Let us go out into the field. After they had gone into the field, Cain rose up against Abel his brother and slew him,
In the city which is called Damascus.
Now Abel was the first dead man of the world, and he was the first martyr that ever was ; and with good will he made confession in martyrdom.
(9) And God said unto Cain : Where is Abel thy brother? Cain answered: I know not. How now, [said Cain], is it I who am custodian for my brother?
12
doib M : doibh /?12 2G ins. amacli M 27 f earann M bf er- /32 -ann ft1 28choimerig M coimh- /31 -rghe /?12 29 in M 30 Abel /3
31 a brathair j3 om. ft12 32 ins. iad a da laim f o bragait cor ba M :
marb M; mliaruh e /?12 2 33 om.. .i. M 34 chathraid M chathraigh /32
35 dianad M darab ainim /3'2 ™ sic M: om. cet marb . . . Aibel j3.
Abel (din sic, bracketed in both MSS.) an ched mairbh -\ marthar bha [ba /32] ariamh i ba [badh /?2] toltanach [toil- /?2] ro H-Adhamh a mhartra [martra /32] /312 3T an [i 38 inairtir M 39 bhaoi ariamh [i 40-40 do tholtanaich -\ ro adaim a martra M 41 co M 42 cia hait /3™
43 fuil M bfml /?12 44 do derbhrathair [dh p2] Abel /312 45 freeair M
'fregair /312 46 feadar M ifedair /?' " om. ar Cain : an ft12
48 misi M f312 49 bhas /31 bus /32 50-50 comhedaid do fii2
(a) s2 M. (6) H here resumes. (c) s1 M.
84 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
y3 Is I 51so 52in 53dara 54ced bhreg, .i. 55an B6diabhul ar 57ttus, 58Cain iartain.
(10) Ocus ro raidh Dla 59go Cain: 60Cid doroinnais60?
61Nuallaigh i G2eigidh C3chugum don 64talmlmnn gnth i
foghar 65fola do G6brathar.
y4 Tri 66nualla 67ro saghat dochum De 68gan 69fuireach : .i. 70nual] fola 71finnghaili, 72amhuil 73nuaill 1'ola 74Abeil iar n-a dortadh 75do Chain, 7Gda bhrathair ; -\ ;7nuall 78pheacaidh 79indirigh, amhuil 80nuall 81pheacadh na 82Sodamdha : i 83nuall i gair na mbocht iar mbreith 84uaithibh a n-85ionmhais -] 86Iar n-a 87slat.
39. (11) ^iadh-sa 2dono i tu. 3mallachdha for 4lalmhain $ i 5budli 6mallachta dono 7in talamh || 8ro foslaic a beal i 9ro ghabh fuil do 10brathar % iaiar n-a 12dortadh II 13dot laimh.
y1 14Uair airmid na staraigeda diada co rob do Ed chnama camaill ro marb Cain a brathair og ingairi chaerach.
(12) 15Agus 16in tan 17oibridfeasu 18in "talamh sin, ni(a)
M
13
51 sco M 52 an ft" S3 daradh breg ft1 M cet breath (sic) M °5 om. an M diabal MH ft" =' tus MH ft" 5S ins. i M 5Vo M
co-co Joronnais pecad i gaim n-adbal M cia doroinnis ft" M nuallaid
MH 62egid M eigid H eighidh ft" 63 chucum M ehugam ft"
"talmain M talamh ft" 65 foladh ft" "bhrathair ft: bh- also ft
66 nuala M nuaillaidh ft" 6' do H : saiged M, sagaid H os cen M
69 fuireaeh M fhuirech ft" ,0 nuaill ft" n fingaile M fingaiU H
fionghaile ft" " amail MH " nuall fola MH n. foladh ft1
"Aibel M Abel ft1 ra dha ft" ,0 dia H, om. da bhr. ft" "nuaill ft" "pecaid MH pecaidh ft'2 n om. M "nuaill ft" Mpecaid M
pecadh ft" »2 Sodoma H Sodomaitibh ft" 83 nuaill /31
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 85
This is one of the first two lies — the devil first and Cain afterwards.
(10) And God ,said unto Cain : What hast thou done? The voice and cry of thy brother's blood maketh complaint and call unto me from the earth.
There are three cries which made their way to God without delay : the cry of the blood of kin-murder, as the cry of the blood of Abel after it was shed by Cain his brother : the cry of iniquitous sin, as the cry of the sin of the Sodomites : and the cry and lamentation of the poor, when their goods have been taken from them and when they have been slaughtered.
39. (11) Thou also ,shalt be accursed upon the earth [and the earth also shall be accursed] which hath opened her mouth and received the blood of thy brother [after it had been shed] at thy hand.
For the sacred historians consider that it was with a shank of a camel-bone that Cain slew his brother, as he tended sheep.
(12) And when thou shalt till the earth, she shall not
"uadhadh /312 M indmais MH ionmhus ft12 86 ar /31 om. /?2
87 slad M (i™
39. 1 biasu MH 2 om, dono -\ tu /?12 : om. -\ H, but yc
3 -clita M -uighe /312 4 tall- /?2 -mhuin /312 5 bid M bu /312 6 -chda M mallach dana /?, mallaighthe /31 -uighe /?2 : om. dono /3'2 7 an H
8 ro (ra H) : sluig (si- M) Abel MH : fosglaic a beul /312 v rogob M
ragab H w bhrathair p (bh- also (3") " ar M /31 " dhor- /31
13 dod H ft12 " if in M only 15 ocus M 16 an M /312
17 oibrigfeadfa-su M oibrigfessu H oipd oibrid feasu /?' euspd oibrid corr. in marg. to oipd /32 1S an H 19 talmain M
(a) H is preserved continuously from this point to the next lacuna.
86 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
2' thibradh a "toirtha cllmit : 7 22biasu 23faelnedach 7 24teitheach t a "liinud. i n-innd || for 26talmliain.
(13) Ocns ro raidh Cain 27go Dia : Is mo 7 is 28fnilliu 2i'm'indirghi soinas mar "dlighim loghadh.
y2 32Dearchainmdh 33dono 34dorighni Cain 35sund 3fiin tan 37ro raid na brlathra-sa : Ni 38gheabha-sa a 39De, 7 nl 40thibrea 41damh loghadh 42ce dagneor 43aithrighi. Ocus 44egnach De do-45som sin.
(14) Is follus, ar Cain, 4<5dichraighsm misi 47andiu o 4"dhreach in 49talamh, i 50namfoilgeabhthar od' ghnuis. 51 Bam 52teiclitbeach 53faelnedach-sa for "talmhuin, i 5''muirndh i 56nlmbcbeagela 57neach me. (15) Agas ro raidh Dia 58go Cain : Ni 59ba 60hamhlaidh sin G1dogh- entar, acht 62planfaithair a 63secht 64cudrnima 65gach aon 6Gdo 67mhnirfeas Cain —
y3 .i. Ni he 68leighios 69peacaidh 70fogheabha bas 71oband amliuil 72saili, acht 73mera 74go 75fada 76gorab 77moidi do 78phian i do 79dioghail.
Ro 80snidhidb Dia Cain 81i 82comhartha 83conach marbhadh 84nach 85duine he.
y4 .i. 86cnocc ina S7eadan 88\ 7 cnoc ceachtar a da griiad 7 cnoc for each cois -j for each laim ||88, -j a bheith 89ghan "ulcha, 91no a bheith 92teiththeach.
20 thibra MH -bin- /3 tiubhradh /?12 21 thoirthi MH thoradh /312 M biadhsa /?12 23 -neadach M f aoil- /31 2i techech M teithibh /312 25 a hinad
aninad M anin with ad above H hionad, ionad /3'2 26 -au /31 27 co MH 28 f uilli MH 2a minndirgi H in innirge /31 inneirge /32 "° na H
31 dhl- /312 32 dier- MH -nead M -nid H -aoinedli /312 w om. /?12
34 -dne M -gni H dorinigh /?12 35 sunn /312 30 antan H /31 37 so /312 : om. ro raid na briathra-sa /3012 : na briathra-sa in M only 3S geba-su MH gheabadh (om. -sa) /312 39 Dhe /?' 40 tibra M thibri H thibredh /31 thiubhredh ft2 41 dliamh /312 : logad dam MH 42 ge dogneor M ge do ner H
ced agnair /312 43 -ide M -igi H -ighthe /3" 44 ecnaeh MH
45 dosam sin H do san am sin /3012 46 diclmirid-siu M diacuirisi H
diachragh and om. -siu /?12 " aniug MH aniu /?12 4S dreich MH
-ech /?12 49 -lman M an tal- H 50 nomf oilgebthar MH -gebhar /?12
(gh- /?2) 5I bain /3'2 S2 teicheach M -teach H teiehtheeh /?12
(-teith /?2) B3 -nead- M faoil- j312 54 -lmain M G5 murf. H nmirbhfedh /?12
THE DISPERSAL OP THE NATIONS. 87
yield her fruits unto thee : and thou shalt be a wanderer and a fugitive [from place to place] upon the earth. (13) And Cain said unto God : Greater and linger is my iniquity than that I deserve forgiveness.
It was despair that Cain expressed there when he said these words : Thou, 0 God, shalt not receive, and shalt not give me forgiveness, though I should work repentance. That was a blasphemy of God on his part,
(14) Lo, said Cain, Thou hast driven me today from the face of the earth, and I shall be hidden from Thy face. I shall be a fugitive and a wanderer upon the earth, and anyone shall slay me, and shall not spare me. (15) And God said unto Cain : Not thus shall it be done : but everyone who shall slay Cain shall be punished sevenfold.
i.e. Sudden death is not the remedy for sin that thou shalt obtain as thou thinkest : but thou shalt live long, so that thy punishment may be the greater.
God set Cain in a sign, so that no man should slay him —
a. lump upon his forehead [and a lump (on) each of his cheeks, and a lump on each foot and on each hand] and his being beardless, and being a fugitive.
56 nimcoicela MH (-gela H) -ehealgadh /312 B7 nech MH (312 5S co MH 59 bu yp co _lad]l 0,2 ei do-dihentar /312 6:!-f aidear M -faigter H
-fuighther (312 63 seacht M s- (312 64 cuduma MH chodrumadh (312 (cod- (32) 65 each oen M each aen H : gac (31 eB om. do MH 67 muirfes MH
marbhas tu /312 (mh- /32) 6S -ges M -g; H 69pecaid MH
pecadh (312 70 f o'geba MH f ogheabhadh (3i2 " opand M obann H /?2 72 saile M saili H saoile (312 ra mairradh (3 maredh /312 (mair- /31)
74 co MH 75 fata M f adadh /312 7e corob M corop H gurab (3
77 moide M j3n 78 pian M 79 digal MH dh- f3" M suigid MH
(s- M) suighe /312 81 hi H 82 -thadh /312 83 connach H gonach /3
84 om. nach /312 K duine nduine (3 86 cnoc M cnoc ionna /?12 87 hedan H etan M edan (3 88_88 in M only 89 cen M can H gan (3" 90 ulchain M ulchadh (312 91 1 M 92 teitheadach M teichteach H (the ch yc),
teitheach /32
13
12
88 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
40. (16) *Ro scibh Cain 2imorro o 3freagnarcns in *Coimhdhedh, i ro "aitreabhaidh, 6is se 7teitheach 8dasachtach, i rind 9airtheraigh 10an feroinn dar ainni10 "Eden—
.i. 12fcrand sin fil "inn airthear na 14Haissia.
(17) Ro "etairgnaidh Cain a "seitigh i ro "coimpar- astar 18si "mac .i. 20Enoch, i ro 21cnmlidaigh-sinm 22catliraigh, i 23tug 24ainm di 6 25ainm a 26mic27, .i. Enoch. (18) Ro 28thusim 29imorro Enoch 30Iaradh, 31i 32ro thuisimh 33Iaradh 34Mauiabel. 35Ro thnisimh 3RMauiabel Matusael. 37Ro 38tusinih 39Matusael Laimh- Tach $ 40diamus .i. on da mnai ||.
6(*i/->
41. (19) aDorad 2imorro 3in *LamhIach 5sin da seitigh, 7Adda i 8Sella a 9n-anmanda-sidhe. (20) 10Agas 11 ro thusimh Adda 12Iabal; is 13eisidhe 14ba liathair t 15l 16ba 17taoisech || 18na n-agairi i nam 19no aitreabh- dais |(a) a 20bpniblibh | 15i 21a bhfaissaighibh ||. (21) Iubal imorro 22ainm a 23bhrathar; is esidhe 24ro bha athair J i 25rob air each || 26nani ro 27chlechtaitis cruit i 28orgain. (22) Ro 29tusmestair 30dana 31Sealla 32mac 33don 34Laimhiach 35ceadhna .i. 36Tupalcan 37a
12
40. ' ra scib H 2 om. (312 3 freacnarcus MH (frec-H)
fergnarcus (32 4 Coimdead M an Choimdead H Choimhdhe /?
5 aitreb MH (-eab M) 6i M ise H om. is /312 re for se /3- ' teichtheaeh H 8dhasachtach [blank space that would hold four letters] fuind (i : dh. i bhf uinn /3n 9 iartharaid M iartharaig H airerthaigh /?12 10-,(l om. /?12 : in (an H) fearaind (r\ M fer- H) MH : dianaid M dianad H " Etan M Eadon no Eden H Edin /31 Eoin /?2 12 om. ferand sin fil /312 :
fearann M fuil H 13 an iarthar M an oirrther H 14 Haisia M
Asia (om. na) /?" 15 eadargnaid (edar- H) MH : edar- /8" '6 setig M seidid H " choimpristair MH -peir- /312 ™ om. si MH "irnac ft2 20Eanoch ft1 Eanoc /32 21 cumdaigsim H chum- /3r- -siom (3™
"cathraid M 23 tuc MH 24 ainim /312 25 annmin MH ainmuin (3
ainim (3" 2* mliic /312 2T ins. primgenid M 2S tuisim M ra thuis. H thuisiumh /?12 29 om- /312 30 ins. mac .i. M : Iarad M Iaareth H la ret /312 31 om. i M 32 M ra tuisim H om. /?12 33 ins. imorro MH: Iareth Manuel H Iarec /31 Iaret /32 u ins. mac .i. M; Mauibel M 35 ro (not ra) thuisim H om. /312 38Maubel mac .i. Maithiusael M; Manuel Mathasael H
\lauabel Matusaoil /32 37 ra H : om. ro tusimh, ins. ^ /3'2 3S thusim M
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 89
40. (16) Then Cain departed from the presence of the Lord, and dwelt, a wild fugitive, in the eastern border of the land called Eden —
The land which is in the east of Asia.
(.17) Cain knew his wife, and she conceived a ,son, Enoch ; and he founded a city and gave it a name from the name of his son, Enoch. (18) And Enoch begat Irad, and Irad begat Maviahel, Maviahel begat Mathusahel. Mathusahel begat Lamech [the bigamist, i.e. (so called) from the two wives].
41. (19) Now that Lamech took two wives, Ada and Sella their names. (20) And Ada bore label ; he it is who was father [and chief] of shepherds and of those who used to dwell in tents [and in desert places]. (21) Iubal, moreover, was the name of his brother : he it is who was father [and leader] of those who would handle harps and organs. (22) And Sella bore a son to the same Lamech, Tubalcain his name. He,
thuisim H 39 Mathasael mac .i. Laimiach M Mathusael Laimiach H
om. Matusael /?2 w this g. in M only.
41. 'darad H 2 om. (312 3 an H om. /312 4 Laimiach MH
Lamiach /?12 (-iac /J1) 5 hi sin .i. /3012 6 seitig M seitid H
7 ins. .i. MH 8 Sealla H /?12 9 -and-side MH (-sidi H) om. a nanmanda /312 10 ocus M " ra H thuisim Ada (foil, by full stop) H : thuisiumh Z?1 -iomh f32 12 ins. mac do Laimiach .i. M n eside M eissidi H csidhe /312 14 bu hathar /312 15 probably A. to be read for i (Ms) all MSS. 10 bu (32 17 taiseach M toissich H 1S do, with na sprs. ys M : na naegairi H
nagari /?12 haegairib M 19 ra aitreabadais H -trebd- M noch aitreabhas /?12 20 puiblib M 21 i f asaidib M a bf asaibh /312 22 ainim /312 23 brathar M brathair /?02 24 rob athair M ro ba /31 25 ro badh (32 26 looks like nam in /31, but may be given benefit of doubt: certainly nam ft2 21 clechtaidis M lechtatis /3 leachtadaois jS12 28 organ M 29 thuismedar /312 30 dono M om. /3" 31 Sella M 32 mac dittogmphed /31 33 do {3012 ** -ech 0* 33 cetna M cedna /312 36 Tubalchain M Tubalcon /312 37 -dhe /? om. a
(a) H lacuna begins.
90 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
einm-side. 38Rob eside 39imorro 40an 41ehed 42cheard 4.;_ 4nail 44Cgac| gaijjja i 45-n ^gad 46saer. Ocns *7rug
4RSella inghen larsin, i. 49Nema sinr 50Tubalcain.
rjIBa hi 52sin in 53chcad driiineach - is I ro 54chead-chum edach re each ar 55ttus.
42. (23) *Agas ro raidh 2Laimhiach re 3seitchibh .i. re 4Hada i re 5Sella : 6A seitclii Laimhlach6, 7eistidh mo 8gnth9, oighidh i "tuigidh mo "bhriathair. 12Uair ro 13mharblras 14fer amiiigh 15aniu, i is 16inund fodhen ro "chreachnaideas 18annsin. 19Uairistar 20form, -\ 21tri 22formad ro 23mhairblnis in 24maeth-dglach Z5sein.
261 2Tba gniomh comhaidhmhi lesiumh sin, 2Snair is tria 29dhiomns i 30in docbhail ro raidh.
(24) 31In tl 32traa 33muirfeas Cain, 34indecbfaidhair in 35tseachtoll ?air : 31in ti 32imorro 33mbnirfes 34Laimhiacli, 35pianfaidliair he a 36secht 37cudrama fa seachtmbogbait.
43. (25) Ro 'etargnaidh 2dana Adhamh 3dorighisi t .i. |(a) *Eua ||, i 5ro 6tlmsimh si mac do, 7i do ro
ainm-side p12 ** ro ba hisidhe /?2 39o?n. imorro M j312 40 in M P2 (bis) 41 cet M (ter) ced p2 ^cerd p2 goba . . . cherd . . . saer M 43 on. i P12 ** ched-ghabhadh /312 (gabh- p2) * an /312 « saor p" 47 rue M 48 Sealla p1 Seall p2 49 Neama p1 50 Thubalchain M " fa M
52 sidhe Pi2 M died ruinech M ced dr. p2 M chet M ced cumedach
yS012 55 tus M P"
42. 1 ocus M p2 2 Lamiae /31 Laimiach. M p2 3 heitchib M 4 Hadda M P" 5 Sealla /312 6_sda seitig Laimiach (attached to preceding) M om. p12 7 estig M 8 ghuth /?12 9 ins. ol se M ,0 tuicid M tugadh p2,
an attempt made afterwards to insert an i before the g " briathra M -thar P1 "om. p12 13 mbhairbhus p2 14fearM 15 aniug M
10inand M ann /312 w chrer-htnaideas M eheachtnaighius P ceclitnaighes p12 ™om. p1 19oir (uair p°) is tar (tair p2) form (f. p°) p012
20 f ormad M 21 tria M 22 for- p2 23 marbas M mharbhas P"
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 91
moreover, was the first wright, the first smith, and the first carpenter. And Sella bore a daughter thereafter, Noemma, sister of Tubalcain.
She was the first weaver, and the first who fashioned raiment for everyone in the beginning.
42. (23) And Lamech said to his wives, Ada and Sella : Ye wives of Lamech, hear my voice, heed and understand my word. For I have slain a man without, today, and it is the very same thing that I wounded (him) there. He injured me, and through jealousy I slew7 that tender youth.
And he thought it a deed for boasting, for it was through his haughtiness and in vainglory that he spoke.
(24) He then who shall slay Cain, it shall be revenged upon him sevenfold : but he who shall slay Lamech, shall be punished seventy and seven times the equivalent.
43. (25) Then Adam knew again <his wife>, [to wit Eua] and she bore a son to him, and Adam called that
24 maoth- ft" (In /32 owing to change of page dittographed thus: in maethog | an maethoglach) 25 sen M sin /312 26 .i. ft0 " fa gnim comaidme lesim in gnim sin M go maidhmi leasiumh /?12 2S oir /32
29dimus M -mas /31 30 ind tocbail M in docbal [i2 31 an /312 (bis)
32 thra M om. /312 33 murfeas M ro mharblias /312 34 indeachfaidear M -faigher (31 -faisgar (s expuncted) fi2 35 seaeht ollfair M secht oil
fair /3 techt ollfair fil~ w om. /312 33 muirf eas M muirblithas /312
34 Lamiac /31 35 -dear M dher /312 3G seaeht M secht /312
37 cutruma f o seaclitmogat M cudrumadh (cad- /31) fo seachtmhoghadh (s- p) F*
43. 1 eadar- M eadargnadh ft2 2 dono M dion /?' dionu ft2
3 -disi M dorighsi /? 4 Eabha (312 b om. ro (I2 6 thuisim M
tuisiomh j812 ' om. j312 (not (3); om. do ro M, -easd- M Adam M
(a) j= M.
92
SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
gairmeastair Adhaimh in mac sin7 .i. 8Seth : i 9is edh ro raidh : 10Dorat "Dia 12dhamh, $ air Adhamh || 13"ar" .i. slol 14samh 15saineamhail aile, tar 16a eisi ^Abeoil ro mhairbh Cain. (26) 18Ro ghenair |(a) mac do 19Seith .i. Enos 20a ainm-side. Is 21e an tEnos sin ro 23thionnsgain ar 23ttns ariam in 24gairm i 25atach anma 26an Coimhdhia.C6)
j8.
43a. Mac dh'Enos Cain- ean. Mac do-siden Male- leth. Mac do-siden Iareth. Mac do-sen Enoc. Mac do-siden Matasaliam. Mac do-sen Laimhiach. Mac do sidhen Noe.
(312. Ghein Enos Canaan. Gcin Canaan Malaleel. *G h e i n Malaleel Iaret. Gein Iaret Enoc. 2Gein Enoc Matnsalem. 2Gein Matusalem Lamiac, i mac dosin Noe.
37. (1) Adam vero cognouit 2Euam uxorem suam, quae concepit et peperit Cain, [dicens] Possedi hominem per Deum. (2) Rursusque peperit 2filium alimn, Abel : fait autem Abel pastor ouium, et Cain agricola. (3) Factum est autem post multos dies ut offerret Cain de fructibus terrae munera 3Deo, (4) Abel quoque obtulit <Deo> de primogenitis gregis sui, et de adipibus eorum. Et respexit Dominus ad Abel et ad munera eius, (5) ad Cain uero et ad munera eius non respexit. Iratusque est Cain uehementer et eoncidit uultus eius.
38. (6) Dixitque Dominus ad Cain : Quare mestus es, et cur eoncidit facies tua? (7) xNonne si bene egeris recipies? Sin autem male, statim in foribus peccatum aderit ; [sed sub te erit appetitus eius, et tu dominaberis illius].
8 Set /?2 9 is seadh ro raidh (i ro radh (om. is edh) /3"
11 om. Dia M I2 dam ar M om. dhamh . . . ar .i. /31-'
:" tUg y812
13 om. ar M
14 saimh (i2
13 seanandiuil eile /312
om. a M /312: eis /312
" Aibeoil ro marb M Abel do mharbhadh (om. Cain) (3™
1 ro
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 93
son Seth; and thus he spake : God hath given me [said Adam] "ar" that is, other gentle excellent seed, in the room of Abel, whom Cain slew. (26) A son was horn to Seth, Enos his name. It is that Enos who began at the very first to call upon and to invoke the name of the Lord.
43a. A son to Enos, Enos be-gat Cainan. Cainan
Cainan. A son to him, begat Malalehel. Malalehel
Malalehel. A son to him, begat Iared. Iared begat
Iared. A son to him, Enoch. Enoch begat Mathu-
Enoch. A son to him, salam. Mathusalam begat
Mathusalam. A son to him, Lamech, and Noe was son to
Lamech. A son to him, him. Noe.
(8) Dixitque Cain ad Abel fratrem suum : Egrediamur Hn agrum. Cumque essent in agro, consurrexit Cain aduersus Abel fratrem suum et interfecit eum. (9) Et ait 3Dcus ad Cain: Vbi est Abel f rater tuus? Qui respondit : Nescio; num custos fratris mei sum? (10) Dixitque 4<Deus> ad 5Cain : Quid fecisti ? Vox sanguinis fratris tui clamat ad me de terra.
39. (II) Nunc igitur maledictus eris super terram, quae aperuit os suum et suscepit sanguinem fratris tui de manu tua. (12) <Et> cum operatus fueris earn, non dabit tibi f ructus suos : uagus et profugus eris super terram. (13) Dixitque Cain ad Deum : Maior est iniquitas mea quam ut ueniam merear. (14) Ecce eicis me hodie a facie terrae et a facie tua abscondar. [Et] ero uagus et profugus in terra, omnis x [igitur qui inuenerit me] occidet me.
geinther /312 19 Seth M /?12 2" om, a ainm-side ins. i ft2 a he in M 22 thinscain M thion sguin /312 23 tus riam M : -amh fi1 nigh- p-
25 atath M aatach /312 2C in Choimdead M, on Choimhdhia /312
43a. Jgein /?2 2 gen /32 (bis)
(a) s1 M.
(b) B lacuna begms. The U here numbered 43a attempts, on the part of the late copies, to supply connecting matter between the two sides of the gap.
94 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
(15) Dixitque ei Deus : Nequaquam ita fiet, sed omnis qui
occiderit Cain septuplum punietur. Posuit[que] Deus Cain
2<in> sigrmm, ut non eum interficeret omnis 3[qui inuenisset
eum] .
I
40. (16) Egressusque Cain a facie Domini habitauit in terra, profugns, ad orientalem plagam Eden. (17) Cognouit autem Cain uxorem suam, quae concepit 1[et peperit] 2<filium nomine> Enoch : et aedificauit ciuitatem, uocauitque nomen eius ex nomine filii sui Enoch. (18) Porro Enoch genuit Irad, et Irad genuit Mauiahel, et Mauiahel genuit Mathusahel, et Mathusahel genuit Lamech.
41. (19) Qui accepit uxores duas, nomen uni xAda, et nomen alteri Sella. (20) Genuitque Ada label, qui fuit pater habitantum in tentoriis atque pastorum : (21) et nomen fratris eius Iubal, ipse fuit pater canentium cithara et organo. (22) Sella quoque genuit 2Tubalcain, qui fuit malleator et faber in cuncta opera aeris et ferri. 3Soror vero Tubalcain Noemma.
42. (23) Dixitque Lamech uxoribus suis *Adae et Sellae : Audite uocem meam, uxores Lamech, auscultate sermonem meum, quoniam occidi uirum in uulnus meum, et adulescen- tulum in liuorem meum. (24) Septuplum ultio dabitur de Cain, de Lamech uero septuagies septies.
43. (25) Cognouit quoque adhuc Adam ^uxorem suam], et peperit filram, uocauitque 2nomen eius Seth, dicens : Posuit mihi semen aliud pro Abel, quem occidit Cain. (26) Sed et Seth natus est nlius, quem uocauit Enos : isti coepit inuocare nomen Domini.
Notes on the Biblical Text, Chapter IV.
*\\ 37. Hauam in ST, but as before Euam has much support. 2Fratrem eius in ST and all Versions and mss. 2Domino in ST and all Versions and mss.
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 95
j| 38. xThis verse, of which the best commentators can make but little, is baldly paraphrased by Tr., who has omitted the unintelligible last clause altogether. 2The Irish is closer to LXX (6tt\0t,ifxt%i tic t" TTetiuv). The original is lost from the Massoretic Hebrew text, but must be supplied (the English Revised Version makeshift "and Cain told Abel his brother" is inadmissible). sDominus in ST, but 6 Oeog in LXX. 4Deus omitted in Vulg., but o Otnt,- in LXX. One Vulg. ms. has Dominus. sEum ST and all mss. No equivalent in LXX.
fl 39. 1> 3These two similar passages are necessary to the sense, and presumably were in the original text of Tr. It is a curious coincidence that they should both have disappeared. 2In omitted by ST, but there is authority for it, as for in Cain signum and in signum Cain.
H 40. xn ro thuisim was probably in the text originally, but dropped out early. 2F ilium nomine found in four mss., but ST omits.
jj 41. 1This name is spelt with one d in all Versions and mss. 2The interpolated mac don Laimhiaeh ceadna doubtless was originally a gloss explaining the personality of Tupalcan (Tubalcain). There is no authority behind the statement in Tr. that he was the first craftsman in his trades. 3There is no authority for the verbose Irish ocus rug Sella ingen iar sin.
U 42. 1Tr. here follows Vulg. against other Versions in transferring the names of the wives from the beginning of the song (where the poetical structure requires them) to the prose introductory matter. The translation of the song is corrupt, and as it stands is partly unintelligible. See the notes to this If.
fl 43. 1A seitig has been extruded from the text by the gloss .i. Eua. 2The speaker was certainly Eve, not Adam. The latter name, for which there is no authority whatever, is doubtless an interpolation.
96 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
Chapter V.
44. (1) As *e so thra leabar |(a) .i. in Genis, no canoin pedarlaigi || tuismeada Adaim. Isin 16 in ra 2thnisim Dla in dnine fo chosmailis fodein, (2) ro thuisim fear - mnai, i ro beandach doib, i tuc in n-ainm as Adam $(a) .i. duni || doib isin 16 in ro thuismit.
y1 Airmit eolaig na sdairi diada na ro beannaig Dla do Adam o daridni in pecad.
y2 I cind se n-iiair co leith do lo doridni Adam i Eba in pecad, .i. torad Chraind na hAithni do ch(&)aithem, tre aslach na nathrach.
(3) Tricha bliadan ar cet ro bo slan do Adam in tan rucad Seth do (4) i doridned laitheada Adaim lar
tuismed 3Seth do .i. ocht cet bliadan, i ro thuisim maccu
i ingena. (5) Ocus Moridnead 5uile saegal 6 Adaim .i.
7tricha ar 8noib cetaib bliadan, i adbath Adam 9iar sin.
y3 10Ocus ro hadnaiced sin chathraid dianad ainm
Sabron, co roibi a chorp sa baili sin co tanic in dili tar in domun : cor scarsad tonna na dilenn a chorp i a cheand
re chele, co rucsad leo na tonna in cenn o Sabron co Golgotha, cor thoiris an Golgotha co chrochad Crist. Co rob tre chend Adaim tarla cend na croichi : co ndeachaid fuil in Choimdead fo agaid Adaim, conad mar sin do baistead Adam ar tus, do reir eolach na sdairi diada10.
45. (6) Cuic bliadna ar cet imorro afa slan do Seth hi tan rncad 2Enos do. (7) Seacht 3mbliadna ar cuic cetaib lar tuismead Enos fa he saegal 4Seth, i ro
44. ] se seo M 2 spelt th;im wherever it occurs M 3 Seith H
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 97
Chapter V.
44. (1) Now this is the book [of Genesis, or of the Old Testament canon] of the creation of Adam. In the day in which God created Man under His own likeness (2) He created man and woman, and blessed them, and gave them the name from Adam [i.e. man] in the day wherein they were created.
y1 Those skilled in sacred history consider that God gave no blessing to Adam after he committed the sin.
y2 At the end of six hours and a half of the day did Adam and Eve commit the sin, namely the eating of the Tree of Knowledge, by the incitement of the serpent.
(3) An hundred and thirty years had Adam complete when Seth was born to him, (4) and the days of Adam after the birth of Seth to him were made eight hundred years, and he begat sons and daughters. (5) And all the life of Adam was made nine hundred and thirty years, and Adam died thereafter.
And he was buried in the city which is called Hebron, so that his body was in that place till the Flood came over the world : and the waves of the Flood sundered his body and his head each from the other, and the waves carried the head with them from Hebron to Golgotha. It abode in Golgotha till the Crucifixion of Christ. And it was through the head of Adam that the end of the Cross came : and the blood of the Lord fell over the face of Adam, and thus was Adam baptized for the first time, according to men skilled in sacred history.
45. (6) An hundred and five years were complete for Seth, when Enos was born to him. (7) Five hundred and seven years was the life of Seth after
4 -ned H 5 uili H 6 Adam M 7 spelt triK in M 8 uae M
9 iartain H 10_1° in M only
45. 'baH 2 Enoss H 3 bliadna yc H 4 Seith H
(a) These glosses Interlined. (fr) H resumes.
L.G. — VOL. I. H
98 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
thuisim 5maccu 7 ingena. (8) Da bliadain dec ar se 6chetaib 7fa he uili 8saegail Seth, 7 adbath Seth lar sin.
46. (9) Nocha ar ched bliadan % .i. deich mbliadan ar mae 2fichtib bliadan || is ead fa slan do Enos 3in tan mead Cainen do. (10) lar tuismed imorro (a) 4Chainen d5, fa beo he fri re chuic mbliadan 5dec ar secht cetaib, - ro thuisim maccu 7 ingena. (11) Ocus 6doridnead uili laitheada Enos .i. cuic bliadna ar nai cetaib, 7 adbath larsin.
47. (12) Seachtmoga ar chet bliadan *% .i. deich mbliadan 7 ocht fichit bliadan || is ed 2fa slan do 3Chainean 4in tan ro thuisim Malalel. (13) Ceathracha ar seacht cetaib bliadan imorro is ed 5fa bed Cainen lar 6tuismed Malalel 7do, 7 ro 8thuismistair maccu 7 ingena. (14) Ocus 9dorignit uili "laitheada "Chainean .i. deich mbliadan ar nai cetaib bliadan, 7 adbath 12iarsin.
48. (15) 1Cuic bliadna 2sescad ar ched is ed 3fa slan do Malalel 4in tan ro thuisim 5Iareth. (16) Tricha ar seacht cetaib bliadan imorro ba beo he lar etuismed Iareth, 7 ro thuisim maccu 7 ingena. (17) Ocus 7doridnit uili laitheada Malalel 8cuic bliadna nochat ar ocht cetaib, 7 adbath 9iarsin.
49. (18) Da bliadain seascad ar ched afa slan do 2Iareth 3in tan ro thuisim 5Enoc. (19) Ocht ced bliadan
5 macu hie et semper H ° chedaib M 'ba H s saegal Seith H
46. 1 nai H 2 sic H, fichit M 3 an tan rugad H 4 Chainein, do bo beo H 5 deg H s dorigned uili laitheda Enoss H
47. tms. dono H 2 ba H 3 -nen H 4 an H 5 ba H * tus (om. -med) H 7 om. do H 8 thuisimstair H 9 dorigned H
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 99
the birth of Enos, and he begat sons and daughters. (8) Six hundred and twelve years was the whole of the life of Seth, and Seth died thereafter.
46. (9) An hundred and ninety years, [that is, nine score and ten years] were complete to Enos when Cainan was born to him. (10) Now after the birth of Cainan to him, he was alive for a space of seven hundred and fifteen years, and begat sons and daughters. (11) And all the days of Enos were made nine hundred and five years, and he died thereafter.
47. (12) An hundred and seventy years [that is, eight score and ten years] were complete for Cainan when he begat Malalehel. (13) Seven hundred and forty years moreover was Cainan alive after Malalehel was born to him, and he begat sons and daughters. (14) And all the days of Cainan were made nine hundred and ten years, and he died thereafter.
48. (15) An hundred sixty and five years were complete for Malalehel when he begat Iared. (16) Seven hundred and thirty years was he alive, moreover, after the birth of Iared, and he begat sons and daughters. (17) And all the days of Malalehel were made eight hundred ninety and five years, and he died thereafter.
49. (18) An hundred sixty and two years were complete for Iared when he begat Enoch. (19) Eight
10 laitheda H " -nen H 12 Cainen iartain H
48. J Cuig H 2 lxx. H 3 ba H 4 an H 5 Iaareth H 6 -edh H hie et semper 7 dorignid uili laithedha H 8 ins. .i. ; cuig H ° Malalel iartain H.
49. 'ba H 2 Iaareth H 3 an tan ra thuisim Enoch H
(a) H preserved continuously from here.
100 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
imorro ro bal 4ina beathaig Tar tuismed 5Enoc, i ro thuisim maccu i ingena. (20) Ocus 6doridnead uili laithoada 7Iareth .i. da bliadain sescad ar nai cetaib, 7 adbath 7Iareth larsin.
50. (21) Cuic bliadna sescad ar chet 1fa slan do Enoc 3in tan ro thuisim 4Mathasalem. (22) Ocus is do 5rer De ro imthig Enoc : da ched bliadan imorro do 6i mbeathaid choitchind chaich lar tuismed 7Mathusalam, i ro thuisim maccu i ingena. (23) Ocus sdorignaid uili 9laitheada Enoc .i. coic bliadna sescat ar tri cetaib, (24) i 10ro imthig "do rer 12thoile De,
2
1 13fa 14in inadaib diamraib 15dithrubdaib, o beathaid choitchind chaich, no aitrebad 16in fer 17sin cein,
no co 18ruc Dia leis he,19
-]20 ro co suigid he 21i Parrdus uasal Adaim. Ocus is e 22in t-Enoc sin, 23.i. mac 24Iareth, ro airic na decc 25n-anmand airegda Ebraidi, o ro 26cet-gairmead Dia ar tusO), o anmandaib ecsamlaib na nEabraide.
51. (25) 'Ro thuisim dono Mathasalem Laimiach, isin sechtmad bliadain ochtmogat ar ched a aisi. (26) Da bliadain ar ochtmogaid ar secht cetaib fa beo Mathasalem iar tuismed Laimiach do, i ro thuisim maccu i ingena. (27) Ocus doridnit uili laitheda 2Mathasaelim, .i. noi mbliadna ceathrachad ar noe cedaib, i fuair bas iartain.
4 ana beathaid H 5 Enoch H (bis) e dorigned a uili laitheda H ' Iaareth H (Us)
50. 2ba H - Enoch H 8an H 4 Mathasailem H
5 reir Dia ra himig Enoch H 6 a mbethaid H 7 Mathasailem H sdognidh H "laitheda H 10 ra imid "do reir H 12 thoili H "baH 14 om. in H " dithrubaib H 1G an H
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 101
hundred years, moreover, was he in his life after the birth of Enoch, and he begat sons and daughters. (20) And all the days of Iared were made nine hundred sixty and two years, and Iared died there- after.
50. (21) An hundred sixty and five years were complete for Enoch when he begat Mathusalam. (22) And it is in God's way that Enoch walked : two hundred years had he in the common life of every man after the birth of Mathusalam, and he begat sons and daughters. (23) And all the days of Enoch were made three hundred sixty and five years, (24) and he walked according to the will of God,
And it was in waste and desert places, away from the common life of every man, that that man was living for a season,
till God took him with Himself,
and set him in the noble Paradise of Adam. Now this is that Enoch son of Iared, who invented the ten excellent Hebrew names, by which God was first called, out of the different names of the Hebrews.
51. (25) Now Mathusalam begat Lamech, in the hundred eighty and seventh year of his age. (26) Seven hundred eighty and two years was Mathusalam alive after the birth of Lamech to him, and he begat sons and daughters. (27) And all the days of Mathusalam were made nine hundred forty and nine years, and he died thereafter.
17 sain H 18 rug H 19 ins. a Parrdhus H 20 cur suigid H
21 a H 22an H 23 om, .i. H 24 Iaareth H 25 n-anmanda
aireada Eabraidi H 26 -meadh H
51. ] The marks of prolongation are here omitted in accordance with p. xxvi 2 Written Mathasaeli in VM. Not understanding this, sM wrote Mathasael-i
(a) H lacuna begins.
102 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
52. (28) Ko thuisim imorro Laimiach Noe, isin dara bliadain ar ochtmogat ar chet a aisi.
Is he dono eitercheart i minugad ciallaidi in anma, 1.i. Noe, .i. requies .i. eumsanad.
(29) Uair is ed ro raid Laimiach iar tuismed Nae : Bid he in mac-sa 2coimdidnaphas i saerfas sind o gnimaib i o gnimaib ar lam isin talmain mallachtnaich mirathmair, ro eascain Dia,
ar pecad Adaim -\ Eua i Cain chlain, chosnomaich, chelgaig, cona ehloind.
(30) Coic bliadna nochad ar coic cetaib ba he saegal Laimiach iar tuismed Noe do, i ro thuisim maccu i ingena. (31) Ocus dorignit uile laitheada Laimiach .i. seacht mbliadna sechtmogat ar 3secht cetaib, i fuair bas iarsinO) ....
44. (1) Hie est liber generations Adam. In die qua creauit Deus hominem ad similitudinem 1suam, (2) maseulum et feminam creauit eos, et benedixit illos, et uocauit nomen eorum "Adam," in die qua creati sunt. (3) Vixit autem Adam centum triginta annis et genuit 2[ad similitudinem et imaginem suam, uocauitque nomen eius] Seth : (4) et facti sunt dies Adam postquam genuit Seth octingenti anni, genuitque filios et filias. (5) Et factum est omne tempus quod vixit Adam, anni nonaginti triginta, et mortuus est.
45-49. It is unnecessary to transcribe the Latin of these formal paragraphs, but some important details with regard to the ages of the Patriarchs are set forth in the notes at the end of the chapter.
52. 1 is for .i. M 2 eoimdid naplias M 3 se M
(a) M lacuna begins.
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 103
52. (28) Moreover Lamech begat Noe, in the hundred eighty and second year of his age.
This is the interpretation, and the significant sense of the name Noe ; requies, or ' ' rest. ' '
(29) For thus did Lamech speak after the birth of Noe : this boy shall be he who shall comfort and deliver us from labours, from the labours of our hands in the accursed ill-fated earth, which God cursed,
for the sin of Adam and Eve, and Cain, the iniquitous, contentious, and deceiving, with his progeny.
(30) Five hundred ninety and five years was the life of Lamech after the birth of Noe to him, and he begat sons and daughters. (31) And all the days of Lamech were made seven hundred seventy and seven years, and he died thereafter ....
50. (21) ^orro Enoch uixit sexaginta quinque annis et genuit Mathusalam. (22) Et ambulauit Enoch cum Deo postquam genuit Mathusalam ducentis annis, et genuit filios et filias. (23) Et facti sunt dies Enoch trecenti sexaginta quinque anni, (24) ambulauitque cum Deo [et non apparuit] quia tulit eum Deus.
51. (This paragraph partakes of the formal nature of most of the chapter.)
52. (28) Vixit autem Lamech centum octoginta duobus annis, et genuit [filium (29) uocauitque nomen eius] Noe, dicens : Iste consolabitur nos ab operibus et laborious manuum nostrarum in terra, cui maledixit Dominus. (30) Vixitque Lamech postquam genuit Noe quingentos nonaginta quinque annos, et genuit filios et filias (31) et facti sunt omnes dies Lamech septingenti septuaginta septem anni, et mortuus est2 . . .
104 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
Notes on the Biblical Text, Chapter V.
Tl" 44. ^he punctuation, doubtless by accident, follows the OL. But there is no authority for the substitution of suam for Dei. 2This passage was perhaps dropped from Tr. owing to an eye-confusion induced by the similar passage in the preceding verse.
fl 45-49. In the ages of the Patriarchs Tr. follows the authority of LXX (and Isidore) as against Vulg. This is shown in the following table. (A = age of each patriarch at birth of firstborn, B = years lived after firstborn, C = total age.)
Septuagint. |
Vulgate. |
Irish Translation. |
|||||||
A B |
C |
A |
B 807. |
C 912 |
A |
1 B C |
|||
Seth ... |
205 |
707 |
912 |
105 |
105 |
507 715 |
612 |
||
Enos |
190 |
715 |
905 |
90 |
815 |
905 |
190 |
905 |
|
Kenan ... |
170 |
740 |
910 |
70 65 |
840 |
910 |
170 |
740 |
910 |
Mahalalel |
165 |
730 |
895 |
830 |
895 |
165 |
730 |
895 |
|
Jared |
162 |
800 |
962 |
162 |
800 |
962 |
162 |
800 |
962 |
Enoch ... |
165 |
200 |
365 |
65 |
300 |
365 |
165 |
200 |
365 |
Methu- selah |
167 |
802 565 |
969 |
187 |
782 |
969 |
187 |
782 |
945 (sic) |
Lamech |
188 |
753 |
182 |
595 |
777 |
182 |
595 |
677 (sic) |
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 105
In the Irish text .xl. has boon miswritten for .lx. in the age of Methuselah, and in the age of Lamech a "c" has been omitted. The 677 years of Lamech 's age is a mere copyist's mistake which has here been corrected in the text, .dc. having been written instead of .dec. The reduction of the age of Seth by 300 years has no authority.
fl 50. xThis paragraph has been much worked over by the interpolation and assimilation of details from the apocrypha of Enoch. It has almost parted company with the Latin original.
ft 52. 1There is here a hint that Tr. is for the moment becoming weary of his work. He does not show his usual care in finding different words for operibus et laboribus : contrast verses 4, 5 of this chapter, where he has duly observed the difference of dies and tempus (laitheada, sdegal). The rendering (or more probably the transmission) of the paragraph is rather too free for any certain establishment of the Latin text. 2It is uncertain whether iarsin, the last word before the lacuna, belongs to v. 31 (where the Latin does not call for it) or begins the lost v. 32, which enumerated the sons of Noah.
106 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
Chapter VI.
53. . . . (a)Ro forcongair Dia] for chlannaib Se[th na ro ehummascdais cairde]s fri clannaib Cain, -\ na ra [clann- aigdis friu i na tucdais] mna dib. Arai sin tra, odchond- feadar clanna Seth iad, tucsat ingena] airedha clainn Cain. Tangadar tar [in forcital, -] ro clannaigset] friu tar sarugad nDe. Conad airi sin [ro geinsit fomoraig i] lupraganaig 1 each egosc dodea[lbda torothorda ra bai] for dainib an donrnin ria ndilind.
A[tberat araile nach dib-sidi] iarricht imorro; is do sil Chaim.
54. (3) Ocus ra [raid Dia : Ni anfaid nios] fada
mo Spirad isin duine | .i. ana x[17 ] duine ||,
conaid coland % A. ar a ro-med d[15 || i]
forbabtar laithedlia in duini i cind ficbet [bliadan ar cet. (4) Do badar] imorro for talmain ar tan sin giganteis, % .i. cora[id o macaib] mileata i 6 hingenaib colacha Cain ||.
55. (5) Ot[chondairc Dia] imorro —
techt tar timna doib J a feirg, a feill, a f[10. . . .]rad, a n-uaill, a n-ecrabad ||, ra chindustair na hui[li daini] do dibadh *] do dilgend.
— Conad iarom ra raid Dia: (7) [Sgrios]fed, ar Se, an duini ra thuisim o dreich an talman, t [8conid tucad] dono dilgenn for uilib anmandaib an talman, i for enaib an aeoir || uair tanig aithrechus dam a ndenma. (8) Fuair Nae imorro airmidin i onoir a fiadnaisi De —
54. ' The small number prefixed to this and such similar lacunae as cannot be certainly filled up indicates the approximate number of characters that have been lost : the number of lost letters may have
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 107
Chapter VI.
53. . . . God forbade the descendants of Seth to mingle friendship with those of Cain, or to beget children by them, or to take wives from them. In spite of that, however, when the descendants of Seth saw them, they took the beautiful daughters of the descendants of Cain. They transgressed the commandment, and had children by them in despite of God. Wherefore there were born giants and dwarfs and every unshapely monstrous being that was among the people of the world before the Flood.
Others say however that it is not of them that they were found : it is of the seed of Ham.
54. (3) And God said : My Spirit shall not remain
longer in man [i.e. in man] for he is flesh [i.e.
for the exceeding greatness of his (sins? ...)]: and the days of man shall be brought to a close at the end of an hundred and twenty years. (4) Now there were gigantes upon the earth at that time, [i.e. champions of the warlike sons and the fleshly daughters of Cain.]
55. (5) Now when God saw —
that they were transgressing the covenant [in wrath, in treachery, in . . . ., in pride, in impiety], He determined to annihilate and to destroy all men.
"Wherefore God said : (7) I shall root out, said He, Man, whom I have created, from the face of the earth, [(so there was brought) destruction upon all the beasts of the earth and upon the birds of the air] for repentance for having made them hath come on Me. (8) But Noe found favour and honour before God.
been greater, for allowance must be made for possible compendia, contractions, and suspensions.
(a) A tew letters of the previous line left ( . . . sadt . a . . . ), which will not fit in with anything.
108 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
Air is e Nae aenfer firen forbthe frith do chlannaib sainemla Seith, na ra cumaisc fri clannaib elaena Cain.
56. (11) Ra truaillned i ra linad tra an talam o ulc i i indirgi na ndaini || ; (12) i 66. chondairc Dia ani sin (13) ra raid fri Nae : Tanig, ar Se, crich i forba na huili cholla am fiadnaissi. Millfed i malartfad nili aitrebaidi an talman, f ota min co mor ||.
57. % Ra raid Dia dono fri Nae || (14) Dena-sa, ar Se, duit feisin aire letliain lnchtmair lan-fairsing, o crandaib snaigthi slemnaigtbi —
y1 nach dernad -\ nach dingentar long bus samail di ar med, ar daingne, ar disli, ar deig-denum.
y2 Ocus is amlaid dorindead i ceitri slesa furri.
Dena-sa dono inti aideda imda ecsamla, i slemnaig- fedsa in aircc ar medon i dia n-echtair o bidamain.
y3 (a) Is e imorro aigned fil isin bidamain, nach milleadh cruimi na gaetha na uisce na. tes ngreine, na cranda do curter inti.
(15) Ocus dena-su tri cet cubad hi fad na hairci, i caoga cubad in a 'leithedh, i tricha cubad ina bairdi.
(16) Ocus dena seinistir isa n-aircc, i aen chubad ana tigi.
y3 (b) Atiad a hadbair, .i. glae iuda i 2bidamain i ere, t -i. uir thiri Siria ||. Bui Dia Anorlaoite ra ehumaisc na hadbair sin tre na cheli, tre forgeall De fair : brathair do Eibifenius do saer na hairci. Uair do mac do [10. . . .] 3nus iad araen. Aitreb a comuir each cineil [ainmide ijnti, Nir cuiread aen 4tairrngi uma na iaraind inti. [Is re
57. J The final d is a little doubtful 2 The scribe began to
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 109
For this Noe is the one righteous perfect man who was found, of the excellent children of Seth, who had not mingled with the iniquitous children of Cain.
56. (11) Now the earth was corrupted and filled with evil [and with the iniquity of men], (12) and when God saw that, (13) He said unto Noe : The end and termination of all flesh hath come before Me. I shall destroy and confound all the inhabitants of the earth [both small and great].
57. [Moreover God said to Noe :] (14) Make thou, said He, for thyself a broad capacious roomy ark of timbers chipped and smoothed —
so that never was made nor shall be made a ship like unto it in size, in firmness, in trustworthiness, and in good crafts- manship.
And thus was it made, with four sides to it.
Make also within it many various chambers, and let the ark be smooth inside and out with pitch.
Now this is the nature that pitch possesses, that no worms, nor 'winds, nor water, nor sun-heat destroys the timbers that have been placed in it.
(15) And make three hundred cubits in the length of the ark, and fifty cubits in its breadth, and thirty cubits in its height. (16) And make a window in the ark, and one cubit in its thickness.
These are its materials, glue and pitch and clay, [that is, mould of the land of Syria]. It was Dia Anarlaoite who mixed these materials together, by the revelation of God. He was brother to Epiphenius, the wright of the ark, for they were the two sons of ( — )nus. There was a dwelling in preparation for every sort of
write ere here, but realised and corrected his mistake after writing the r 3 The first half of this u torn away 4 the g sprs. c H
110 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
bida]main do chomdluthugad a clar re cheili. Secht 1a [amain] sul do fer tosach na dilenn, i is amlaid bai Nae cona [macai]b, -] a leth-gluini dessa fuithib, "7 siad ag edarguidi De im [f]oirithin d'fadbail.
Da raid Dia co Nae : Dena-su imorro [d]orns na hairci ara slis, i dena cendacuili inti co feicib deiligtecha ■eaturru.
58. (17) Daber-sa co follus % ar Dia || uisci na dilenn for talmain, do marbad hina lmili cholla hi lull xspirad bethad fo nim, -\ biaid forba i crich for na hnilib itat a talmain. (18) Ocus doden caradrad rit, 1 raga-sn 2isa n-aircc i do seidig % .i. Coba ingen Laimiach, do siur-sin ||, -\ do mice i seitchi do mac imailli ritsiu, $ i is rlaid do geinsid diblinaib ||. (19) Ocus bera leat isa n-airc caraid cacha lianmanda in ecoisc chechtarda fil for talmain, ardaig a mbethad do choimed t 1 silta uaithib iar ndilinn ||. (21) Bera dono let isi n-aircc biad cubaid comadais % do each amnanda, et reliqua, dligtheach -\ indligthech ||, i bid biad duidse i doib-sim sin do chaithim. (22) Daroini tra Nae na huili neithi ro forchongair Dia do.
54. *(3) Dixitque Deus : Non permanebit Spiritus meus in homine 2diutius, quia caro est, 3eruntque dies illius centum uiginti annorum. (4) Gigantes autem erant super terrain in diebus illis4 . . .
58. * the a sbs. -first written ifa and afterwards corrected.
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. Ill
animal within it. Not a nail of bronze or of iron was put into it : with pitch was its timber secured together. There were only seven days before the first of the Flood poured down, and thus were Noe and his sons, with their right knees bent under them, interceding with God to obtain succour.
God said unto Noe : Make, moreover, the door of the ark in its side, and make chambers within it, with separating roof-beams between them.
58. (17) Lo [said God] I shall bring the water of the Flood over the earth, to ,slay altogether flesh in which is a spirit of life beneath the heaven, and there shall be termination and end upon all that are in the earth. (18) And I shall make a compact with thee : and thou shalt go into the ark, thou and thy wife [Coba, daughter of Lamech, thy sister] and thy sons and the wives of thy sons together with thee [and of thee were they born on both sides]. (19) And thou shalt take with thee into the ark a pair of every animal, in each shape that is on the earth, in order to preserve their life [and for seeding from them after the Flood]. (21) Thou shalt take also with thee into ark food, meet and fitting [for every animal, et reliqua, lawful and unlawful] and it shall be food for thee and for them, to eat thereof. (22) So Noe did all the things which God connnanded him.
55. (5) Videns autem Deus1 .... (7) Delebo, inquit, hominem quern creaui a facie terrae, 2ab homine usque ad animantia, a reptili usque ad uolucres caeli, paenitet enim me fecisse eos. (8) Noe vero inuenit gratiam coram 3Deo
112 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
56 a(H) Corrupta est autem terra [coram Deo J et
repleta est iniquitate. (12) Cumque uidisset Deus 2. . . . (33) Dixit ad Noe : Finis uniuersae carnis uenit coram me 3. . . . Ego disperdam eos cum terra.
57. (14) JFac tibi arcam de lignis leuigatis. Mansiuncula.s in area facies, et bitumine linies intrinsecus et extrinseeus. (15) Et sic facies earn: trecentorum cubitorum erit longitudo arcae, quinquaginta cubitorum latitudo, et triginta cubitorum altitudo illius. (16) Fenestram in area facies, et in <uno> cubito consummates summitatem. Ostium autem arcae pones ex latere deorsum : cenacula et tristega facies in ea.
58. (17) Ego ergo addueam diluuii aquas super terram, ut interficiam omnem carnem in qua spiritus uitae est subter caelum, uniuersa quae in terra sunt consumentur. (18) Ponamque foedus meum tecum, et ingredieris arcam, tu et filii tui, uxor tua et uxores filiorum tuorum tecum (19) et ex cunctis animantibus uniuersae carnis bina induces in arcam 1. . . . (20) . . . . ut possint uiuere. (21) Tolles igitur tecum ex omnibus escis quae mandi possunt, et com- portabis apud te, et erunt tam tibi quam illis in cibum. (22) Fecit ergo Noe omnia quae praeceperat illi Deus.
Notes on the Biblical Text, Chapter VI.
ft 54. Verses 1, 2, lost. 2In aeternum, Vulg. 3This obscure and probably corrupt passage, usually (though not always) taken by commentators to indicate a limitation of the life of the human individual, is understood by Tr. in the alternative sense — a term upon the duration of the human race. 4The remainder of this verse dropped out.
ft 55. a Remainder of this verse and verse 6 dropped out. 2(Co7iid tucad) dilgenn is obviously a marginal comment which has entered the text, and probably necessitated some
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 113
subsequent modification of the context to modify the nonsense which it produced. 3Domino in ST., but Deo has some support.
H 56. Verses 9, 10 omitted or lost. 2> 3These passages possibly discarded by Tr. or by a copyist because they repeat matter set forth immediately before.
H 57. xThis H has been rendered with tolerable literalness ; only in one place does Tr. stray from the text — where he, renders the corrupt and unintelligible in cubito consummabis summitatem as though it meant that the walls of the ark should be a cubit thick. This is also the theory of the author of the poem no. V : but the text cannot bear this meaning. The rendering of tristega, "storey," by feice, "roof -beam," is noteworthy. The paragraph is so farced with glosses that it is difficult to keep on the track of the biblical narrative.
fl 58. 1The long passage here omitted enumerated the birds, cattle, reptiles, etc. It must have been in Tr. originally, for it is presupposed by the et reliqua of the gloss following. Probably some impatient scribe dropped them as being irrelevant to the main purpose of the present text.
l.g. — VOL. I.
114 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
Chapter VII.
59. (1) Ocus da raid Dia re Nae : Imthig-siu isin aircc i do muintir uili mailli rit, ar as tti aen-Iiren fuaras isin chinead-sa. (2) Bera leat dono isin aircc na sechta i na sechta ona huilib anmandaib glanaib, .i. mascnl i femen. Bera lett dono a do i a do ona hanmunnaib inglanaib, .i. mascul i femen. (3) Bera dono let na sechta i na sechta o ethaidib glanaib inimiO) .i. mascul i femen. Bera dono let na deda i na Meada do na foluaimnechaib inglanaib .i. mascul i femen. (4) Daber-sa dono, ar Dia re 2Nae, a forba an isechtmad laithi oniu, fleochad silteach saidbir for talmain, ri re cethrachat laa i cethrachat aidchi. Ocus dilegfad i dicurfet o dreich an tahnan in uili fo-thairisim dorignus. (5) Darone tra Nae na huili ra athin Dia do.
60. (6) Se cet bliadan dono ba islan do Nae an tan tanig an dile tar in talmain, (7) i dochuaid Nae, cona macaib i cona seitchib imailli ris, isa n-aircc for uisci na dilenn, (8) i rug leis na huili anmanna glana i inglana (9) amail ro forchongair Dia do.
61. (10) 0 ra comlanaiged tra secht laithi na sechtmaini, ra iltondaid i ra imdaig uisci na dilenn for talmain (11) i ra brisit uili thopur na haibeisi mori —
ra brucht ~] ro scenstar an talam suas ina huili thoipri diamra dichelta ra badar and.
Ea foslaigid dono cam^ithisi $ i seinistir || nimi anuas (12) i ra silsedar andsin cetha trena troim-^leachaid for talmain fri re 2cetracha laa i cethracha aidchi :
59. ' the a sbs. 2 sprs. c H
61. 1 The first a yc H ■ thus written in full, not -chat
*
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 115
Chapter VII.
59. (1) And God said unto Noe : Go into the ark, and all thy people with thee, for thou art the only righteous man that I have found in this generation. (2) Thou shalt take with thee into the ark sets of seven of all the clean animals, male and female. Thou shalt take with thee sets of two of the unclean animals, male and female. (3) Thou shalt take with thee more- over sets of seven of the clean birds of heaven, male and female. Thou shalt take with thee sets of two of the unclean fowls, male and female. (4) I shall bring, said God unto Noe, the end upon the seventh day from today, a strong showering deluge upon the earth, for the space of forty days and forty nights. And I shall extinguish and remove from the face of the earth every substance which I have made. (5) So Noe did all that God commanded him.
60. (6) Now six hundred years were complete for Noe when the Flood came over the earth, (7) and Noe, with his sons and with their wives along with him, went into the ark upon the waters of the Flood, (8) and he took with him all the animals clean and unclean (9) as God commanded him.
61. (10) Now when the seven days of the week were completed, the waters of the Flood swelled mightily and increased upon the earth, (11) and every spring of the great deep burst open —
the earth opened up and vomited altogether the hidden secret springs that were in it.
Moreover the sluices [and windows] of heaven were opened from above, (12) and then strong heavy-wetting showers poured upon the earth for a space of forty days and forty nights :
(a) First written glaiab inmi and then corrected.
116 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
1 caoga ar cet laa imorro ra bai can tragadh. I seachtmad 3loo deg an mis tanusti X -i- an mis Mai II, ra thinscain an dili fertain : isin 16 sin X .i. hi sechtmad decc in mis tanaisi ||, luid Nae a muintir ochtair isa n-airc.
(13) In airtical dono t -i- a tosach || an lai in ra thinoilit na huili anmanda tria chetugad i cumaclita De doehum na hairci dia liinotacht, % is andsin sanradh do linadli || ra lainecradh in aire dmim-lethan domain,
Ba gnim saethair suad-lama, o ehlarud chaem-cumachta.
62. (15) Iar ndul tra, do Nae ina aircc cona muintir ochtair, i iar Hinol na n-uili 2anmidi i na n-uili anmand n-ilarda n-examla inti (16) cos na huilib neichib taiscithib ra athin Dia do Nae, ra iad Dia dia n-echtair an aire (17) i doradad for talmain fri re cethrachat laa 1 cethrachat aidchi. Ocus ra imdaigid na huisci i ro thogbadar na huisci suas an airdi o talmain in aircc (18) lias tondaib na dilenn.
Ocus ra bai an aircc ar snam a hinad a n-inad.
63. (19) Ba forbair i ra imtaid an t-uisci for talmain (20) co ruacht coic cubaid deg lias each ,sleib is airdiu ra bai xfo n-uili nim. (21) Ocus tucad dilcend i comarba [lege coimnarbad] coitcend for na huilib dainib (22) i for na huili a raibi spirad bethad for talmain —
ar a n-iumus i ar a n-anumuloid do Dia.
(23) Ba marthanach imorro Nae a aenur, i each aen ra oai amaille ris isin aircc ; (24) i ra bai an diuli for dreich an talmain ri re 2caoga ar cet laa,
can esbaid can dig-bail forri.
3 first written loog; the de y sprs. c H
62. ' Doubtful mark here ins. c H 2 anmidi i y sprs. c H
THE DISPERSAL OP THE NATIONS. 117
and it was an hundred and fifty days without drying up. On the seventeenth day of the second month [the month of May] the Flood began to pour: on that day [i.e. on the seventeenth of the second month,] Noe, his company of eight persons, went into the ark.
("•3) In the article, [that is, in the beginning] of the daj in which all the animals assembled, by the command and power of God, to the ark to enter it, [it is then exactly that it was filled] the broad-keeled deep ark was fully ordered.
It was the product of the labour of skilled craftsmen, with
boarding of beauty and strength.
62. (15) Now after Noe went into his ark, with his company of eight persons, and when all the creatures and all the manifold various beasts were assembled within it, (16) with all the things in store, which God had commanded Noe, God shut the ark from the outside, (17) and there was a downpour upon the earth for a space of forty days and forty nights. And the waters increased, and the waters bore the ark aloft from off the earth (18) upon the waves of the Flood.
And the ark was swimming from place to place.
63. (19) The water increased and augmented upon the earth (20) till it reached fifteen cubits above every highest hill that was under the whole heaven. (21) And destruction and a general common death was brought upon all men, (22) and upon all that had a spirit of life upon the earth,
for their haughtiness and lack of humility toward God.
(23) But Noe alone endured, and all that were with him in the ark ; (24) and the Flood was over the face of the earth for a space of an hundred and fifty days,
without diminution or decreasing.
63. ' fo t/c H a written .l.a.
118 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
59. (1) Dixitque Deus ad ^Noe : Ingredere, tu et omnis domus tua, arcam ; te enim uidi iustum [coram me] in generatione hoc. (2) Ex omnibus animantibus mundis tolles septena septena, masculum et feminam. De animantibus uero non mundis, duo duo, masculum et feminam. (3) [Sed et] de uolatilibus caeli <mundis, tolles> septena septena, masculum et feminam. <De uolucribus non mundis tolles duo duo, masculum et f eminam>, 3 [ut saluetur semen super f aciem uniuersae terrae] . (4) Adhuc enim ego pluam super terram quadraginta diebus et quadraginta noctibus, et delebo omnera substantiam quam feci de superficie terrae. (5) Fecit ergo Noe omnia, quae mandauerat ei Dens.
60. (6) Eratque *<Noe> sescentorum annorum quando 2diluuii aquae inundauerunt super terram, (7) et ingressus est Noe et filii eius 3et uxores eorum cum eo in arcam 4propter aquas diluuii. (8) De animantibus quoque mundis et immundis (9) si cut praeceperat Deus 5eo.
61. (10) Cumque transissent septem dies aquae diluuii inundauerunt super terram (11) 1. . . . <et> rupti sunt omnes fortes abyssi magnae et 2cataractae caeli apertae sunt (12) et facta est pluuia super terram quadraginta diebus et quadraginta noctibus. (13) In articulo diei illius ingressus
3
62. (15, 16) These verses paraphrased only .... sicut praeceperat ei Deus, [et] inclusit 1arcam Deus deforis. (17) Factumque est diluuium quadraginta diebus 2<et quad- raginta noctibus> super terram. Et multiplicatae sunt aquae, et eleuauerunt arcam in subliminc a terrae. (18) .... super aquas <diluuii>.
63. (19) Et aquae praeualuerunt nimis super terram .... (20) quindecim cubitis altior fuit aqua super monies 1sub uniuerso caelo. (21) 2. . . . uniuersi homines (22) et cuncta in quibus spiraculum uitae est in terra mortua sunt. (23) .... remansit autem solus Noe et qui cum eo erant in area. (24) Obtinueruntque aquae terras centum quinquaginta diebus.
Notes on the Biblical Text, Chapter VII. U 59. 1ad eum (in some mss. ad ilium) Vulg. : but7rpocN<7>e in LXX. There is no authority in any of the Versions or
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 119
mss. for the emphasis laid upon Noah being the one just man of his generation. 2The distinction between unclean and clean birds is lost not only from Vulg., but even from the current text of Heb. It is, however, preserved in LXX, which is clearly the authority here followed by Tr. : tea) airb tmv
TTtTStVlOV TOU OVpilVOV TbtV KCldufJUIV tlTTn tTTTU, cljOfTi V KCl\ 6r)\v ',
kiu airo \_travT(i)v\ tiov irtTUvdv tmv in) KaOapiov S»u> Svo, lipaev K-al Ot}Xv. The word 7raiT<uif, not rendered by Tr., is absent from some important mss. 3The equivalent of these words were dropped out from "JH and were reinstated in the margin, most likely by the copyist himself on discovering his mistake. They have crept back into the text in the wrong place (gloss after vi. 19).
ft 60. 1Nwe in LXX, not in Vulg. 2An dile is closer to 6 KaTuXvKafinq (LXX) than to diluuii aquae (Vulg.) : contrast aquas diluuii in the following verse (in LXX, to vowp row KuTaicXvafxov), duly rendered uisci na dilenn by Tr. 3The abbreviation of the verbal exuberance of the original text is probably due to weary scribes; compare the abbreviation of the repeated catalogue of the animals in v. 8. ^Propter aquas = for uisci: has Tr. misread super for propter"! 5Noe, Vulg.
ft 61. XA passage omitted here, presumably because it merely repeats what has gone before. 2C<itaractae (LXX KarapaKTai) which may here be translated "sluices," represents the Heb. 'eruboth, literally "windows" (so in English Auth. and Revised versions). A glossator seems to have dis- covered this meaning from some source of information, and to have interlined .i. seinistir. When this 5 became g, the .i. as usual slipped into "|. 3From this point to the beginning of ft 62 the passage has been written in an abridged or para- phrased form, and deserts the Latin original.
ft 62. xTriv Kij5h)Tov in LXX: but arcam not in any Vulg. ms. 2Not in ST, but found in numerous Vulg. mss., and also in LXX.
ft 63. 1Sub uniuerso caelo is out of place ; it belongs to the clause at the end of v. 19, which is here omitted. Two clauses have here been abbreviated and combined into one. 2Here, and also in v. 23, a long catalogue of the creatures which perished is again omitted.
120 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
Chapter VIII.
64. (1) Ra 'chuimnig imorro Dia J i ra airchis || ani Naei i na n-uili anmandaib i na n-uili umenti ra badar amailli fri Nae ina aire. Ocus dorad Dia gaeth t do sugad na n-uisci || i 2ro digbaid na huisci. (2) Ocus ra hiadaid topur na haibeisi 7 camfithisi nime, i ra tliairmiscid na fleochadha do nim. (3) Ocus ra thathcursedar na huisci don talmain is na hinadaib as a tancadar, i ra digbaid na huisce a cind caoga ar cet laithi. (4) Seacht laithi sechtmogad i secht mis don aircc o thuind do thuind, corgab airisim a sleib Armeinia. (5) Ra sergaid na huisci cosin deccmad mis. Isin cet 16 don deccmad mis adces mullaidi na sliab.
65. (6) I cind cethracha laa iarsin ra ^oslaic Nae seinistir na haircce i rusleig an fiach amach, (7) i ni thanig doridisi. (8) $ An sechtmad la iar sin || do leig-sin an colam amach —
1 ra dun an aire andiaid an eholuim ar omun na ngaeth —
(9) Ocus tanic an colum 2ar culu, air ni tuair baili a tairisfed —
1 do thairind ar an aire, o nach luair foslaiethi hi, 7 gabais gles da gulbuin forsan clar —
1 do sin Nae a laim amach ar cend an eholuim 1 tuc leis asdeach he isa n-airc. (10) Ra leig dono dorigisi a cind secht laa amach an colum, (11) 1 tanig a Jescur t an lai cetna || 1 gesca olacraind cona duillennaib liraidi ina belaib.
Ocus do bendaeh Nae eisim de sin t ra mallach an fiach, 64. J the n y sprs. c H 2 ro yc H
THE DISPERSAL OP THE NATIONS. 121
Chapter VIII.
64. (1) But God was mindful of [and had compassion upon] the ,said Noe, and all the animals and all the cattle that were with Noe in his ark. And God sent a wind [to suck up the water], and the water decreased. (2) And the well-spring of the deep and the sluices of Heaven were closed, and the showers from Heaven were withheld. (3) And the waters were restored to the earth into the places whence they had come, and the waters decreased at the end of an hundred and fifty days. (4) Seventy and seven days and iseven months was the ark from wave to wave, till it took rest in a mountain of Armenia. (5) The waters were drying up till the tenth month. Upon the first day of the tenth month the tops of the mountains appeared.
65. (6) At the end of forty days thereafter Noe opened the window of the ark and let out the raven (7) and it came not again. (8) [On the seventh day thereafter] he let out the dove —
and closed the ark after the dove, for fear of the winds —
(9) And the dove came back, for it found no place where it should stand,
and descended upon the ark, as it found it not opened, and made a working with its beak upon the board —
and Noe stretched his hand forth for the dove and brought it with him into the ark. (10) Then he let the dove out again at the end of the seven days, (11) and it came in the evening [of the same day] with a twig of an olive-tree having its fresh leaves in its beak.
And Noe blessed it, and cursed the raven; and for that, 65. 1 9 y sprs. c H 2 r y sprs. c H
122 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
1 tuc 3Dia de sin a dath-sain forsan fiach i taitnem an 4?iaich fair-sim ar anumlaeht in 5fiaich.
Ea tlmig Nae cor digbaid na huisci. (12) Ocns araidh ra ernaid secht laa aili an tan ra leig 6amach an colum an tres feacht, i ni thanig dorigisi,
uair ni rangadar a les.
66. (13) An cet la don cet bliadain % iar mdilind |f ar sugad na n-uisci, do 2scail Nae dorus na liairci, i do dech se an doman ana thimchell. (14) Isin sechtmad laa fichit don cet mi tanig Dia do labairt fris, (15) t is ed ra raid Dia co Nae : (16) Eirig asa n-airc, ar Se, 1 do seidid i do 3mic i seitchi do mac, (17) i beir lat na huili 4anmanna filed isa n-airc i inclieimnig for talmain. Forbrid i 5dobarnimdaightber for talmaim (18) Daclmaid din Nae asa n-airc —
hi sechtmad fichit f esca Mai imorro || an mis tanaisi : .i. an mis Mai atharrach isin cet bliadain.
Se cet bliadan do bo slan do Nae an tan sin. Se bliadna caoga i se cet i mili bliadan o cruthugad Adaim co sin, ut dixit,
Cet aimser in bethad bind . . .
Daclmaid imorro seidig Nae, i dochnadar a mic i 6doclmadar seitclii a mac (19) i na huili ainimidi rabadar isa n-airc eisti.
Isin sechtmad fichit an mis cetna atharraig tanic eisti, an 7Aine imorro a laithi sechtmaine. Gonad se deg 7
1 Dia y sprs. o H 4 'f y sprs. c H 5 second i y sis. c H
6 amach y sbs. c H
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 123
God gave the colour of the former to the raven, and the
sheen of the raven to the other, for the insubordination of
the raven. Noe understood that the waters were decreased. (12) Howbeit, he waited other seven days and then let out the dove for the third time, and it came not again —
for there was no need.
66. (13) On the first day of the first year [after the Flood], upon the isucking-up of the waters, Noe loosened the door of the ark and looked on the earth round about him. (14) On the twenty-seventh day of the first month God came to speak with him, (15) and thus God spake unto Noe : (16) Rise from out the ark, said He, thou and thy wife and thy sons and the wives of thy sons, (17) and take with thee all the beasts that are in the ark, and step forth upon the earth. Increase and be ye multiplied upon the earth. (18) So Noe went out of the ark,
in the twenty-seventh day [of the moon of May] of the second month :
that is, the secondary month of May in the first year.
Six hundred years were complete for Noe at that time. One thousand six hundred fifty and six years from the creation of Adam till then, ut dixit,
Poem no. VII.
— and further the wife of Noe went, and his sons and the wives of his sons (19) and all the beasts that were in the ark went out of it.
On the twenty-seventh day of the same secondary month, he came out of it : as regards the day of the week, on
66. 1 d y sprs. e II 'li/cH 3i y sbs. o H 4 written ana
6 written do bar nim daighther ° the u sprs. s H 7 written Aen mi H
124 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
bliadain deiside ra bai Nae isa n-aircc. An sechtmad deg don mis cetna, X -i- iR mis Mai |], ra thinscain an dili fertain : an dechmad uathad esca $ in mis tanaisi j| an mi doluid Nae isa n-aire, i a muintir ochtair, cos na huilib anmandaib i anmigib rug leis inti : .i. eupla do each "fiadach neoeh do beth re silad .i. eeitri lanumna do dainib, 1 eeitri lanumna deg do enaib, i secht lanumnu do chinelaib eisc, i lanomain do each einel egsamail o sin amach bai isa n-aire. Dia Haini didine arai laithi sechtmaini dochuaid Nae isa n-aire, i Dia Mairt dolodar aisti iartain, ut dicitur,
Dia Haine docuas inti . . .
67. 0 thuead dana an dili tar an doman, ra baided na huili daine (sic) acht Nae eona tri macaib i cona eeitri mnaib, amail ra raidsimar romaind. Ar is e Nae an tAdam tanaisti, cosa mberar fir domain ; -\ Enoec an tAdam saer (sic) : Crist imorro an tAdam deidenaeh, tres ar saerad sil an trir remraite do raidsimar romaind, an a tuc he fein a croich cesta tar cend an trir sin da n-eissi, i dorad an mbroid a Hiffern dar saerad lueht na eoic n-aimsir ar aen sligi.
68. Se eet bliadan do ba slan do Nae an tan tanig an dili tar an doman : caoga i tri eet bliadan ra bai Nae a. mbethaid iar ndilinn : conad caoga i noi eet bliadan sin uili. Uair is e Nae an eeatramad duine do sil 1Adaim as[s]ia saegal indisis eanoin, .i. xVdam i Iareth i Mathasailem -\ Nae. Tricha i noi eet bliadan saegal Adaim. Da bliadain sescat 1 noi eet saegal Iareth. Noi mbliadna sescat i noi eet saegal Mathasailem. Caoga i noi eet bliadan saegal Nae : amail adbea.rar andso —
Ceatra as [s]ia saegal slan
68. J y sprs. s H
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 125
Friday. So that thence Noe was a year and sixteen <da.ys> in the ark. On the seventeenth day of the same month, [that is, the month of May], the Flood began to shower : on the tenth of the moon [of the second month] of the month, Noe went into the ark with his company of eight persons, and with all the animals and beasts that he took with him into it. These were, a couple of every wild creature, whatsoever should be for seeding; to wit four human pairs, fourteen pairs of birds, seven pairs of species of fish and a pair of every different kind from that onwards, that were in the ark. As regards the day of the week, it was a Friday that Noe went into the ark, and Tuesday they came out of it afterwards, ut dicitur,
Poem no. VIII.
67. Now when the Flood was brought over the world, all men were drowned save Noe and his three sons and their four wives, as we have said above. For Noe is the second Adam, to whom the men of the world are traced : and Enoch is the innocent ( 1) Adam : but Christ is the last Adam, by whom the seed of the aforesaid three, already mentioned, were saved, when He gave Himself on the cross of suffering instead of those three, after their time, and brought the harrowingi over Hell by which the people of the five Ages all at once were saved.
68. Six hundred years were complete for Noe when the Flood came over the world : three hundred and fifty years was Noe in life after the Flood : so all that makes nine hundred and fifty years. For Noe is one of the four men of the seed of Adam, of whom the Canon telleth that had longest life — namely Adam, Iared, Mathusalam, and Noe. Nine hundred and thirty years was the life of Adam.. Nine hundred sixty and two years the life of Iared. Nine hundred sixty and nine years the life of Mathusalam. Nine hundred and fifty years the life of Noe : as is said here —
Poem no. IX.
126 SECTION L— FROM THE CREATION TO
64. (1) Recordatus est autem Deus Noe, cunctorumque animantium et omnium iumentorum quae erant cum eo in area. x<Et> adduxit 2<Deus> spiritum super terram, et inminutae sunt aquae. (2) Et clausi sunt 3fontes abyssi et cataraetae caeli, et prohibitae sunt pluuiae de caeli. (3) 4Reuersaeque aquae de terra euntes et redeuntes, et ceperunt minui post centum quinquaginta. dies, (4) Requie- uitque area mense 5septime uicesima septima die mensis super 6montem Armeniae. (5) At uero aquae ibant et clecreseebant usque ad decimum mensem. Decimo enim mense prima die mensis apparuerunt cacumina montium.
65. (6) Cumque transissent quadraginta dies, aperiens Noe fenestram arcae [quam fecerat] dimisit coruum, (7) qui . . . 1<non> reuertebatur ... (8) Emisit quoque columbam . . . (9) quae cum non inuenisset ubi requiesceret [pes eius], reuersa est . . . extenditque manum et adpraehensam intulit in arcam. (10) Expeetatis autem ultra septem diebus [aliis] rursum dimisit columbam [ex area] (11) at ilia uenit [ad eum] ad uesperam, portans ramum oliuae uirentibus foliis in ore suo. Intellexit ergo Noe quod cessassent aquae [super terram]. (12) Expectauitque nihilominus septem alios dies, et emisit columbam, quae non est reversa ultra 2[ad eum].
66. (13) a[Igitur sescentesimo] primo anno, [primo mense], primo die [mensis] <post> inminutae sunt aquae
[super terram], et aperiens Noe tectum arcae aspexit 2. . . .
(14) Mense 3primo septima et uicesima die mensis 4. . . .
(15) locutus est autem Deus ad Noe, dicens : (16) Egredere de area, tu et uxor tua, filii tui et uxores filiorum tuorum [tecum] : (17) cuncta 5<que> animantia quae sunt apud te . . . educ tecum, et ingredimini super terram. Crescite et multiplicamini super terram. (18) 6Egressus est ergo Noe et filii eius, uxor illius et uxores filiorum eius cum eo, (19) sed et omnia animantia ....
Notes on the Biblical Text, Chapter VIII.
fl 64. *Et in only two Vulg. mss., but nai in LXX. 2Deus not in any Vulg. ms., but 6 6t<k in LXX. 3Plural in Vulg.
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 127
and LXX, but singular in Tr. 4The rendering of this verse seems a little closer to LXX : na\ eveStSou to v$u>p iropsvofjuvov
CtTTO Tf)c 7^9' iVtS&OV TO vBlOf) K(ll r)\tlTT01>OVTO K.T.X. 5TlieSe
numbers have become corrupted : evidently .uii la, .xx. has degenerated into .uii. lxx. "Plural in Vulg. and LXX, but sing, in Tr.
U 65. 1Non not in ST, but in numerous mss. (in nearly half, however ins. sec. man.). Also in LXX. 2The biblical text has suffered severely by glossarial encroachment and substitution in this paragraph.
J[ 66. 1Tr. in its present form corrupt and imperfect. Iar ndilind must be removed as glossarial : perhaps ar sugad has somehow developed out of ar se cetaib. Confusion of a scribe's eye has caused the loss of primo mense. 2The words filling this gap have no biblical warrant : they are a gloss, which has ousted the original text. 3Don cet ml is a mistake : all Versions agree on "the second month." 4Here again a gloss has expelled the original sentence. 5-que not in ST, but in several mss. : also nai in LXX. 6This verse is inter- rupted by a chronological interpolation in the middle of a sentence. The mention of Noah's wife before his sons is in accordance with LXX : but it may be a mere translator's inadvertence.
IT 67, 68. These paragraphs are interpolations, and are no part of the Biblical Text.
128 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
Chapter XI.
69. (10) Ced bliadan ba slan do Sem an tan ra thnisim Arifaxad, a cind da bliadain iar ndilinn. (11) dug cet bliadan imorro bai iar tuismedh Arafaxad, i ra thnisim macu -j ingena.
70. (12) Cuig bliadna trichat ba slan do Airifaxad an tan ra thnisim Saile. (13) Tri bliadna ar tri cetaib ba beo Arafaxad iar tuismedh Saili do, i ra thuisim macu i ingena.
71. (14) Tricha bliadan do bo slan do Saili an tan ra thuisim Eber. (15) Tri bliadna ar ceithri cetaib imorro ba beo he iar tusmedh Eber do, t ra thuisimh macu i ingena.
72. (16) Ceitri bliadna trichad imorro ba slan do Eber an tan ra thusim Faillech. (17) Ocus tricha ar
cet bliadan ba beo he iar tusmedh Faillech do, i da thusim macu i ingena.
73. (18) Tricha bliadna ba slan do Faillech an tan thusim Keu. (19) Noi mbliadna ar dib cetaib imorro ba beo he iar thusmedh Eeu do, i ro tuisim macu i ingena.
74. (20) Cuig bliadna trichat ba slan do Reu an tan ra thuisim Saruch do. (21) Cetheora bliadna ar dib cetaib imorro ba beo he an tan J(°) no iar || ra tusmedh Saruch do, i ra tuisim macu i ingena.
75. (22) Tricha bliadna imorro ba slan do Saruch an tan ra thusim Nachor. (23) Da cet bliadan imorro ba beo he an tan ra tusmedh Nachor do, i ra tuisim macu i ingena.
(a) This gloss interlined above.
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 129
Chapter XI.
69. (10) Sem had an hundred years complete when he begat Arfaxad, at the end of two years after the Flood. (11) Five hundred years was he, further, after the birth of Arfaxad, and he begat sons and daughters.
70. (12) Thirty-five years were complete for Arfaxad when he begat Sale. (13) Three hundred and three years was Arfaxad alive after the birth of Sale to him, and he begat sons and daughters.
71. (14) Thirty years were complete for Sale when he begat Eber. (15) Four hundred and three years was he alive further, after the birth of Eber to him, and he begat sons and daughters.
72. (16) Thirty-four years moreover were complete for Eber when he begat Faleg. (17) An hundred and thirty years was he alive after the birth of Faleg to him, and he begat sons and daughters.
73. (18) Thirty years were complete for Faleg when he begat Reu. (19) Two hundred and nine years moreover was he alive after the birth of Reu to him, and he begat sons and daughters.
74. (20) Thirty-five years were complete for Reu when he begat Saruch. (21) Two hundred and four years moreover was he alive when [or, after] Saruch was born to him, and he begat sons and daughters.
75. (22) Thirty years moreover were complete for Saruch when he begat Nachor. (23) Two hundred years moreover was he alive when Nachor was born to him, and he begat sons and daughters.
L.G. — VOL. I. K
130 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
76. (24) Noi mbliadna ficliit dono ba slan do Naehor an tan ra thuisim Tare. (25) Noi bliadna deg imorro ar cet ba beo he iar tnsniedh Thare do, i ra tuisim macu i ingena iartain.
77. (26) Sechtmoga bliadan ba slan do Tliarre an tan ra tlmsim Abram i Naehor i Aram. (32) Acus ba he uili saegail Tliarre coic bliadna ar dib cetaib, i adbath a Carran a tir Chandan iartain.
Ocus is e an tAbram sin cendadart an tres aimser an domain : da bliadain ar nochat ar noi cetaib 6 dilinn co gein Abraim a tir Chailldiorum.
Notes on the Biblical Text, Chapter XI.
On the displacement of this passage see p. 11 ff. It is not necessary to print the Latin original here : Tr. adheres to Vulg., and ignores LXX, which inserts an additional generation (Kaivav. between Arfaxad and Sale), and has several differences in the numerical statements of the ages. The only deviations in Tr. from ST are the age of Eber (130 instead of 430) and of Ecu (35 before son's birth, 204 after as against Vulg. 32-207). There is some very slight
Chapter VIII (resumed).
78. (20) Ra chumdaig Nae altoir don Choimdid t iar ndilinn || i doroini idbarta toltanacha forthi do Dia ona huilib cethraib t i ona huilib enaib || i eathaidib glanaib —
1 is i sin cet 1altoir ra cumdaiged 2sa domain. 78. 1 y sprs. s H 2 scribe wrote 7 and then wrote s with a sbs. over it
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 131
76. (24) Twenty nine years were complete for Naclior when he begat Thare. (25) An hundred and nineteen years moreover was he alive after the birth of Thare to him, and he begat sons and daughters thereafter.
77. (26) Seventy years were complete for Thare when he begat Abram and Nachor and Aram. (32) And all the life of Thare was two hundred and five years, and he died in Haran in the land of Canaan thereafter.
And that Abram is the head-rest of the Third Age of the world : nine hundred ninety and two years from the Flood to the birth of Abram in the land of the Chaldeans.
support for the Irish figures, but most likely they originated in copyists' errors : it is easy to confuse xxxii with xxxu and ccciiii with ccuii. In H, our only ms. for this portion, the word cuig in the Reu passage is written in full, so that the error, if it be an error, goes back to "J'S.- The spellings Saruch (ver. 20) Nachor (vers. 22, 26) Aram (v. 26) as against the ST Sarug, Nahor, Aran, are to be noted.
78. (20) Noe built an altar unto the Lord [after the Flood] and made acceptable offerings upon it unto God, of all the clean four-footed beasts [and of all birds] and clean fowls.
That was the first altar that was built in the world.
132 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
(21) Ocus ba so-airigthi ailgen la Dia an edbairt sin; ocus adbert Dia fri Nae, Nocha mallachab $ .i. nocha tibar dilind || don doman doridisi ardaig na ndaine, ar is aibrisc a n-aicned i is tairberta trascartha airiugad i imragad in cridi daennae dochmn nilc do denum. Nocha muirbeb dono o so 3amach in n-uili n-anmain mbi amail doronns. (22) Acht beidit 6 na huilib lathib don talmuin .i. earrach i samrad i fodmar 4[i gemred cen cnmsanad].
78. (20) Aedificauit autem Noe altare Domino, et tollens de cunctis pecoribus et uolucribus mundis obtulit holocausta super altare. (21) Odoratusque est Deas odorem. suauitatis et ait ad eum : Nequaquam ultra maledicam ten-ae propter homines, sensus enim et cogitatio humani cordis in malum prona sunt [ab adulescentia sua]. Non igitur ultra percutiam omnem animantem sicut feci. (22) Cunctis diebus terraer
Chapter. IX.
79. (1) Ea bendach Dia Nae cona macaib, i adbert f rin : Foirbr[id i dobar] nimdaigther i linaid an talmain, (2) i bid lar smacht i far [n-namain for uil]ib anmundaib an talman, i for uilib enaib an aeoir [archena —
1 ro] thidnaicc doib uili domain,
iascc an mara (3) i each an[nride der] scaigther i a fuil betha : i caithfigthisi na huili sin amail uile ilraidi,
3 am sprs. c H 4 these words torn away
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 133
(21) And God considered that offering to be worthy of acceptation and pleasant. And God said unto Noe : I shall not curse [i.e. I shall not bring a Flood upon] the world again by reason of men, for fragile is their nature, and the perception and imagination of the human heart are given over and subdued to work wickedness. I shall not slay, moreover, from hence- forth every living soul as I have done. (22) But all the days of the earth there shall be spring and summer and autumn and winter without cessation.
[sementis et messis] , frigus et aestus, aestas et hiemps, [nox et dies], non requiescent.
Note on the Biblical Text, Chapter VIII.
fl 78. This paragraph represents the text of ST with tolerable literalness : hut whether with intention or not, the strong anthropomorphism of verse 21 is softened.
Chapter IX.
79. (1) God blessed Noe and his sons, and said unto them : Increase and be ye multiplied and fill the earth (2) and your authority and terror shall be over all the beasts of the earth and all the birds of the air together —
and He gave the whole world to them,
fish of the sea (3) and every beast that moveth and that hath life in itself : and ye shall eat of tho,se all,
134 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
(4) cenmotha aen ni nama, .i. can feoil cona foil do
chaithem. (5) Ar sirfeadsa i toibeochad bar ?uili-si cna lrailib phiastaib i ona hnilib dainib, i sirfead anmain each duine o each aen muirfes he. (6) Ar each aen doirtfes in fuil ndaena, doirtfigter a fuil aris : fo imaigin i cosmailus De dorigned an duine. (7) Sibsi irnorro, ar Dia fri Nae cona macaib, f orb rig -1 dobarnimdaigter i linaid an tahnain.
80. (8) Asbert dono Dia fri Nae cona macaib, (9) Ordaigfedsa i biaid mo charadradli imailli frib i for bar claind do bar n-eissi (10) i fris na huilib tangadar asin aire. (11) i ni thibar dilinn tar an Domun doridisi,
cenmotha an tan dofas crich eoitehend ehaich i l-loo bratha.
(13) Daber imorro comartha mo charadraig daib isin <n>em, i cein adcifigter an comartha .sin o nim (15) ni bia crich na comarba coitcend for na dainib. Is e so in comartha, .i. mo boga ina sduaig isin nim.
Conad do sin ata an sduag nime .i. a tabairt do chomartha caradraig do chlannaib Nae iar ndilinn, .i. co mbia Dia an aentaid friu, aireid ^dcistear an sduag nime. Is follus imorro asso cona roibhibh an sduag; nime ria ndilind,
T nocha bia coic bliadna deg ria mbrath.
(19) 0 na tri macaib-si tra Nae, .i. Sem, i Cam i Iafeth, ra silsad i ro thuismit an t-uili chinead daena iar ndilinn.
80. ' second a sbs.
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 135
as of every green thing, (4) except only one thing : ye shall not eat of flesh with the blood thereof. (5) For I shall demand and require your blood of all beasts and of all men, and I shall demand the life of every man from every one who shall slay him. (6) For evervone that shall shed man's blood, his blood shall be shed in turn : under the image and likeness of God was man made. (7) But ye, said God to Noe and his sons, increase and be ye multiplied and fill the earth.
80. (8) Moreover God said unto Noe and his sons, (9) I shall ordain, and there shall be, My friendship with you and upon your progeny after you (10) and with all that came out of the Ark. (11) And I shall not bring a Flood over the world again,
except when the common end of every man shall come about in the Day of Judgement.
(13) Moreover, I shall put a sign of My friendship to you in the Heaven, and so long as that sign shall be seen from Heaven (15) there shall be no end nor common death upon men. This is the sign, My bow arching in the Heaven.
Therefore for that purpose is the rainbow, given for a sign of friendship to the progeny of Noe after the Flood, that God shall be united with them so long as the rainbow is seen. Howbeit it is clear from this that the rainbow did not exist before the Flood,
and that it shall not have being for fifteen years before the Judgement.
(19) From those three sons of Noe, Sem, Ham, and Iafeth, was the whole human race after the Flood begotten and born.
136 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
81. (20) Ka thindscain dono Nae tirfrecar do denum, l ra clannastar finemain. (21) Ocus luid fechtus Nae in a diaid sin i n-a theipernacuili do 61 Una. Rangab mieisci, i do thuit a chodlad fair, i do rochair a edach de, co mbai nocht ina theiparnacal. (22) Iar sin dolnid Cam .i. athair Chandain, anadochum, i adchondairc bnlln imnara a athar iar n-a nochtad, co ndernaid gairi nime. Luid amach iarsin i ad?ed dia braitrib, | .i. do Iafed i do Sem || amail ra bai a n-athair i se nocht (23) Dalodur imorro Sem i Iafeth isin tebernacuili, -\ is amlaid imorro dochuadar i a cnln rempu, ardaig co nach faichtis feli a n-athar : i doradsad a edach 2thairis i ra Jagsad ana codlad he, i lodar uad iarsin. (24) An tan imorro ra eirig Nae as a chodlad, do faillsiged do gnimartha na mac sin; conad andsin ra mallach a athair Cam, -\ is ed ra raid : (25) Is mallachda i is coirpthi, -\ biaid Cam coma mogh moghad da braithrib. (26) Ocus isbert Nae : Ra bendacha an Coimdi ani an Sem, -\ bid Cam a fognam do; (27) Ocus ra lethnaidi Dia Iafeth, i aitrebad a teibarnacuilib Sem, i bid Cam ag fognam do Iafeth.
Gonad he Cam cet duine ra mallaigedh iar ndilinn,
conad iarsin ra geinidar lupracanaig i fomoraig i gaburchind 1 each egasg do-delba archena fil for dainib —
Iarsin tuead grid dilgend ar Chandandaib, t tucad a ferand do macaib Israel a eomartha na mallacht eedna sin. Uair ro bo do sil Chaim Candandai, -j is tresin mallachtain cedna dilgend clann Da.rdain i Ioiph, cor marb each a cheli dib.
t
— conad he sin bunad na torathar.
81. ' c sprs. s H 2 is sprs. s H
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 137
81. (20) Now Noc began to work husbandry, and planted a vineyard. (21) And on a time, after those things, Noe went into his tent to drink wine. Drunkenness seized hold on him, and his sleep fell on him, and his raiment slipped down from him, so that he was naked in his tent. (22) Thereafter came Ham father of Canaan, in to him, and saw the shameful members of his father which had become uncovered, and he made a mock of him. Then he went out ; and he tells his brethren [Iafeth and Sem] how that their father was naked. (23) So Sem and Iafeth came into the tent; and in this manner they went, with their backs forward, that they should not see the nakedness of their father : and they put his raiment over him and left him asleep, and came again away from him. (24) Now when Noe arose from his sleep, the doings of those sons were revealed to him ; and then his father cursed Ham, and thus he spake : (25) Cursed and corrupt is Ham, and he shall be as it were a slave of slaves for his brethren. (26) And Noe said : Let the Lord bless the aforesaid Sem, and let Ham be in service to him; (27) and let God enlarge Iafeth, and let him dwell in the tents of Sem, and let Ham be in service to Iafeth.
So that this Ham is the first man who was cursed after the Flood :
and thereafter there were born dwarfs and giants and horse- heads and every unshapely form in general that there is among men —
Thereafter there was brought [as it were] (a) destruction upon the Canaanites, and their land was given to the sons of Israel, in token of those same curses. For the Canaanites were of the seed of Ham, and it is through that same curse that there was the destruction of the children of Dardan and Ioph, so that each of them slew his fellow.
— so that that was the origin of the monsters. (a) See the note on this paragraph.
138 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
79. (1) Benedixitque Dens Noe et filiis eius, et dixit ad eos : Crescite et multiplicamini et iraplete terram (2) et terror uester ac tremor sit super cuncta animalia terrae et super
omnes volucres caeli 1 (3) Et omne quod mouetur et
uiuit erit uobis in cibum quasi holera uiuentia .... (4) excepto quod carnem cum sanguine non comedetis. (5) Sanguinem enim animarum uestrarum requiram de manu cunctarum bestiarum et de manu hominis, de manu uiri [et fratris eius] requiram animam hominis, (6) Quicumque effuderit humamim sanguinem, fundetur sanguis illius : ad imaginem quippe Dei factus est homo. (7) Vos autem crescite et multiplicamini et implete terram.
80. (8) Haec quoque dixit Deus ad Noe et ad filios eius cum eo, (9) [Ecee] ego statuam pactum meum uobiscum et cum semine uestro post uos (10) et . . . cunctis quae egressa sunt de area .... (11) ... . nequaquam .... erit deinceps diluuium dissipans terram .... (12) .... hoc signum foederis .... (13) ponam in nubibus .... (19) xTres .... filii Noe, ab his disseminatum est omne humanum genus ....
81. (20) Coepitque Noe uir agricola exercere terram et
plantauit uineam. (21) 1 inebriatus est, et nudatus
est in tabernaculo suo. (22) Quod cum uidisset Ham pater
Chanaan, uerenda scilicet patris sui esse nuda
nuntiauit duobus fratribus suis foras. (23) At uero Sem et Iafeth .... incidentes retrorsum . . . patris sui uirilia non uiderant. (24) Evigilans autem Noe ex uino, cum didicisset quae fecera<n>t fili<i> su<i> . . . (25) ait : Maledictus 2Cham, servus seruorum erit fratribus suis. (26) Dixitque <Noe> : Benedictus Dominus <Deus> Sem, sit Cham servus eius. (27) Dilatet Deus Iafeth, et habitet in tabernaculis Sem, sitque Cham seruus eius.
Notes on the Biblical Text, Chapter IX.
fi 79. aThis part of the verse has probably been lost owing to confusion caused by the repetition of the equivalents of mouentur . . . mouetur. A glossator, observing the omission of the reference to fishes, inserted it in oratio obliqua, which betrays the intrusion.
ff80. *As in previous passages, glossarial interpolations borrowed from Sex Aetates Mundi have here ousted the biblical lemmata; and though the framework of the Latin
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 139
original is preserved, the words of the text cannot be com- pletely recovered.
ff 81. aThe remarks on the preceding paragraph are applicable here, if anything, to yet greater extent. 2There is slight support in the mss. of both LXX and Vulg., for the substitution of Cham for Chanaan (or Chandan) : but (ft) such an obvious, if inaccurate, change could have been made at any stage independently, and (b) it must have been made in the H tradition subsequently to the incorporation of the interpolated passages.
The following notes, which should follow ]\ 85 (pp. 142-3), are printed here for typographical convenience : —
82. (32) Haec familiae Noe iuxta populos et nationes suas : ab his divisae sunt gentes in terra post diluuium.
83. (1) Erat autem terra labii unius et sermonum eorundem
84. (2) (3) Dixitque alter ad proximum suum :
Venite faciamus lateres, et coquamus eos igni. Habuerantque lateres pro saxis et bitumen pro cemento. (4) Et dixerunt : Venite faciamus nobis ciuitatem et turrem cuius culmen pertingat ad caelum, et celebremus nomen nostrum, antequam diuidamur in universas terras.
85. (5) Descendit autem Deus ut uideret ciuitatem et turrem quam aedificabant filii Adam : (6) Et dixit Deus, Ecce, unus est populus et unum labium omnibus : coeperuntque hoc facere, nee desistent a cogitationibus suis donee eas opere compleant. (7) [Venite igitur] descendamus et confundamus ibi linguam eorum, ut non audiat unusquisque uocem proximi sui. (8) Atque ita diuisit eos Dominus ex illo loco in universas terras, et cessauerunt aedificare ciuitatem (9) Ed idcirco uocatum est nomen eius Babel, quia ibi confusum est labium uniuersae terrae, et inde dispersit eos Deus super faciem cunctarum regionum.
TT 82. This, the only surviving portion of the "Table of Nations," is very freely paraphrased in Tr.
The rendering of Chapter XI, 1-9, is useless for critical purposes : the story has been practically re-written ; inflated (after the manner of the later romances) with cumbrous accumulations of adjectives; and rendered partly unintelli- gible, especially in verses 4 and 6, by intrusive glosses.
140 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
Chapter X. (Vers. 1-31 desunt.)
82. (32) Ra silsad imorro clanna Nae, i ro imdaigsead for talmain amail adbert Dia friu : i ra roinnsed i ra fogailsead an talmain eturru iar ndilinn.
Chapter XI.
83. (1) Is ainlaid imorro bai an talam an tan sin, 1 aen berla inand ag na hnilib dainib ra batar fair,
1 Goirthigern a ainm, .i. an berla Ebraidhi,
no cor scailed na berlada ag an Tur. Is amlaid so adcaemnacair sin dia ndernad gnim n-ingnad(a) n-indligteaeh isin domun an tan sin dorisi.
Lo'
84. [17 ] difuluing fir an domain an
tan sin [15 ] btha amor thoraid in talmain
toir c[9 ]htuig a rabadar. (3) Ocus adbert
each dib ri araile [9 ] co tirmaigem an criaid
ro-ruaid, ro-rigin [5 ]id, taidlig, tesaidi, curab
eaidigter cairrgi crnaide, [5 ] garba. Dentar
dono lind an bidamain blaitli bith[*. . . .]in : ara n-ael n-alaind n-aendatha. (4) Ocns dono raidsed beos :
[4 ] i dentar lind cathair chaem^cumdaigthi i
dnn daingen [bi]th-2foduigthe. Dentar lind dono tor ro-mor, ro-remar, rigda, ro-ard, ro-fada, co ria % co feici fir || nime J no nas aeor ard nasnadach || eleithi cendmnllaig an tnir sin. Ocus dono mortar i medaigter ar n-ainm anos ar irdarcus, riasiu ronscailter i ronscapthar hi crichaib ciana comaigthi. Ocns dorigned uili leosam an gnim sin.
84. 1 cum sprs. s H 2 the MS. reads bith-f oghlaidhi, which cannot
be right.
(a) Not clearly written: ngtlAT) apparently covering over something else (indecipherable) that had been written in error.
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 141
Chapter X.
82. (32) So the children of Noe increased and multiplied npon the earth as God said unto them : and they divided and parted the earth between them after the Flood.
Chapter XI.
83. (1) Now the earth was in this wise at that time, all men that were upon it having one and the same language,
and Gorthigern was its name, i.e. the Hebrew language,
until the languages were separated at the Tower, That came to pass in this manner, when a wonderful lawless deed was done in the world at that time once again.
84. [An] intolerable [famine ? ? seized the] men of the world at that time [and there could not be
fo]und a trough (?) of the fruit of the [ ] earth
in the east where they were. (3) And each said to the other [go to,] that we may dry the very red, very stiff . . . bright heated clay, that it may be as solid as hard .... rough rocks. Let there also be made by us the smooth ever- [stiff?] pitch : for their beautiful lime of uniform colour. (4) Moreover they said further : .... and let there be made by us a fair-erected castle, and a strong everlastingly founded fortress. Let there be also made by us a very great, wide, royal, lofty, tall, tower, that the ridgepole of the summit of that tower may reach [that men may see] the heavens, [or above the high upper air] . And thus let our name be magnified and enlarged from on high in glory, before we be divided and scattered through lands distant and strange. And this deed was wholly done by them.
142 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
85. (5) Ra thainustar imorro Dia do [fech]ad na catrach i an tuir ro cumdaigsed maic Adaim —
.i. maic an duini thruaid thalmaidi phecaid i oiltua sin isin 1scribtuir diada .i. maic Adaim do rad dib.
(6) Ocus adbert Dia : Is follus ataid na huili daini conad aen phopnl iad, conad aen berla fuil acu : 2$ -; nocha n-uil || i noclia n-anfad ona 3n-imraitib ra thinscansadar, nocha chomlanaiged iad 2$ o gnimaib ||.
(7) Conifuiscem iarom i bruigem a mbeiia blaith, builid, binn, conna ra thuigi neach dib gnth araili. (8) Ra mescaid dono, ra medraid, ra meraigid an lnclit sin re hilar na mberla 4n-anaich<ne> n-examail : i is amlaid sin ra ansadar ona gnimuib ra thinscansadar dono do denum. (9) Ocus is airi sin ra gairmead ainm an inaid sin Babel, .i. cnmasc : ar is and ra cmnuscid uili berla an talnian, .i. na da berla sechtmogat, o tri macaib Nae. Ra scail Dia na cineada sin isin n-uili talmain.
Here the Extract from the Book of Genesis ends.
86. Ra raind Nae an doman a tri itir a macaib, .i. Sem an Aissia, Cam an Afraicc, Iafeth an Eoraip. Ocns adbath each fer dib ana rand bodeisin : .i. marb tra Sem a mnllaig Sleibi Radraip do thes ngreine, marb Iafeth a mullach Sleibi Formeinia, adbath 0)Cam a mnlla {sic) Sleibi Rafan. Conad ar an fath sin adrubrad an duan-sa,
(P)Atliair cdich, Coimsid Nime
87. xAr sin 2tra 3ro 4feallsat clanda Adaim for uaill i for 5dimos i for imarbus i for fingail, .i. Cain mac Adaim 6in sindser ro 7marb-siden a sdearbrathair .i. Abel, tiia
85. ] The scribe began to repeat isin, but finding his mistake before he wrote the n he scratched out the i's, and adapted the s as the initial of the following word 2~2 probably the disjecta membra of a gloss,
T nocha n-uil[liu] o gnimaib, "and there is none greater by reason of
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 143
85. (5) Now God descended to see the city and the tower which the sons of Adam were building —
i.e. the sons of the wretched, earthy, man of sin : that is a reproach hi the divine scripture, to call them 'sons of Adam.'
(6) And God said : Lo, all men are as it were one people, and they have one language ; and they will not cease from the purposes which they have begun, till they have fulfilled them. (7) Let us therefore confuse and crush their smooth, gentle, tuneful speech, that none of them may understand the voice of another. (8) So that people was confused, maddened, and caused to err, with the multitude of the different unknown languages : and thus they left off from their deeds which they had begun to do. (9) Wherefore the name of that place was called "Babel," i.e. "confusion": for there all the languages of the world were confused, to wit the seventy-two languages, from the three sons of Noe. God scattered those nations into the whole earth.
86. Noe divided the world into three parts among his sons : Sem in Asia, Ham in Africa, Iafeth in Europe. And each of them died in his own division. Sem died on the summit of Sliab Radruip of the heat of the sun, Iafeth died on the summit of Sliab Armenia, Ham died on the summit of Sliab Rafan. So that the following song was said of that matter —
Poem no. V.
87. Thereafter the children of Adam played false, in pride, in haughtiness, in sin, and in kin-murder : Cain son of Adam, the elder, he slew his brother Abel through his
deeds." The second i of gnimaib sos. and blotted. 3 h-im. MS.
4 "bracketed letters not m MS.
87. (variae lectiones from H, text from M) * iar 2 thra 3 ra (tit semper) 4 feallsad 6 dimus 6 an seindser ' marbsigein
8 derb-
(<z) Cain ms. (6) M here resumes.
144 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
9saint i tria 10formot, do ?id chnama 11chamaill ; conad airi sin 12dorad Dla 13dilind 14tars in n-uili doman.
"Ocus nir gein mac a cind a bliadna 6 athair "acht Adam nama, uair is fir nar "slan acht aen bliadain 18Adaim, 19madab imslan, in. uair 20ro "compread Cain.
88. Seth mac ^dam imorro, 2in treas mac 3aireada 4ro bai 5ac Adam, Gi is uad 7atat fir domain uili, t -i- Nae mac Laimiach meic 8Mathasalem meic Enoc meic Iareth meic Malaleth meic Cainen meic 9Enos meic 1GSeth meic Adaim. ||0) "Is he thra Nae 12in 13tAdam 14tairasti, 15co,sa 16mberar fir 17domain uili. 18Uair ro "baid 20in 21dili 22sil 23 Adaim, 24aeht 25Nae cona tri maeaib .i. 26Sem, 27Cam, 28Iathfed, i a 29ceithri nana 30.i. Coba 31i Olla 32i 3301iua i 3401Iuana.
35Imroimadair 36X dosfaidead || 37clanna 38Adaim, 39co tard 40Dia 41dllmd 42tarsin 43uili 44doman, 45conach terno 46neeh beo 47eisti acht lncht na 48hairei .i. 49Nae 50cona 51trT maeaib .i. Sem, 52Cam, Iathfed cona 53ceithri mnaib .i. Coba 1 Olla 54i Oliba i Olibana,53
5jamail asbert50 —
Sluag ndd chide cua-chel
9 saint 10 formad " camuill n darad 13 an dile
14 tarsa nuili 15 om. i 16 ach o Adam " slan 1S Adhaim
19 madob imlan an 20 do 21 -pred
88. 3 Adaim and om. imorro H 2 an tres H 3 aireda H
4 om. ro H 5 ag H " om. -\ H 7 ataid H 8 -sail- H
9Enois H "Seith H " oru is e Nae H oir is e an (in /?2) Noe
sin /3012 12 an H " tAdhamh /312 ,4 tanaisti H tanasti /?
tainaiste /312 15 gusa /3012 " mairedh /31 mared /?2 " ins. an
and om. uili /J012 : uili also om. H : domli- /312 ,8 oir /312 : do H 19 bhaith /} bhaidh /?12 20 an H /? 21 diliudli /?12 22 siol /3012
23 nAdhaimh uili f3 Adhamh uile /312 24 ach H 25 Noe gona tri
macaibh /? : Naoi gona thri macaibh /312 26 Semh /? 27 Cairn (3
23 ins. i /3'2: Iafeth H /? Iaphet /?12 20 ceitri H geeithre mnaibh /3,:
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 145
envy and jealousy, with a shaft of a camel-bone. Wherefore God brought a Flood over the whole earth.
Now never was son born of father at the end of a year save [from] Adam only : for it is true that one year of Adam was not complete, if indeed it was quite complete, when Cain was conceived.
88. As for Setli, son of Adam, one of the three eminent sons which Adam had, from him are the men of the whole earth. [Noe s. Lamech s. Mathusalam s. Enoch s. Iared s. Malalehel s. Cainan s. Enos s. Seth s. Adam]. Now Noe is the second Adam, to whom are traced the men of the whole earth. For the Flood drowned the seed of Adam save Noe and his three sons, Sem, Ham, Iafeth, and their four wives Coba, Olla, Oliva, Olivana.
The progeny of Adam sinned [fell] ; so God brought a Flood over the whole earth, so that not one escaped from it alive except the people of the ark, to wit Noe and his three sons, Sem, Ham, Iafeth, with their four wives Coba, Olla, Oliva, and Olivana.
As one said —
Poem no. I.
cceitre mnaibh ft2 30 om. A. fi- 31 om. -\ /3" 32 om. -\ /?12 33 Oliu M Oliva /31 om. fi2 3i Olibana M Olivana /31 35 this y om. H:
im ro imair fi imromhair /?" 36 om. /3012 "ins. a suidiu [3 : clann
(i°- clainn /31 3S Adhaimh (3 Adhamh /312 39 co darat /3 co tarat /312
40 om. /312 41an dillinn /3 in diliu /312 42 tarsan (3°>2
43 uile /3012 ** dhomainn [i domhainn /31 domhaann /32 45 gonach j3ri
"om. M neach /312 " om. P012 48 haircedh /312 49 Noe /3012
'" 50 a chlann i a mnaibh do reir an file /?12 51 thri /3° ;" Cham -\
Iafeth /3° 53_53 ceathra mnaibh .i. Cobha Olla Oliua Oliuana
r'4 1 Oliba om. M and sprs. but miswritten i Olibana 55 amail adbert
an fili H amail asbeart an filidh f3
(a) Text of B here 'resumes, 'jut is still preserved in the transcripts only. L.G. — VOL. I. L
146 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
89. 0 'Adam 2eo dilind 8in chet ais. 4Is e seo 5am 6in lin 7bliadan fil innti 8eheadus,4 .i. so °bliadna 10caecad "ar- se "chedaib lsar 14mile, 15amail asbert 16in file — 15
Cet aimsir in bethad bind ....
1TIs 18iad 19seo 20airich 21na cet aisi sin 22cona 23saeglaib, Iar Seth 24cheadas22—
"Adam |
ilccccxxx bl. |
"Cainen |
dccccx bl. |
26Seth |
dcxii bl. |
28Malaleth |
dccc bl. |
Enos |
dcceeu bl. |
29Iareth |
dcccclxu bl |
30Enoc |
^cclxu bl. |
||
31Mathasalem |
clcccclxix bl. |
||
32Laimiaeh 33 |
dcclxxuii bl. |
34Sem 35dono rogob i nAisia, Cam 36i nAfraic, 37Iathfed 38a nEoraip, 39amail asbert in fili,
Sent rogab i n-Aisia n-ait ....
90. Ra thuismid -\ ra chlannaigsed tra na tri meic-sin Nae, .i. Sem, Cam, Iafeth, eineada i elanda imda ilarda examla, .i. da chinel seehtmogat | .i. da chined deg ar tri fichtib ||. Is amlaid seo imorro ra tusmid i ra
scailit na cinela sin, .i. secht cinela fichit dib o Sem, tricha imorro o Cham, a cuig deg o Iafeth, conad da chinel sechtmogat sin uili. Ocus conad da berla sechtmogat tucad doib iar tairmesc an Tuir Nemruaid; conad a cind decc mbliadam iarsin do tebustair Feinius Farrsaid berla na nGaeidel as na dib sechtmoga.t, co rustaisealb dia dalta, .i. do mac Adnomuin, .i. do Gaeidel.
No comad a cind decc mbliadan iar scailead don scoil for each leth dorebi Feinius Farsaid(a) i .i. in sai || berla na nG-aeidel as na dib berlaib sechtmogat, i dorad iarsin do Niul, dia mac bodeisin.
Darad-sidi do Gaeidil Glas mac Niuil 7 dia niacaib-sein bodeisin, conad uada-sidi ainmnigter in berla sin.
89. J Adhamh /3012 2 go dilionn j3 go dilinn /312 3 an died
ais H in ced aois /3 ced aois an domhuin /312 (-am /32) 4~4 om.. /312 as H 5 om. am H ft 6 an H om. ft 7 bliadhna ft 8 ceadns ft inti and om. cheadns H 9 -dhna /?012 10 caogad ft012 " re ft12 12 chead ft ched ft12 13 air ft2 14mili H mhili ft mhile ft1 ,5-,5o»i. ft'2 : amhuil ft
16 inso H in fili ft1 " ins. 1 H ft012 : as ft0'2 18 iat ft " so H ft'2
20 airid H airigh ft athrachadh fti2 21 11a cet aissi H na haoisi ft na
haoise ft12 """marlle ris an rae do mhair siad ft12 21 saeghlaib H
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 147
89. From Adam to the Flood is the First Age. This is the tally of years that are in it first, one thousand six hundred fifty and six years, as the poet said,
Poem no. VII.
These are the leaders of that First Age, with their lives, after Seth first of all —
Adam Seth Enos |
930 years 612 1 905 „ |
Cainan 910 years Malalehel 800 „ lared 965 „ |
Enoch Mathusalam Lamech |
365 years 969 „ 777 „ |
So Seth settled in Asia, Ham in Africa, Iafeth in Europe, as the poet said,
Poem no. II.
90. Now those three sons of Noe, Sem, Ham, Iafeth, begat and fathered many numerous and various nations and progenies, to wit, seventy-two peoples [i.e. three score and twelve peoples]. Now thus were these peoples born and scattered : twenty-seven of them from Sem, thirty from Ham, fifteen from Iafeth, which makes in all seventy-two peoples. And there were seventy-two languages given to them after the confusion of Nemrod 's Tower : so that in the end of ten years after that, Feinius Farsaid extracted the speech of the Gaedil out of the seventy-two languages, and set it forth to his fosterling, the son of Agnomain, Gaedil.
Or perhaps it was at the end of ten years after the scattering of the school on every side that Feinius Farsaid [the sage] extracted the speech of the Gaedil out of the seventy-two languages, and gave it afterwards to Nel, his own son.
He gave it to Gaedil Glas son of Nel, and to his sons; so that from them is the language named.
saoghlaibh fi 24 chedus H cheatas 25 Adhamh fi012 26 Set fi"
2T Cainan fi Canaan /312 28 Malalel fi Malaleal fi12 23 Iarat fi'2 30 dccclxu fi012 31 Mathasailem H Methusalem fii2 32 Lamhiach fi Lamiac fi12
33 dcclxuii M dcclxxuiii fi12 34 ins. do Naoi i a thriar mac .i. fi12
33 07ft. dono : dogab imorro an Aissia H : dana roghabh in nAissia fi gab Sem an Asia Cam an Aif ric -j Iafeth (Iaphet ft2) Europ fi12 36 a nAf raicc H in nAf raic fi 3T Iafeth H 38 in nEoraip fi 39 amail inso
H amhail asbert infili fi om. fi12
(a) interlined.
148 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
91. Ra imdaig tra uimir na cinel sin [sech n-uimir na miberla; ar] ataid isa nAffraicc il-chinela [im oen-berla, cen (?)] atharrach tengad accu. Is ed fodera sa(n), na rab[atar] aeh da chinel sechtmogat thall aeon Tur, an tan ra sg [ailed na] berladha : i ee ra himdaigead na cinela, na ro im[dai|g|ed (?) i] n-airim chinel n-examail iad, acht a leigiwd a fo-tasgor na cinel [ba] nesa doib. Conad lia na cinela iar tothacht an [date na berlae, cian] cob lia iar n-uimir.
92. 1 Conad 6 na tri macaib sin Nae ro 2geneadar 3na da 4chenel 5sechtmqgat iar 6n-dllind, 7cona dib berlaib sechtmogat Hucad doib 9Iarsin, ac 10tairmesc "in Tnir 12Nemruaid. 13Conad i cind 14decc "mbliadan 16Iarsin ro 17thebistair 18Feinins Farrsaich 19berla na 20nGaedeal 21as na 22dib berlaib 23sechtmogat.1
s*Tricha x$ no .uii.xx || mac 25badar 26ag 2TSem, "nm 20Airifacsad, 28um 30Assur, 28um 31Peirsins.
^Ocus is 83dia 34sil-sidi na 35Hebraidi. 36Is iad so na 37coic 38meic 395 ra silad aigi, .i. 40Alam, "Assur, "Airifacsad, "Luid, is Aram: i cia "ainmnigter 45coic meic 46ag Sem, ni 47tabar a "n-airim 49acht 60cinead da mac dib.
5ITricha "mac imorro badar oc Cham, im 53Chnss, im 5*Mesram, im 55Futh im 56Chandan,
Ocus 57cia 58ainmigter 59tricha mac ^oc Cam, ni 6Itabar a n-airem 62acht cinead "da, mac dib.
92. '-1 ora, H: conadh o thri macaib-siden Noe fi (these words om. /312 2 gheinseadar fi012 (g- f3\ -edar (31 -edair fi2) 3 om. na /31-
4cheineil fi012 (-el fi12) 5 deag is tri fithchiod /3012 (deg . . fithcit fi12)
6 -inn fi012 ' ins. o chlannaib Naoi /312 : conadh da bhearla fi, gonadh
da bherladh /312 Hugadh doibh (ion 9 iarsoin fi012 (-soin fi1
iair- /32) 10 toirmeasg fi toirmiosg fii2 " an /32 12 Neamhruaidh /? Nemrodh fi12 (-mh- fi2) " conadh a ccend fi i a gcenn (3y- 14 deich
/3» 15 bliadhna /3012 16 -soin fi " teipestair /3012 (-ar /32)
l8Fionnus Farsaigh /?12 F. Fairsaidh fi 19 berladh fi12 *> nGaoidheal /3012 (-dhel fi12) 21 ins. i fi1 " di bherlaibh (i da bherladh fi "
"sechtmhodh fi12 2i text from here print (d as in H: interlined 5 wi
H only 2'ins. ro M do /3'2 : bhadair fi bhadar fi12 2C ac M a /?12
"ins. mac Nae [iv2 Mim M />' (bis) MAirifaxat fi Arfacsat /312
31 Asur M 31 Persius M /3012 32 uair M : om. is /302 33 da sil-side M 34siol-seu fi; siol (om. sen) fi12 ""Heabraidi M Heabhraidhe fi1"2
12
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 149
91. Now the number of those peoples increased beyond the numbers of the languages ; for there are in Africa many peoples having- one language, and no change of tongue. This is the reason thereof, that there were only seventy- two peoples yonder at the Tower, when the languages were separated : and though the peoples were multiplied, they were not multiplied in the computation of different peoples, but were left as a. subordinate company of the peoples nearest to them. So that the nations are greater in substance than the languages, though they are not greater in number.
92. So that it is from those three sons of Noe that the seventy-two peoples were born after the Flood, with their seventy-two languages that were given to them thereafter, at the confusion of Nemrod's Tower. And it was at the end of ten years thereafter that Feinius Farsaid extracted the language of the Gaedil out of the seventy-two languages.
Sem had thirty [or twenty seven] sons, including Arfaxad, Assur, Persius —
and it is of his seed that the Hebrews come. These are the five sons from whom he had descendants, Elam, Assur, Arfaxad, Lud, and Aram : and though five sons of Sem are named, I do not give in enumeration the descent of more than two of them.
Ham had thirty sons, including Chus, Mesraim, Flit, Chanaan,
and though thirty sons of Ham are named, I do not give in enumeration the descent of more than two of them.
(-aidh ft12) 3S no comad iad so M no gomadh iat so /3 i is iad so /?12
37cuig /3 coig /?12 38maic /3" 39 oir sioladh aige /? da (do /?3)
cloinn ar bhfagham (air bhfh- /32) sliocht /312 : aici M M Alamh /3
41 Asur M 42 Araf axat M Arif axat (J Arf acsad /312 43 Luidi Saram MH Ludi Sarain /? Ludi Saram /312 44 ghth- /312 -thear M 45 coig /3 na coig /?"
46 ac M aig Semh /3 sin Seini /312 " tabhair /3012 48 airem M aireamh /? airemh /?" 49 ach H 50 cinneamh en da mhac dibh ft ceinemh in
da mhac dhiobh [ii2 51 Triothchad (Triochad (32) mac bhadh ag
Cam mhac Naoi um Cus um Esrom um Futh um Canaan /?12 52 mac
aile oc Cam M mac eile o Cham /? 53 Chus M Cus /? 54 Esram H
Easrom (1 B5 Futh /? 5S Cannain (3 " gia /3 B8 -gthear M
-ghthear (i -ghther an /312 59triotchad /31 triothchadh (32 60 ag
Cam /? sin and om. oc Cam (312 61 tabhair /? tabhar /31 toabhar /32
03 diobh acht cinneadh da mac /?012 (dlliiobh, cinedh, mhac /312) 63 ins. a H
12
150 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
A G4cuig deg 65imorro 66ag Iafeth.
M
67im 68Danai, 69im 70Gregi"is, 65im 71Espanus 69 im 72Goim- erus : 73no 74is 75morseser ar fichit do macaib badar aici
4. .i. oc Sem ||.
no ,6cumad iad so annianda "na mac sin Iathfeth, .i. ,8Gomer, 7SMagoc, Magia, Iaban, Tubal, 79Masoth, 80Tirus, "Maisechda.
H
1 ni tabar a n-airim ach cinedh tri mac dib. Ni hamlaid ra badar na meic aili can geine- mhain uaidhib; acht ri ro geinir uaidib ni ar bu dingmala ainm ceineoil da tabairt forro.
88
Is 82a.mlaid 83sin 84imorro 85do 86silsad na 87cinela sin, °M. a 89secht fiehit dib 6 Sem, 90tricha imorro 0 Cham, 91euic 92cenela deg o 93Iafeth,8S 94ut dicitur
Tricha mac mln, monar ngle
93. Iathfeth dono mac Nae, Ms uad tuaiscert-leth na Haissia 1 lucht na Heorpa uili. Sem imorro for medon Aissia, 6 Srnth Eofrait co tracht airthir an betha. Cam dono ragab-sidi an Affraicc, -\ deiscert-leth na Haissia.
94. JIafed 2dono3, is iad a 4chlann-sidi 5lenfamaid 5anossa. 7Is 8uad 9tuaiscert-10leath "na 12Haissia lbuili, .i. 14Aissia Beg 15i 16Airmein 17i fir na Sceitliia
65 om. ft 66 oc Iathfed M ag Iaphet ft
68 -nn- ft"" 69 urn ft" (ter) 70 Greagus ft12
73-73
,;l ciiic dec M 6' in ft am ft"
71 Easp- ft"" 72 Gomerus ft Gomerius ft1 Gomeretis ft- "-" 0 sei
sear dihiobh (dhiobli ft2) mar ata ft" 74 om. is ft 75 morseisiur
air fichit do mhacaibh bhadar ag Semh ft 78gomadh ft, possibly
cumad iad so cert-anmanda in M: the writing hay partly effaced by a blot badly rubbed out, and there is room for a letter or two more than is printed in the text "mac Iafeth "Maghach (Magaeh ft'
-och ft2) Madia Iuban ft" 79 Massoth ft" Massoc ft " Tiras ft012
81 Maisecdha ft Maisectadh ft" 82 amhladh ft amhlaidh ft'2 83 seo
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS.
151
Iafeth had fifteen,
including Danai, Gregus, Espanus, Gomerus : or [Sem] had twenty-seven sons.
Or perhaps these are the names of the sons of Iafeth — Gomer, Magog-, Madai, Iavan, Tubal, Mosoch, Tiras, Maisechda.
And I do not give in enumera- tion the descent of more than three of them. It is not the case that the other sons had no descendants : but none were born from them worthy of being called ' ' a people. ' '
Thus it is that those peoples were descended, twenty-seven from Sem, thirty from Ham, fifteen from Iafeth, ut dicitur
Poem no. III.
93. Iafeth son of Noe, of him is the northern side of Asia and the people of all Europe. Sem over the middle of. Asia, from the river Euphrates to the eastern region of the world. Ham settled in Africa and on the southern side of Asia.
94. As for Iafeth, it is his progeny which we shall follow now. From him is the northern side of all Asia, namely Asia Minor, and Armenia, and the people of
M B so /?12 8iom. p™ Kro M /3012 86 silad M sioladh B012
(s B') 87 cenela M cineala B cinedhaibh /31 cinethehaibh B2 S8~88 om. /312 89 seacht xxit diobh o Seimh triocha B12 ^ ins. i M 91 ins. -\ M :
a cuig deg B
92 cinela H
93 Iathf ed M
94 am ail asbert in
teolach seo M amail isbert an filidh p do reir an fhile B12
93. 1 sprs. s H
94. 1 Iathfed M Iaphet B12 2 tra M /? om. B12 3 ins- mac Nae M mhac Naoi B" mac Nai mac Laimhiach ft 4 eland-sen M cldan /31 : om. side B012 5lean- /3 -aoid /312 e om. M /3012 'ins. -\ B 8uadh B uaidh B12 9tuaitsciort /312 (-th- B2) 10 leithi M "na dittographed B1 ,2 Haisia M B012 " om. M /3012 " Aisia M Aissia /312 15 .i. for i B12 18 Airmen M Armein /?12 "-17 om. B
152 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
1S1 is 19uad 20an Greg Beg i an Greg Mor 17i Greg na 21Ha\a,xandria.18 220cus is tiad 20lucht na Heorpa 23uili.
24Ocus dono is dla cloind each gaMil dogab Erinn, cenmotha Cessair nama.22 24
95. (A) Do chlaimaib Iafed andso bodesta. Iafeth dono mac Nae i Oliuana a bean, ro thechtsad ocht maccu, .i. Gomer, Magog, Maigia, Iabal $ no Eonae || t .i. an seindser ||, Tubal, Masoch, Tirus, Maisegda.
(B) Gomer imorro, is nada ataid Galladagdai, i is inann iadside i Gailli. Ainm aili doib Gailligregi.
Cid dia n-abur Gailligregi re sil Gomeir meic Iafeth? Ninsa. Gailli iad do bunad adbeir Asuidhir, i dorad rigi an feraind dlianad ainm Betania don Gregdo-sidi irandus dia thir ar chongnam fris. Ra ansad aigi an agaid a braithrech; i is airi sin adberar Gailligregi riu, ar a mbeith itir Greg i Gaillia do bunad, -\ ni heir comad mac do Goimer Gregus.
(C) Teasallus mac Greguis ra cumdaig an catraig diana ainm Tesalonica, 7 is inti ro follamnaigsed a Haithus. Is uad ainmnigter in Tesaill iar firind, 1 o <a> athair ainmnigter an Greg.
(D) Ceitri meic la Goimeir, .i. Ripad Scot o taid Scuit; 1 dob eisein Ibath mac Goimeir, senathar Feiniusa
Farreaid t A. Feinius Farrsaid mac Baaith meic Ibaith meic Goimeir meic Iafeth ||.
Cid dia n-abar Greg Sceithegda re Gaeidealaib, ar ni do sil Neimid meic Adnomain iad do bunad? Is do lucht na Sceithia doib, uair is do sil Feiniusa Farrsaid doib ca raibi flaithus na Sceithia. Acht ceana ni raibi rigi na Sceithia aigi acht a flaithus, 1 ar a mbeith do chlannaib Goimer adberar Greg re Gaeidelaib; 1 as decair lind a (a)scartain re Goimer da reir sin.
(E) Na tri meic aili Goimeir, .i. Asceinex, otaid Reigine, Erifam o taid Paplagoine, Togarm 0 tait Frigia -\ Ilia.
ls-'som. M 19uaidh (3> uatha (32 "o/n. /3M 21 -dreach fi
2;-22 om. (3 23 uile f312 2i-2i om. M fi"
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 153
Scythia; and from him are Graecia Parva, and Graecia Magna, and Alexandrian Greece. Of him also are the people of all Europe.
Moreover it is of his progeny that is every Taking which took Ireland, save only Cessair.
95. (A) Of the children of Iafeth here now. Iafeth son of Noe and Olivana his wife, they had eight sons, Gomer, Magog, Madai, Iabal or Iavan, [the eldest] , Tubal, Mosoch, Thiras, Maisegda.
(B) As for Gomer, of him are the Galladagdae [= Galatae] , and they are the same as the Galli. Another name for them is Gallograeci.
Why is the seed of Gomer son of Iafeth called ' ' Gallograeci ' ' ? They were fundamentally Galli, says Isidorus : and the ruler of the land called Bithynia gave to the Greeks a portion of his land for giving him help. They stayed with him to oppose his brethren; and for that reason they are called Gallograeci, because they were fundamentally in part Greeks, in part Galli; and it will not arise that Gregus was a son of Gomer.
(C) Thessalus son of Gregus built the city called Thessalonica, and therein he ruled his kingdom. From him is Thessaly named authentically, and Greece is named from his father.
(D) Gomer had four sons, Rifath Scot from whom are the Scots; now he was Ibath son of Gomer, the grandfather of Feinius Farsaid [Feinius Farsaid s. Baath s. Ibath s. Gomer s. Iafeth].
Why are the Gaedil called Greeks of Scythia, seeing that fundamentally they are not of the seed of Nemed son of Agnomain? They are of the people of Scythia, for they are of the seed of Feinius Farrsaid, who had the princedom of Scythia. However, he had not the kingdom of Scythia, but its princedom : and as they are of the progeny of Gomer, the Gaedil are called Greeks. We find it hard to disconnect them from Gomer on that account.
(E) The three other sons of Gomer were Aschenez, of whom are the Rhegini, Rifath of whom are the Paphlagonians, Thogorma of whom are Phrygia and Ilia.
(a) MS. -th-air, clumsily corrected sec. man.
154 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
(F) Maigia no Meda mac Iafed, a quo Meda; 7 ragabsai ochtar o Meadaib rigi an domain.
(G) Ionan mac Iafeth, is uaidib-sein ataid Iondaid, 7 is uad rasgeinseadar Eoldaid. Ocus ainm aili do, Greg mac Iafeth. [Is uad] ainmnigter an cuiged berla na Gregi, .i. an berla Eol[da, -\ is ua]d ainmnigter Gregaig iar firind. Uair is co Gregus mac [Iafeth ber]ar genelach Alaxandair meie Philip rig Greg, 7 is uad Gregaig [4. . . .]cain. Ocus is uad adberar an Muir Eonda.
(H) Coig meic aigi-sidi, .i. Elisa, Tairsis, Seithim. Dodainim, Gregus. Elissa a quo Eigila, .i. geinilach Sicimorum. Tairsis, is uad Tairsis 7 Cillegda. Seithim a quo Ioif mac Saduirn, amail adbeir leabar Augustin o Chathair De, 7 uada Ceitheagdai. Is uaidib-sein ainm- nigther cathair na Cipricai, .i. Ceithunt.
(I) Dodainim, is uadha-sidi Rodai. Is uaidib-sein ra foglad indseda Mara Toirrian, cona cinelaib examlaib, .i. Inis Roid, 7 Inis Coirbdith, 7 Inis Sicil, 7 Inis Creid, 7 Inis Ceithiria, 7 Inis Rodain, 7 oilena eirimda ele, ineoch na ra thuirmsemar sund, ardaig mi-chuimni. Gregus a quo Gregaig.
(K) Tubal, is uada ataid Iberdaid 7 Espandai ; X no comad mac d'lafed Easpanus o taid Espandai ||, 7 Celtiberdai, 7 Edaldai. Uair Eiperus, do sil Tubail do ehinel Iafeth, a quo Eipiritarum, - or gein Ianus ri na Heiperda. Is e cet ri da gab Romanchu. 7 is uad ainm- nigter mi Ienuair, 7 is uad Coirinti.
(L) Massoch, is uada ataid Capadusdai.(a) Tirass, is uada ataid Tragdai. Maissegda, dibaid-sein.
(M) Magog, is uada ataid fir na Sceithia 7 na Gaith, .i. Gaidil. Cuig meic la Magog, .i. Baath, 7 Ibath, 7 Barachan, 7 Emoth, 1 Aithechta. Baath dono, mac do-sein Feinius Farrsaid, athair na Sceithegda. Feinius Farrsaid dono,
(a) Capaddai written and x changed clumsily to t) ; (= dus), sec. jnan.
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 155
(F) Madai or Meda, son of Iafeth, a quo the Medes; and eight men of the Medes took the kingship of the world.
(G) Ionan son of Iafeth, from them (sic) are the Ionians, and from him were the Aeolians born. He has another name, Gregus son of Iafeth. From him is named one of the five languages of the Greeks, the Acolie, and from him the Greeks are named authentically. For the genealogy of Alexander son of Philip, king of Greece, is traced to Gregus son of Iafeth and from him are the ... (?) Greeks. Also, the Ionian Sea is named after him.
(H) He had five sons, Elissa, Tharsis, Cetthim, Dodanim, Gregus. Elissa a quo Aetolia, the pedigree-stem of the Siculi. Tharsis, from him are Tarsus and the Cilicians. Cetthim, a quo is Iuppiter son of Saturn, as the book of Augustine De Ciuitate Dei saith, and of whom are the Citii. From them is named the city of the Cyprii, namely Citium.
(I) Dodanim, from him are the Rhodii. By these people the islands of the Torrian Sea, with their various inhabi- tants, were appropriated, to wTit Rhodes, and Carpathos, and Sicily, and Crete, and Cytherea, and the Balearic Islands, and very many other islands which we have not enumerated here, owdng to failure of memory. Gregus, a quo the Greeks.
(K) Tubal, from him are the Iberi and the Hispani [or perhaps Easpanus was a son to Iafeth, and from him are the Hispani] and the Celtiberi and the Itali. For [it is] Eperus, of the seed of Tubal of the race of Iafeth, a quo the Epirotae, and from whom sprang Ianus, king of the Epirotae. He is the first king who took over the Romans. From him is named the month of Januarv, and from him are the Quirites.
(L) Mosoch, of him are the Cappadoees. Thiras, of him are the Thraces. Maisegda is missing.
(M) Magog, of him are the men of Scythia and the Goths, that is, the Gaedil. Magog had five sons, Baath, Ibath, Barachan, Emoth, Aithechta. As for Baath, his son wTas Feinius Farrsaid, father of the Scythians. As for Feinius
156 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
mac Baaith meic Magog meic Iafeth. Adl3eraid araile imorro is Feinius Farrsaid mac Baaith meic Ibaith meic Goimeir meic Iafeth.
(N) Ibath dono, an mac aili do Magog, mac dosaidi Alainius. Tri meic aigi-sidi, A. Airmein, Negua, Isicon. Coic meic ag Armon (sic), A. Gotus, Uiligotus, Cebitus, Brugandus (sic), Longbardus. Negua dono, ceitreO) meic lais, .i. Uandalus, Saxus, Bogardus, Longbardus. Isicon imorro, an tres mac Elainius, ceitri meic lais, .i. Frangcus, Romanus, Albanus a quo Albania an Aisia Big, i Albanactus mac Britan meic Siluius meic Ascain meic Aeniasa meic Anicis a quo Alba Iartair : 7 Britus, 0 raiter Indsi Bretan.
(0) Is andsin do randad an doman a tri randaib, .i. Eoraip 1 Afraicc i Assia. Secht mbliadna decc re scailead na mberlad tanig an ced fer do sil Iafeth is an Eoraip, .i. Alainius mac Ibaith meic Magog meic Iafeth meic Nae. Alainius, is uada ataid Fraingc 1 Romanaig; 1 is amlaid thanig a tri meic laiss, .i. Airmein, Neagua, Issicon : conad a fus ra clannaigsed na macu adchualumar.
(P) Saxus mac Negua meic Alainius meic Ibaith meic Magoe meic Iafeth Meic Nae, is uad Saxain. Emoth mac Magoc, is uad fine thuaiscert an domuin. Barachan, a quo Gaeidel, mac Eitheoir meic Bai meic Tai meic Barachain meic Magoch. Aitheachtaig mac Magoch, is dia chloind- sein na thuatha thangadar an Erinn ria nGaidelaib, .i. Parrthalon mac Sera meic Sru meic Esru meic Praimint meic Aithechtaig meic meic (sic) Magoch meic Iafeth meic Nae : -\ Neimid mac Adnomain meic Paim meic Thait meic Sera meic Sru. Ocus adberaid aroili do lebraib corab ar slicht an meic do fagaib Parrthalon thair(&) do Neimead, .i. ar slicht Adla meic Parrthaloin. Ocus clanda Neimid, .i. Gaileoin i Fir Bolg t Fir Domnand i Tuaith De Danund. As doib-sin do chan an file.
Magog mac an Iafeth ....
(a) At first written C (i.e., tri three) : afterwards c-e was Written flanking the i, to turn the word into ceitre four. (6) The /i-dot doubtful.
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 157
Farrsaid, he was son of Baath s. Magog s. Iafeth. Others say however that Feinius Farrsaid was s. of Baath s. Ibath s. Gomer s. Iafeth.
(N) As for Ibath, one of the two sons of Magog, his son was Alainius. He had three sons, Airmen, Negua, Isicon. Airmen had five sons, Gotus, Uiligotus, Cebitus, Burgandus, Longbardus. Negua had four sons, Vandalus, Saxus, Bogardus, Longbardus. Isicon, the third son of Alainius, had four sons, Francus, Romanus, Albanus, a quo Albania in Asia Minor, and Albanactus s. Britan s. Silvius s. Ascanius s. Aeneas s. Anchises, a quo western Alba, and Britus, from whom are called the Islands of Britain.
(0) Then was the world divided into three divisions, Europe, Africa, Asia. Seventeen years before the scattering of the languages there came the first man of the seed of Iafeth into Europe, Alainius s. Ibath s. Magog s. Iafeth s. Noe. Alainius, of him are the Franks and the Romaais. And his three sons came with him, Armen, Negua, Isicon : so that on the hither side they begat those sons of whom we have heard.
(P) Saxus s. Negua s. Alainius s. Ibath s. Magog s. Iafeth s. Noe, of him are the Saxons. Emoth s. Magog, of him is the people of the north of the world. Barachan, a quo the Gaedil, s. Etheor s. Bai s. Tai s. Barachan s. Magog. Aithechtaig s. Magog, of his progeny are the peoples who came into Ireland before the Gaedil — Parthalon s. Sera s. Sru s. Esru s. Praiment s. Aithechtaig s.O) Magog s. Iafeth s. Noe : and Nemed s. Agnomain s. Paim s. Tat s. Sera s. Sru. Others of the books say that Nemed was of the family of the son whom Parthalon left in the east, Adla s. Paxthalon. Also the children of Nemed, the Gaileoin and Fir Bolg and Fir Domnann and Tuatha De Danann. Of those the poet sang,
Poem no. IV.
(a) Disregarding the dittography in the text.
158 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
(Q) Is iad tra na cineada sin .i. clanda Iafeth, ra gabsad ferandus 7 flaithus na Heorpa uili, 7 tuaiscert-leithi na Haissia : 1 is iad sin cuig prim-chinela deg chlainni Iafeth cona. fo-ehinelaib : 7 ra sealbsadar feranda imda isan n-Aissia, .i. o Sliab Mai 1 0 Sliab Tur a tuaid co Sruth Danai 7 coruigi an Sceithia tuaiscertaig : 7 ra selbsad an Eoraip uili, coruigi an aigen muiridi fuineada Insi Bretan 7 conuigi an Espain treuillig budeas, .i. Tuillslicht. Da chlannaib Iafeth meic Nae eonuigi sin, cona prim-chinelaib 7 eona fo-ehinelaib, 7 cona ngabalaib 1 cona ferandaib, itir Aissia 1 Eoraiph.
96. Na tri meic-si tra Nae ra thuimiseniar romaind .i. Sem 7 Cam 7 Iafeth : ria ndilinn rugtha an triur sin. Ocus adberaid araili co rugad mac do Nae iar ndilinn, .i. Eoinitus : i £than an rand feraind do gab, 7 as na tri randaib aili ra teibead a ferand. Ocus rob estrolagda maith he, iar n-a ifoglaim 0 athair, 0 Nae.
97. Coba bean Nae, is i ra fig edach re each iar ndilinn.
Eua ben Adaim, is i ra fig tonag di fein 7 do Adam ar tus, an tress la iar teacht a sruth Tibir diaid a n-aitrigi, iar n-a forchongar do Dia fuirri.
Catafola a n-ingen, rugad araen re Cain, seitchi Phendain meic Adaim, is i ra figh edach ria chach. Is uimpi doronad an t-ed.
Iafeth mac Nae, is e ra seind cruit 7 organ ar tus iar ndilinn.
(n) Sem mac Nae, an cet goba t an cet cherd 7 an cet saer iar ndilinn.
Nae imorro, ra thindscain tirfrecar do denum, an cet bliadain iar ndilinn: .i. dorigni ar 7 buain, 7 do chlandustair nneamain.
Cam mac Nae imorro ranig snara 7 aircheadal 7 filidecht ar tus.
Ora airig tra Cam iarsin co ticfad an dili, 7 na faidi ca thirchartain co ticfa dilgend chlainni Adaim, tria i'ingail Chain for a braithrib, do rindi tri colamna ceithir-(&)slis, .i.
(a) The initial S is of an extravagant shape; it looks as though the scribe thought that it was a *)•
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 159
(Q) Now these are those peoples, to wit the progeny of Iafeth, who took the territory and princedom of all Europe and of the northern side of Asia ; and those are the fifteen chief people of the progeny of Iafeth, with their subordinate people. And they possessed many territories in Asia, namely from Mount Amanus and Mount Taurus northward to the river Don, and to Northern Scythia : and they possessed all Europe to the ocean of sea in the west of the island of Britain, and to three-cornered Spain in the south, i.e. the Astures. (?) Of the progeny of Iafeth son of Noe down to this, with their chief peoples and their subordinate peoples, their takings and their territories, both in Asia and in Europe.
96. As for the three sons of Noe that we have reckoned above, Sem, Ham, Iafeth : before the Flood were those three persons born. Others say that a son was born to Noe after the Flood, named Ionitus. Ethan was the portion of territory which he received : out of the other three portions was his portion selected. He was a good astrologer, having learnt it from his father Noe.
97. Coba, wife of Noe, she it is who wove raiment for every one after the Flood.
Eua wife of Adam, she it is who first wove an apron for herself and for Adam, on the third day after coming from the river Tiber (sic : lege Tigris) after their penance, when God had commanded it to her.
Catafola their daughter, who was born along with Cain, wife of Pendan son of Adam, she it is who wove raiment before anyone else : about her was the jealousy excited.
Iafeth son of Noe, it is he who first sounded a harp and an organ after the Flood.
Sem, son of Noe, the first smith, the first wright, the first carpenter after the Flood.
As for Noe, he began to work husbandly in the first year after the Flood. He made ploughing and reaping, and planted a vineyard.
Ham, son of Noe, first attained to swimming and poetry and bardism.
Now when Ham understood thereafter that the Flood should
come, and the prophets were foretelling that a destruction of
the progeny of Adam should come, by reason of Cain's kin-
(6) the s sprs.
160 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
columan d'ael, i colaman do criaid, i colaman do chiaraig. Ocus do sgrib intu seela na haimsiri cora mairdis iar ndilinn. Ra millead an colaman aeil i an colaman criadh, -\ ra mair an colaman ciarach. Conad he ra indis scela na haimsiri ria ndilinn; i mairid iartain.
Olibana a ben-sidi, i is i ra cet-cum eclaeh iar ndilinn.
98. 1Grecus mac Iathfeth, is 2uad in Greg 3Mor i in Greg 4Beg i Greg na 5Halaxandria. Espanus mac "iathfeth, 6 tait 7Espandai. Gomerns mac "Iathfeth,1 da 9mac 10lais, .i. "Emoth i Ibath. 12Emoth, is 13uad fine tlraaiscert in domain.13 14Ibath, da 15mac 16lais, .i. 17Bodb i Baath. 18Bodb, 19diar bo mac 20Dohe. Elenus 21mac 22Dohe, tri 23meic 24lais, .i. 23 Airmen, Negna, Isicon. 26 Airmen 27imorro, 28coic meic 29lais, 3f,.i. 31Gntus, 32Cibidus, 33Uiligothus, 34Burgandus, 3FLongbardns. 36Neagrla 37imorro, tri 38meic 39leis, 4°.i. 41Saxns, 42Boarus, Uandalus. Hisicon 43imorro, 44in 45treas mac 46Elenuis, 47ceithri 48meic 49lais, 50.i. Romanus, Frangcus, 51Britus, Albanns. ■ Is 52he in tAlbanus sin 53rogab 54Albain 35ar 56tns 57cona 58chloind, 1 is 59uad 60ainmnigther 61Albn : 62co ro indarb 63a "brathair 65tar Muir 66nlcht, 67eonad iiad Albanaich leatha Hoidia.
99. 1Magoc 2mac 3Iathfed, is 4dia 5chloind-6sen na 7tnatha 8tancadar 9in 10Erinn "J ar trls || 12rla "nGaeidelaib, .i. "Parrthalon mac Sera meic Srn meic
98. '-1 om. /312: Greacus m. Iafet, &c, /3 2 uadh /? 3 mhoir f3
4 bheg /? 5 Halaxandreach /? ° Iaf eth [i 'Easpain [i
sIafeth/3 9mhac /?012 10leis/312 " Eamot /312 12om. /S'2
13-13 uadh finidh thuaisciort in domhain ft uatha fine tuaitsciort (-ths- /?2) in domhuin /312 "Iobat /J12 ,5 mhac /30U 16 leis /?12
"Boidhbh /?012 lsom. M Boidhbh /3012 »dar /312 20 Dothe /?
Tote ft" M mhac /312 22 Dothe /? Dote /?12 23 mic /312
21 leis P 25Armen /?012 26 Armen M /312 27 dono (3 om. /?12
28cuig mic /?12 29leis /31 :<" om. .i. /312 31 Gotus /?012 32 om. M
33 -gotus M £012 34 -ntns M /3012 ™ -bh- /3 Longabairdus ft"
36Negua ft012 37 om. ft0" 3S mic ft" 39lais ft"2 w om. .i. ft0i
41Sacsus ft" ,2Boaii-us ft" 43 om. ft" 44 in yc M: an p1'
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 161
murder against his brethren, he made three four-sided columns, one of lime, one of clay, and one of wax. And he wrote upon them the histories of the [antediluvian] age, so that they should endure after the Flood. The columns of lime and of clay were destroyed, and the column of wax remained : and this it was that related the histories of the Age before the Flood, and it survives thereafter.
Oliuana his [Iafeth's] wife, it is she who first fashioned raiment after the Flood.
98. Grecus s. Iafeth, of him is Graecia Magna and Graecia Parva and Alexandrian Greece. Espanus s. Iafeth, from whom are the Hispani. Gomer s. Iafeth had two sons, Emoth and Ibath. Emoth, of him is the northern people of the world. Ibath had two sons, Bodb and Baath. Bodb, who had a son Done. Elenus s. Dohe had three sons, Airmen, Negua, Isicon. As for Airmen, he had five sons, Gutus, Cebidns, Uiligothus, Bnrgnndns, Longbardns. Negua more- over had three sons, Saxus, Boarns, Uandalus, Isicon moreover, one of the three sons of Elenus, had four sons, Eomanus, Francus, Britus, Albanus. This is that Albanus who first took Alban, he and his children, and of him is Alba named : so he drove his brother across the sea of Icht, and from him are the Albanians of Latium of Italy.
99. Magog son of Iafeth, of his children are the peoples who came into Ireland at first before the Gaedil, namely Partholon s. Sera s. Sru s. Esru s.
*tres ft thres ft12 48 Heloni ft0'2 "cethri ft" ceithre ft'2
48mic ft12 49leis ft 50 om. ft012 51 Briotus ft'2 52 e an ft012
"roghabh ft0'2 54 -uin ft'2 55 air ft'2 M ttus ft 57 gonadh ft'2
58cloind M ehloinn ft012 59uadha ft uadh ft'2 "-ghthair ft
-ghther ft12 w Alba ft12 62 gor iondairb ft gur hionarbadh ft12
f-airb- ft2) 63 ins. Britus ft Briotus ft12 M bhr- ft012 65 tair ft2
" nlocht ft2 67 gonadh uaidh Albanaigh ft012 (conadh ft")
99. ' Magoth ft Magog ft'2 2 mhac ft'2 3 Iafeth ft Iaphet ft"
4 da ft'2 5 ehloinn ft012 * sin ft12 ' tuathadh ft'2 8 thangadair ft tangadar ft'2 9 an ft0'2 " Eirinn ft'2 " om. ft°'2
"re ft» '3 nGaedhealaibh ft nGaoidhil ft12 14"14 om. ftn'2
L.G.— VOL. i. M
162 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
19Easrii meic Gaeidil Glais meic Niuil meic Feiniusa Farrsaig meic Bathatha meic Magog meic Iathfeth meic Nae : no14 15Parrthalon mac 16Sera 17meic 18Sru meic 19Easru meic 20Pramint meic "Aitheachda meic 22Magoth meic 23Iathfeth24* 25. Ocus 26Neimead mac 27Adnoimin meic 28Phaim meic Thait meic 29Seara meic Sru 30meic Easru, -jrl.30. 31Ocus Clanda Nemid, 32.i. ssGaleoin 7 Fir 34Bolc 7 Fir 35Domnand 7 36Tuatha De Danand.
37Ocus fineada Cloindi Beothaig meic Iarmuineoil Fatha meic Neimid, .i. Tiiatha Taiden 7 Donmannaig dia roibi Conall Cruachain, 7 Clanda Umoir, 7 Cruithnieh na
Cruachna, 7 aiemeada Slebi Uiri, dia rabadar na riga, .i. Tindi mac Conraeh 7 Mac Cecht 1 Fir Chraibi, dia roibi Tindi mac Conraeh, 7 Eochaid Dala. Ocus airmid eolai"' corob d'iarsma na fineadach sin Clanna Morna. 7 sentuatha Condacht olehena.37
100. xConad do na gabail sin Parrthaloin 7 Nemid, 7 do genelaigib na tuath sin olehena1, do chanad so —
Magog mac an Iafeth ....
2Scuirem do chlannaib Nae 7 dia n-imthechtaib. Adfed- sam do chlannaib Gaeidil bodesta 7 dia n-imtechtaib 1 dia ngabhalaib.2
Miniugad Gabal nErenn. These two paragraphs are all that represents § I in Min. liA 25 y 40 ^R 90 8 14
101. Miniugudh Gabal nErenn, 7 a ^enchais, 7 a remend 2rigraidi, annso sis, 3i ethre i mbeolo aissneisen, 7 labra 6g 4dondni remimn, 5 3thosueh 6in libair 7anuas co tici sso, ut 9dicit historia. Hybernia
"Partholon /3 Pairrthalon /3" : mhac /312 16 Searra f3 Serra /3'2
" mine /3n (hie et semper) 1S Sruth /312 19 Esru /3012 :" Braimint
/5 Framuit /312 2IEackachta (3™ 22 Magog /?12 23 Iafeth (3
Iaphet (312 24 mc Seara mc Sru ins. and erased (3 2S ins. mic Naoi (3' mic Noe /?" 20 Neimheadh (3 is uaid (uadh. (32) Neirnhedh. mliac (31-
27 Aglinomain (3™ (mh (312) 28 Paimm. Tait (3012 29 Sera 0"
sc-30 om. (3012 31 1 Clann Neimeadli (3 7 is 0 Neimedh /312 32 1 M
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 163
Gaidel Glas s. Nol s. Feinius Farsaid s. Bathath s. Magog s. lafeth ,s. Noe : or Partholon s. Sera s. Sru s. Esru s. Brament s. Aithechda s. Magog s. lafeth. And Nemed s. Agnomain s. Pamp s. Tat s. Sera s. Sru s. Esru &c. And the progeny of Nemed, to wit the Galeoin, the Fir Bolg, the Fir Domnann, and the Tuatha De Danann.
And the families of the progeny of Bethach s. Iarbonel Faith s. Nemed, i.e. the Tuatha Taiden and the Domnannaig, of whom was Conall of Cruachu, and the progeny of Umor, and the Cruithne of Cruacha, and septs of Sliab Puirri of whom were the kings i.e. Tinde s. Conri, and Mac Cecht, and the Fir Chraibi, of whom was Tinde s. Gonri and Eochu Dula. And learned men reckon that of the relics of these families were the Clanna Morna and the old populations of Connachta in general.
100. So that of the said Takings of Partholon and of Nemed, and of the genealogies of those peoples in general, was this sung —
Poem no. IV.
We shall leave off from the progeny of Noe and their adventures. We shall tell now of the progeny of Gaeidel and of their adventures and their Takings.
101. An explanation of the Takings of Ireland, and of her history, and of her royal roll, here below ; and a recapitulation of the narratives, and a clear statement of the matter before us, from the beginning
om. (i12 33Gaileoin (3 u Bolg fi Bholg /312 35 Domhnaind /?
Domhuann /312 36 Tuat [i2 37"37 om. /3012
100. 1~1 om. /30'2 amhuil asbeart in ffli /3, do reir in file /?12 2~2 not in M
101. This and the following matter down to the poem Gaedel Glas otait Gaedil missing from fiV. The text of the missing portion printed from nA, with variations from /iR unless otherwise stated. ] seanchas
2 -raide innso 3 1 ethre om. nA : ambeolu aisueisin /iB, * duinn
remund /iA 5 -ach e ind 7 om. 8 indso 9 dicunt
164 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
insola 10possita est in occidente ; sicut "Ade Paradisus in australi plaga orientis 12poissitus est, ita Hibernia in 13septimprionali parte, apud 14oecasmn sita est. Sic similes 15snnt natura hnmi16, sieut similes sunt ambo locis in orbe : quoniam sicut absque bestia Paradisus est, ita periti Hiberniam non habere serpentem uel leonem uel ranam uel murem nocentem uel draconem uel "scorpium uel 18ununi noxinm animal nisi 19lupum tantum testantur. Hibernia ergo dicitur 'insola 20occasus.' 'Hyberoc' Grece, 'occasum' "dicitur Latine; 'nia' autem uel 22'nyon' Grece, 23i insola' Latine dicitur. % 24Hybernia autem proxima 25Britanie insola : 26spacone(a) terrarum angustior, sect 27situ fecundior. Hoc(&) ab Affrico in Boriam porrigitur, cuius partes priores in Hiberniam, (°) $' id est in 28Espaniam ||' et Cantabricum Occianum intendunt; unde et Hibernia dicta. Scotia(d) autem dicta, quia a Scotorum gentibus colitur. Illic nulla 29anguis, auis rara, apes(e) nulla : adeo, f non sic in hoc tempore ||', ut adnectos inde 30pulueris(/) 31seu lapillos, si quis alibi sparserit inter apiaria,^) examina fauos deserunt ||. J Scoti autem 32a Scota. filia regis 33Egipti Pharaonis, sunt dicti, que 34fuit S5Nelii uxor. %' 36Phoeni autem a Foenio 37Fariseo dicuntur ||'. 38Scoti autem idem et Picti, a picto 39corpore, f quasi 40scissi ||', eo quod "aculeis ferreis cum atramento variarum figurarum 42stigmate adnotentur ||. 43Heriu 44dono ab 45heroibus nominata est. 46t Sudet qui legit %.
histonci 10 poisita "Adae ,2 poisitus 18septim trionaili
14occassum, the first c sprs. yc ^R M om. wins. sunt "scorpiam: -puim corrected later fiA 18unam "lupam 20occassus 21 dieunt -nvaon -3 van sol a (Latine sprs. yc ^R) "Hibernia 25 Britaniae, the t sprs. yc /*R 26 spaco fiA spatio ,uR 27 sutu 2S Hispaniam
29angis 30pulueres 31 seuo lapilos fiA 32 nearly a whole lint
of writing, probably written in error, erased here. 33 Aegipti Faraonis 31 fuit sprs. yc juR 35 Neli ux(or sprs. yc. /iR) 38 Foeni 3T Faisiseo pA 38 Scotiorum /j.a 39 corpoire 40 s<-isi " acules ferres fiA acnleis
feraeis /xR 42 stimate 43 Heri /iA Hereo ^R ** dana "h-ioribus pA
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 165
of the foregoing book down to this, ut dicit historia. The island of Ireland is situated in the west; as the Paradise of Adam is situated on the southern coast of the east, so Ireland is in the northern portion, toward the west. Those lands are as similar by nature, as they are similar by their positions on the earth : for as Paradise hath no noxious beast, so the learned testify that Ireland hath no serpent, lion, toad, injurious rat, dragon, scorpion, nor any hurtful beast, save only the wolf. And so Ireland is called "the island of the west" : "Hyberoc"(70 in Greek is called "occasum" in Latin; 'nia' or 'nyon' in Greek is called "insula" in Latin. [Now Hibernia is next to the island of Britannia : in extent of territory it is narrower, but in soil it is more fertile. This stretches northward from Africa, and its foremost parts tend toward Iberia, I that is, Spain j and the Bay of Biscay; whence also Hibernia takes its name. It is called Scotia also, because it is inhabited by the nations of the Scots. Within it is no serpent, rare bird, nor bees; to such an extent — } not at this time j — that if anyone were to scatter in any place amongst beehives dust or gravel carried from thence, the swarms would desert the honeycombs.] [The Scoti are named from Scota, daughter of Pharao King of Egypt, who was wife of Nelius : J They are called Feni from Fenius Farsaid { . The Scots are the same as the Picts, so called from their painted body, j as though scissi ! , inasmuch as they are marked with an impression of a variety of devices by means of iron needles and ink.] Moreover the country is called Eriu from the heroes. [Let him who readeth perspire !]
46 this is a gloss, marginal in /iA expressed by initials s.q.l. in /mR, s-.q1. 1;. in nA
(a) Read spatio. (6) Read haec.
(c) Read Hiberiam, and omit the preceding in.
(d) Read Scotia autem, quia ab Scotorum gentibus cohtur, appellata. (e) Read apis. (/) Read pulueres. (fiO Read aluearia.
(/t) The final c must be read as a Greek_ sigma : ' hyberoc is meant tor eantpos. as ' nyon ' for vrtffov , accusative of vi)aos.
166 SECTION I.— FROM THE CREATION TO
102. o lthrib maeaib 2N6i tra ro Hnait tri 3ranna in talman, .i. Eorpa, "Affricca, Assia. Sem mac 5Noe dana rogab 6ind Aissia, i secht eenela fichit 7fiad innti. Cam in "Affraicc i tricha 9cenel iiadh 10inte. "Iafeth 1!mac Noi 13ind Eoraip i 14in tiiaiscert Aissia, 15i coic ltcenela dec 17tiad intib : de quibus hoc 18carmen,
Sem rogab i n-Aisia n-ait . . . Tricha mac min monar ngle . . .
0 Iafeth dana in t-airter-19thnascert 20.i. Scithecda i Armenndai, i lucht na 21Hassia Bicce i ergabala i 22cininda nEorpa nile, co lucht na 23n-indsi atait frie aness i attiaidh i aniar, 24i otha Sleibe 25Riphi atuaidh co 26traigh na Hespaine. Ocht meic 27tra la Iafetli, 2&.i. Magoth — ba se 29in t-ochtmadh mac. Da mac 3f,dono la 31Magoch .i. 32Ibadh i Baath. O 33Ibadh larom rig Roman. Mac dono 34do Baadli, Fenius 3r,Farrsaid 5 36fnilet Scithecda, i 37dia sil Gaidil. O Ibad 38Fraincc, Romain, Saxain, i Brettain i Albandai. O Magoch mac Iafeth 39didiu, na tuatha rogabsat Erinn rla 40nGaidelaib, .i. 41Parthal6n mac 42Sera meic Sru meic Esru meic 43Briamin meic Fathecht meic 44Baaidh meic 45Magoch meic Iafeth meic Noe : Nemed mac 46Adlmomain dana meic Phaim meic Thait meic 47Sera meic Sru : i clanna 48Nemhid, .i. Gaileoin i Fir 49Bolgc - Fir Domnann. De quibus 50Finntan cecinit,
Magog mac an Iafetli.
102. ' tri - Noe 8 randa an 4 -\ Africa i Assia 5 Nae tra e in Assia 7 uada innte 8 Affraic 9 gen uada 10 om. " Iaf edh /iA 12 om. mac Noi 13 in Eoraip " om. in 15om. -\ " gn in
both mss. " uada inntib 1S cairmen ,9 tuaisc- -" om. .i. :
Scithecdai -\ Armendai 21 Haisia Bice 22 cineda na Heorpa uili :
ciniuda miswritten cinuida /j.a, and a dash put over the first stroke of the u to correct the error 23ninnsi tainait fria anes i atuaith
THE DISPERSAL OF THE NATIONS. 167
102. Now of the three sons of Noe were filled the three divisions of the earth, Europe, Africa, Asia. Sem s. Noe .settled in Asia, and twenty-seven nations were descended from him therein. Ham in Africa, and thirty nations from him therein. Iafeth s. Noe in Europe and in the north of Asia, and fifteen nations from him therein : de quibus hoc carmen,
Poem no. II. Poem no. III.
From Iafeth is the north east, Scythians, Armenians, and the people of Asia Minor, and the colonists and nations of all Europe, with the people of the islands tiiat are over against it from the south, north, and west, and from the Riphean Mountain out of the north to the shore of Spain. Iafeth had eight sons, one of whom was Magog : he was the eighth son. Magog had two sons, Ibath and Baath. From Ibath afterwards came the rulers of the Romans. Baath had a son Fenius Farsaid, from whom are the Scythians : of his ,seed is Gaedil. From Ibath are the Franks, Romans, Saxons, Britons, and Albanians. From Magog son of Iafeth are the peoples who took Ireland before the Gaedil, Partholon s. Sera s. Sru s. Esru s. Braiment s. Aithech s. Baath s. Magog s. Iafeth s. Noe : Nemed s. Agnomain s. Paim ,s. Tait s. Sera s. Sru : and the progeny of Nemed, the Gaileoin, the Fir Bolg, and the Fir Domnann. De quibus Finntan cecinit,
Poem no. IV.
24 om. i 25 Eipe atuaid 26 traig (g sprs. yc fiR) na Haespaine
27 om. tra la 28 1 Magoeh 2D an tochtmad (om. mac) 30 om. dono 31 Bmagoc 32 Baad i Ibad 33 Ibad 34 da Baad 35 Farsaich
36 f uil 37 ins. is ** Frainc i Eomain i S. i Bretain i Albanda
3<> om. didiu 40 uGaidil- and om. A. : nGail- fi.A 41 Partol- 42 Soera 43 Bramin 44 Baaid 45 Magoich 46 Agnomain m. Paim m. Tait
47 Sera m. Stera m. Stru 48 Nemid 49 Bole 50 hoe carmen dicitur Finntan the last two words in marg.
168 THE VERSE TEXTS
THE VERSE TEXTS OF SECTION I.
R1U7(L1/38:F1/S 28). R2 ff 15 (V 1 y 23 : E 1 (3 38 PljS 32). R3 H 88 (/3 34, 14 : /31 34 . 30 : /32 10 . 15 M 267 y 47 : H 102 a 30).
1. 1Sluag nad 2chloe 3cua-diel,
4Noe 5nir 6bo 7iiiath-len, 8seel 9co 10ngrain lxro glead ger — i 12Sem, Cam ocus 13Iafeth.
2. 1Mna 2cen 3midend, 4mor-feba,
os dilind 5cen 6dibada ; 7Coba, 8brlgda 9in 10bain-ela, "Olla, 1201iua, Olluana.
1. ] sluaig FR3 H sluagh V sluacc P 2 claoi EP clile ft012 clae MH 3 gua-chel LR2 ecnad chel F conad chel M conadachel H 4 ins.
ac M, ag H : Naoi E Nai P Nae MH B nior (30i- 6 ba L bu V
bho (3 bhodh /312 7 miad-len LR3 midathlen F niath-nel VE matha-nel P niadh-len /3012 8 sgel FE sec P seeal /3on 9 gan /312 J0 ngradh
VE ngrad P ghradh /3012 u ro gleaid F rongleath gen V rogle gen
E rongleadh gen P ro gleodhagh and om. ger /3012 12 S. is C. is I. F
II.
R1 ff 8 (L 1 (3 14 : F 1 y 2). Min fl 102 (MA 25 S 23 ; is. R 91 a 23). R3 ff 89 (/3 34 . 29 : (31 34 . 47 : (32 10 . 29 : M 267 8 15 : H 102 a 39).
1Sem 2rogab 3i 4n-Aisia n-ait ;
5Cam 6eona 7chlaind 8sin 9Afraie ; 10
10Iafeth nasal "is a 12maic,
13'siat rogabsat 14i n-Eoraip.
1 Semh ft 2 dogab F /iA H rogab dittographed fiU roghabh /J012
2 rogob M 3 ind fiA an ft H inn ft12 4 n-Assia L Aissia F nA ft H
Asia fiR ft12 5 Camh ft 8 gonadh ft1 .i. ft2 7 claind L elainn /*R
cl- fiA H cloinn ft chloinn ft1 clann (32 cloind M 8 in /iA /iR san
OF SECTION I. 169
THE VERSE TEXTS OF SECTION I.
I.
1. A host that a wintry death would not subdue, Noe, there was no hero's weakness,
a story with horror has been made clear with
keenness — Sem, Ham, and Iafeth.
2. Women without evil colour, great excellences, above the Flood without extinctions,
Coba, vigorous was the wThite swan, Olla, Oliva, Olivana.
/3012 H 13 Iaf edh V Semh Camli (i yc) Iataf en E Iaphet /312 (not /J)
Iathfeth M
2. 1 mnaa L 2 ccomtin P, gen /? gan /?12 can H 3 rnideng F
midhen (i mhidhen /312 mieing H 4 moreua F mor'feba V moff eabha
E morfephai, P nior Ebha /3 nior Ebha /J1' nior obha [i2 moreba M moireaba H 5 gan EP /3012 can H 6 di'gbada VH dibhada /3
diobhadha /312 7 Cobba L Cobha E /3012 8 brighdha VP brigha /3
brioghdha /312 brig H 9 an H 10 baneala FE banela V mbaineala E banealai P baneala /3 ben aladh /?12 " Ola changed oy re-inker to
Ollai, P M Oliba Olibana L Olliua Oilibana E Olipa Olipa P Oliua
Oliuana ft Olliva Olivana fi1 Oilliua Olivana (5- Oliba Olibana M Oliu Olibana H
II.
Sem settled in pleasant Asia; Ham with his progeny in Africa ; noble Iafeth and his sons, it is they who settled in Europe.
/301 H ann /32 sa nAf raic M 9 Affraicc L ^A Adffraic F Aif raie ft1
Aifric /32 Afraicc H 10 Iafiath F Iafedh /j.a Iaphet /301 Iathfed M
11 om. is fiU 12 mc F, mcc fiA meie /xR M mhac /?012 13 is iad
dogab sin F hite rotrebsat fiA ite rotrebsat /xB, is iad roghabhsat Eoraip /3012 (roghabh in Euroip /301) is iad rogob an MH (dogab an H) " sin Eoraip F : om. in /zA
170 THE VERSE TEXTS
III.
R1 P {not traceable, in L : F 1 y 10). Min fll02 (fx\ 25 S 25 ; fj. R 91 a 25). R3 fl 92 {/3 34 . 43 : /31 35 . 14 : 02 11 . 11 : M 267 S 38 : H 102 /? 19).
1Triclia 2mac 3mm, 4monar2 ngle,
5cinsit 6 6Cham 7mac 8Nae,
a 9secht 10fichit "fil 6 12Sem, 15
13is a 14coic dec 5 15Iafeth.
1 Triocha /? triothchat (312 (-ad /32) =-= cenel comul ,uA clienel
comol fiR 3 mind F 4 is rad MH 5 cinnsit F einset uR /312
IV.
R1 ff 10 (L first two and half quatrains frayed away
1 (3 47 : F 1 8 8). Min ff 102 (pA 25 8 42 : ^R 91 /? 10).
R3 ff 95, 100 (0 35 . 14 : iS1 35 . 30 : (32 11 . 31 : M 268 a 35 : H 99 a 50).
1. 2Magog 2mac an 3Iafeth,
4ata cinnti a 5chland : 6dlb 7Parthalon sBanba,
9ro bo 10chadla a "band. 20
2. Ba 2dib 2Nemed 3noithech,
mac 4Agnomain 5oen : 6ba dib 7Gand, 8dib 9Genand, 10Sengand, "Slaine 12soer.
3. 1 Gland 2Eladan 3imda, 25
4fa dib 5Bres, 6can breig : mac 7Eladan 8arm-gaith,
9meic 10Delbaith "meic 12Neit.
1. J Magoth LF Magoch Min Magoc MH 2 mhac /?* 3 Iaphet /312 Iathfeth MH (in If 100) 4 ata cinti F atascinnte ftA ataiehinte /j,R ataithchinte f3 atait chinte /31 tait cinte (32 ad aithindti M adaithinti H 5 chlann F Min /31 claim /302 e ins. ropa itR : dibh /3 diobh /312 ' Parrtolonn F Parrthalon ftA /312 MH Partolon /iR Partaloin /3 8 Bannbha /3 Banbha /312 " do bo F ro po fiA ro ba fiR do bu fi012 do ba H 10 chahna nA cadla /xR acadla /312 " bans F Min bhand /3 bhann /?12
2. » dhibh (3 diobh /312 2 Nemid F /xR H Nemedh txA Neimheadh f30i2 Nemead M 3 naethach F naitech (iA noethech xtR naethoach /3012 (-ach /?12) noitheach M naideach H 4 Agnumaid F Adnomain xtA H
OF SECTION I. 171
III.
Thirty sleek sons, a brilliant fact, they sprang from Ham son of Noc, twenty-seven who are from Sem, and fifteen from Iafeth.
chinsiat /J cinsed M cinnsed H 6 Cam /*R ' nice fiA 8 Noe
/uA/«R /?012 Naee H ° ocht /^R seacht H 10 fidhchet (31 fidhet [i2
11 ar sin F uad o Sem /iA,uR (uadh Ma) fuil /3012 dib H 12 Sem /301 /uA M 13 om. is F /xA M in ft012 H " .u. deg F do dee /iR cuig deag /? cuig
deg /?12 H euic decc M 15 Iafedh /*A Iaphet /31 Japhet (I2 Iatf edh M
IV.
1. Magog son of Iafeth,
there is certainty of his progeny : of them was Parthalon of Banba — decorous was his achievement.
2. Of them was noble Nemed son of Agnomain, unique ;
of them were Gand and Genand, Sengand, free Slaine.
3. The numerous progeny of Elada, of them wra-s Bres, no untruth : son of Elada. expert in arms, son of Delbaeth son of Net.
Agnomhain /312 Agnomen M 5 aen F fiA ain y8012 aein H e om. ba
dib /xR: ba dhibh j3 ba diobh /?12 7 Gann F fiU ft12 8 is ^'dibh /? diobh /312 9 Genan F Genann fiA Gaenann ,uR Ganann /312 10 Seangann /iA Sengann fiU M Seangand /? H Sengan /?12 " Slaigne /31 Slaingne
j82 Slaene M Slane H 12 saer F fiA MH saor jS012
3. a clann F /3012 clanna ^R elanda H 2 Eladhan F Ealadain
tiA P1 M Elatha fiR Ealadhain /302 3 imdha fiA [i iomdha /312 : om. /xR 4 ba Min (3012 H 5 Bress Min Breas /3 M 6 gan breicc /xA cen
breic jttR gan bhreig /3012 (br- /32) cen breg M 7 Eladain fiA M
Elathain /*R Eladhain /3 Ealadhain /312 8 'felgaith /j,A -ghaith /?12
9mhic /312 "Delbaeith ^R Dealbhaidh /301 Dealbaith ($2 MH (-dh /32) 51 mic /3012 (mh- /31) Neid FH fi 12 Neitt fiA
172 THE VERSE TEXTS
4. ^leic 2Indai 3meic 4Alldai —
5Allda 6ba 7mac 8Tait, 30
9meic 10Thabuirn "meic 12Eno, "meic 13Baith, "Ebaith 15ait.
5. ^feic 2Bethaig', 3meic 4Iardain,
5meic 6Nemid 7hm 8Phaim : 9Paimp 10meic "Thait 12meic 13Sera 35
14meic 15Sru, 16Braimin 17bain.15
6. 1Braimin 2meic 3Aithechta
4meic 5Mago>g, 6mor 7blad, 8ro-bas a n-a 9n-aimsir
"comthaidbsin uri 12Mag. 40
4. 1 mac /3012 2 Innui L Indui /tA Inndui fiR India f312 3 mac (3 mic f312 4 Alldui L pR Allai F fiA MH Alia (3on 5 Alldui L Min Alii F Allai fi MH Allaidh /312 6 fa MH 7 nice /j.a 8 Taitt L /xA Taid /? 9mic 0°" 10 Thabairnn F Tabuirn fiA Tabuirnn /xU Tabairn /3012 Thabairn M " mic /3 mhic /?12 (bis) 12 sic LF Ceno Min, Enna (3 H Eanna /312 Enda M 13 Baath L /312 Baaith /j.a (3 MH Baaid /*R 14i?is. meic L Min MH, mic (3 mhic /312 : Ebath L Ebaid F Ibaith fiA Magoich /iR Ebhaith (3 Eabhaith /312 15aitt L HA H Baaith fiR
5. 1 om. meic Min; mac /3 mhic /312 2 Beothaig FM Bethach Min, Beothaigh /302 Beothagh /?* 3 ins. ba Min; mac Min mic j3012 4 Iarbaneoil /xA Iarboneol /iR Iarbhoneoil (3 Iarbonel f32 -boneil M -boinel H 5 mic /3012 (mh- /31) G Neimid FM Neimhidh (3 Neimlied /31 -mhedh (32 'lioLoF hua fiA ua /?n'2 hu M 8 Paimp LF Paim /uR M Phaimp (3 Poimp /?12 9Paim L (yc in marg.), also tiA MH Paimp (3 Poimp /312 10 mac (3012 (mh- [3') u Thaitt L
R2 II IS (V 1 5 9 : E 1 y 21 : P 2 a 13 : D from quatrain 10, 3 a 1). R3 IT 86 (M 267 a 1 : H 101 a 36). AZso collated, copy in Book of Ui Ma.ine (U) 38 a 24.
1. 1Athair 2caich, 3Coimsid 4Nime,
5in Ri 6uasal 7ainglige3 ar 8Ctiingid, ar 9Coimde, ar 10Cend "cen 12ttis, cen erlch, een 13forcend.
1. 1 atair TJ 2 chaich M eaith U 3 coimsidh (the second i
and the dot of the d due to re-imker) P coimsich M coimsig H 4 nimi
OF SECTION I. 173
4. S. Inda, s. Allda— Allda who was s. Tat, s. Tabam s. Enda,
s. Baath, [son of] pleasant Ibath.
5. S. Bethach s. Iardan
s. Nemed grandson of Paimp :
Pamp s. Tat s. Sera
s. Sru s. white Braiment.
6- Of Braiment s. Aithecht,
s. Magog, great in renown : there happened in their time a joint appearance against a Plain.
Tait F /*R /312 H Taitt ^A Taid fi 12 mic /3012 1S Sera M
Seara /3 H Serra /312 " om. meic /xA : inac ft mic /312 15-15 Easru
ain ft2 16 ins. meic L /iB M H, mac [i : Bimbfind F Esru Min H
Easra /? Easru M " briaim fiA ain MH.
6. 1 ins. mac j8 mic /?12 meic MH : Braimid F Briamin lia Briamain /xB Braimint /3 Fraimint /31 Froimint /32 Praimint MH -ins. ba F Min : mac F Min ft, mic /312 : ba mac dittographed, /iR 3 Fattecht L Aithiehta F Fathecht fiA Baaith /*R Eachachda /?012 (-dha /3) Eachada M 4 mac /3 mhic /31 mic /32 5 Magoth LF (3 Magoch Min Magoc MH ems. ba L : moir /3 7 ins. a /3012 : bladh ^a /302 blath fi1 8 robasa nanamsir L ro bassa riana [i expimcted] naimsir /iR ro pass ria naimsir ix A ro ba sona a naimsir /3012 (sona in naimsear /?) ; do FM, da bas ina H ina also M 9 om. n- FM (amsir F) 10 comthadbsin L comthaibsin F co taidhbsin ria mag lla oca taibsin dar mag /iR com thaibhsen /? gon dubh sin a reimed /312 comthaibsib M comtaib (with sin sprs. yc) H 31 re F R3 12 Magh /?
V.
1. Father of all, Master of Heaven,
the noble angelic King, our Champion, our Lord, our Head, without beginning, end, or termination.
HU 5 mac maith Muire ingine M an ri H 6 uassal E 7 -de E
-ghe P -dhi H -ghi U s cuindigh V,, cuinnidh E cuinge (written over and defacing another word) P cuingidh U 9 coimdhi V, -dhe E
-gi M -di H coimsid U 10 cenn M ceand U u gan PU, can H
(throughout the line) 12 tuis E " f oircenn P foircenn M
forceand U
174 THE VERSE TEXTS
2. aFerr na 2cach rl 3in 4RI 5raith 45 6lasndernad 7in 8maiss mor-maith,
°grada 10Nime, "caem. in cloth, 12araen 13issin 14cet Domnoch.
3. 1Delbais secht znime 3sin Ltian,
sin Mairt muir, 4talum 5tond-buan ; 50
6sin 7Chetain, 8esca is 8grein 10ngie ; "neoil 12is eoin 13Dia 14Dardaine.
4. Duine 1ro 2delbad iarsin, 3debrad ! 4isin 5n-Aenditin, —
6tucad, 7etir 8cliois is 9cend, , 55
10assin 11doman 12caem 13coitchend.
5. :Gnionirad in 2tseisedh 3laoi lain, 4aisneidfed duibh sin r'deg-dail, anmann' in talman, thiar tair,
an deilb Gn-ill-dathaig 7nAdhaim. 60
6. aCend 2Adaim "airdirc co 4hogi 5tuead a tir maith Malon :
6is 7tairis 8tegaid amach
9srotha 10Parrduis "co 12bladach.
7. 1Bruinde 2ind 3Iir 4Haroin 5aird, 65 6a 7bra a 8Baibiloin 9bith-gairg,
a 10chossa a "Labaan 12ler-bla, a 13sliasta 14a tir 156ogoma.
2. 1maraid dogres MU (-raigh U), fear H 2 gach EP 3an P 4 rig MU 5 rath U e lassnernadh V lasndernadh E lasandernad PU (written over another word P) lasnderna MH (-san- M) ' an H 8 mais EPM om. U 9 gradha VPU 10 nimi EU " coemda cloth VEP (caemda E caomdha P), caem a cloth HU 12 maraen EMHU araon P 13 isin E isin PHU isa M 14 diet E cedomnach H domnach PU
3. Mealbais PMH -nimi HU 3 sind VE isin P san H 4 talom E, -am MH 5 tonn- VEPH 6 sa VH san P 7 cet- PU chedain M 8 escca P 9 grian VEPMHU 10 n- om. VEHU
11 neoill MH niuil EU. In U written over something else, apparently nuiil i:iM " om. dfia MU 14 -aeine E -aoine P diard- MU
4. 'raH 2 dealbad EMH dhealbadh P 3 debradh EP dearbad M deadbrad U 4 isind E isa M isan H 5 aoindidin E n-aoine didin P aendidin HU naindidin M ° tucadh V tugadh EU tuccad P 7 itir EMH 8 cois EPU 9 cheand M chend H ceand U 10 asin E (the a yc E) isin PMU issin H " domhan E domun MH
12 chaem VMH caom EP (-nih P) caem U 13 coitchenn VEP choitchenn H choitchend M choitceand U
OF SECTION I. 175
2. Better than every King is the King of Grace
by whom was made the great excellent world-stuff, the orders of Heaven, fair the fame, together on the first Sunday.
3. He formed the seven heavens on the Monday,
on the Tuesday sea, earth with enduring surface; on the Wednesday, moon and bright sun ; clouds and birds on Thursday.
4. Man, who was formed thereafter, Debrad ! on the Friday,- —
he was taken, from foot to head, out of the fair common earth.
5. The works of the full sixth day
I shall relate to you in (this) good company;
[I shall tell of] the beasts of the earth, west and east,
of the form of Adam, rich in colour.
6. The head of renowned Adam perfectly was taken from the good land of Malon : through which go forth
the rivers of Paradise famously.
7. The breast of the man from lofty Aron, his belly from ever-fierce Babylon,
his legs from Laban, a conspicuous land, his thighs from the country of GTogoma.
5. this quatrain in EP only : printed as in E, these variants from P : J gnimrad 2 -sed 3 lai 4 aisneidhfit 5 deghaill 6 nillath- 7 nAdhuim
6. 1 tucad (tugudh U) cend (ceand U) Adaim co hog || a fearand (-und U) molfach (molbthach U) Malon (Molon U) MU : ceand H 2 Adhaim E, Aduim P 3 oirdaircc V airrdeirc E airrdirc P airrdhirc H (the mark of lenition scratched out) 4hogh PH "tucadh P eom. U T the is sprs. yo E 8tec(ad) V tecaid MH tegait U 0 srotha V (the a yc V) srota P 10 Parrthais V Parduis E Partais P Parrthuis H Parrthais U "go E 12 bhladhaeh P blatach U
7. a bruinne E bruindi PHMU 2 an MH in U 3 fir EPU 4 Haron EH Haraib M Hardon U 5 ard EU also H, but an i sis. yc H 6 a sbs yc E 7 pru P 8 Biblon E Lotain M Babilon U 9-garg EU lan-gairg M "cosa E lama MU "Laban EMHU 12 leir mbla E leir bla H erbla U 13 sliasda E : chosa M, lama H cosa U "i II 15 Goghoma V Gagoma E Gogomah- (no Gomaa sec. man. in matrg.) P Gomaa M Gouma H Gogama U
176 THE VERSE TEXTS
8. Tri H-rath 2d'Adum 3een 4anmain
5Iar n-a 6chruthugud 7do 8talmain; 70
9ardaig 10Fiv "do 12bai tri trath
13cen 14anmain n-a 15ehurp "ehaem-gnath.
9. irrriar 2ro 3chrathaig a 4chorp 5cain 6Iar 7n-erge do n-a 8bethaid,
9allus 10d'usce, lxba dia deoin,11 75'
12tess 13tened, 14tinfed 15aeoir.
10. *Adaig 2Adaim fial 3in 4feth
sair 5ar 6sleib 7Parrduis 8Partech; 9ro 10altuig "faicsin 12greine
13tarO) mullach 14in mor-15sleibe. 80
11. 1Adraim, adraim 2thusa, a 3De ! — 4is e 5cet-guth 6do 7raid 8se :
9ac faicsin 10Eua 11ame,
12and 13dorigne 14a 15chet-gaire.
12. 1A chet-imtheeht, 2caine guis 85 3co 4tobar 5Pairtech 6Parrduis:
a 7chet-rith, 8rem 9co ndaithe, do 10dechsain na 11henlaithe.
8. ' thrath VMH tra U 2 d 'Adamli E d 'Adam M d 'Adham U 3 gan EPU 4 anmuin H !ar U 6 cruth E chruthad P cruthadh U chruthugud M : other mss. have cruth- ' don M ar HU
8 ins. trom EP : thai- E talmhuin P 9 -igh EPU 10 fir PU 11 ro VEP da U " baoi E boi P bhi U 13 gan EPU can H 14 anmuin PH 15 corp E chorp H 3G caomhgnath E caomgnath P chaemnar M chaemngnath H comgnath U
9. ] ceathrar M 2 om. ro M ; do H dar U 3 cruth- E erathaidchi M cruthaidh H cruthad U 4 corp EPU chuii-p M 5 choin M 6 ar U 7 n-erghi V neirge dlio E neirge do P nergi M neirgi HU s bethaigh V beathoid M bhethaid HU
9 ins. a U 10 dusqi E duisqe P is uisqi M duisqi H """ f odein M badeoid U 12 tes VEMH teass P teas U " tenidili V teinf edh E tineth P tinedh H tenead U 14 tinfedh V teinfedh E tinfeadh U ,;aieoir P aiger M: the e written over another letter H
10. 1 aiged EH ace P aidheadh U 2 Adhaim EU Adaimh P 3 a EHU 4 feith P 5 fri VEPH 6 Sliab VEP (bh EP) MHU ' -dhuis E -tais P -dais M -thuis H dhais U 8 pairtech E ft:ich P partiach U 9 ra H 10 atlaig E alt- P altaig MH failtigh U " ins. ag EP : aigsin E aicsin P faisci U ,2 grene
OF SECTION I. 177
8. Three days had Adam without life after his formation from earth ; because of a Man who was three days without life in His ever-fair body.
9. There were Three Persons who formed his fair
body after he arose alive;
sweat from water, it was with his good will, hea,t of fire, breath of air.
10. The night of Adam, generous the repose, eastward upon Pairtech Mountain of Paradise; he welcomed the sight of the sun
over the top of the great mountain.
11. I adore, I adore Thee, 0 God!—
this was the first word that he uttered : When he saw noble Eve, then he made his first laugh.
12. His first walk — beauty of strength — to the Spring of Partech of Paradise : his first race, a course with swiftness, • to see the birds.
VMH greini P in ngreni U " dar VEDUH do M M an EPH
15 sleibhe E slebe DM sleiphe P slebi H sleibi U
11. * adram adraim E adhrum adhrum T7 2 tu VEPMTJ tusa D tliusu H 3 Dhe, lenition mark faded D 4 hiss V iss ED hise P is H 5 toisech VEPD ced guth M toiseach H 6 ro DU 7 raidh EU 8 se E 9 hie aiscin VD ic aisgin E ac f aicsin PM hie aicsin H ig f aigsin U 10 Ebha E Eba M " ane V ainee E aille M ailli HU 12 ann DH 13 dorinde E dorindi M dorine H doriglmi U "in D 15 ced EDH ched PM : gam H
12. ] chetna V died EM ced P : imtecht EP imdhecht U 2 caine guiss V cain aguis M caini uiss II lith gan geis U 3 go DU 4 topur VE top- PDH tobor U 5 prech PD -each V paitrech EH pairtiach M parrtiach U 6 partuis V parrdais E pairt'ais P parduis D parrthuis H parrthais U 7 ced E cheit D ched PM 8 rem VDM reim EP ceim U 9 condaithi D co ndaite P conaichi M conaithi H condhaithe U 10 descain E dechsinn P descuin D decain U " haenlaithe P -laithi D henlaithi MH
(a) Here D begins. L.6. — VOL. I. N
178 THE VERSE TEXTS
13. ^oic 2la 3dec, 4nl 5luad 6saeb,
d'7Adam is d'8Eua 9maraen, 90
eo 10toracht "demon 12donim "dia 14saigid 15i 16nAenditin.
14. 1Delb 2nathrach, corp 3aeoir 4seim 5tuc 6lois 7diabul 8sin 9droich-reim :
10litri X1tria§ 12ro chan, ni 13as llach, 95
14Iae, Uau, Iae 7 lath.
15. 1Ata 2sund 3in 4fath — 5rofess — ar a n-6apar : Cle 7sech 8dess : 9ar 10is I 11in 12lam 13chle chrom
i4ro isrjg6(j iGC0Sjn i7UDOii. 100
16. Iar 1n-imarbus 2doib — nir 3dlecht — 4ro 5laite 6i tir 7n-aird 8nEgept : 9remes 10tri "mis 12Iarsin maidm 13rusbiath 14ruseit 15ind aen-phailm.
17. aRo 2coimpred 3Cain, 4nir chlan; 105 5ro 6coimpred, 7rucad 8AbIal;
do Chain 9chrin 10in ixcaehta, 12ro len 13gnim na 14mallachta.
13. ] coig EP cuig H - laithe VE laithi PDH 3 deg EHU 'nocho M; ins. is U B luadh EP luag M slicht U «saobh E saob P saebh. U 7 Adum VH Adhum EU s Ebha E Eba PD Eu H 9 -aon EP -oen D 10 torracht EP tanic U " demun VH deaman E demhan P deman M 12 do uirnh E do uirri other mss. Perhaps to be read do[g]nim I3 da mellad MU " saighid V saicc P soig D : om. MU IS ind D san MH isin U 16 aondidiu E aoinedittin P oendidin D aindidin M aeudidin HU
14. ] dealb EPH dealbh U 2 natr- EPH 3 aer U 4 eim VH seim ED seimh P em M emh U ° tug E 6 les D 7 demin M diabal H demon U s co MH tre U 9 droch-reim VE drochmen P droichrem D ndrochmen M ndrochmein H droehmein U 10 littri V " tria ro can E triarrochan D trias archan M resar clian U 1!raH 13 is MU " la Ae Uau i Aiath mss. ; except Anath P, ia uau i en iach M iae, uau, iaiath U
15. 3 is he sin MU (e U) 2 sunn EPD 3 an H 4 fat U B ro-fes ED ro-feass P ro feas M ra-fess H rotfeas U 6 apur V abartor E apartar P abar MU ' seach MUH 8 des EHU deas PM thes D 9air P ardaig MHU (-gh U) ,0 issi VP as i E is hi M " an EPH 12 lamh EP laam D I3 chle ciom VH : cle chrom E
OF SECTION I. 179
13. Fifteen days, it is no idle tale, had Adam and Eve together, till a demon of misdeeds (?) reached them, on a Friday.
14. The form of a serpent, a body of thin air, the devil took to himself on the evil course :
the letters through which he made incantation — a
wretched affair — were He, Vav, He, and Yodh.
15. There is the reason — it is familiar — why men say "Left beyond right" : because it is the crooked left hand that was stretched to the apple.
16. After they had sinned — it was not lawful — they were cast into the lofty land of Egypt :
A space of three months after the transgression the one palm-tree fed and clothed them.
17. Cain was conceived, it was not long; Abel was conceived and brought to birth ; to withered Cain of the shackle
the deed of the curse adhered.
cle crom PU (crum P) clirom chle written first and then corrected D 14 do MH da U 15 righed P righeadh. U u 16 cossdn V cosind E
gusin PU cosa nuball H " ubhall E nup, expanded in marg. in
later hand nubhuill P ubaoll D uball M ubull IJ
16. ' ninarbus U 2 do P doibh U : two letters {apparently do) erased after this word H 3 drecht H 4 ra H 5 laithi VD laiti P late M laitea U 8 a MH 7 nairdd V nard EHU 8 nEighept V nEigept EH nEigep (sic) P Egeptt D 9 remiss V remis E reimeas P remess D 10 tri miss om. in text and ins. by late corrector in marg. V " mhis U 12 triasin V re sin H 13 rossbiath V rosbiath EU " roset E rosneit V rusneitli P rnsneid H roseith the marie of lenition erased U 15 in VEMU an PH aon pailm E aonpa with ilm added by corr. in marg. P oen pailm D naen-pailm M aen-phailm H aen-pailm UE
17. 'raH 2 choimp- D coimpread M coimbread U 3 Chain D 4 nir cian D ni chel M ni eel U 5 rucad ro coimpread M : ra H : 1 ru coimbread Abel U 6 coimpredh V com- E 7 rucadli VE ruccad P rugad D 8Aibial D Aibel M Abel IJ 9crin EPHU crich M 10 an H u cachtai P chachta DMH 12 roglen ED dolen M ralen H ronlen U 13 gnimh E 14 mallachtai D
180 THE VERSE TEXTS
18. ^otar d'2id(«)pairt da 3reithe
4 Abel, Cain 5nlr 6chleithe; 110
7nochor indraic 8leis in Rig 9in "idpairt lxruc 12leis 13Cain.
19. 1Taiiiie rath 2ruithne 3Rig *grian 5forsin 6idpairt 7ruc 8Aibial :
9de ro 10lln niformad 12is 13ferg J 15
Cain colacli na 14claen-cherd.
20. (&)1Rogab 2Cain n-a 3laim 4luind 5lecain 6cintaig 7in 8chamuill : 9co Haibel 10leim iaco 12hiindi,
13conid 14ro 15marb 16d'aen-17builli. 120
21. 1Tuc 2Seth a 3laim re 4lecain 5ac faicsin fola 6in 7phecaid : 8'se sin 9in fer 10cen "urchra arar 12fas in 13chet-ulcha.
22. ^dberait 2rind na 3heolaig, 125 lucht 4in 5ecnai il-6cheolaig,
nach 7iasait na 8clocha 6 9chein — 106'n 16 "rosfer fuil 12Aibeil.
18. 1 Lodar HU 2 idbairt E edbairt U 3 rethe D reithi H 4 Aibedl MH Anel U 5 ni MH gaai U 6 ehlethe D eleite E chleithi P cleithi H clethe U 7 nocho ro gab ri na rig DE (gaib D) nochar gab ri na rig P noar gab ri na rig M noclior indraice lasin ri H nocho rogab in rig rel U s Iptssin V s ind VE inn P 10 idipart E idbairt PD eadbairt U " rucc P rug M u leiss V lais P 18 Caen U
19. Jtanic VU tanuig D tanig H 2 ruitlini VPDH ruitni E ruithin M ruithen U 3 righ VE ri H rigrian IT 4 nel M 5 for ind VDM forand E form P foran H ar an U 6 edpairt VDH iopairt (sic) E inpairt P idbairt U : reithi M 7 rug ED 8 Abial \rPDH Aibel M Abel U 9 om. de M 10 lion E "f ormud V format PU 12 -] M " fearg VMU f errcc P 14 claen-redlig V claon-cerd E -redhg (no claoin-cerd mi marg.) P -redg D -cheard M -cealg XJ
20. 2 -gabh PU -gob M ragab H 2 Caidin P 3 laimh EP 1 luinn E: blind om. and sprs. cD 5 leea M lecea U 8 cintaieh VD -taigh E cMnntach P chintach M chintaig H ' an PH 8 ehamhaill E caraaill P chamuill H camhaill U 9eo Habial VEH co Hab. P
OF SECTION I. 181
18. They went to offer two rams, Abel, Cain who was not noble ; the King did not consider worthy
the offering which Cain brought with him.
19. There came the grace of the brilliance of the
King of Suns upon the offering which Abel brought : thence did envy and anger fill sinful Cain of the crooked crafts.
20. Cain took in his savage hand
the guilty jaw-bone of the camel; to Abel he leapt with violence, so that he slew him with a blow.
21. Seth set his hand to the jaw-bone, on seeing the blood of the sin : he is the man without deficiency upon whom the first beard grew.
22. The learned tell us,
the people of wisdom of manifold melody, that from a long time the stones grow not — ■„ from the day when Abel's blood suffused them.
go Haibial D go Habial H co Hauel U 10 lem DHU " go DU
12 luindie VEP luiruie D luindhi U " conadh EP -ad MHU M ra H
15mharb EH marbh PIT 10 do en V d'aon E d'en PH d'oen D
17 buille VED bhuilli P bulle U
21. This quatrain is here im EP, follows no. 32 in M, and is absent from all the other mss. ' tig E 2 Seith. EP 3 lamh EP lam M 4 ins. a E 5 ar bf aigsin E ag f aigsin P 6 an P 7 pee. E pecaig M 8 sin fen (f ein P) in fer (fear M) PM 9 an E 10 gan E can M : in P another word has teen re-inked into can " urcra mss. 12 fas P "ced-nlcai E cet-ulchai P
22. » atberait VU adberad E atberuit D adbearaid MH 2 rinn PD 3 -aigh VU 4 ind VD an EPH na MIT 5 egna E egno (written egl-) P ecna DH heagna M hegna U 6 ceolaigh E ceol- P hil-cheolaich. D -cheolaich M -eheclaigh U 7 hassait V na hasad E asait P assuitt D nach f asaid M hassaid H f asait TJ 8 cloca U 9 cein P chen M chein, the i expuncted U 10 o rasben riu M o da ben riu U 11 rosben ED 12 Abel VTJ AbeU PH
(a) j2 M here. (6) s1 M here resumes.
182 THE VERSE TEXTS
23. 1Rogabsat 2secht 3ccnuic *iar sain
5for 6Cain, 7iarsin 8fingail ; 130
9cnoc 10eechtar a 31da 12chos 13cain, "is da 15chnoc 16for a 17lamaib.
24. aCnoc 2ina 3etan, 4mo ntiar,
is 5cnoc 6cechtar a da 7gruad :
8tar <Jchnoc 10a etain, nro-12lIach, 135
12 jn i3j._llDaii 14tarlaic 15Laimiach.
25. ^aimlach 2digamus 3cen 4gai is 5e cet-fer Gthuc 7da 8mnai : 9leis 10dorochair "Cain 12crom
13dia 14tarlaic 15fair in 16uboll. 140
26. Da mac ^aimiach, 2laechda a 3mbrlg, Iubal 4is 5Tubalchain :
Iubal fuair 6cruit in 7cara, 8Tubalehain 9in cet-10goba.
27. ^dpairt 2Abeii, mar 3adclos 145 4rucad Mia °eis 7i 8Parrdos;
9is e 10sin aiin 12rethe 13ran
14tucad 15dar 16cenn mac 17nApram.
23. ]-sad VEMH ragab- H 2 seacht M 3 cnuice V cnuic EPDMH cnuicli U 4 -sin EMPU -soin D 5 ar MU 6 Chain VMH Caidhin P 7 isin EH iarsan P tresin U s iarsindinguil, with f yc above the d D bhfingail P r'iugail H fingal U " cnocc VH 10 chechtar M cecthar U " dha VEU I2 choss V chos E cos PU 18 choin M chain H 14 1 EDMU 15 cnoc EPU te na EDM ar a U 17 lamhaibh VE lamhaiph P
24. 1 cnocc VH 2 ara M 3 edan EMHU 4 munuar V monnuar E manuar UM 5 cnocc H 6 ceachtar M 7 gruadh VEPU 8 dar VEPH ar U 9 cnoc VEDUM clinocc P cnocc H ,0 an edain E ind etuin D in edain M a edain HU " ra H 12 liadh E Had D 12 a E an H 13 tubull V tubhall EP turchur U M tarluic D ro thelg M ra thilg H ro theilg U 35 Laimhfiach E Laimfiach P marg. Lamiach DU
25. 2 Lamiach VEU Laimfiach P 2 dighamuiss D diamus M bigamus U 3 gan PD can H : co mbrig U 4 goe E gaoi P 8 he cet fer V cet fer also E : fear M 6 tuc VPU tucc E tug D thug H 7 dda E 8 mnaoi P 9 lais VEPH les IT J0 adrochair M
OF SECTION I. 183
23. After that seven wens took hold upon Cain, after the kin-murder : a wen [upon] each of his fair feet, and two wens upon his hands.
24. A wen in his forehead, alas,
and a wen [upon J eacli of his cheeks : through the wen of his forehead, very
wretched ! [went] the apple which Lamech cast.
25. Lamech the two-spoused, without falsehood, he is the first man who took two wives :
by him did crooked Cain fall, after he cast the apple upon him.
26. The two sons of Lamech, valiant their
strength, Iubal and Tubalcain : Iubal invented harps of music ( ?), Tubalcain was the first smith.
27. The offering of Abel, as it hath been heard, was taken after him into Paradise ;
that is the very splendid ram which was given in place of the sons (sic) of Abram.
adroeair U " Caidliin P 12 cromni E crum P 13 ar arde
arlaig in tubull U M tarlaicc E -luig D -laig H 15 aire D
10 ind ubull E ubhull P tuboll D tuball M diub. H
26. 1 Lamiacli EU Laimli- P 2 laocdha P loechda D laech co mbrig M laeelidlia U 3 mbrigh VEPDU * sic EU, -\ all other mss. 5 Tupcai P (bis) Tubalclroein D Tubalcain U 6 chruit D 7 eharae E carui P 8 Tubalcain {a stroke through the stem of the b) U " om. E, an HP 30 gaba VDHU gabae E gabhadli P
27. * hedp- E eadhp- P hedb- PD edb- M eadb- U 2 Aibeil DH Aibel M Abliel U 3 atcloss V adcloss E atclos PD daclos M doclos HU 4 rucadn V ruccad E rucad P rugad DU 5 da MU 6 lies V ess DesU » hi VEPD a HU 8 Pardos VD Pardoss E Parrtos H Parrtus HU 9 ins. -\ U : is hessin V isse P liise D : hessin {om. is) H 10 om. sin U " an PH 12 reithe EP reithi MH 13 rain H 14 tucadh V tucead EP tugad D !SarM tar HU 10 cend EHU " nAbram VDPM Abrara {om. n-) EU, nApraim H
184 THE VERSE TEXTS
28. 1Crocenn 2ind 3rethe sin rlam
4riacht 5d 'Abram iar Bn Abial : 150
7itches 8im Crist 9cen inchinaid, 1Jic 12fosaic 13dla 14desciplaib.
29. Daisia fa sead ainm lin chroind co 2torad n-imda n-aloind,
3a Muig Aron a 4Parrdus — 155
dia 5ndernad 6in 7t-imarbus.
30. XA hocht cethrachat 2noi cet is 3mile, ni 4himarbrecc,
5 re 5ind 6Adaim 7chetna scain
9co 10Hapram. "cossin 12n-athair. 160
31. 1Tricha 2noi cet 3bliadan 4mban 5saegal 6Adaim 7ria imrad : deich 8mbliadan, 9risin 10uile, "saegal 12a mna 13mong-buide.
32. ^aegal 2Seith 3is col Mam 5sin 165 a 6cuig dec ar 7noi 8cetaibh :
9cuig bliadna 10noi cet ro "clos no 12co a3rug 14in 15t-ec 16Enos.
28. l crocand V croccami E croiceim PM crocann D crocend H croicend U 2 in EMU an PH s reithe V reitlii EMHP rethi D rithi U 4 doriacht VEPDH do ruacht M arucht U 5 om. d ' U 6 nAip- P nAibeil M nAbhel U ' atches VPU itchess- EM hitchess D atces P iteheas M adces H 8 an P am MH 9 g&n P cin D can MH om. TJ 10 cinaid D dar cabair U " Me osaicc, with f sprs. cD ig- P do M 12 f ossaicc E asaic M asaig-li U M da U 14 deisciplaib E disgiplaib (in marg. absdalab) P apsdalaib M deiscep. H aptalaib TJ
29. this quatrain om. YEDHTJ 5 an eroinn P - dtor. nimdha P 3 amuigh P 4 Parrtos P 5 -adb P 8 an P 7 -bhas, in marg. timarbus P
30. J a hocht ceathrachad cem [cein?] glan, | mill ar noe cedaib bliadan, | o re Abraim chedna chain, | co Hadam, cus in athair M 2 noe V nai ced H 3 mili HTJ 4 -breg D himirbreg HU B inn P an H in U 6 Adiiaim VEU Adaimh P Adauim D » cetna VH
OF SECTION I. 185
28. The hide formerly of that ram came to Abram after Abel :
it was seen about Christ without fault as He washed for His disciples.
29. Daisia, that was the name of the tree with much and beautiful fruit,
in the Plain of Aron in Paradise — for which the sin was committed.
30. , Eight and forty, nine hundreds
and a thousand, it is no fiction, from the time of that same fair Adam to Abram, to the father.
31. Thirty and nine hundred clear years was the life of Adam with its fame ; ten years, with all of those,
was the life of his yellow-haired wife.
32. The life of Seth, I have that knowledge, fifteen over nine hundreds :
five years and nine hundred, it was heard, until death took Enos.
chetnai E cedna P 8 chain ED * go D gu U 10 Habram EU
11 cos hi EP gussm D cusan H gusin U 12 om. n- EDUH : athair E
athauir D
31. ' trica II - noe M nai U 3 -ain P mbliadan U 4 om. m-
MH 5 saogh- P saedhal (no g- written sec. man. above the d)
D soegul U 6 Aduim D Adliaim U ' ria imradli EP re imrad
MH re imrath U 8 -dh- H 9 riss sin V rissin EDH iarsin U
10 huile D mile H ule H uili U " saogli- P soegal D saegul U
1J Eua U 13 buidhe VE budi H bhuidlie U
32. " saocc- P soegul U 2 Seth EDMU 3 as H 4 damh VP
3 sain V soin D 6 do MU 7 se DM 8 cettaib E cetaip P
cetauibh D 9 cuic YM se EP 10 nochad V nochat ED .lxxxx. at P
noe cet M " closs VP chloss E : ra clos H 12 go DU cho H
13 rue VMHU " an PH 15 teg VEPDMH tec U 16 Enoss VE
186 THE VERSE TEXTS
33. Deich ambliadan 2noi cet, 3cen craid,
4aes meic 5Enosa, 6Cainain : 170
Tn6i 8cet 9acht 10a ctiie, 1Jeo 12mblaid, 13saegal 14Malaleith mor-15glain.
34. 1Cuic 2bliadna 3sescat, 4noi 5cet 6do Iareth 7ria 8ndul 9i n-ec :.
10tri "chet sescat 12a 13euic ro 14clos 175
d'15Enoc 16rla 17ndul 18i 19Parrtos.
35. 1Ochtmoga 2bliadan 3co mblaid ocus 4noi 5cet do 6bliadnaib — 7is e sin 8in 9saegal 10seng
"tucad do 12Mathasalem. 180
36. aSaegal 2Laimiack, 3ltiaiter 4lat, 5secht cet Ga 7c1iic 8sechtmogat : 9saegal 10Noe, "noeb a 12blad, 13caeca ar 14noi 15cetaib 16bliadan.
37. TrI meic M'Aclam 2ca mbai 3eland — 185 Seth, 4Sile, Cain 5claen-cam :
a 6teora mna, 7buadach 8brig ! Olla, 9Pip, i 10Pithip.
33. This quatrain om. U * mbliadlna P - lxxxxat cc cradh P nai cet M nocliat other MSS. 3 cen crad VEDH (in E an open a resembling u) co ngrain M 4 ins. a V : aess VED aois P 5 Enois VP Enos ED c Chainean V Cain ean P Cainan D Caiuean (the i and second a soscr. apparently in a slightly different ink) H 7 nai M 8 cett E 9 ach. H 10 om. a MH a ins. bliadna MH : ar for co MH 12 mblaidh. V bloid M blaid H " saogiial P M Malaleth VED Maialeit P Malalel M 15 gloin D
34. 1 coic VED coig- P da M decc U 2 mbl. U 3 sesca M 4 ins. is : nai M 5 cett E 6 d 'Iareth U ' re MHU 8 dul P ndol D nvd H 9 adecc V a dh- P adec ineg D a dec M a deg H aneg U 10 sesca tri cet U " cet VM 12 om. a E 13 coic VD coicc E coig P om. and euig ins. in bad hand in marg. U " closs VE * Enocc ED Enogh P Enog H 1G re MHU " ndol D 18 hi VPD a H 19 Parrthoss V Pardoss ED Parrthos P Parrdus M Parrthus H PaiTtus U
35. ' -gha EP sechtmogha MU 2 -ain P 3 co??i mblaid V : co
6 -aip P ' is he sin E hisse
OF SECTION I. 187
33. Ten years and nine hundred, without vexation the age of the son of Enos, Cainan;
nine hundred save five, with renown, the life of Malaleth great and pure.
34. Sixty five years, nine hundred to Iareth before going to death :
three hundred sixty and five was it heard to Enoch before going into Paradise.
35. Eighty years with fame
and nine hundreds of years —
that is the stately life
which was given to Mathusalem.
36. The life of Lamech, to you is it mentioned, seven hundred, five and seventy :
the life of Noe, holy his renown, fifty over nine hundreds of years.
37. Adam had three sons who had progeny — Seth, Sile, Cain perverse and crooked : their three wives, victorious strength ! were Olla, Pip and Pithip.
sin D 8 an H 9 saog- P -gul U 10 seang U u tuccadh E
tugad PD tugadth U 12 Mathasaileam VH Matlia Salem EP (the
second m dotted sec. man. P) Mathusalem D
36. 1 saoghal P saeghal U 2 Lamiach VU Lamech ED 3 luater U 4 latt P leat TJ 6 seaelit M 6 seaeht mbliadna caeead M secht mbliadna trichat UO) 7 coic VED coig H 8 -moghad V -moghat E -mogad H 9 saoghal P soegul P 10 Naoi P Naee MH " naeb V naobdha P niamda MHU (-dha U) 12 bladh VDU ,3 eoica D llnai M 15 cettuip E cetuib D cetaibh U 16 -dhan P
37. 1 om. d' MU: Adum VH Adhain E Adaum D Adaim M Adhaimb U 2 coa mbae E ga mbaoi P coamboi D ga mbi U 3 clann D 4 Sili H 5 claon P cloen D : chain VDU chamm E 6 dteor P tri MHU 7 buadQiach VU 8 brigh VPD a mbrigh EU a mbrig MH 9 Pib U 10 Pithib EDMU Pitib P
(a) In marg. of U : seaeht moghat seaeht ccet is e so airemh is firianigh do reir an biobla.
188 THE VERSE TEXTS
38. TrI meic 1Noe nair 2cech 3neirt,
4Sem, 5Cam, 6Iafet 7aurdairc : 190
is 8re 9Cam, 10calad "ciape, 12ro 13scarad 14ind 15airdrlge.
39. 'Cata 2Rechta 3ba ben 4Sem, Cata 5Chasta ben 6Iafeth,
Cata 7Flauia, 8co 9ngrad 10ngrinn, 195
ainm nana 11Caim, 12nocho 13celim.
40. ^am 2ro gab 3i 4nAffraicc n-ait, "Tafeth 6rogab 7i snEoraip ;
m 9chelar 10duinne, dar Dla ! —
Sem "rogab 12uile 13i 14nAisIa. 200
41. ^richa 2eined, 3rad 4nglan ngle 5cinsit 65 Cham mac Noe :
a 7secht fichit, fuil 86 9Sem, 10a etiic dec o Iafeth.
42. *I 2Sleib 3Radruip 4aided 5Seim ; 205 6bas 7Iafeth si 9Sleib 10Armein ;
lxi 12Sleib 1?Raphan, 14rad 15nglan ngle, 16ro-thatham Cam 17meic 18Noe.
38. This quatrain om, M ' Nad P Nae HU 2 gach PU ce D cen H
3 nert U" 4 SeimP Semh U 5 Gham ED Oainh PU 6 ins. is U : Iafeth PU ' aurdaircc E oirrdirc P airdirc HU 8 is ria VPH Ms ro Cam ED 9 Camli U 30 caladh VEU n ciabe EH cipe P •eebe U 12 do H I3 scaradli VU sgarad P u int D an H in U 15 ardrig-he E n-airdrighe P ard- D
39. 1 Catirasta U ' - Eeacht H 3 fa bean M 4 tSem V tSeim P tSeim H Semh U 5 Casta EDHU Casta P 6 Iaf edh V Iafet P Iathfed M ' Flaia M Flagia H 8 go U 9 ngradh VPU ngrain M 10 ngrind VPHU grind E u Cam P 12 nocha PDH 1= ceilimm E chelim D ceilim PU
40. 1 Camh P 2 ragab H rogabh U 3 ind VP inn E an H
4 om. u VP : Affraic P Athf raic M Affraich U 5 Iathfed M 6 dogab H rcgabh U ' inn V ind P an H s nEorniph E 9 eel ar P chel ar duine D chel arduin U 30 dnini H dnine all other mss. except U 11 rogob M ragab H u lmile D uili MHU 13 inn VE an H 14 Aissia VH Assia EDU
41. This quatrain om. VDU; follows quatrain 21 in E. In M the •quatrains in this part of the poem are in the following- order: — 37, 40,
OF SECTION I. 189
38. Three sons of noble Noe, of every [kind of]
strength Scm, Ham, glorious Iafeth : from Ham, for all his firmness, the high-kingship was sundered.
39. Cata Rechta, she was the wife of Sem, Cata Casta, the wife of Iafeth,
Cata Flavia, with pleasant love,
was the name of Ham's wife, I conceal it not.
40. Ham settled in pleasant Africa, Iaphet settled in Europe;
it is not hidden from us, before God ! — Sem settled altogether in Asia.
41. Thirty races, a pure, clear saying, sprang from Ham son of Noe : twenty seven, which are from Sem, fifteen from Iafeth.
42. In the mountain of Radrap the fate of Sem ; the death of Iafeth in a mountain of Armenia ; in the mountain of Rafann, a pure, clear
saying, the great sleep of Ham son of Noe.
41, 39, 42, omitting 38. 1 Fichi M 2 cinedJi E cineth P cinead M
3 radii E 4 glan gle EPM 5 rinsed E -set P -sead M 6 Cham m. Naoie E ; Naoie also in P, Naei M 7 coie dec badlar PM 8 og PM
3 Seimh EP 10 a cuig deg o Iathf eth E Is a cuig- dec ag
Iathaf eit P is a undec at Iathf eth M. The version of this quatrain in H is as follows : —
Tricha cinedh Chaim eolaig cirmsed on fir can olaid,
a secht fichit fuil o Sem a cuig deg ac Iatafet.
42. » hi VEPD a MH : sleip P sleb MU 3 Radhruip P Eathuiris M Radraip H Rathuir chain U 4 aiged VH aidedh E aighed P
bas MU B Sem EDMU Seimh P Seim H 6 bass E ' Iathf ed M
"liiPaH 9sleb EM sleab U 10 Armen VM Armein U
11 hi EPH 12 sleb M sliab U " Rapan V Rafan MH Rafm U
" radh VP 15 raglan gle U glan gle VPMH glan ngle E 16 ro hatham V ro athtam ED (in D changed sec. man. by writing tli sprs. and rxpuncting the 2nd t) ro attham P ro ratham do ratham (in rasura) H ro hat him U " mc V mc E mac U 18 written ixe P : Naei M Naee H
190 THE VERSE TEXTS
43. ^irde 2hairce, sbaile *ita
5tricha Gcubat 7cutroma; 210
tri diet 8cubat 9i n-a 10fat; 11n-a lethet 12coica 13cubat.
44. ^en^chubat 3'n-a 4tigi 5thair, 6itir 7fid 8is 9bidumahi :
10bidumain 11uimpi 12cen bron, 215
13dia 'muig 14-j 15dia 16medon.
45. A doras 1assan 2sliss 3soer, 4amail 5ro ordaig 6Noe 7noem ; 8daig 9ro oslaiced 10a toeb "thair
12ar Crist, ar 13Ceim, ar n-Athair. 220
46. Tri ^oecait 2mlle co 3mbuaid 4airde 5Thuir 6iioithig- 7NemrTiaid, caeca 8mile 9tar 10cech "leth 12rogab 13in Tor 14tren 15rigthech.
47. 1Tri 2cetlirair 3tri ficbit, 4fir, 225 5airem 6thoisech 7is tren-8rig
9lasaiidernad 10thoir 11in Tor, im 12Nemrtiad, im 13Nabcodon.
43. • airdi PMH arde na hairce fir trath. U" 2 ins. na M (also in H, but erased) : aircce VE airce P airci D liairci MH 3baili ED bail H i fail tra M 4 itha V itta P t-a DH (before the t an a faintly sbs. cH 6 caeca M G cubad MH cubhat T7 7 eutruma VE cudruma PH cutranuna D cudrama U 8 cubad VM 9 inna D ana H 10 fad EMH " na leithe V leithed EPM na llethe D lethat U 12 coeca V coicca D caeca M ,3 cubad VM cubatat E cubaat (sic YD, but in D copied like cubattt) D
44. ' aon P aen HIJ 2 chubad M cubhat U 3 ina natigi U (the dittography caused by a change of line) * tighi VP tig-he EP tige D 5 tair PU thoir M 6 etir V eitir EP 7 fidh VP "fid EMH bi U 8 1 U a bittununain E bidamuin MH bidomain U 10uitumain VP bittummain E bituniain D bidamain M bidomain U 11 impe E impi PM immpi D umpi U 12 gan EPU can H " diamuigh VP diamuich ED imaig M immaigh U " occus P 15 ar MTJ 16 medhon VU meton P.
45. J ara PMH asa D ar U 2 slis EMHU slios PH 3 saer VDMH saor P 4 is amlaid E samlaid DHTJ B ro ordaigh VE ro ordiuighl D rosordaigh U ra for ro as usual in H 6 om. Noe ED (ins. sec. man. D) Naoi P Nae MH Nai IT 7 naem VMHU noeb ED naom P 8 daigh VEP (also perhaps D, but the marie of lenition
OF SECTION I. 191
43. The height of the ark, a place in which are thirty balanced cubits;
three hundred cubits in its length ; in its breadth, fifty cubits.
44. One cubit in its thickness eastward, what with wood and pitch :
pitch about it without regret (?), outside and inside.
45. Its door out of its free side, as holy Noe ordained;
for He would open its side eastward, our Christ, our Head, our Father.
46. Thrice fifty miles with victory
was the height of the famous Tower of Nemrod;
fifty miles over every side
did the strong royal Tower contain.
47. Thrice four men and three score, truly, the reckoning of leaders and strong kings by whom the Tower was made in the East, including Nemrod and Nabcodon.
is
faded) ardaigh. IT : co ros f oslaic a taeb thair M 9 roslaicedli V
roslaiced ED hosluiced P foscail H oslaicthi (om. to) U 10 om. a
VEP : taeb VD taobh P thaeb H taib U " tair HIT 12 ar Crist
chaem ar ar n-athair M ar Oris (sic) uais ar innathair IT " cend) EH
46. 1 coecat V choicat E la P choica (with a d apparently following, but erased) D chaecaid M 2 cubat EP mib IT 3 -dtti EPTJ 4 ins. fa he M, ba he IT : arddi E airdf MH 6 tuir E in tuir MIT 'noithich VE noitc P om. MIT naithid H * -dh E Neamraaid M Neamrudid with attempt sec. man. to turn the first d to an a IT 8 mili MH 9 dar E for HIT I0 gach VEPDU each MH " leath M 12 rogob M dogab H -bh IT 13 an PH I4 trennilleach M 15 rigtheaeh V -tech PH righeach IT
47. 1 om. M 2 chetrair E cethruir P ceathrar M ceathrair HIT sar fiehit instead of tri f. M: tri .xx. ficit fir (sic) IT 4 co M
8 dairim V dairem P airim ETJ 6 tuisseeh V taoisech P toissech D thaiseach M toiseeh H taiseaeh U 7in_M 8ri E righ PU
9 lassandernadh V -adh also E -earn- M lasadngadh IT ,0tair VP thoir (the lenition mark faded) D thair HIT " an PH ,2 -adh IT "Nabgadon VPDU -gaton P Nabhgodon IT
192 THE VERSE TEXTS
48. ^m 2Assur, im 3Ibad 4n-ard,
im 5Laitin is Gim 7Longbard, 230
im 8Grecus, 9im Gomer ngle im 10Eber mor mac 11Saile.
49. ^m 2Boidb, im sBritus 4cen brath, 5im 6German is 7im 8Garad,
9im 10Scithus, im "Gothus nglan, 235
im 12Dardan, Sardan solam.
50. 2Ri na 2talman is na tor 3in Rl 4slnes 5caeh 6saegol, 7buanaided mo 8cbruth, mo chli
cid 9oen in 10t-abb sa' t-airdrl. 240
51. Ro \scailti na 2berla 3doib
do 4traetad 5Nemruaid nert-moir; 1 ro 6trascrad 7in Tor, 8comad 9isligthe 10a n-uabor.
52. 1Coic 2bliadna cethrachat cain, 245 3mile secht cet do 4bliadnaib,
o 5thosach 6domain co 7n-uaill, 8no co 9torchair 10Tor 11Nemrtiaid.
48. ' Amasur Amabad M 2 Asir P Asur HU 3 Baad D Baadh (written like bacc&) E Ibath H Ibliadh U 4 om. n- VPH 5 Latin E Laidin HU 6 am H 7 -bhard U 8 Gregus MH 9 mac Gomer g-le M 10 Emir V Eimer P Emer MH " Sale U
49. ' am MH : Imodlbt U 2 Bodb VH Boid EPDM 3 Boritus (the o expunvted) V Brittus E 4gan brath P co mblad MU (-dh. U) ; nm P 6 Gomer H 7 am H 8 Garadli V Gharadh LT 9 am P w Garath M Scotus H Scithius TJ " Scotus H Gothius U 12 Dordarn (hut the second compendium perhaps to be read ai) T)
50. This quatrain om. VED, in this place in PM, and in HU at the end of the poem, where it is more appropriate so far as the sense is concerned: the version of the last line in H is probably correct, as it ends with the word athair. ' Big U 2 talmhan U 3 an H
OF SECTION I. 193
48. Including Assur and lofty Ibad, Latinus and Longbardus, Grecus and brilliant Gomer, great Eber son of Sale.
49. Including Bodb and Britus without deception, Germanus and Garad,
Scithus and pure Gothus, Dardan and swift Sardan.
50. King of the earth and of the lords, the King who prolongeth every life,
may He make enduring my form, my body though the abbot and the high king be alike.
51. The languages were dispersed for them,
for the subjection of Nemrod, great in strength ; and the Tower was overturned, so that their pride was humiliated.
52. Five years and forty fair,
a thousand seven hundreds of years, from the superb beginning of the world, till the Tower of Nemrod fell.
4 sineas MU snow H 5 gach PU 6 saoghal P saegal H saeghul U
7 buanaigedl mo cruth can cair, is e ar n-ab is ar n-athair H, buaidnaidh- eadha dom chorp cain co tuga in tab sin tathair U 8 cruth. mo cli P
9 aon P 10 tab M in tadm ( ?) sa tairdrigh P
51. » sgaoilti P sgailti D scailtea MU 2 berlae E 3 doip P doibh U 4 traetliad VEDH traothad P thraedad (t sprs. over first d yc) M thraetliad U 5 -oid M 8 thascrad E -grad PD -cairtea U
7 an P 8 comud V combad E gumad U 9 isslitte V isliti E islide PD islidi MHU 10annuabar PU (first n expuncted P) anuabur D anuabar PH
52. This quatrain om. VMH. 1 Coig P 2 mile P 3 mili DU 4 -aiph P -uib D B tosach P -eac U 6 -uin E T mbuaidh U
8 om. no P : no go D 9 torcair P ndorcair U 10 ins. in P " -ruad D -ruaidh U
l.g. — vol. I. O
194 THE VERSE TEXTS
53. :I m-Maig 2Senair, 3iarsin Tor,
4ro 5tinolad ein 7choem-scol, 250
8sin 9chathraig 10Ibitena, xldo 12foglaim na 13n-il-berla.
54. ^olaig na 2mberla, 3is 4blad 5bind ar 6a n-ergna 7nostuirmim,
im 8Feinius 9Farsaid 10co "rath, 255
1 im 12Chai 13cain-brethach.
55. ^iruath, 2Nenual brathair Niuil, 31 4Gaedel mac 5Ethiuir, 6Dauid i Loth 7na land,
8Saliath, 9Nabgadon, Forand, 260
56. 1Talemon, 2Cainan, 3ni 4chel, 5Caleph, 6Mored, Gad, 7Gomer, 8Etrochius, 9Bel, Bobel 10binn, 11Ossi, 12Iessu, 13Iochim,
57. aHidomus 2is 3Ordmor ard, 265 4Achab 5is 6Ruben ro-7garg,
8Humelchus, 9Ionan an, 10Affraim, 1:LSru, Iar mac 12Neman.
53. ' imrauig V immaigh ED immaigli P hi maig M a muig H a
maig-li TJ 2 Seimair ED (S E) 3 imon M iarsan H iman U 4 ra H 5 -ladh E -oil- P -oileadJ M -oileadli HU 6 an H 7 chaem VE caom
secoil P mor- M tren- H trom- U 8isin H gusiii U "cathraig V
catkraich E catraig PH chathruigh D ehatraid M catraigli U 10 Pbitliena V Ibithenae E Ibitena P Imbithena D Hebotena M Eba tena H Gan sena U "ro M dinidhagliud na nilberla U 12 f oglaim V
f occhlaimm E 'f ogluim D ifoglaim M 'f odlaim H " -lae E -lai P hil- M
54. 1 -laigh EU -lach PM -luich D 2 mberlo D 3 as PH om. U 4 bladh P 5 binn PD 6 in ergna E a n-ergnai M ' rosturmim VH -tuirbim P tuirniinmi D -aimiim U 8 Fenius V Foenius D Feinus M Feinius TJ 9 -aidh V Farr- PH Farrsaich M Farrsaigh U 10 go D gan U » brath U 12 Cliae V Cliaoi E Oaidhe P 1S -breathach VM caoin-breatk (ach yc) E chain- M
55. ' Iruath TJ 2 Nenbhal E Noenal D Naeneal M Neanual TJ 31 yc P 4Gaidlel V Gaoidel E Gaoidhel P Goeidel D Gaedeal M
OF SECTION I. 195
53. In the plain of Senar, after the Tower, was the fair school assembled,
in the city of Ibitena,
for learning the manifold languages.
54. Those skilled in the tongues — 'tis tuneful fame —
for their cunning I enumerate them : including Feinius Farsaid with grace and Cai of the just judgements.
55. Hiruath, Nenual brother of Nel, Gaedel son of Etheor,
David, Loth of the blades, Saliath, Nabcodon, Forand.
56. Talemon, Cainan, there is no concealment, Caleph, Mored, Gad, Cromer, Etrochius, Bel, tuneful Bobel,
Ossi, Iessu, Iochim.
57. Hidomus and lofty Ordmor, Achab and very rough Ruben, Humelchus, brilliant Ionan, Affraim, Sru, Iar son of Nema.
Gaeid. H Goedel U 5 Eithiuir EPMHU 6 Dabhi E - ' nalland E na lanoi PDM s Sailiath H 8 -codon E Nabgodon P JNTabcadon
D Nabhcadon M -godon U
56. 1 Tailimon P Dalamon M Talumon H Tailemon U 2 cain MH caem IT 3 nocho MU nocha H 4 eel PH B Calep E Saleph P Quiliph. M Pilib U 6 Moriath M mor iath U 7 Goimher E G-oimei' H 8 Etrochius (o sprs. yc) V Etroichus P EtroicMuss- U Eochrochuis M Etroichus H Etrocus U 9 Bel babebind M Belbobel U 10 bind VEHU 11 Oss© ED Ose M Osu U 12 Iasu EU Isiu M " Ioeim E Iochimm D IacMm M Iacim U
57. 1 Hidomiiis- VED Hidmius P Domu ; M Idonius U 2 om. MU" 3 Oirdmor E Ordinor P Ordonus M Adrarnus U 4 Aehap P Aeab U 5 Sru MU 6 Ruiben EP Rumen U 7 gharb E 8 Humeleus EPH Umelchus M Imelcuw^ U 9 ins. is U 10 Affraim is Iar VEPH Affram P Affraim Isiar D Ef raum M Eaffraim U " om. Sru MH (is Iar H) Iarinach (or -mach) is Neaman U I2 Nemain VDH
196 THE VERSE TEXTS
58. JNel mac 2Feiniusa 3nir 4bfann
5luid 6i 7nEigept, 8co 9Forann; 270
10i 11ferann 12Eigipt 13Iartain, 14rucad 15Gaidel ar n-athair.
58. 1 Niuil U 2 Feinus P Foeniusa D Feiiiiusa M 3 nar MH
4 bf and VPH f ann D faun MH f and U 5 luidh E luig H « an EH 7Eigipt EHU Eigipit P Egipt D Eigep M 8 go D re M iar U
VI.
R3 fl 28 (B 8 y 53 : M 265 a 40).
1. 1Tobar 2Parrduis, buan a 3blad 4dianaid ainm 5Nuchal nlam-glan;
6smit as, nl 7thruag a 8threoir 275
ceithri srotha 9soer-cheneoil.
2. 1Fiso,n 2sufflatio arfas, Geon zfelicitias, uelocitas Tigris tren,
is fertilis 4Enfraiten. 280
3. 1Fison sruth. ola, 2sair suairc, Tigris in fin, siar 3soer-chuairt, 4Eufraites in mil, 5fodess, Geon in loim, 6thuaid 7tibes.
1. 1 tobur B 2 Parrtuis B 3 bladli B 4 dianadh B 5 Nuchul B 6 sighnit ass B ' truag MSS. streoirB s saer M -cheineoil B
2. 1 Fisson B 2 suflatio B suflaitio M 3 sic M {which must be retained for the metre) : -itas B 4 Eofraten M
VII.
R3 U 66, 89 ((3 34 . 20 ; /31 34 . 39 ; /32 10 . 21 ; M 267 S 6 ; H 102 a 35).
JCet 2aimsir 3in 4bethad 5bind 285
6otha Adam co dilind,
se 7bliadna 8coicat, 9rad ngle,
10ar "se 12chetaib ar 13mile.
1 cead /? 2 aimser MH aimsior /3 3 an H/3 4 beath H
bheatha /3 blietliadh /312 5 bhinn (i™ ° ota M ato H ata o Adhamh.
OF SECTION I. 197
58. Nel son of Feinius who was not weak went into Egypt, to P.iarao; in the land of Egypt thereafter, was born Gaedel our father.
* -and EPMU 10 hi bf . E hi f . D, a f . MH " -nd EHU M Eigipti V Eigipit P Egipt D Eigeipti H Egeapt U " iardtain E iartoin
Diardain U " mcadh V rugad EH ruec P rugadh U 13 Gaedeal
VMH Gaoidel EP Goeidel D Gaedhel U
VI.
1. The spring of Paradise, lasting its renown, whose name is Nuchal of clear brilliancy;
there extend from out of it, not miserable is its
strength, four rivers of free nature.
2. Phison was revealed as sufflatio, Geon as felicitas,
strong Tigris as uelocitas, and Euphrates as fertilitas.
3. Phison a river of oil, gently eastward, Tigris wine, a free circuit westward, Euphrates honey, southward,
Geon milk, which laugheth northward.
3. ^isson B 2saer B 3 saerchuart M 4 Eofrates M
* fodhes B f odeas M 6 tuaidh B 7 tibhes B thibeas M
VII.
The first age of the tuneful world from Adam to the Flood, fifty-six years, a clear saying, over six hundreds and a thousand.
go dilinn /?012 7 bliadhna /3 8 caecad M caogad jB012 9 radh /?
rangle /312 10 air /301 " se (312 12 ceadaibh /3 chedaib /3" (ced- /32) " mili H mhile /3012
198 THE VERSE TEXTS
VIII.
R3 fl 66 (H 98 a 3).
Dia Haine docuas inti,
isa n-airc comlain chinti. 290
De Mairt dolodar amach
asin lestar chaem-chlarach.
IX.
R3 fl 68 (H 98 a 21).
1. Ceatrar as (s)ia saegal slan, indisis Canoin chomslan,
Adam, Iareth, ailli (a)geal, 295
Nae nar is Mathasalem.
2. Tricha ar noi cetaib can ail saegal airmidnech Adaim; a do sescat noi cet cain,
saegal Iareth abrad-chain. 300
3. A noi sescat ar noi cet do Maithisailem, ni breg : caoga ar noi cet, nir bo liaeh, saegal Naee meic Laimiaeh.
(a) geall MS.
OF SECTION I. 199
VIII.
On Friday there was the ingoing into the ark complete, appointed. On Tuesday they came out from the fair-boarded vessel.
IX.
Four who are longest of complete life, the perfect Canon hath related : Adam, Iareth, a bright praise, noble Noe and Mathasalem.
Thirty over nine hundreds without reproach the venerable life of Adam : nine hundred sixty and two fair, the life of Iareth of the fair brows.
Nine hundred sixty and nine
to Mathasalem, it is no falsehood :
nine hundred and fifty, it was not pitiful
the life of Noe son of Lamech.
200 NOTES ON SECTION I.
NOTES ON SECTION I.
Prose Texts.
First Redaction.
(For the explanation of the asterisk see the beginning of R2.)
1, 1*. Fecit shows that oo R1 worked on an ante-Hierony- man text of Genesis. The Vulgate has creauit, as in R3 fl 20.
The gloss in R1 is of some critical importance. It is absent from T[ 1*, therefore it was not incorporated in the text of *Q. In LF it appears in the form -\ nl fil . . . . fairseom, to which F (and L sec. man.) add fein. The version in *X is preserved in R3 ff 20 ; there we have the older feisin. In LF nd foircend precedes fairseom, in *X it follows fairseom feisin. Such a shifting about of words is practically diagnostic of the incorporation of a superscript gloss, therefore nd foircend must be a further glossarial addition made after the incorporation of the original gloss with the text. The history of the interpolation was therefore as follows : —
(1) The gloss existed, interlined or marginal, in VLF*X*Q in the simple form .i. nl fil tosach fairseom : a very natural comment — "In the beginning God made .... (note, that He hath no beginning)."
(2) oo *Q was copied, without the gloss, or at most with it in an interlineation.
(3) There must have been a ms. \/LF*X in which the gloss was incorporated, and to which nd foircend was added glossarially. (In R3, these words must have been still inter- lined in yBMH, for B has them in a different place from the other two mss. of R3.)
(4) From this ms. \/LF and *X derive. But as F generally displays closer affinities with *Q than with L, we must suppose that L has undergone scribal distortion or editorial manipulation in deriving from \/LF. If we had more of *X, we should probably find it nearest to co R1 : F and *Q must on the whole be good copies of V^F *X *Q,
NOTES ON SECTION I. 201
as they are in close agreement : L is the farthest away from oo R1.
2, 2*. Here again we find evidence that *Q represents an older text ; in 2* we have cetumus, olchena, Aendidin as contrasted with chetus, archena, Aine, in 2. Dorigne and the consistent spelling -nd- are also older than doringne and the spelling -nn-. In these readings F shows a closer affinity to *Q than to L.
Soillsi aingel is an attempt at a solution of the old puzzle, as to how light could have been created before the luminaries : see Augustine, Civ. Dei sd. 9. The creation of the angels upon the First Day is usually described in summaries of the Creation such as this : for example, in the Arabic Book of the Rolls .-1 "The Holy First Day, chief of Days : early in it God created the Upper Heaven and the Worlds, and the highest rank of Angels . . . and the Archangels," etc. So in Isidore, Etym. v. 39 : Prima aetas in exordio sui continet creationem mundi. Primo enim die Deus in lucis nomine condidit angelos. And in the old English Lyff of Adam amd Eve (ed. Horstmann, Sammlung altenglischer Legenden, p. 220 ff.) : "God as his wille was behihte to make liht : and bo he made angelus."
Firmament. The absence, of the definite article shows that the writer took the word, which he found in his Latin Bible, for a proper name.
The reading in F, neam .i. firmamaind, is a misplacement of a gloss, for neam must originally have explained the difficult word firmament, and not vice versa. The gloss must also have been in *X, for in R3 ff 20, third interpolation, it has displaced firmament altogether. That *X, and not *Q, is the source of this passage is shown by its use of nem-chrtithaig as against the n-ecliriithach of F* Q. This excerpt from #X is further instructive, as it shows that all the dates are interpolations. They precede the works in *X, but follow them in the other mss. The original text was therefore a bald list of the works of creation — ' ' He made first the formless mass. He made Firmament. He made Earth and Seas," etc. The names of the days were interlined as
1 Ed. Gibson (Oamb. Univ. Press), transl. p. 3.
202 NOTES ON SECTION I.
glosses, and taken in at different times and in different places. They were not securely in the text even in L, for at least three of them have been inserted sec. man. in that MS.
After tondaitecha, the words in mora in LF and na fairrge in *Q kill one another. They are both glosses, inserted independently by readers who knew or discovered for them- selves that marine creatures were created on the Fifth Day. It follows almost inevitably that ind deoir and in tahnan are giossarial also.
Dia after ro ehumsain is correctly omitted by E ; as it has entered the text before larom in *Q, and after it in \/LF*X, it is suspect on the principle already set down. Most likely it remained as 5 till late in the R2 tradition. In the original text, the verb ro chumsain, like dorigni, had no subject expressed.
Oipriugad for foirbthiugad is another mark of affinity between F and *Q.
1 ni 0 follomnaclit itir may perhaps have been suggested by the OL text requieuit ab omnibus operibus suis quae inchoauit Deus facer e (cf. LXX,<Lv r/?»s«ro 6 Otoe; Troiijnai) — an implication that the Divine energy continued after the accomplishment of the Creation. As it occurs in F*Q it must be original, or a very early interpolation ; more probably the latter, as it is absent from *X.
T clorad bendachtain foraib in R2 must have been inserted after the incorporation of the first leaf of #Q with that text. It is unknown to LF*X, and breaks awkwardly into the sense.
Foraib is almost certainly a copyist's mistake for fair: he forgot that the blessing was upon the rest-day, not upon the creatures (Gen. ii. 3).
2a (in R2). A group of three late interpolations (y1, y2, y3), which (like the gloss at the end of 2* just noticed) entered the *Q tradition independently, after its first leaf had been separated from the rest of R1. The first two were borrowed by yW, but the third was ignored : as 1/R3 was nothing if not acquisitive, we infer that *Z, his copy of R2, did not contain it. Y2, which is a natural pendant of U 2, was the first of the three to make its way into the text : but y1 y2 must both have been no more than marginal notes in #Z, for yW
NOTES ON SECTION I. 203
has inserted y2 before, not after, the list of the works of Creation, and has taken in y1 at a different pla.ee (fi 25).
1 a alius is a gloss : it is not found in R3, and therefore was unknown to *Z.
The original purpose of y2 was to show that Adam was made from the four elements. A further interpolator has confused this by inserting the specification of the countries from whose earth Adam was fashioned. YR3 C\\ 25) has discovered anew the purpose of the passage, and has expressed his discovery by adding the comment is amlaid . . . in gach duini.
For parallels to the ideas here expressed as to the materials from which Adam was made, see Stokes, Three Irish Glossaries p. xl : idem, Man Octipartite (sic), in R.C., i, p. 261. The formation of Adam from the four elements is thus described in the Syriac Cave of Treasures :2 "The angels saw the right hand of God opened out flat and stretched out over the whole world : and all creatures were collected in the palm of His right hand. And they saw that He took from the whole mass of the earth one grain of dust, and from the whole nature of water one drop of water, and from all the air which is above, one puff of wind, and from the whole nature of fire a little of its heat and warmth" — and therewith made Adam. In the same work Budige quotes from a Coptic tradition preserved in The Discourse of Abbaton the Angel of Death, by Timothy, archbishop of Rakoti (Alexandria), to the effect that the clay of which Adam was made was brought by the angel Muriel "from the land of the East." More specific but mutually contradictory information is afforded by various Jewish Rabbis on the subject. Eisenmenger3 quotes Rabbi Meir as saying that the dust from which Adam was made was brought together from the whole earth; ingeniously deducing the fact from a combination of Ps. exxxix [Vulgate exxxviii] 16 and 2 Chron. xvi. 9. Rabbi 'Oshaya declares that the body of the first man came from Babel, his head from the land of Israel, his limbs from the other countries. Other theories are given in the same place, but none so specific as the version which has reached the Irish interpolator.
- Tr. Budge, pp. 51-2. 3 Entdeclites Judentlwm, vol. I, p. 364.
204 NOTES ON SECTION I.
For Garad, Arabia, Lodain, Agoria the homily on Creation in Lebor Brecc* substitutes Malon, Arton, Biblon, Agore respectively. I can make nothing of these, unless "Agoria" be a. misreading for "Moria": in some forms of Irish script capital M is not unlike Ag. Mount Moi-iah is alleged to have been the site of the altars of Solomon, David, Noah, Cain, and Abel as well as of Abraham, and is specified by Maimonides (Beit Abacliria, c. 2) as being the source of the earth from which Adam was made. According to The Dialogue of Salomon and Satumus,5 Adam was made of eight pounds weight of materials, which are specified, but here irrelevant.
The same authority agrees with y3 in saying that Adam was created as at the age of thirty, but the age of Eve is not specified. According to the Lebor Brecc homily, Adam was created nine months before Eve.
3. 3*. The legend of the Fall of the Angels, here intro- duced as a necessary preliminary to the Fall of Man, is part of the complicated angel-demon mythology that was absorbed from Persian sources and developed in post-exilic Judaism : quite likely it has its roots in the myth of the combat of Marduk and Tiamat, which is the prologue to the Babylonian legend of Creation. Brought to shape by false exegesis of such scattered passages as Isaiah xiv. 12, Luke x. 18, Revelation ix. 1 ff., the story was taken over into early Christian tradition. The first of these passages, foreshadow- ing the downfall of the King of Babylon, and addressing him ironically as "Morning Star," has given the name "Lucifer" to the leader of the revolting angels : see Augustine Civ. Dei, xi. 15. The story appears in mast early paraphrases of the Biblical history, as for instance in Saltair na Rann, no. vi, and in the fourteenth century Cursor Mundi.6 None of the LG texts knows of the second fall of the infernal angels, after the temptation of Eve, referred to in the hymn Alius Prosator, verse G.
In both F and L this paragraph is desperately difficult to decipher : impossible indeed, at least for me, without the
4 Ed. MacCarthy, Todd Lectures, iii, p. 48.
5 Ed. Kemble (Aelfric Society, 1848), p. 180.
6 Ed. Morris, E.E.T.S., line 473 ff.
NOTES ON SECTION I. 205
help of ultra-violet photographs prepared by Professor Ditchburn. But the page is so badly rubbed, in both mss., that the photographs do not recover the whole text : it is, however, clear that L here stands by itself, and F and *Q, though not identical, are related. L's reading- looks like a scribal guess at an illegible passage in \/h. Comparison between the two texts reveals two or three minor inter- polations, indicated by the marks |-|| on the printed page, but not calling for special remark. Imbe in *Q as against Nime in LF is probably right. I take -\ do Eioa cona chlainn to be a double interpolation. In the original, Lucifer and Adam were in partnership. Then someone, forgetting that Adam was at the time expected to be a virginal immortal, added cona chlaind. After that someone else slipped in i do Eua, and forgot to make the consequential change cona cclaind.
In R2, do Neimi is anomalous, but it is certainly what it looks like in V. It is very worn and obscure in this place. The "Nine orders" of the Angels are very frequently specified in Apocryphal literature, as in The Book of the Secrets of Enoch, xx. I.7 The following enumeration is gtiven by Solomon, bishop of Basrah:8 "The angels are divided into nine classes and three orders. The upper order contains Cherubim, Seraphim, and Thrones, and these are the bearers of God's throne : the middle order contains Lords, Powers, and Rulers : the lower order contains Principalities, Archangels, and Angels." Isidore (Etym, VII. v. 4) gives a similar enumeration, but in a different sequence.
[Ro] -diumsach intl Lucifer, though appearing both in *Q and in LF, is probably an early interpolation, seeing that the words of the Almighty are habitually reported in Latin. It is probably nothing more than some reader's personal opinion on Lucifer's proceedings.
The words Venite, etc., are a reminiscence of the sentence upon the builders of Babel — Venite et confundamus linguam eorum (Gen. xi. 7). The words ut uideamus, imported into
7 Charles, Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha of the O.T., vol. ii, p. 441. See also Colossians i. 16 : Irish Liber Hymnorum (Henry Brad&haw Society edn.), vol. ii, p. 155.
8 As quoted by Budge, Cave of Treasures, p. 45.
206 NOTES ON SECTION I.
the *Q tradition from the preceding verse 5 of the Babel narrative, are also found in the quotation from the Babd story in Auraicept na nEces.9 The Irish translation there given, mutatis mutandis, is identical with that found here in *Q. Obviously the annotator of R2 was familiar with the Auraicept : we find further evidence of this on a later page.
4, I*. That the envy of Satan for his supplanter was the reason for the Temptation and the Fall of Man, is the usual belief, derived ultimately from that popular apocryphon, The Book of Adam and Eve. The passage, which it is need- less to quote here, will be found in Charles, Apocrypha and PseudepigrapJia, ii, 137. The Irish historian has, however, missed the contrast between the Paradisus spirit uum, from which Lucifer was cast out, and the Paradisus corporum (not "heaven") which was to have been the portion of Adam: even the glossators in R3 overlooked this, though they could have learnt of it from Comestor, Historia Scholastica, chap. xxi. Our text knows nothing of the refusal of Lucifer to do homage to Adam : a very common incident in Creation storias. It is related in the Lebor Brecc Homily.
Dohiid Iofer Niger. The subject of the verb must originally have been Lucifer, carried through from the preceding sentence. "Iofer Niger" is beyond question an intrusive gloss, written in by someone fresh from reading the Life of the fourth-century St. Juliana.10 The name is there given as an alternative for Belial son of Beelzebub, totius mali inuentor •. but so far as I have been able to find out for myself, or through enquiries which the Rev. P. Grosjean, S.J., has most kindly made on my behalf, the name does not appear to be recorded in any other text. Bespelled by Juliana, this being is compelled to confess his own misdeeds, the first of which is Ego sum qui feci Adam et Euam in Paradiso praeuaricari103- The editors of Acta Sanctorum quote variant forms — Iophin, Iofet, Iofen, Tophet, and they suggest an (improbable) etymology (Hebrew -^ntT- sahor, " black ").
^ _____ Z
0 Ed. Caltler, p. 12.
,n Acta Sanctorum, February, vol. ii, esp. p. 875.
10a Alluding, of course, not to the original transgression, but to the subsequent subterfuges of the culprits. Our glossator has overlooked this : so has the Irish translator of the Juliana text.
NOTES ON SECTION I. 207
The relevant passage is quoted in the glosses to Feilire Oengusso t11 the name there appears as Iafer, Iofer, and (in Labor Brecc) Ethiar. Of all these forms, "Tophet" is the most comprehensible, but is not on that account necessarily the most authentic. The critical history of this interpolation usefully supplements that of the gloss in fl 1. It was absent from *X, as will be seen by reference to ft 31 : R3 cannot have taken this from *Z, because that MS., being dependent for its opening words upon *Q, would have included the demon's name. It is also absent from F, which here shows itself earlier in tradition even than *Q. In L it has become distorted by corruption : the form there found, Iarngir, may be compared with Ifirnaig, the form which the name has assumed in the Irish text of Vita Iulianae (R.C., xxxiii, p. 316) under the influence of the word Ifernd.
The occasional superiority of F and *X to *Q is further illustrated in this ]\ ; *Q contains two other interpolations, not in *XF. I ffochraic do is an attempt to fill in what someone took for a lacuna after dobertha; and co curp seim is a cheville borrowed from Poem V, line 93.
The detached part of this paragraph, which follows If 5a in R2, contains an unintelligible expression q cenn fri cotlud. Though a guesswork rendering for it is offered in the trans- lation, I suspect tha.t it is really nothing but an early mis- reading of cen forcend, "without end."
5, 5*. This If was no part of oo R1. It must have been a marginal gloss in yR1 ; it was taken into the text before the words Conid aire sin, etc. in *Q, and after them in VLF*X. Moreover, the differences between the texts in the two traditions cannot be explained except on the assumption that when it was in the marginal- gloss stage it was in Latin throughout, and that what we have are two independent attempts at a translation. The renderings into Irish of the words of the Deity are later still. Those in *Q are obviously quite independent of those in LF.
On the whole the texts are Old Latin. Terra es et in terrain ibis is OL : Vulg. has Puluis es et in puluerem ibis. Sabatier's restoration of the OL of the second quotation is In sudore faciei tui edes panem tuum : Vulg. has In sudore
" R.I.A. edition, p. 52 ; H. Bradshaw Soc. edition, p. 74.
208 NOTES ON SECTION I.
uultus tui ucsceris pane. Our text lies between the two; but Sabatier in his notes quotes an identical version from Hieronymus In Isaiam. The OL of the third quotation is Multiplieans multiplicabo tristitias tuas et gemitum tuum; in tristitiis paries filios. VuLg. has Multiplicabo aerumnas tuas et conceptus tuas; in dolore paries filios.
It is worth passing notice that the biblical order of the three texts is reversed. Almost certainly the original glossator quoted them from memory.
We note as a contribution to the genealogy of the mss. that the unauthorized addition et filias tuas is omitted in F, inserted without translation in L, and inserted with translation in *Q. We have no excerpt from *X at this point, so we do not know what was in that MS.
Sasam in E1 may also be read sasad, in the obscurity of the page.
5a. (in E2). I cannot find the reading Ecce os in any of the Latin versions, but it is presupposed by all the redactions.
75 cuma, which is absent from E, does not seem to make any reasonable sense : the suggested translation is a mere makeshift. I suspect that the words have no glossarial or other connexion with the text at all ; that they were originally a marginal scribble conveying a surreptitious communication from one student to another on some subject of transient interest — ' ' Never mind " ; "It doesn 't matter. ' '
In cliet-gliaire, here adopted from P as against VE, is certainly right : the gloss was clearly suggested by line 84 of the poem no. V. The change to choibclie is arbitrary, made by someone who did not understand the original reading.
It is obvious that this ff is an interpolation, quite irrespective of its absence from E1. It makes the creation of Eve follow the Fall !
6. This paragraph is the most difficult to read of the whole obscure first page of L. Here again *Q gives a better text, though there are several interpolations, especially the alternative version of the death of Abel.
There are numerous speculations as to the instrument of Abel's murder. The Book of Adam and Eve does not enlighten us. Tlie Book of the Rolls says that a sharp
NOTES ON SECTION I. 209
stone was used. In the Old English versions, it is commonly said that the instrument was an ass-bone : thus, in the Lyff of Adam and Eve we read "wib be eheke-bon of an asse he smot him on be hed"; and in Cursor Mundi (1073) we are told —
Wit the chafte ban of a ded has Men sais bat bar wit slan he was.
This was presumably suggested by the exploit of Samson against the Philistines. Salt air na Rann, which follows The Book of Adam and Eve, has nothing to say on the subject : and there does not appear to be any authority for the idea that a camel-bone was used. Did the old Irish historians fully comprehend the difference between an ass and a camel? In Cashel Cathedral there is a quaint carving of an elephant, of a much later date, which reveals a very rudimentary conception of the appearance of an exotic animal : and as in ancient Ireland the camel and the ass were equally unfamiliar,12 it is quite possible that they were supposed to be similar or identical.
"Lasin enaim chamaill" is the best that I can make of the faint traces in L. It seems to be different from the do lecain chamaill of R2 and the fid chnama of FR3 (§ 87). The version of this para-graph in F is glossarial, and has ousted its lemma : the original form (with some, minor verbal variations) is preserved by L*Q. The F version has been written after R2 attained its present form, in which the Flood is sta,ted to be a punishment for the murder of Abel. One of the glossators of R3 has copied it in ff 87, directly from F or perhaps V^ ; this late and corrupt version cannot come from the early MS. *X, which is the source of most of the R1 glosses in R3.
Fo intamail marbtha na n-idbart is a gloss which has come into the *Q tradition after its incorporation with R2 : it refers to Exodus xiii. 13, xxxiv. 20.
7. The folio torn from *Q to complete yR2 comes to an end just before ]\ 7. The mutilated MS. still remained, to form the basis of R3 : the *Q equivalent of this paragraph will be found in R3 at ft 88. The text of L is thus revealed as
12 See Proceedings, Royal Irish Academy, xxxiii, section C, p. 530.
L.G. — VOL. I. P
210 NOTES ON SECTION I.
corrupt. Mac Adaim has become imorro : aireagda ro bdi ac has dropped out, almost certainly by oversight of a cor fa chasdn (these words are in a cor fa chasm in F)13 : aoca rribdi eland is a gloss. In these respects F follows *Q exactly. The genealogy breaks the sense awkwardly, and is doubtless an early interpolation : it appears in all three mss. Most likely it was first written by an annotator in the margin. The second interpolation of L is not in F, which substitutes the Imroimadar .... Olibana also found at the end of fl 88. The remainder of the text of this part of R1 is genealogical, giving the following particulars —
(i) Seth to Noah, a genealogy at first assumed rather than expressed, but early interpolated into ff 7.
(ii) The three sons of Noah, with their inheritances (IT 8).
(iii) The sons of Japhet (fl 9).
(iv) The descendants in Ireland of Magog son of Japhet (IT 10). Everything outside this brief scheme may be taken as interpolated matter.
Acca mbai claind, shown by its absence from F*Q to be glossarial in the L tradition, is interesting, as it proves the acquaintance of a glossator in that tradition with poem no. V (see line 185 of that poem). There are two quatrains from this poem quoted in R1, from a version widely different from that which appears in R2, R3.
In tAdam tanisi has grown out of a. confused and inaccurate recollection of 1 Corinthians xv. 45.
The second interpolation is otiose, as it merely repeats what has gone before. F has a different interpolation here, which must come from a MS. of R2 (IT 10, H) : #R3 has copied it, like the preceding paragraph, from F or from \/F. Note that the discovery that the wives of Noah and his sons were their respective sisters had not been made when the MS. of R2 used by g¥ was written. Also note that the expression na hairci sin, which appears in the L interpolation, postulates a previous mention of the Ark which, in fact, does not occur in the present context.
13 An illustration of the fact that the external form of the texts is of considerable importance in criticising MSS., and especially in determining their affinities.
NOTES ON SECTION I. 211
The almost complete absence of the Flood story from R1 contrasts notably with the emphasis laid upon it in R2, R3, and is one of several indications of the primitive simplicity of that text.
The names of the women of Noah 's family were themes for endless vain speculation. According to The Book of Jubilees Noah's wife was called 'Enrzara, and the wives of his sons were respectively Sedeqetelebab, Ne'elatama'uk, and ' Adatan 'eses. Various Jewish and other apocryphal authorities name Noah's wife Noria, Noema, Bath-Enos, Tithea, and Haical; Eutychus names Salit, Nahlat, Arisisah as the wives of his sons.14 The poem Athair caicli gives Cata Rechta, Cata Chasta, Cata Flauia as the sons' wives (quatrain 39). Olla, here named as Shem's wife, there becomes the wife of Seth. Cbmestor gives similar names — Phuarpara for Noah's wife, and Pharphia, Cataflua, Fliva as the sons' wives. Cata Flauia or Cata Flua, expanded into Cata Folofia, appears in the compilation known as Bansenchus as the wife of Cain — confusion between Cain and Cam or Ham is not infrequent — as we may see in the Book of Leinster facsimile 136 b 32. In the Dialogue of Salomon and Saturnus15 this tradition is combined with that in the text before us. Noah 's wife is there called Dalila : those of Ham and Japhet are respectively Jatarecta and Catanuuia, but, the author adds, "by other names are they named, Olla, Ollina, and Ollibana." Shem's wife does not appear : indeed, Shem himself has become the wood of which the ark was made. In the fifteenth century Master of Oxford's Catechism the omission was rectified: Noah's wife is called Dalida, and the sons' wives are Cateslinna, Laterecta, and Aurca, other- wise Ollia, Olina, Olybana.16 In the Pseudo-Berossus of Johannes Annius16a — for what that absurd document may be
M Pabriciua, Codex Psendepigraphus Vet. Test., p. 277.
15 Ed). Kemble, p. 184.
16 Ibid., p. 218. The confusion of D and L (A, A) in these last two versions of the name of Noah's wife shows that it must come ultimately from a Greek source.
iea On this worthy see Proceedings R.I.A., viii, p. 354 ff. The only reason for quoting him here is the fact that he had somehow become acquainted with these names : the use which he made of them concerns no one but himself.
212 NOTES ON SECTION I.
worth — we read how "Noah taught astronomy, division of time, and astrological predictions, and he was considered as being of divine origin : therefore was he called Olybama and Arsa, which mean 'heaven' and 'sun' wherefore the Scythians of Armenia have towns Olybama and Arsa Rath a and the like. ' m In the Caedmon Genesis™ the names of these women are given as Percoba, Olla, Oliua, Olliuani. Gollancz, in his introduction to the sumptuous facsimile of the Caedmon ms.,19 considers that the passage containing these names is an interpolation, on the ground that elsewhere the ms. closely follows the Biblical text. He suggests that they have been picked out more or less at random from some Onomasticon of Biblical names, in which Aholah, Aholibah, Aliolibamah (Vulgate Oolla, Ooliba, Oolibama) occurred together. This is quite admissible, assuming the early existence (and local availability) of such an Onomasticon; but the compiler can hardly have taken the trouble to look up the unsavoury connexion in which the first two of these names are found (Ezekiel xxiii). His suggestion that Percoba is a corruption of "Berseba" seems, perhaps, less happy. Percoba figures in Bansenclius along with her daughters-in-law, thus characterized {Book of Leinster facs. 136 b, 35-40).
Percoba ben Noe co n-nari,20
Cen choi, cen gari — ba gaud!21 Copa seim ba comse a caem-fir,22
Toirsech ca coiniud a eland. Olla. setig Seim blaith bithi,
Ben Chaim Oliuan o hais, Commam Iafeth Olluane,
Na tarat barr for bais.
"Percoba the wife of Noe with shame,21 without weeping, without laughter — how dull!22 That she was modest suited
17 Fabricius, op. tit., p. 245.
18 Also in Saltair na Mann, ed. Stokes, lines 2485-2488. 39 Published 1927 by the British Academy.
20 Referring, presumably, to the episode of his drunkenness.
21 Lit., "it was niggardly " ! The translation adopted is a perhaps supererogatory attempt to endow the cheville with some semblance of
sense.
22 Ba comsech ca caem-'fir ms., which is unmetrical.
NOTES ON SECTION I. 213
her fair husband, sad in lamenting her were her children. Olla the spouse of Sem, smooth and feminine, the wife of Ham Oliuan of free-will : the wife of Japhet Oliuana, that won not the goal over death." Epiphanms (Adv. Haeres. I ii 26) gives us a long and silly story about "Noria wife of Noah" who burnt the Ark while it was a -building. This is irrelevant here : but it may not be a mere accidental coincidence that he makes reference immediately afterwards to a certain prophet, one Barkabba, whose name he describes as suitable,
KajSpa J(ip spfirivevtrai ' vopvtia' Kara rrjv ^LvpictKi)}* S<uAf»croi'. For completeness' sake wre may add that the poem beginning Iiedig dam a De do nivn, contained in the Irish Sex Aetates Mundi, has the same names, Copha, Olla, Oliua. It also gives Olla as the wife of Seth, along with Pibb and Pithibb, the wives of Adam's other married sons (cf. Poem V, line 188).
8. The *Q version of this ff, much farced with glosses and interpolations, appears in R3, partitioned between ]} 89 ad fin. and H 92. Its principal contribution to criticism is the close relationship which once more it shows between that ms. and F, as both have a glossarial addition correcting the number of the sons of Shem (but in different words). On the other hand it does not show some careless omissions of F.
The world was supposed, on the basis of the data supplied in Genesis x, to have been divided into 72 nations or linguistic groups : see for instance Isidore, Etym. IX ii. The total of 30 + 30 + 15 is 75, which is three too many : the glossarial note just referred to corrects this.
The names of Shem's sons here specified are the first three of those enumerated in Gen. x. 22. It is not clear why they should be reversed in order. "Persius" corresponds to the Biblical Elam.
CUsh and Canaan are the first and last of the sons of Ham enumerated in Gen. x. 6.
The sons of Japhet are more disguised. Dannai pre- sumably means Dodanim (recte Rodanim) at the end of the list in Gen. x. 4. Gregus no doubt is the same as Javan (= Ionians). Hispmnius is Tarshish, the leading town in Southern Spain. This, like "Dodanim," appears in Gen. x. 4 as a. son, not of Japhet, but of his son Javan. The equation Gomerus = the Biblical Gomer needs no comment.
214 NOTES ON SECTION I.
9. The *Q version of this ff appears is R3, partitioned, owing to later interpolation, between fl 94 and U 98. It became the common property of early historians, and appears also in Sex Aetates Mundi, from which another version of it has entered the text of H, in the long- extract from Sex Aetates which forms oar fl 95. It is also found in Nennius. Leaving for the moment the general question of the text and its origin, let us concentrate our attention upon the LG- version, as it appears in LF*Q. It is unknown to R2. The irrelevance of the passage to the main purpose of LG shows that it can be no part of the original text : but as it appears in *Q it must have been an early interpolation. The oldest form of it, however, happens to be preserved by a late interpolation in H (fi 93) : Iathfeth dono viae Nde, is uad tuaiscert-leth na Haissia -\ luclit na Heorpa wile. This must derive from a tradition earlier than the extant R1 texts : in these, the obviously glossarial A. Aissia Becc, Airmen, -\ Fir na Scithia had already become incorporated after Haissia, making it necessary to repeat is uad before luclit. L makes the further addition of Media, and corrupts tuaiscert-leth to slor-deise. "Mac Nde" was probably also glossarial, and I suspect that it was still interlined when oo R3 dealt with the text : it does not appear in H in the "full-dress" form in which we find the passage in fl 94, though BM both contain it.
I take it that these words, and the preceding quatrain (Triclia mac mm) were set out in \/HMB as follows: —
Jdjre^fr u<xvuiAifcz:t ijdfatfp2udif fabccdpwn 1 p/i vjlSckiai If uAtn gcbcol^TMM&x
To the margin of this MS. someone added against these words is iad a cland-sem lenfamaid, which appeal's in all three derivatives. M, and B as presented by its eighteenth-century copyists, follow the text with this addition, and display no more than unimportant orthographical variations. But coH started a vicious tradition by overlooking the words in the cor fa chasdn (line 2 of the above figure) at the end of the
NOTES ON SECTION I. 215
quatrain. He proceeded from the quatrain to line 3 ; thence, misled by the continuity of the sense, to line 4; and did not notice the omitted words till he came to Alaxandrach. So he inserted them in his transcript at the place which he had reached, allowing the repetition of the words is Had .... Alax. to remain, to save himself the trouble of making erasures. As he wrote Greg Beg .... Greg Mor in the first of these repetitions (ff 94) and reversed the order in the second (ff 98) it follows that the scribe of his exemplar (VHMB) must have accidentally omitted Greg Mor, and inserted it as an interlined correction. Large interpolations were subsequently made piecemeal in the H tradition — fl 93 after the quatrain, and fflj 95-97 before Grecus mac Iafeth. From this point onward the two texts, R1 and *Q, are virtually identical, and we need notice no more than that *Q justifies the insertion of mac after Hisicon imorro in tres, where L has left it out.
Taking now the paragraph in detail : the first few lines, and probably the only original part of the paragraph, enumerate the peoples descended from Japhet in Western Asia and Europe. The first interpolation enlarges on these details, assigning various peoples to the sons of Japhet from whom they are descended. These sons are the same as those enumerated above, in ]\ 8, excluding "Dannai, " who is here disregarded. Grecus and Essbdinus correspond to the Biblical Javan and Tubal. Isidore helps us to link them together : "Iauan a quo Tones qui et Graeci, Thubal a quo Iberi, qui et Hispanic Gomer, according to Isidore (loc. tit.), is the ancestor of the Galatae or Galli, so it is natural to affiliate to him two personages, Emoth and Ibath, who are in the traditional Teutonic and Celtic ancestry respectively; even although these have no warrant either in Genesis or in Isidore. The important son Magog does not appear : but that is because the following interpolations have divorced him from his context. Properly speaking, fl 10 should follow on immediately after the first interpolation, to which it belongs.
The second interpolation is an Irish version of the Frankish "Table of Nations," published first by Grimm,24
23 Etym., IX, ii, 28-29.
24 Teutonic Mythology, Eng-. Tr. by Stallybrass, vol. iv, p. 1734.
216 NOTES ON SECTION I.
and afterwards, with a much more extensive apparatus criticus, by Miillenhoff.25 This document must date from about the year 520, as Miillenhoff has shown — basing- his conclusions on the names included and (what is equally important) omitted. The genealogy starts from the statement for which Tacitus is our oldest authority,26 that the god Tuisto bad a son Mannus, from whose three sons are descended the three branches of the Germans, the Herminones, the Istaevones, and the Ingaevones. The Frankish Table gives eponymous names, Erminius, Inguo, Istio, clearly postulated to explain the names in Tacitus : and these are the Armen, Negna, and Isicon of the Irish version. Two mss. of the Frankish Table give Alanus or Alaneus as the father of these three eponyms. These mss. (E and F in Miillenhoff s enumeration) appear from the forms which the names assume to be of Irish origin. In the others, the parentage of the three brothers is not specified, though Alanus appears in the document as "the first king of Rome"! In "Alanus" Grimm recognized long ago a miswriting for the "Mannus" of Tacitus.
To Erminius the Frankish Table assigns the Goths, the Walagoths or Goths of Italy, the Vandals, the Gepidae, and the Saxons : to Inguo, the Burgnndians, Thuringians, Langobardi, and Baioarii or Bavarians, who a,re here referred to in literature for the first time. This distribution somehow became disjointed when the document reached Ireland. There, in Sex Aetates Mundi (see Booh of Ballymote, p. 3 of facsimile a 50, also LG H 95 N) ; in LG, in the present paragraph ; in the Reichenau ms. of the Table, lettered F in Miillenhoff 's edition; and in Nennius, who has certainly derived his copy from an Irish source ; the Burgnndians and Langobardi are transferred to "Airmen" or Erminius, and the Vandals given to "Negua" or Ingno in exchange. All the versions agiree in assigning: Romanus, Britones, Francus, and Alamannus — the Romans of Central Gaul, Britons (of Brittany), Franks, and Alemanni, the four peoples who in or about the time when the table was drawn up were under the domination of the Frankish Kingi Chlodwig) to Istio or
25 "Die frardrische Volkertafel" Abhandlimgen der Ak. zu Berlin, 1862, p. 532.
■" Germania, § 2.
NOTES ON SECTION I. 217
Isacon, the third of the three brothers. (Naturally Romanus, Francus, etc., in the Irish text are to be regarded as representing Latin accusative plurals.)
The table also appears in Sex Aetates Mundi and in Nennius ; the latter version, as Zimmer has shown27 must have been taken from an Irish source. But we ca,nnot follow Zimmer in concluding that that source must have been either LG or Sex Aetates— Zimmer prefers the former hypothesis. In fact, all three compilations must have borrowed it from some common source unknown ; for all three treat the genealogy differently. LG- links it on to Gomer, son of Noah : Sex Aetates to Magog : and Nennius to Javan. The last named gives us a long genealogy, back to the antediluvian patriarchs, impinging in one or two places only on the much shorter pedigree in R1 : we find Nennius 's version, however, in another connexion, in R2 (see below, ^ 16).
The peculiar pendant which is found in LG only, must be an addition by some philomath within the LG tradition itself. "Albanus" should of course be "Alemanus": the miswriting is a very simple matter. Our glossator thought of "Alba," and associated "Britus" with Britain (instead of Brittany). So he seemingly invented this story of the Britons having driven out the "Albans" across the English Channel, in order to secure the monopoly of the Island of Britain ; and he seeks to account for similar ethnic names on the continent — Albanians, Alba Longa, or what not — as the result of this manoeuvre. Sex Aetates has something similar, in saying that from Albanus come the "Albanians of Asia."28
10. (*Q version in ff 99, 100, much inflated with glosses.) As has already been noted, this paragraph is properly a continuation of the first interpolation in fl 9. The names in the form in which they appear here, from F, are very corrupt.
Tancatar Erinn, in which the verb of motion is used with- out a preposition, is a favourite construction in this text, and may possibly indicate the influence of a text originally in Latin \ as in Vergil's Italiam uenit).
27 Nennius vindicates, p. 234 ff.
28 See Zimmer, op. tit., p. 237 ff.
218 NOTES ON SECTION I.
Second Redaction.
11. This fl hints that in the original form of R2 there was an antecedent in which the unions of Sethites and Cainites were denounced. It is more fully preserved in R3, to which we may postpone the discussion of the subject. The three sentences, in which a singular conception of the family of Noah is suggested, are clearly glossarial interpolations. They have made no impression on R3 — except in the late MS. M, at fl 188, where the idea, implied is referred to. It is probably inspired partly by a desire to draw an exact analog}- between the households of Adam and of Noah, partly to insinuate that only by such irregular unions could the contamination of Cainite blood be avoided. I have found no authority for it in apocryphal or pseudepigraphic literature. The Syriac Cave of Treasures says that Noah married Haykel d. Namus d. Enoch, brother (sic) of Methuselah.283- It is referred to (probably borrowed from the text before us) by the compiler of the prose version of Bansenchus.
The statement that the Flood was a penalty for the crime of Cain has here arisen fortuitously, owing to the accidental juxtaposition of ff 6 from *Q and fi 11 from R2. It is possible to find it elsewhere in Apocrypha5 thus The Book of the Rolls, to give but one example, makes Adam prophesy to Seth in these words : Know, my son, that there must come a Flood to wash all the earth, on account of the children of Cain, the wicked man who slew his brother. But this is not really parallel : the Flood is here a punishment for the children of Cain [and their union with the Sethites] not for the crime of Cain.
12. Here we have definite proof of what we suspected in the preceding paragraph : that the Flood, according to R2 in its original form, was the penalty for the sinful marriages of Sethites and Cainites, and not for the crime of Cain itself, as the text, in its present form suggests. The theory is based upon a misinterpretation of Genesis vi. 1, 2.
2sa Tr. Budge, p. 99, who quotes (ibid., p. 97) the Book of Enoch, eh. x, for a marriage between Noah and Enoch's daughter: I cannot find this in Charles "s translation.
NOTES ON SECTION I. 219
The copyists of R2 have here and there made a bad muddle of the story : conspicuously so in this paragraph, especially in the laboured arithmetical disquisition inserted at the end. The account of the Flood was developed by the copyists of the R2 tradition : the R1 copyists took little interest in it. The R2 version has carelessly admitted certain discrepancies with the biblical history. The forty days of downpour, and the 600 years of Noah's life, come from Genesis vii. 12, 11. That there were "three pairs" of clean beasts is a lapse of memory : no sechta is a reader's correction. The month of May is named in the Irish text : the Hebrew and all the versions say "the second month. " On the hypothesis that the Creation took place at the Vernal Equinox, April would be the first complete month, and so May would be the second. That the biblical months were lunar was hidden from the compilers. The date (seventeenth) agrees with Heb. and Latin: LXX : has "twenty-seventh." A careless glossator seems to have misread the date as "seventh," and to have rushed in with the information that the embarkation took place on the nones (seventh) of May. I take the sentence beginning In tan tarnaic to be a gloss, as it breaks the sense : deda do inglan, etc., is a further gloss upon that : and no sechta is an additional gloss. Lower down, t cona ingenaib is obviously iglossarial, as it is superfluous before seitcliib, and indeed makes nonsense.
"Twelve cubits," which is given by all mss. for the height of the water level above the loftiest mountain-tops, is an error : the biblical text in all versions says ' ' fifteen, ' ' and (later in the fl) E and P have given the correct figure. So, apparently, did \/ V, as is suggested by the form cub ait for cubat. Early in the history of the text — or even in the history of the document from which the R2 compilers derived their information — .xii. must have been misread and mis- written for .xu., as often happens. It is indeed possible to read .xu., as the number is written, in both V and E ; but inadmissible, as it dislocates the arithmetic of the following interpolation. The Ark, we are told, drew ten cubits (there is no biblical warrant for this) : its keel was two cubits above the highest summit : therefore the water-level was twelve cubits above them. This note further contradicts the orthodox
220 NOTES ON SECTION I.
version of the height of the Ark (30 cubits, Gen. vi. 15) : ten cubits below water and fifteen above make only twenty-five. Something- has been lost from the sentence, .xii. cub at diu uas na sltibtib aid airdiu : I suggest diu < don usee > uas, which would be an easy haplography.
13. The irrelevance about Enoch and Fintan is clearly a reader's note. Of the latter we shall hear more on a later page. On the legend that Enoch is reserved to fight against Antichrist, along with Elijah (and even to perish in the fighting), see Revue celtique, xxvi, pp. 164-5, and references there.
14. The waters began to dry after 150 days (Gen. viii. 3), but the Ark was floating for 7 months 27 days (Gen. viii. 4, LXX and Vulg. : Hebrew says 17 days). The waters con- tinued to dry until the tenth month (Gen. viii. 5). An early loss by homoiotes at this point has affected all the mss. : before dechmud miss we must supply the words dechmad miss : i ccet 16 don. The raven was sent out after 40 days (Gen. viii. 6, all versions) : the 47 of the Irish text is a mistake. There is no Biblical warrant for sending forth the dove on the following day : it is derived from b-rriaw avrtw (LXX) or post eum (Vulg.) which represent a Hebrew original meaning from him (i.e. from Noah). The seven days' intervals of the missions of the dove follow the Biblical story.
15. The date of the exodus from the Ark, in all the Biblical versions, is given as "The twenty-seventh day of the second month" (Gen. viii. 14). For pridnoin Mai must be due to the same glossator as the author of the similar gloss in fl 12, who believed that the voyage occupied exactly a solar year, which, in fact, was approximately true.
The passage tossuch . . . oclit ccetaib is an interpolation, as it breaks the sense. It must come from some historical treatise (not Sex Aetates Mundi, but resembling it). The opening words are clearly a. chapter heading. The double article na Jideisse in domain may be accounted for by "age-of-the-world" having come to be regarded as an indivisible technical term. The figures are not accurate : the Hebrew reckoning should be 390, not 292; the Septuagint
NOTES ON SECTION I. 221
reckoning 1170, not 842. (See the table in Skinner's Commentary on Genesis, p. 233.)
The statement that Noah's altar was the first built after the Flood is preceded by the mark .i., which is usually diagnostic of an interpolated gloss. The passage anmand mac Noe to the end of the annexed poem is also no part of the original text. It likewise interrupts the sense, which is a description of the divisions of the world : and it gives names for the wives of Noah's sons not in accordance with the tradition followed by R2. This tradition is summed up in poem V, and if the original redactor had named these women, he would presumably have followed its lead. See note on ff 7. The last sentence is a relic of the original abstract of the Biblical history, rendered obsolete by the elaborate genealogical matter which has been superposed upon it.
16. Riphath, to whom the pedigree in this paragraph is traced, comes from Gen. x. 3. The original meaning of the name is obscure : in 1 Chron. i. 6 it appears as "Diphath," the discrepancy being due to the similarity of the characters for D and R in both the older and the later Hebrew scripts. The addition "Scot" has of course no Biblical warrant, but conceivably it has arisen from some copy of the Latin version in which the name was given as Riphaz or Rifatz (as in two of the mss. on which the Vatican variorum edition is based). The z we may suppose to have become separated from the rest of the name, resolved into sc or st, and then expanded into "Scot."
The genealogy is obviously quite different from that given in R1 : but it is of equal if not greater antiquity, for it was in the document used by Nennius. The ancestry of ''Alanius" as given by Nennius is practically identical with that before us. See fl 9 above.
The interpolation at the end is an attack on an opinion, presumably held by many men of learning at the time, but now of insignificant importance! But it illustrates the difficulty which the compilers had, in reducing their chaotic materials to order.
17. We have here the first of the Synchronistic disquisi- tions, chiefly founded upon the Chronicle of Eusebius, which
222 NOTES ON SECTION I.
form an important but probably intrusive element in R2, R3. The figures of Eusebius are not correctly reproduced. He allows only 853 years between the beginning of the reign of Ninas and the end of that of Tautanes (the Tutanes of our text) : whereas R2 has 874. As for Tautanes, we must take him as we find him. It has proved impossible to reconcile the names of Mesopotamian kings, derived by Eusebius from Berossus, with the names recovered from the monuments.
The interpolator in this paragraph reckons 40 years from the Tower to Feinius Farsaid : he must therefore be a different person from the author of the otherwise very similar inter- polation in If 16, who makes Feinius the sixteenth in descent from Rifath of the Tower.
If 17 allows two years from Feinius to Ninus, and from Eusebius we learn to consider Ninus a contemporary of Abraham. But we have already seen that on the lowest estimate there were 292 years from the Flood to Abraham : a long period must therefore be assumed from the Flood to the Tower, to be bridged by three generations only — Japhet, Gomer, Rifath.
The animadversion on the Auraicept is a fatuity : on referring to that text (ed. Calder, line 126) we find that the Latinus of the Tower was quite a different person from Latinus son of Faunus.
18. "Cincris" is the Akenkheres of Eusebius, the Smenkli-ka-ra of modern Egyptology. He is of no importance in Egyptian history : a mere ghost -king who reigned for a brief space c. 1360 B.C. immediately before the now famous Tutankhamun. The glossarial addition, explaining the name of Scota, has arisen from a later passage in the same redaction (see vol. ii, If 129, and note thereon). It was primarily an attempt to explain the relation of Scota II, daughter of Nectanebus, to the name "Scota," and to differentiate her from Scota I, daughter of "Cincris," who is the person before us at the moment.
Dobreath a ingen is in all the mss., and in the R3 appropriations of the text. It should be dobretha a ingen, as the corrector of E has noted in a very bad hand, which has induced the misreading, critical note (15) ad loc.
NOTES ON SECTION I. 223
Third Redaction.
At the beginning of the text in B is written in an eighteenth-century hand "Accounts partly authentic and partly fabulous of the first Inhabitant (sic) of Ireland." At the top of the first page in M is written in a hand con- temporary with the text An toibrechan selaithi annso sis. This has been partly cut through by a bookbinder, and is in consequence not perfectly easy to make out.
20. The gloss ism Mac, which has entered the text of M as an interpretation of ar tils or in principio (critical note no. 5), is an exegesis as old as Irenaeus, who saw what he presumably thought was the Hebrew word bar, "son" (it is really Aramaic), in the opening words of Genesis, B'reshith bard, "In the beginning of creating."29
The Irish annotator probably borrowed the idea from Petrus Comestor, whose influence is obvious throughout the glosses in R3 : Verbum erat principiuni in quo et per quod Pater creauit mundum . . . Creatus autem est in principio, id est, in Filio.30
With regard to the interpolations, we have seen above (note to ff 2a) that y2 does not come from *Q, the ms. of R1 used by oo R3, nor from *X, the ms. of R1 used by yW, but from *Z, the ms. of R2 used by y~R3, in which ms. it was still a recent interpolation in the margin. Y3 comes from #X. That it was added later than the others is shown by the reversal of the blocks of material, for the matter of y3 precedes y2 in R2. The first interpolator knew that the Creation was fully described in the following text : the second interpolator rushed in where his predecessor had thought it at least unnecessary to tread. The following differences
29 See Gwatkin, Early Chwrch History to A.D. 313, vol. i, pp. 196-7. The Armenian (the only extant) version of the Irenaeus text, at p. 692, translates these words < < The Son in the beginning. ; ' See also Augustine, De CvoHate Dei, xi. 32.
30 Eistoria Scholastica, cap. i.
224 NOTES ON SECTION I.
between this passage and its cognates in the other mss. are noteworthy :
(i) The statements are inverted, each day being named before its work. (The significance of this has already been pointed out in the notes to ft 2.)
(ii) The rn.onth-da.tes are inserted (possibly a still later interpolation).
(iii) Adam is mentioned before the beasts in the sixth day's work.
(iv) There are some differences of Vocabulary : neam for firmament (on which see note to ft 2). "muir" ina timchell, reltcmda for renna, anmanda muiridi for tondaitecliu. A few passages have all the appearance of intrusive glosses, and are marked as such in the text.
The date assigned to the beginning of Creation — fifteenth of the Kalends of April, i.e., 18th March — is obviously determined by the Vernal Equinox. The completed Universe is set upon its course on that day, the natural beginning of the year, solar and agricultural. Though not stated, it is presupposed by the Flood story in K2 : see note to ft 12.
With the description of the Matter of Creation compare the following, from Cursor Mundi (1. 348) : —
The mater first ther of he mad, That es the elementes to sai, That first scapless al samen lay . . . This elementz that al thinges bindes, Four er thai als elerkes fhides, The nethermast es watur and erth, The thrid es air, and fir the ferth.
The gloss ni locdacht, etc., may be borrowed from some commentary or homily, though I have not succeeded in tracing its origin. But it reads more like the interpolation of a copyist, anxious to reassure himself that the transcription of the words which he has just written down did not constitute an act of unpardonable sin. If this were so, we must assume that the major interpolations had already established them- selves in the text, concealing from the writer the fact that he was dealing with a text which had scriptural warrant.
NOTES ON SECTION I. 225
21. It is important, as will appear presently, to note that the words dropped by homoiotes in B (-] fodlad na n-usci) contain 14 letters.
The subject of ro fogail may be either Dla or firmamint — probably the latter, as it carries on the command "let it divide ... it divided. ' ' The ambiguity exists even in Heb. : LXX has removed it by inserting 6 0e6g. The Irish trans- lator is not quite emancipated from the idea of his predecessors responsible for R,1, R2, that firmamentum is a proper noun, and does not require the article.
22. Here there is another haplography in B, caused by the homoiotes of clcmdaiged. The mistake existed in \/B ; for sB has observed the gap in the sense, and has inserted a full stop after the clcmdaiged which has survived. His intelligence did not, however, carry him to the further step of realising that he was copying a biblical text, so that had he chosen he could have filled the lacuna by referring to a copy of the book of Genesis, and translating the equivalent of the missing words.
Note that 43 letters are lost, practically the exact triple of the loss noted in the preceding U : this indicates (i) that "X^B was written in narrow columns of short lines, with an average of 15 letters to the line, and (ii) that some of the carelessnesses for which the Book of Ballymote is notorious must be laid to the account of the exemplar from which it is copied.
23. In grein, ind csca, which have no authority in any version of the biblical text, are evidently old glosses, inter- lined in VBMH and incorporated with the text after the separation of the B, M (and H) traditions, in different relative contexts.
24. BamimdaigMer is an illustration of the use of the possessive pronouns to supply the place of the missing first and second persons of the passive : but it is probably an artificial archaism in this place. One distinguished Celtist to whom I showed it called it "a monstrosity."
25. In Tuismeadh is another old gloss, earlier than yBMH. The omission of verse 25, which is almost a repetition of
L.G. — VOL. I. Q
226 NOTES ON SECTION I.
verse 24, may have been intentional ; but Tr. is on the whole too conscientious for this, and it is more likely a piece of carelessness or laziness on the part of a copyist. On the interpolation, see notes to 1J 2a.
27. This paragraph begins the J-source of the Hebrew Genesis. Although Comestor calls special attention to the critically important word Dominus, which here begins to appear in the Divine name — adding an exegesis with which we need not trouble ourselves — the glossators have not shown any special interest in it ; nor has the Irish translator made any endeavour to maintain the distinction, which is found in the Hebrew and -all ancient versions.
The story of the finding of a name for Adam, contained in the long interpolation at the end of the paragraph, appears first in The Book of the Secrets of Enoch, written in Egypt somewhere about the beginning of the Christian Era, and brought to its final form by a Hellenistic Jew.31 It survives to-day in a Slavonic version only : but in its time it had a considerable influence upon Early Christian literature. In chap. xxx. v. 13 ff. we read: And I [God] appointed him [Adam] a name, from the four component parts, from east, from west, from south, from north, and I appointed for him four special stars, and I called his name Adam. Charles cites parallels from The Sibylline Oracles (iii. 24-6) ; Pseudo- Cyprian, Be Montibus Sina et Syon iv; Bede, Exposition of Genesis, iv; which in one form or another narrate the same story; others might be added. In Cursor Mundi we read (line 592)—
»
In this nam er four letters laid
That o the four 3a,tes er said :
Sua micul es Adam for to muth
Als est and west and north and south.
And thou mai ask, wit-outen blam,
Qui God him gaue sua mikel a nam . . .
It takens Adam and his sede
Ouer al the werld than suld thai spred.
81 See R. H. Charles, Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha of the Old Testament, ii, p. 425 ff.
NOTES ON SECTION I. 227
So we find in The Dialogue of Salomon and Satumus (Ed. Kemble, pp. 178, 194)—
"Whence was the name of Adam formed? — Of four stars. How are they called? — Arthox, Dux, Arotholem,
Minsymbrie. ' '
In illustration of which Kemble quotes the following' elegiac couplet from MS., Harl. 3362, fol. 6—
Anathole dedit A, Disis D, contulit Arctos Et Mesembrios M : collige, net Adam.
The Master of Oxford's Catechism (op. cit., p. 217) gives Artax, Dux, Arostolym, Momfumbres as the names of the four stars. None of these versions of the story refers to the mission of the angels, which, however, appears in the Old English Lyff of Adam and Eue : this text gives us the closest parallel to the Irish version —
"bo after he made mon of erbe in nesch and bon, in be vale of Ebron . . . ber-aftur God bad foure angelus bat heo schulden seche bulke monnes nome bat he hedde imaad. Seint Mihel wente in to be est : he seih ber a sterre bat was swibe briht, Anatalim was bat sterre ihote, wib be furste lettre A, and soone he com a3eyn. Gabriel in to be west-half wente; and he sei3 in be firmament a sterre bat hihte was Dysus : be furste lettre D ber-of soon he brou3te. Raphael com to be north : he say ber a sterre bat is iclepet Arcis; anon he fleyh a3ein, wib be furste letter A bat he con wib him bringe. Forb him wente Vriel riht in to be soub. Messembrion hihte be sterre bat he sih bere; wib be furste lettre M he wente swibe a3eyn & broulit hit tofore God wib >e obur breo. God took >eos foure lettres & bad Vriel rede & he radde : Adam."
28. Parrthus na Toile is a rendering of Paradisus Toluptatis, the Vulgate equivalent of the Garden of Eden. OL. has simply Paradisns, to which the Parrthus of R1 corresponds.
228 NOTES ON SECTION I.
The Rivers of Paradise were a favourite subject for speculation : it is therefore not surprising to find, this para- graph farced with glosses. The conceptions that lie behind them are set forth most simply in Cursor Mundi (line 1032) —
Midward that land [Paradise] a wel springes, That remies out with four strandes, Flummes farand in fer landes . . . The first es Tigre and sithen Gyon,32 Sithen Eufrates and Fison.
Some hints at the characters attributed to the Rivers of Paradise are given by Comestor (borrowing from Isidore XIII. xxi, 7). Unas dictus est Phison, qui a Gangaro rege Indiae dictus est Ganges . . . Tigris animal est uelocissimum, et ideo fluuius a sui uelocitate tigridi equiuocatus est . . . Euphrates frugifer uel fructuosus.Z2a- The Master of Oxford's Catechism comes close to the statements in Poem no. VI :
"Whate hight the iiij waters that renneth through Paradise? — The one hight Fyson, the other Egeon, the iijde Tygrys and the iiijth Effraton. Thise be milke, hony, oyll. and wyne."
There is a similar passage in Salomon and Saturnus. These ideas are forced, in Christian tradition, into an analogy between the four streams and the four evangelists : Cursor Mundi at line 21,293, likens the words of the Evangelists to water, wine, milk, and honey respectively. They are, however, of Jewish origin. Rabbi Yehosha ben Levi is quoted in Yalkut Shimoni as saying, in the course of a description of the terrestrial paradise, "And there flow out from it four rivers, one of milk, one of wine, one of balsam, and one of honey.
We have already seen that ^B had about 15 letters to the line. The haplography in the last interpolation in B is evidently due to a careless copying of words arranged thus —
32 In some MSS. Ganges.
32a Hist. Schol., Liber Genesis, cap. xiv (all quotations from this book are from the section on Genesis unless otherwise stated).
33 Eisenmenger, Entdecktes Judenthum, ii, p. 310.
NOTES ON SECTION I. 229
-p cfceppc obi trfjvi iuch rf)eio^ibecoj\ofd)
— the central line of the three being omitted, because either its end was similar to the end of line 1, or its beginning to the beginning of line 3.
Bdellium was the name of a gum, used for medicinal purposes. But Tr. or his copyists having turned the word into Boellium, the glossator identified it with the Latin opalus. His note is obviously a description of the opal set in the volcanic matrix (andesite or what not) in which it is found in nature. I have not traced the source of his information, but what he says about the stone seems to be a confused recollection of some description of the play of colours seen when it is contemplated from different angles.
29. That Adam was created first and afterwards trans- ferred to the Paradise was the general belief, following Genesis iii. 7, 8. Damascus is named as the scene of Adam's creation, and of his retreat after the Fall : see Comestor, eh. xiii. This Tradition is followed by gW, ft 38.
The glosses upon oipriged and coimetad are obviously suggested by Comestor. Tulit ergo Deus hominem de loco formationis suae in Paradisum, scilicet terrestrem, ut operaretur ioi. Non tamen laborando ex necessitate, sed delectando et recreando, et sic Deus "custodiret ilium/' scilicet hominem. Vel utrumque refertur ad hominem, ut scilicet homo custodiret Paradisum et "operaretur" ut dictum est. (Hist. Schol. xv.)
The interpolation y1 is meant to explain away the discrepancy between the threat of immediate death upon eating of the fruit, and the fact of Adam's survival for over 900 years.
Comestor, again, is the source of y2 : Praecepitque ei dicens, etc.; ut homo sciret se esse sub Domino, praeceptum accepit a Domino (loc. cit.).
230 NOTES ON SECTION I.
30. It is impossible to decide whether the string of adjectives after sum and ben in this fl, which is anticipatory of the vicious style of the later romance-writers, is due to Tr. or to his copyists. But see the note to the following ff.
The idea that Adam's sleep was mantic rather than anaesthetic seems to be another borrowing from Comestor : Non somnum, sed exstasim, in qua creditur supernae inter- fnisse curiae; unde et euigilans prophetauit de coniunctione Christi et Ecclesiae, et de diluuio futuro, et de iudicio per ignem (Hist. Schol. xvi). It was, however, a common idea : Epiphanius (Adv. Haeres. II i 48) ingeniously proves it by pointing out that Adam spoke of the past (os ex ossibus), present (ex uiro suo sumpta est) and the future (homo adhaerebit uxori sui) ! In the Old English Paraphrase of Genesis and Exodus34 we read — ■
God dede Sat he on sweuene cam, And in Sat sweuene he let him sen, Mikal Sat after sulde ben.
Many other quotations to the same effect might be taken from various sources.
The note is I seo cet faitsine appears to be due to a dullard homiletic glossator who has made several comments of the same kind on the text, and who is also probably responsible for the silly note ami grada, etc. He did not observe that a predecessor had already called Adam's words, Ecce os etc., "the first coibche and the first prophecy which Adam made." The longer gloss is older than the shorter statement, as it comes later in the text. This is a very important critical principle, of not infrequent application in the text before us. The annotator was in such a hurry to "hold his farthing rushlight to the sun" that he had not the patience to read a line or two further, when he would have found tha.t he had been anticipated. In fact, both wiseacres have been misled by careless reading of Comestor, who definitely asserts that the passage which follows (Quamobrcm, etc.) is the real prophecy (Hist. Schol. xix).
34 Ed. Morris, E. E. T. S. (1865), lines 224-6.
NOTES ON SECTION I. 231
31. There is evidence in the beginning of this ff that the adjectival exuberance of the biblical translation is to some i xtent giossarial. The superlatives attached to the Serpent in the original text have been multiplied by an annotator : they appear in the two mss. in a different order, which as before indicates the interpolation of an interlined gloss.
The interpolation y1 appears to come from R2, because Eve is represented as being the sole victim of the Serpent's temptation. Comparison with the text of R2 (ff 4*) shows that co curp sewn is an interpolation made after the leaf of *Q had come into R2, but before the writing of *Z, the copy of R2 used by gW. The omission of Iofer Niger is a striking feature in this version of the passage.
The envy of Lucifer against Adam is referred to by Comestor {Lucifer enim deiectus a Paradiso spirituum, inuidit Jiomini quod esset in Paradiso corporum, sciens si facer et eum transgredi quod et ille eiiceretur (Hist. Schol. xxi)). For once, however, this is not the source of the interpolation : the idea had been in the text from before Comestor's time, and LGr, as we have seen, has no hint at the contrast between the spiritual and the terrestrial paradise emphasized by Comestor. The interpolation y2 has nothing to do with y1. It comes from a different source, and is most likely due to a different annotator.
Before these interpolations were made the text probably ran thus : Ro oai nathair . , . -\ ro raid. As the interpolation separated the subject from the verb, a later glossator inter- lined .i. in athair sin above ro raid. When the gloss entered the text is I evolved out of .i. This glossator's spelling of athair, without the initial n, has survived the vicissitudes of his note after its incorporation.
32. This paragraph is much farced with glosses. After ro hoslaicit a leaf has been lost from B. Its matter is preserved in the eighteenth-century transcript /?, which is a good, though not a perfect copy of the MS. The two other eighteenth-century copies, p1, /32, have been collated through- out, but (as has been shown in the introduction) their only value is as a check on (3, confirming some of its readings; their own variations do not appear to possess any importance, but they are recorded in order to secure completeness.
232 NOTES ON SECTION I.
''In the noise of a mighty wind" is a carious misinter- pretation of the Latin ad auram.
A medhon chrainn Pairrthus : the singular number of chrainn reproduces the Latin ligni.
33. The gloss 6 guth aingleagda is preserved in M only, but probably is another loss in the B tradition due to the short lines of "f/B and the carelessness of s\/B. If the text were written in ^B thus
o £ttcfy din gZ ed^&a
IjicjidlDdAfcAcouc
there would have been homoiotes at both ends — a fatal trap for s\/B.
On the first leaf of H, which begins in this fl, the top- most 16 lines of each column are torn away entirely, and some of the others are injured, as the tear runs obliquely. In fact, the first few of the surviving lines are reduced in this manner to a few letters only, which would be quite unintelligible if we did not possess a perfect copy in M for comparison. If this first leaf of H had been perfect, the surviving portion of that text would have begun somewhere about verse 4 of the chapter, thus extending back to slightly before the beginning of the lacuna in B.
It may be worth mentioning that the "Welsh antiquary, Edward Lhuyd, according to a letter written by him on 20 December 1702, and printed in Archceologia Cambrensis, 1859, p. 246, was possessed of "an imperfect copy of the B[ook] of Genesis in Irish" bestowed upon him by a priest near Sligo, who told him that "in the opinion of one of their chief est antiquitys [sic]" it "was very little later than the first planting of Christianity' ' in Ireland. This fragment does not seem to be preserved among Lhuyd 's mss. in Oxford; and as one or more of the fragments now bound up in the miscellany which includes our manuscript H were at one time in Lhuyd 's possession and bear his autograph, I am
NOTES ON SECTION I. 233
inclined to suspect that this "fragment of the book of Genesis" was no- other than H. If so, its Sligo provenance may possibly be confirmatory of the suggestion made above (p. 13) that the H leaves had been torn out to supplement the deficiencies of the Book of Ballymote. In that case, however, the deficiency was not that caused by the loss of folio 9, which must have taken place after Lhuyd's time, but the chasm in this text described, loc. cit. Further, the depredation most probably took place before 1522, when the Book of Ballymote appears to have migrated from Sligo to Tir Conaill.
Dorad domh do chrcmn, omitting the definite article, is a literal translation from the Latin dedit mihi de ligno. It adds a subtle point to the story, as suggesting that Adam professed ignorance of the tree from which the fruit had come; but unfortunately the Hebrew text disallows it.
For the curious rendering acht me fern, see the notes on the Latin text.
34. The translator seems to have missed the point of the serpent's "lying in wait," and to have understood it to mean self -protection rather than hostility.
The gloss iomad galar mlsda dhuit is paralleled by a Kabbinic idea (Eisenmenger, i, p. 833) that this disability is due to a union between Eve and Sammael in the guise of the Serpent.
Further confirmation of our conclusions as to the nature of -tyB is here forthcoming. As the words d'indearna Dia . . . 1 do thalmain are absent in /3012 we may take it for certain that they were also absent in B. They just amount to two of the short lines of which we have already found indications —
cen coj\ <xt<v£cui/vpo
234 NOTES ON SECTION I.
The eye of s\/B wandered from the beginning of the second of these lines to the beginning of the fourth.
35. Our worthy glossator seems to fear that subsequent readers, if not warned, would take Eve to be the mother of animals as well as of men !
How gH ascertained that the garments made for Adam and Eve were of one colour does not appear.
36. The perverse exegesis in the interpolation in this ff is from Comestor : Ironia est, quasi uoluit esse ut Bens, sed in euidenti est modo quod non est (Hist. Schol. xxiv).
37. Y1 is clearly an incorporated gloss, the lemma of which is the sentence following. It filled the whole interlinear space above that sentence in the ms. from which it entered the body of the text, and thus it was taken in before the words which it ought to have followed. That Adam and Eve remained virgin in Paradise was a notion suggested by the fact that Eve's name of universal mother is not recorded till after the Fall. Something of the idea will be found in Augustine, Civ. Dei xiii, 13, 14 : and it was emphasised in the Bevelationes of Pseudo-Methodius, according to which, Sciendum est quod exeuntes Adam et Eua de Paradiso uirgines fuerint; or as the Old English paraphrase expresses it/
3et owt of Paradyse when bey paste clene vyrgenys were bey both —
Our glossators, however, show no direct acquaintance with that singular production, and probably took the idea from Comestor, who gives a paraphrase of the words of Pseudo- Methodius in his chap. xxv. According to the Syriac Book of the Bee, Adam and Eve remained virgins for 30 years after their expulsion (ed. Budge, chap xviii).
The interpretation of the name of Cain is borrowed in the first instance from Isidore : Cain possessio inter pretatur, unde etymologiam ipsius exprimens pater eius ait "Cain" id est ((Possedi hominem per Deum." Idem et lamentatio, eo quod pro interfecto Abel interfcctus sit, et poenam sui sceleris dederit. Abel luctus inter pretatur (Etym. VH.
NOTES ON SECTION I. 235
vi. 7). We must regard no lamentacio as a gloss, although Isidore gives the alternative interpretation, partly because, though in a Latin context, it is introduced by an Irish conjunction, and partly because it is ignored in the subsequent matter. Both etymologies are of course wrong. Caneithi is the Hebrew MTOp qamthi, "I have gotten," Lamentatio looks back to the quite independent Hebrew word HTp qinah "a dirge." All these early commentators overlook the fact, which a little knowledge of elementary Hebrew grammar would have taught them, that it was Eve, not Adam, who said Possedi hominem. But they are in the good company of Augustine, Civ. Dei xv. 15.
The idea expressed in y3, following many ancient commentators and versions, that the acceptance of Abel's offering was indicated by fire from heaven, seems to go back to the version of Theodotion, in which l'I£^ (respexit) is translated ivtirvpiatv. It is, of course, developed under the influence of the narrative in I (III) Kings xviii (Elijah on Carmel). As usual, Comestor is the proximate source of the glossator's information : Quia placuit Deo Abel et pro ipso placuit oblatio eius, quod quomodo cognitum fuerit, alia translatio aperit. ' ' Inflammauit Deus super Abel et super munera eius." Ignis enim de coelo oblationem eius incendit. (Hist. Schol. xxvi).
There is no authority for the words a ttoirsi -\ in dabha, which must be a glossarial expansion.
38. The simple account of the murder of Abel in B (as preserved in the derivatives of that ms.) is clearly the original version, being based on the Genesis text. The interpolation in M, ro tad a da laim fo bragait cor ba marb (H here unfortunately fails us) is as clearly borrowed from R2. This introduces us to a further complication in the history of the text — the borrowings from earlier redactions at late stages of development. This cannot be one of the borrowings originally made from *Z, as in that case it would have been in B also.
Y1, in one form or another, must have been in yBMH. The family had returned to Damascus where Adam was
236 NOTES ON SECTION I.
created — we need not vex the shades of the glossator by insisting that Damascus could hardly have been a cathair at this stage of the world's history, as he conceived it. Comestor says of the expulsion from Paradise: Emisit eum Dommus de Paradiso Voluptatis . . . in agrum scilicet Damascenum, de quo sumptus fuerat, in quo Cain Abel swum fratrem inter- fecit (Hist. Schol. xxiv).
Y2 seems to be an extract from some homily upon Abel. The haplography attested by (3012 must have been in B. It was easy for a scribe to commit (Abel do cet marb . . . Abel in cet martir) but for once it cannot be laid to the account of \/B, for the omitted words are too long for the 15-lettcr lines of "^B.
The variant of the question Quid fecisti in M is curious. Presumably it is due ultimately to a reader who, having read Cid doroinnaisel was moved to write in the margin Pecad 7 gnim n-adbal ! (He was of the spiritual kindred of Lucifer's critic in fl 3.) The loss of cid, which might easily happen after the preceding Cain (especially if it were written Caidin, as in P) would result in the absorption of this note by the text. Y4 seems to come from another homily, in which reference was made to Genesis iv. 10, xviii. 20, and Luke xviii. 7, 8.
39. Once more we have a paragraph filled with glossarial fatuities. The ms. from which coH, coM, and 00 B were copied, in this order (as .shown above, p. 14) must have had ro oslaic a bel, probably with an open a in oslaic. Both 00 M and 00 H independently misread this as ro slide Abel: but 00 B copied it correctly, and in the derivatives from B the reading has been put beyond a doubt by inserting the prefixed /. We have already seen that we cannot assume a '1JMH differentiated from MJB ; the mistake must therefore have been made twice. In the M tradition a number of interpolations— three in this paragraph alone — have entered the text, not found in H or in B. Y1 has been inserted by some one who did not take the trouble to observe that it contradicts the biblical story, related a few lines above. But it must have entered the M tradition before the story about Abel's being strangled with Cain's hands (fl 38) was inserted. For we may lay it down as a general principle that when we have two contradicting interpolations (a) and (&), if they
NOTES ON SECTION I. 237
lun consecutively they may be contemporary, the glossator setting down two opposing views between which he makes no choice; or else (&), the second, may be later than (a), having been interpolated by a second glossator to contradict what was already in the text. But if the two are separated by some lines of text, then the probability is greatly in favour of («) being the later of the two, having been inserted by a reader who has not yet reached (6) and does not anticipate it.
The perverse notion that the mark of Cain was designed to secure a prolongation of his punishment is borrowed from Comestor. " Omnis quis inuenerit me occidet me." Ex timore hoc dixit, uel optando dixit, quasi dicer et: JJtinam occidant me. "Dixitque ei Deus: Nequaquam it a fiet." Non cito scilicet morieris, " sed omnis qui occiderit Cain" — supplendum est, liberabit eum a timore, a dolor e, et miseria — "septuplum punietur." Id est, punitio fiet de eo dum uiuet in poena.
There have been many speculations on the mark of Cain. For once Comestor is jettisoned by our glossators, who say nothing about the theory adopted by him, that the mark was a perpetual shaking of the head — that "he wagged alwey forb wib his heued" as the Old English Lyff of Adam and Eue puts it. The 'lump in his forehead' goes back to a lost Book of Lantech, which told how Lamech, under the guidance of his son Tubalcain — for he was blind — shot an arrow at a wild man covered with hair, and with a horn growing out of his forehead, who proved to be Cain. Lamech was so distressed by the discovery that he killed Tubalcain. The additional "lumps" are added by yM. under the influence of poem no. V (quatrain 23). That Cain had no beard comes indirectly from the same authority, which states (lines 123, 124) that Seth was the first man who grew a beard.
40. A glossator has doubtless introduced the appellation dlamus, in order to distinguish the Cainite from the Sethite Lamech. The interpretation of the wTord is most likely the work of a still later annotator.
41. That Naamah was a weaver or embroideress was a commonplace of mediaeval apocryphal speculation. Probably our glossator borrowed the fact from Comestor — Soror uero-
238 NOTES ON SECTION I.
Tubalcain Noema, quae inuenit arUm uariae texturae (Hist. Schol. xxviii). So also Cursor Mundi (line 1523) —
A sister had this brether alsua, And sco was heiten Noema : Scho was the formest webster, That man findes o that mister. That fader was the first o liue, That bigam was, wit dubul vijfe.
Ro chet-chum is a favourite construction in this text : the composition of cet with a verb, to denote "he was the first to ' ' perform whatever action is specified.
42. The difficult Song of Lamech has given trouble to the translator, and apparently also to his copyists. The rendering as we have it does not even make reasonable sense, to say nothing of its relation to the original text. Ro mharbus fer amuigh aniu seems to have arisen out of Ro mliarbas fer am guinib (the last word perhaps written guiniu), thus repre- senting the Latin occidi varum in uulnus meum. The sentence which follows is apparently a gloss, the original form of which was most likely .i. is inund q " ro chrechtnaiges" annsin.
The word sechtoll does not seem to occur elsewhere in Irish literature.
It is curious that none of our meddlesome glossators have come forward with the information — known to the author of poem no. V, and universally believed — that Lamech 's victim was Cain.
43. Adam's speech is thus written in /3 : air Adhamli, \ar\ A. siol, etc., indicating that the scribe was puzzled by the word ar. It can scarcely be equated with the Irish ar, "ploughing": it is perhaps a degeneration of the Hebrew I'H* zer'a, "seed" — read backwards, like the Tetragram- maton in poem no. V. This word appears in the original of the passage, and may have reached the Irish translator by some circuitous route.
At the end of this paragraph there comes the lacuna in the B-tradition (see p. 13) which was there even before B lost its leaf. The eighteenth-century copyists were conscious of a gap in the sense, and each in his own way made a makeshift
NOTES ON SECTION I. 239
stop-gap, here printed as fl 43a. H resumes in the course of the following paragraph, and until M fails us at the end of \\ 52 H and M are the only authorities for the text. It is here printed from M, with variants from H.
44. Y2 like y3, was in M only. H is here defective, but a count of words shows that there was no room for it.
According to a belief recorded by Comestor, Adam was only seven hours in Paradise (Quidam tradunt eos fuisse in Faradiso sept em horas — Hist. Schol. xxiv). With this Cursor Mundi more or less agrees (line 985) —
For he [Adam] was wroght at undern tide,
At middai Eue draun of his side.
Thai brak the forbot als sun,
That thai war bath don out at none.
A poem contained in the Book of XJi Maine specifies 134 hours : but the Master of Oxford makes the time seven years. The writer of y2 must have copied it from some other literary source, as is indicated by the spelling Eba, by the here superfluous specification of the nature of the sin, and by the description of the forbidden tree as Grand na Haithne (not Fessa).
Of the transfer of Adam's head to Golgotha, Comestor, with a critical judgement which he does not as a rule encourage us to expect in him, wTrites as follows : Ambrosias, in Epist. ad Romanos uidetur uelle quod ibi sepultus fuerit Adam, et a capite eius dictum Caluariam; et ei dictum ab apostolo: Surge qui dormis, exsurge a mortuis, et illuminabit te Christ as. Be qua opinione dicit Hieronymus quod fauorabilis est inter pretatio, et mulcens aures, non tamen uera. Vnde credimus hoc a. falsariis positum in Ambrosio. (Hist. Schol. in Euangel. elxx). Of the burial of Adam in Hebron we read in Cursor Mundi (line 1415) —
Doluen he [Adam] was thoru Seth his sun, In the dale that hat Ebron :
and in Comestor : Locus in quo luxerunt [Adam and Eve, after Abel] dicitur Vallis Lacrymarum iuxta Hebrom (Hist. Schol. xxv, doubtless suggested by Ps. lxxxiii [Hebrew lxxxiv]
240 NOTES ON SECTION I.
verse 7). This geography is a commonplace of the Adam apocrypha. The interpolation y3 is peculiar to M, and probably came from the same literary source as y2. The glossators have apparently never heard the Eastern story, told in The Cave of Treasures, that the body of Adam was part of the cargo of the Ark, where it served the useful purpose of keeping the men and the women apart ; and that it was afterwards buried by Shem in Golgotha.
45 ff. Worthy of passing notice is a commentator, possibly of ethnological or psychological interest, who was apparently unable to conceive of large numbers except in scores, and had to reduce the hundreds to that unit, in order to under- stand them.
50. Enoch was the central figure of a. vast mass of folklore and apocryphal literature. His existence "in desert places and away from common life" is doubtless an expansion of the Biblical et non apparuit, but it may have reached the Irish glossator from some special source.
The ten names of God are thus enumerated by Isidore {Etym. VII. i. 1) : El, Eloi, Eloe, Sabaoth, Elion, Eie, Adonai, la, Tetragrammaton, Saddai. The list gjven by Epiphanius {Adv. Haeres. I, iii, 40) is Sabaoth, Eli, Eloi, Israel, Sadadai, Ellion, Rabboni, la, Adonai, Iabe. On their magical use, see Budge, Amulets and Superstitions, pp. 369 ff.
From o anmandaib ecsamlaib in this paragraph to the end of ]\ 52, M is our only authority for the text.
52. With the end of this paragraph the great lacuna begins in M. Unlike sB, sM was conscious of the gap in his exemplar, ?nd left the remainder of the column, upon which he was writing, a blank, in the hope of filling in the missing matter afterwards. This neither he nor the subsequent owners of M were ever able to do : and H, which now carries on the story, shows us that the space provided (32 lines in a column of 50 lines) was absurdly small.
We are still in the mutilated first leaf of H, which has lost the top lines of all its columns. The missing portions of the two texts slightly overlap, so that at this point there are a few lines of the text which are altogether lost, as well as
NOTES ON SECTION I. 241
portions of the beginnings and endings of others — covering- verses V. 31 (last clause) and VI. 1, 2, of the biblical text.
In the gloss explaining the name of Noah, is Noe is doubt- less to be corrected to .i. Noe.
53. From here on to ff 87 our only authority is H. The first two verses of chap. VI, lost from our text, contain the fragmentary tale of intercourse between filii Dei and filiae hominum. This tantalizing story was for long the subject of speculation : and some copyist seems to have considered these speculations more interesting than the barren biblical narrative. That the "sons of God" were the Sethites, and the "daughters of men" the Cainites, was the normal mediaeval solution of the enigma. It is set forth in Pseudo- Methodius as well as in Comestor, ch. xxxi, the Old English Lyff of Adam and Eve, and many other authorities. The full story, as related in The Gave of Treasures, is to the effect that Adam, when dying, had commanded Seth and his descendants to remain on the holy mountain of Hermon, apart from the offspring of Cain, and that this injunction was lepeated by each succeeding patriarch till the days of Yared (Jared, which means "descent"), when the Sethites broke their oaths and went down to the encampment of iniquity of the Cainites. The glossator has based his interpolation, with which the text resumes after the lacuna, upon the detailed paraphrase of this story in the Irish Sex Aetates Mundi. The ms. is here much injured. The inner edge of the leaf has been made ragged by tearing the fragment from its proper place (as described, p. 13 ante), and in consequence parts of several lines are lost. Some of the gaps can be filled up by a collation of Sex Aetates (Rawl. B 502 facsimile) ; but not all, for the texts, though similar, are not identical. Restorations of the text are here contained within square brackets.
The alternative explanation of the origin of the monsters, recorded here by a later glossator, will be found below, fl 81.
54. The glossator has forgotten that the descendants of Seth had their share in the production of the giants.
L.G. — VOL. I. R
242 NOTES ON SECTION I.
55. Here again an extract from Sex Aetates Mvmdi has been interpolated, and has ousted verses 5, 6, of the biblical text : a process facilitated by the fact that the two passages began with the same words. The passage as it appears in Eawl. B, 502, reads Otchonairc Dia imorro tictain doib dar a thimna, ro chinnistar na doini do huili-dilgenn, coni do tucad in diliu. This has been expanded in our text by glossators.
The interpolation at the end of the paragraph is from another source.
57. Y2 is obviously suggested by Comestor's fuit liaec area in fundamento quadrata (Hist. Schol. xxxii).
The interpolations y3 a, b, are parts of a single marginal note that has become bisected, and has entered the text in two different places — in the second place breaking very awkwardly into the sense. The information is derived in part from Comestor : Bitumine intus et extra Imita est, quod est gluten feruentissimum quo ligna linita non dissoluuntur aliqua ui uel arte nee materia uel maceria bituminata solid potest ... In lacubus Iudaeae supernatans colligitur. In Syria limns est a terra aestuans. Comestor in his turn seems to have taken this from Isidore (Etym. XVI. ii. 1) : Bitumen in Iudaeae lacu Asplvaltite emergit, cuius glebas supematantes nautae seaphis adpropugnantes colligunt- In Syria autem limus est passim aestuans <h terra . . . Natura eius ardens et ignium cognata, et neque aqua neque ferro sumpitur . . . utilis ad conpages nauium.
I can find no authority for the two persons who altruisti- cally contributed to the success of an enterprise from which they themselves derived no benefit : the carpenter with the improbable name Epiphenius, and the mixer of pitch whose name, in the absence of auxiliary evidence, cannot be certainly read in the text : evidently sH could not read it clearly in yi[, and did his little best to copy it as it stood.
$iffbrd4f?£flire
The curved line over the n is turned the wrong way for the usual m contraction. It is a little to the right of the middle
NOTES ON SECTION I. 243
of the n, and is attached to the top of the following I. The only expansion that I can think of is Dia-anarlaoite, as printed in the text, or perhaps Anarlarte. By a perverse fate the name of the father of these brethren is torn away except the end, 13, in which the minim is most likely part of an n. This gives -nus, a termination that will not fit any antediluvian name in history or legend that I ever heard of. These names, and the details of the construction of the Ark here set forth, and the prayers of Noah and his sons, appear to come from some lost homily or apocryphon.
58. Here again a glossator tells us of the peculiar matrimonial relationships of Noah and his sons, presumably borrowing them from some late ms. of R2.
59. On the importance of the discrimination between clean and unclean birds in this paragraph, see p. 9 ante. The adjectives silteach saidbirm&y be original or glossarial, it is uncertain which, and matters little.
60-65. There is little in these paragraphs to call for notice other than what is referred to in the notes on the biblical text. The glosses are more than usually naive : note especially the expression of admiration for the Ark at the end of ff 61, and the description of the proceedings of the dove in ff 65. If the latter is not an invention, it would be difficult to say whence the glossator obtained his information. Someone has acutely observed that glosses like this express and partially satisfy a natural craving for an illustrated history-book. In the absence of pictures, the annotator jots down picturesque details, which fill in the mental picture suggested by the words.
That the first emission of the dove took place seven days after that of the raven is a glossator's discovery, with no biblical authority.
66. The chronology of the Flood according to the inter- polation forming this and the following paragraph is not easy to follow, and the attentions of glossators have added to the confusion. But the following is clear (paying due attention to the corrections, p. 127) —
year |
month |
day |
600 |
2 |
10 |
600 |
2 |
17 |
600 |
7 |
17 |
600 |
10 |
1 |
600 |
11 |
11 |
601 |
1 |
1 |
601 |
2 |
27 |
244 NOTES ON SECTION I.
Noah enters ark
Flood begins
Flood lasts 150 days = 5 months of 30 days each. Therefore ground- ing of ark at the end of that time takes place on
Mountain tops appear
Raven sent forth 40 days afterwards (1 month and 10 days), and there- fore on
Noah opens ark
Noah leaves ark
Noah has therefore been in the ark 1 year 17 days — in the Irish reckoning 1 year 16 days.
The interpolators (or one of them) apparently supposed that the expression "second month" implies that the May in which Noah entered the ark was an intercalary May (Mai atkarrach). This is interesting, as it seems to indicate the recollection of a lunar calendar like that of Cbligny.35 The calculation that he entered the ark on a Friday and left it on a Tuesday presupposes a lunar calendar with 12 months of 30 days : 12 X 30 + 16 = 376 = 7 X 53 + 5. The first of these five extra days being Friday, the last would be Tuesday : on this assumption therefore the calendar works out.
It is unknown to me on what basis or authority the number of species of birds and fishes in the ark is reckoned — or for that matter, why fishes were included in the calculation at all.
67. The reference to Enoch is rendered obscure by the state of the MS. : Mict\-oMii|\\ comes at the end of a line, after which a blob of the very opaque purplish colour, with which a capital letter on the other side of the page had been decorated, has penetrated through the vellum. Underneath this disconcerting obstruction the eye of faith can discern very faint traces of a letter like an L or a. b. The eji begins the next line ; but -p^*ej\ is more difficult to comprehend than ]-6-e]\, the reading here adopted. The general sense is presumably that as Adam and Noah were the founders of
35 Unlike those responsible for R2, who thought of solar months : see notes on f 12 above.
NOTES ON SECTION I. 245
human physical life, the pious Enoch was the founder of human spiritual life.
78. The gloss i ona huilib fnaib is a good illustration of the haste of a reader, too impatient to read to the end of the sentence, where he would have discovered that' the birds had not been forgotten.
80. Comestor says (on earlier authority) that the rainbow shall cease to appear forty years before the Last Judgement : Et tradunt sancti quod quadraginta, annis ante Indicium non v.idebitur arcus, quod etiam naturaliter ostendet desiccationein aeris iam incoeptam (Hist. Schol. xxxv). This paragraph is greatly influenced by the corresponding passage in Sex Aetates Mundi, from which also the long passage on the history of the rainbow comes. The absence from Sex Aetates of the anticipation that the bow will not appear before the Judgement indicates that this is a later intrusive gloss on the LG- text.
81. Here again the translation has been contaminated by an extract from Sex Aetates Mundi. The glosses also come from that work, so that the obvious interruption of the former by the latter is old. Jl3 interpolates the mutual slaying of "the children of Dardan and Ioph," which does not refer to the Trojan war, as might appear at first sight,36 but to the destruction of the Midianites (Judges vii. 19 ff.) : Dadan and Ephai appear in the Latin version of the account of the family from which this people is said to have descended (Gen. xxv. 3, 4).
We are not, however, to suppose a simple cross-copying from one book to the other. The curse on Ham, and the destruction of his descendants, were written in first : the further note, here printed in smaller type, attributing the existence of monsters to the curse on Ham, must have been added as an interlined and marginal afterthought. This is shown by its dispartition (compare the fate of the note on the composition of pitch, ff 57.)
36 Notwithstanding the occurrence of these names, in Trojan connexion, among the descendants of Ham in Sex Aetates Mundi.
246 NOTES ON SECTION I.
The word gid (in tucad gid dilgend) does not appear in the corresponding- place in Sex Aetates Mundi (see Bawl. B, 502, facs. p. 71 b, line 49). I take it that the words in \/H were tucad aigid-dilgend "a death-destruction was brought" (on the persons of the Canaanites, and confiscation on their land). The missing letters were in a cor fd chasdn at the end of the preceding line, and were overlooked by sH.
I
2
4 ItfiU cd(tAX]mdlldcz.cm j?n -aj \iobedofiUM Carifa Z!l ?i
5 nriAWj^pefmdiifdlcwiD]lienT3ctbAi^m^]o\pcoiipt..n,b
6 MApCACACtle-h'Dlb . O&b her pn bufiXO n«TOp«h<ffl
The accompanying diagram sliows what must have lain before sH in the ms. (VH) which he was copying. The preceding ms. (^H) had nothing but the matter of the first and last of these lines in sequence (omitting, of course, the letters after lafeth in line 1). Later, someone wrote into the margin of "^H the note about the consequences which the curse upon Ham had brought upon his Canaanite descendants. After this, VH was copied from -fH.; and the copyist took this note into the text, the writing being disposed as in the diagram. Still later, another scribbler, writing partly between the lines and partly in the margin, enriched \/H with the further details about the monsters descended from Ham — an item of special interest, apparently, as another glossator inserted it again in \/H, at fl 53.
When our ms. H was copied, history repeated itself. The new paragraph was incorporated in the text at what was obviously the most convenient place, the period preceding Iarsin in line 2. The scribe pursued it as far as da i nib, in the margin at the end of line 5 : but he failed to observe its conclusion, tucked into the blank space at the end of the short line 6. He then returned to Iarsin : but the inter- lineation which he had already copied, and at which he did not look again, screened from his vision the cor fd chasdn, which must have concluded the first line and contained the beginning of the obviously imperfect word "gid." There
NOTES ON SECTION I. 247
must have been no more than a short sentence before Iarsin originally : a longer sentence would have filled up the preceding line to the end, kuving no space for the indispens- able cor fa chasan. This is an additional argument for the secondary nature of the "monsters" gloss.
It is most fortunate that sH possessed in abundant measure the most valuable of all endowments for a scribe — ww-intelligence. He copied by rote what lay before him : its meaning, if it had any, was not his concern — that was the affair of his betters. Owing to this admirable quality, he failed to identify, in the words at the end of line 6 when at last he reached them, the end of the "monsters" note which he had copied only a few moments before — although he had already copied out its whole text some time previously, when writing ff 53. He therefore transcribed them just as they stood, and made no attempt to insert them in their proper place. It never occurred to him that "gid dilgend" was incomprehensible nonsense. Had he realised these things, he would infallibly have made disastrous efforts after emenda- tion, and would thus have destroyed all the clues !
R3, while copying these details, omits a censure upon the Gaedil for ascribing the monsters to the Cainites, this being a violation of the scriptural truth that all life perished in the Flood. Augustine (Civ. Dei XVI. 8) discusses at length whether the monstrous races of men (in which there was in his time at least a half -belief : he gives a list of these deformities of folklore) were descendants of Noah, and answers in the affirmative. He does not, however, call in the curse of Ham to account for them.
82. The genealogical chap, x is lost. The heterogeneous paragraphs which follow the Biblical translation represent various attempts to fill its place.
83. The story of the Tower of Babel is very diffuse, and departs widely, in its language at least, from the biblical text. The lacunae near the beginning are due to a tear which mutilates the inner margin of the leaf.
"Hebrew," says Augustine (Civ. Dei XVI, 2), "was the common language of the race of men till the time of Heber father of Pefeg, when the earth was divided. Till then it did
248 NOTES ON SECTION I.
not require a distinctive name, but after that it was called Hebrew, after Heber. " Nowhere can the origin of the name Gorthigern, given to this primitive language by Irish historians and grammarians, be discerned : we might guess that it is a corruption of some sort of rendering of the Vox Domini of the Psalter, the language being assumed to be the speech of Heaven.
[It may be desirable to explain here, in condonation of the use of the symbol A for the Latin manuscript which lies at the basis of the biblical text which we have been studying, that it has been chosen simply because it is one of the very few symbols not already pre-empted by the elaborate apparatus criticus of the Vatican edition. There is not the slightest fear of its ever being confused with the St. Gall ms.]
86. The biblical extract is followed by a miscellaneous collection of snippets, with the basal text *Q acting as frame- work. For an analysis of this part of the compilation see the introduction to the present section. In these paragraphs, the parts belonging to *Q are printed in ordinary type, the stratification of interpolations being roughly indicated by two varieties of smaller type. This paragraph is in H only, but the lacuna of M ends at the beginning of the poem. The particulars as to the place of death of the patriarchs are doubtless taken primarily from poem no. V, quatrain 42 : but from what source it reached that authority I have not discovered, and until it is found attempts at explaining Eafan and Eadruip would be mere guesswork. Formeinia, of course, = Armenia, and the mountain intended is no doubt Ararat.
87. In H and M, apparently from R2, or from some text depending thereon. The comment regarding the age of Adam seems to come from this passage of Comestor, quoting Pseudo- Methodius : Et anno creationis uitae Adam decimo quinto natiis est ei Cain et soror eius Chalmana. Et si enim f actus est Adam quasi in aetate triginta annorum tamen fuit unius diei et anni (Hist. Schol. xxv).
88. This comes from *Q. See the notes on R1, ff 7. The appended gloss, though containing the same substance as the
NOTES ON SECTION I. 249
corresponding gloss in fl 7, is differently worded and must have been introduced independently.
89. The last sentence and the appended quatrain continue the matter from *Q : but before it a passage from Sex Aetates Mundi has been interpolated. This includes the first verse of a poem (gfiven in full in Sex Aetates) and the tabular state- ment of the ages of the Patriarchs. These figures agree with Sex Aetates against all versions of the biblical text (except the Irish translation printed above) in the case of Seth : against all versions including the Irish translation in the ease of Mahalaleel : and with all versions against the Irish translation in the cases of Methuselah and Lamech.
90. In H only, of unidentified origin. But see below ff 92. Two successive readers have appended speculations on how
the Goidelic language came to be.
91. Also in H only. It is mutilated by a tear from the inner margin of the leaf, and would be unintelligible if it were not borrowed from Sex Aetates Mundi, with the aid of which text it can be partly restored — though with some slight verbal differences — from the copies in Rawl. B. 502 and in B. The words acht a leigiud a fo-tasgor na cinel appear in Rawl. (41 d 20) from which B differs only in some orthographical trifles, in the form acht a lecud hi fothechdas na genel n-aile. The following passage from Isidore (IX ii. 39) appears to be the basis of the paragraph : Nam quod ex filio Cham qui vocatur Mesraim Aegyptii sunt exorti, nulla hie resonat origo uooabidi, sicut nee Aethiopum, qui dicuntur ad eum filium Cham pertinere, qui Chus appellatus est. Et si omnia consider entur , plura tamen gentium mutate quam manentia uocabula apparent, quibus postea nomina diuersa dedit ratio. See also Augustine, Civ. Dei, XVI, 6.
92. The beginning of this fl is in BM as well as H, but it is a continuation of the matter in H 90; H 91 being a later interpolation. The text of *Q then resumes : note how the correction about the number of the sons of Shem has been taken over. The passage is much farced with interpolations. The formula cia ainmigter . . . ni tabar a n-airem comes from
250 NOTES ON SECTION I.
Sex Aetates Mundi, as also does H's note, which has ousted its lemma, to the effect that the unnamed sons had descendants, but of no importance. The summary enumeration of the sons of Shem and of Japhet in R1 has been expanded by reference, not to the Biblical source, but to Isidore (IX ii 26 ff.). He enumerates the sons of Japhet thus : Gomer (ancestor of Galatae i.e., Galli), Magog (supposed ancestor of Scythians and Goths), Madai (supposed ancestor of Medes), Ieiuan (ancestor of Ionians, who are the Greeks, and eponym of the Ionian Sea), Thubal (ancestor of Iberi who are the Hispani, by some supposed ancestor of the Italians), Mosoch (ex quo Cappadoces, unde et urbs apud eos usque hodie Mazaca dicitur), Thiras (ancestor of Thracians). By some misunderstanding the city of Mazaca (Caesarea in Cappadocia) has become an unauthorized additional son, Maisechda, whose descendants a later interpolator naturally sought in vain : see below fl" 95 L. The variant in H (i ni lobar .... tabairt forro) is an adaptation of a similar passage in Civ. Dei, XVI, 3.
93. This paragraph in H only. It is borrowed from R2 (ft 15). It is not clear why the order of the sons of Noah has been reversed.
94. This paragraph, more or less mutilated, is in all the mss. It comes from R1, but there are some traces of the influence of R2. The version before us gives some good readings. It is more probable that Fir net Scitluet should decline into Farsacca, and that this, owing to the constant association of "Medes and Persians, ' ' should develop a prefixed Media, than that Farsacca (protected by the associated Media from misunderstanding) should evolve into Fir na Scithia, The phrase Is Had lucid net Heorpa uile is now exposed as a marginal gloss, taken into the text in different places: and "Greens mac Iafeth" is likewise shown to be an intruder into the text of R1.
95. For convenience of reference this very long paragraph is broken into sections, denoted by capital letters. Most of it comes from Sex Aetates Mundi (here referred to as SAM) : it is found in H only.
NOTES ON SECTION I. 251
A. — The gloss no Eonae and the secondary gloss .i. an seindser, are not in SAM. But the additional son of Japhet appears, there named Masseca.
B. — The interpolated explanation of the name Gallograeci is based on Isidore, Etym., IX, ii, 68. {Galatae Galli esse noscuntur, qui in auxilium a rege Bithyniae euocati regnum cum eo parta victoria diuiserunt: sicque deinde Graecis admixti primum Gallograeci, nunc ex antiquo Gallorum nomine Galatae nuncupantur.)
C. — Also based on Isidore, Etym., IX, ii, 69 (Graeci ante Thessali a Thessalo, postea a Graeco rege Graeci sunt nuncupati).
D. — This section only repeats well-worn etymological speculations with neither value nor authority behind them. The harmonistic identification of Rifath with Ibath is perhaps worth a passing acknowledgement.
E. — Taken direct from the list of Japhet 's descendants in Isidore Etym., IX ii, 26 ff. (Filii Gomer nepotes Iaphet, AscJianaz a quo Sarmatae quos Graeci Rheginos uocant, Riphatli a quo Paphlagones, Gotorna a quo sunt Phryges). "l Ilia" must be a gloss.
F. — Madai, a quo Medos existere putant : Isidore, loc. cit. We shall hear of the eight Medians who ruled the world, in due course, in some of the later synchronistic insertions.
G. — A combination of Isidore and SAM. According to the former : Filii lavan Elisa, a quibus Graeci Elisaei, qui uocantur Aeolides. TJnde et lingica quinta, Graece AloXic, appellatur; and again, Iauan, a quo Tones, qui et Grae'ci-; unde et Mare Ionium. In SAM we read : Iaban a quo Ioni sunt, et a quibus nominatur Ionicum Mare, -\ is uadib rogenatar Eolldai -\ a quibus 7iominantur Iolici. Ocus is uaidib ainmnigthir in cuiced berla na Greci i. Berla Eolla. There is no reference to Alexander the Great in either source.
H. — Isidore, loc. cit. : Tharsis a quo Cilices, ut Ioseph us arbitratur- Unde et metropolis ciuitas eorum Tharsus dicitur Cetlmn, a qiw Citii id est Cyprii, a quibus liodieque urbs- Citium nominatur. Dodanim, a quo RJiodii. I cannot find
252 NOTES ON SECTION I.
any justification for the quoting of Civ. Dei as an authority, unless it be this sentence from XVI, iii, ad init. : Coeptae .sunt cnim commemorari a mmimo fUo qui meatus est lapheth. A poor latinist, with an ill-written MS., might mix up "Coeptae" with "Seithim," and "lapheth" with "Ioif," and produce the reading presupposed. An absurd reading, but probably most of us have heard or perpetrated equal absurdities in our own schooldays.
I. — This comes from some other source. The islands are admittedly enumerated from memory, and the names appear to be distorted : Edict, Sicil and Creid are the only ones whose identification is clear. Corbdith and Ceitliiria are presumably the Cycladic islands Car pathos and Cytherea. Rodain I conjecture (with fitting hesitation) to be the Balearic Islands, which were colonized by Khodians, and are roughly speaking opposite the mouth of the Rhone {Rhodanus).
K.—Thubal, a quo Iberi qui et Hispani: Hat quidam ex eo et Italos suspicentur. The Irish compiler is less cautious than Isidore. The remainder of this section apparently comes from Augustine (Civ. Dei, VII, 4).
L. — Mosoch, ex quo Cappadoces, wide et urbs apud eos usque lwdic Mazaca dicitur; Thiras, ex quo Th races,— Isidore, loc. cit. The Irish writer does not trouble himself with the Cappadocian city of Mazaca, which, as we have already seen, has become "Maissegda" son of Japhet, SAM, while briefly enumerating the descendants of the sons of Japhet, though mentioning this fiction in the preliminary text, does not, like the author of the interpolation before us, confess that information about his progeny is missing. It gives us the extra-biblical information that Thiras had seven sons: and then enumerates the children of Corner, as they appear in § E above. But it does not. like the text before us, duplicate the personality of Rifath.
M. Magog, a quo arhitrantur Scythas ct Gothos traxisse
origin cm : Isidore, loc. cit. The identification of the Goths and the Gaedil follows from the historical sojourn of the former, and the legendary sojourn of the latter, in the land of the Scythians, of which we shall hear later. The matter
NOTES ON SECTION I. 253
of this section, in shorter: form, appears in SAM : Isidore remarks further : Gothi a Magog filio Iaphet nominati putantur de similitudine ultimae syllabae, quos ueteres magis "Getas" quam "Gothos" uocauerunt (IX, ii, 89).
N. — This repeats matter which has already appeared in R1 (U 9) and will be found again in ff 98, taken from *Q. The text here is different, and more closely in accordance with that in SAM. The paternity of Baath is differently given, and the genealogical steps between him and Elenus or Alanus are omitted. Longbardus has been duplicated, and his double has been made into a fourth son of Negua. SAM differs from E3 as to the geographical connexion of Albaniis : we there read .i. ota ind Albcrin airtherach isind Assia Moir.
0. — Borrowed from SAM, with an interpolation on the descent of the Franks and the Romans from Alanus.
P. — Only the beginning from SAM. The rest is the orthodox LCr tradition, though the family of Barachan is new.
Q. — Mostly from SAM but with some expansion. "Sliab Mai ' ' can be identified with Amanus by the help of Comestor (Filii Iaphet tenuerunt septentrionalem regionem a Tauro et Amano montibus Ciliciae et Syriae usque ad fluuium Tanaim — Hist. Schol. xxxvii). Isidore testifies to the same distribution : Haec sunt gentes de stirpe Iaphet, quae a Tauro monte ad aquilonem mediam partem Asiae et oninem Europam usque ad Oceanum Brittanicum possident. The sentence relating to Spain appears to be corrupt. In SAM it reads : 1 in Espain n-uilidi co huilinn talmain (Rawl) or -\ conice in Easpain uilide fodeis .i. treuilleach, which is nearer our
present text. Tre-uilleach is written rinlle^c, which suggests a possible origin for the mysterious word uuillflichc ; but tre-uillig also appears in the text before us, and if this excludes the explanation suggested, I can only conjecture that it is a corruption of Astures.
96. In H only. Ionitus, the fourth son of Noah, has obviously reached our text through Comestor. Centesimo anno tertiae chiliadis natus est Noe fHiuS in similitudinem-
254 NOTES ON SECTION I.
eius, et dixit eum Ionithum. Trecentesimo anno dedit Noe donationes filio suo Ionitho, et dimisit eum in terram Ethan, et intrauit earn Ionithus usque ad inwe orientis, quod dicitur Elioschora, id est, " solis regio." Hie accepit a Domino donum sapientiae, et invenit Astronomiam (Hist. Schol. xxxvii). Comestor here follows Pseudo-Methodius,37 whose alleged "Revelations" popularized this personage in Europe. He passed into the traditions of the founding of Rome, the greatness of which he was said, to have foretold. See CI. A. Graz, Roma nella memoria e nelle immaginazioni del medio eve, Torino, 1882, I, p. 86.38 The legend is of oriental origin. According to the Cave of Treasures Nimrod learned wisdom from Yon ton son of Noah, but the devil afterwards perverted the teaching, which accounts for the mixture of good and evil in astrology, magic, etc. The Book of the Bee gives Y6nat6n as the name of the post-diluval son, whom Noah loaded with gifts and sent forth "to the fire39 of the sun" in the east.
97. In H only. A history of the beginnings of the arts, clearly an imitation — almost a parody — of the inventions attributed in Genesis to the sons of the Cainite Lamech. Eve's penitence in the Tigris is the central incident in the Book of Adam and Eve and related apocryphal documents. The twin sister of Cain is usually (following Pseudo-Methodius) called Calmana. Is uimpi doronad an t-ed refers to the story that the real cause of Abel's murder was the desire of both brethren to marry this sister : a dispute in which Adam took the part of Abel, as he considered that Cain's twin consanguinity was too close for an admissible marriage. The brother 'Pendan' appears in the later redaction of Tenga Bith-nua (Revue Celtique, xxviii, p. 300) as a second victim of Cam's jealousy.
Two long interpolations have divorced Oliuana from her husband Japhet.
The erection of the pillars is attributed to Seth by Josephus, who is apparently the source of this frequently-
37 See C. D 'Evelyn, The Revelations of Methodius (Mod. Language Assoc, of America, xxxiii (1918), p. 135.)
38 1 have had no opportunity of verifying this reference.
39 "Fire" should be "land." The corresponding Syriac words in their native script have some superficial resemblance, which might mis- lead a careless or astigmatic copyist.
NOTES ON SECTION I.
255
repeated story (Antiqq. I, ii, 3). The Irish writer has missed the point of the difference in the materials of the pillars. According to Josephus, there were two pillars, one of brick and one of stone. If the anticipated destruction came by water, the stone pillar would survive, if by fire the pillar of brick.
98. On this paragraph see notes to f[ 9.
99. This is from *Q. It is instructive to compare the two genealogies of Partholon wdth the corresponding text in F, fl 10, the only other R1 text which has preserved this passage.
*Q (i)
*Q (2)
F
Parthalon |
Parthalon |
Parthalon |
m. Sera |
m. Sera |
m. Sera |
m. Sru |
m. Sru |
m. Sru |
m. Esru |
m. Esru |
m. Esru |
m. Gaeidil Glas
m. Niuil
m. Feiniusa Farrsaig
m. Praimint
m. Bimbind
m. Bathatha m. Magog m. Iathfeth
m. Aitheachda m. Magog m. Iathfeth
m. Aaithecha m. Magoth m. Iafeth
Most likely the genealogy marked *Q (1) is the original, and was the only one in *Q. In the LF*X tradition, the shorter genealogy became substituted for the #Q genealogy; and this alternative form was inserted into the tradition from some ms. of that group. When two variant forms of a state- ment are given, united by a conjunction which means or, in the overwhelming majority of cases we may assume that the first is the original form, the second an interpolated alternative.
The concluding part of this % which is certainly no part of the original text, is a condensed (and confused) genealogy of the Aithech-Tuatha of Connacht. Tindi s. Conri, Eochu Dala, and Fidheg s. Feg, who is not here mentioned, divided Connacht between them after the coming of the Fir Bolg, taking respectively the East, West, and South of the Province. See Genealogical Tracts, i (ed 6 Raithbheartaigh) under the various names in the index, where further aspects of the
256 NOTES ON SECTION I.
relationships of these communities will be found. They are there derived from the Fir Bolg, not, as here, from the Nemedians. One or other of the two references to Tindi s. Conri in the paragraph before us, must be intrusive : it is not certain which, as the Genealogical Tracts assign him to the Fir Taiden. These, with the Domnannaig and the Fir Craibe, constituted the "three original Connachta." Sliab (F)uirri is in Galway, near the Roscommon boundary, and close to Ballygar.
101. This paragraph, as is explained in the introduction, begins a translation of the early Latin text. It was headed Miniugud Gabal nErenn "An explanation (i.e. translation) of the 'Takings of Ireland'." The following words were doubtless added when the text (originally independent) was tacked on to R2, to supplement the deficiencies of that version.
Ethre i mbcolo aissyieisen ''an end (or tail) in a mouth of relation" rendered by Thurneysen (Zu ir. ffandschr. u. Lit. ii, 5) as "recapitulation" perhaps might rather be supposed to refer to the end of a chain of oral transmission, and be translated "tradition."
6 thosuch in libair aniias : an editorial note, inserted to link the text to R2 to which it is now appended.
Hybernia insola, etc., down to ilinsola" Latine dicitur, is probably the preface of the original text.
Then follows an interpolation derived from Isidore (XIV, vi, 6) as Thurneysen has already observed : it is not repro- duced quite correctly in our mss. : the true readings of Isidore are given here in footnotes to the text, There are two glosses, one explaining the corrupt Hiberniam (for Hiberiam) and the other contradicting the oft-quoted statement, disseminated by Solinus, as to the absence of bees.
Scoti autem a Scota adnotentur is an additional
interpolation, suggested by the reference to the Seotnrum gentes in the excerpt from Isidore.
The sentence beginning Plioeni autem is a further inter- polation, interrupting the remarks about the Scots. Their identification with the tatooed Picts in this passage is contrary to all the orthodoxy of the LG tradition.
With Heriu dono the original passage resumes: this follows on naturallv to the etymological speculations
NOTES ON SECTION I. 257
interrupted by the intruded excerpt from Isidore. Here again an unusual idea is suggested. The comment s. q. 1. is a frequent formula, of complaint regarding a passage which a reader found it hard to understand. It is equivalent to the difficilis est haec pagina of the Saint-Gall Priscian.
Quasi scissi is another etymological interpolation, a guess by some wiseacre at the origin of the word Scoti.
Verse Texts.
Metre : the two quatrains forming this composition are probably, in origin, independent compositions, as is suggested by their diversity of metre. The second is in. cmbairdne (73 + 73) with trisyllabic rhymes between lines 2 and 4; the first is in sndm sebaic, a variety in which the third line ends with a monosyllable.
The text has been greatly corrupted by scribes, who tinkered with it unrestrainedly in the vain hope of extracting more sense out of it than the author or authors ever put into it : as the verses are mere displays of metrical gymnastics, the meaning is of minor importance in an endeavour to restore the text. In addition to the rhymes, there is assonance between the first two lines of each stanza, and an alliteration in every line, which the attentions of the scribes have to some extent suppressed. This is the chief help toward restoring the text. The ms. P has been re-inked unintelligently.
1. Sluag has evidently been changed to the plural after the incorporation of the second quatrain, bringing another ' ' host ' ' into view. Both alliteration and meaning help us to choose cua-chel "a winter (or rainy) death" as the true reading, although it happens to be found only in the three inferior derivatives from B. Conad has arisen from a misreading of a mark of prolongation as an abbreviation for n : the same mistake is probably at the base of F's ecnad. In sndm sebaic there is no necessity for vowel-assonance between lines 1 and 3, and therefore we can read eel, "death, fate" instead of the less tractable eel "an omen."
L.G. — VOL. I. S
258 NOTES ON SECTION I.
2. The insertion of oc in MH (not in B) is an attempt to mend the metre, after Noe had come to be pronounced as a monosyllable, Nai. The alliteration decides for niath-Un against rival readings.
3. The evidence for the infixed pronoun (ronglead) is hardly strong- enough to justify us in adopting it, though it may be right.
4. Iatafen in E is an attempt to mend the metre, the name having sunk into a dissyllable.
8. The rhyme with dibada teaches us the pronunciation Olluana.
II.
Metre : debide irnrind.
Apparently a. variant of poem V quatrain 40, not found in any complete text of the poem — or more probably from another poem on similar lines, as V is in debide scdilte, and has only two quatrains (23, 49) in debide imrind.
III.
Metre : debide scdilte.
A variant of poem V quatrain 41, likewise not found in any complete text of the poem. In Min these two quatrains run continuously, as though forming one extract : this may be original, the matter which separates them in the other Kedactions being editorial. Nae is here still a dissyllable, but Iafeth is no longer trisyllabic. The variant do dec in the last line has obviously arisen from a misreading of the numeral sign .u.
IV.
Metre: cro cummaisc etir casbairdne -\ letkrcnnmgecht. There should be alliterations in the first two lines at least, but in a poem so full of proper names this is impossible to maintain consistently. The language is Middle Irish.
20. This cheville may also be translated something like "well seen was his authority," but the rendering chosen makes little difference to the sense.
NOTES ON SECTION I. 259
22. den used absolutely, as a rhyme to soer.
32. Meic, inserted before Ebaith by numerous MSS., though desirable, is hypermetric and must be rejected.
33. Iardain must be read instead of larboneil, for metrical reasons, thougjh the last is the more orthodox form.
36. Esru and meic must be omitted, for metrical reasons. Compare line 32.
39. This refers to the magical apparition of the Tiiatha De Danann : the ' ' plain ' ' is Mag Tuired.
V.
Metre : debide scdilte. The versifier began by making alliterative linkages (conacJilann) between the end of every quatrain and the beginning of the next, but after the seventh quatrain abandoned the effort : no re-arrangement of the quatrains can establish the device after this point, and we must assume that the few cases to be found in the latter part of the poem are accidental.
There are two versions of this long composition, contained in not a few modern mss. I have collated several of these in the Royal Irish Academy40 without finding anything of importance : no version contains the isolated variants which
40 23 A 40, F III 2, 23 M 18, C vi 1, 24 P 13. Of these 23 A 40 23 M 18 audi Cvl belong- to the M group and show nearly all of its peculiar readings and) arrangements of the quatrains. Except for scribal mistakes (as abartar for abar, line 98 (23 A 40)) or the peculiar spelling Caidin for Cain in 23 M 18, they show no particular individu- ality. A later hand has inserted into 23 A 40 an attribution of the poem to Eochaid ua Floind : 23 M 18 is content to say Ollamh eigin cct. E III 2 and) 24 P 13 are closer to the printed version. F III 2, which attributes the poem to Colum Cllle, closely follows EP in its readings. The following variants may be worth noting: line 58 (this spurious quatrain is present, as in EP) dib gain, Chaim: line 68 Agania (for Gogoma): line 89, tri troth go leith, nl luad saobh: line 129, ro fasadh Mii. ccnoic: line 142, Tubadh Caoin. Stanzas 28-30, 34, 37, 39, 45, 46, 50 are omitted. The city in line 251 is called Imbitena, as in D ; in 263 we find Etrosius — one of many proofs afforded by Irish mss. that although c was always pronounced hard in Irish, it was pronounced as s before i and e in Latin. 24 P 13 has also close affinity with EP, but has nothing of importance to tell us.
260 NOTES ON SECTION I.
we have seen in nos. II, III above. In the mss. before us, M may be taken as the type of the one text, R2 of the other. H, on the Avhole, follows R2, but U (the Book of Vi Maine), which has a fine copy in a different context, follows the M version. Referring back to the diagram, p. 14 ante, I am now inclined to think that the two folios, 2 and 7, disappeared together, and had both gone when coM transcribed the text. He recognised the torso of the poem, and found another copy from which to supply the missing quatrains (1-30). M and H appear to agree against R2 more frequently in the second half of the poem than in the first.
42. Mac maith Muire ingine (an unconscious lapse into the heresy of Sabellianism !) is peculiar to M among the manuscripts here used. Though not in U, it is a reading of the M version of the text.
43. None of the mss. indicate the nasalization after dr.
46. Maiss, the chaotic material out of which the universe was fashioned.
52. The "clouds" (neoil) are introduced to make an assonance with coin. The poet takes advantage of the freedom in debide rhyme to unite the long vowel in gle with the short vowel in Darddine. Some peculiar minor verbal differentiations appear in the M text in this quatrain.
54. The assertive interjection Bebrad is here left untranslated, in view of the uncertainty attaching to its etymology. As everyone knows, an over-indulgence in this expletive was one of St. Patrick's few human weaknesses.
57. This stanza breaks the conachlann, which has not yet been abandoned; and as it appears in two mss. only it is probably spurious, even although it is a necessary supplement to the preceding stanzas, which describe the works of creation. It is here printed as in E, with the addition of punctuation and prolongation marks only. Dcg-dail, the company listening to the narrative. Anmann must be for anmunna (the a elided before the following vowel); this, and the accusative deilb, are governed by aisneidfcd. Note the article with a noun depending on a proper-name genitive in the last line.
NOTES ON SECTION I.
261
61 ff. The poet is here dealing with a body of apocrypha differing from that followed in the prose text, as may be shown bv the following table : —
Head from Breast ,, Belly „
Legs
Prose (U 2a, 25)
Garad
Arabia Lodain Aojoiria
Verse
Malon Aron Babylon Laban, Gogoma
— 'disregarding the variant forms in the different mss.
This, however, does not bring us nearer to discovering the origin of the Irish version of the story. Verses which appear to be a. rather remote variant of these quatrains, found in Codex Palatino-Vrtticamis (Todd Lectures, III, p. 24) revert to the prose version (Garad, Arabion [or Aradon, or Adilon], Laban, and Dagaria [or Gagaria]). The poet has also his own views as to the course of the rivers of Paradise. Tairis if the reading of all the mss., but we should doubtless emend this to tairse : the rivers ran through the (fern.) land, not the (masc.) head. In this stanza we note an important deviation in the M text.
69. Trdtli(a) means "days," as is more usual in this text, not (canonical) hours, on account of the reference to Christ's three days in the tomb. The first couplet of this quatrain is metrically faulty, as both lines end in a dis- syllable. That Adam was for some time without life is a popular belief in apocryphal literature : but it is quite independent of the three-days' sojourn of Christ in the tomb, with which it is here typologically connected. In fact, the stories vary as to the length of time which elapsed before the body of Adam was quickened. A Muslim legend shows some affinity with the ideas here expressed. "Allah formed Adam out of a handful of dust . . . which . . . had been collected from different parts of the world, and consisted of various kinds of soil, which accounts for the divers colours of men and women. When Allah had formed Adam, He left the figure lying lifeless forty days — some say forty years — while
262 NOTES ON SECTION I.
notice was sent to the Angels, the Jinn, and the Jan, to be ready to worship and do him honour as soon as Allah had put breath into his nostrils.41
73. Trior presumably means the three Persons of the Trinity, who are represented as collaborating in the creation of Adam — another variant from the conception in the prose text. To make any sense of the cheville at the end of line 75 we should have to read bet did ndeoin "by Their good will" : but no ms. supports this.
77. An abridged translation of quatrains 10-13, 15 will be found in Archdeacon Seymour's paper. The Book of Adam and Eve in Ireland,42 which should be in constant reference in studying the apocryphal Adam matter in this compilation. Pairtech, the "great mountain" of Paradise, is new: it appears again in the form Pariath in the Lebor Brecc history of the creation (Todd Lectures, III, p. 48). Adam's hymn of praise is a commonplace of apocrypha. In Pirqe Rabbi Eliezer, chap. II, we read "And as [Adam] saw the creatures which God had made he began to praise God his Creator, and said: 0 Lord, how great and many are Thy works!"
81-2. Another metrically faulty couplet, both lines ending in a monosyllable.
83. According to the Syriac Cave of Treasures "God took a rib from the loins on the right side of Adam and He made Eve : and when Adam woke up and saw Eve he rejoiced in her greatly. And Adam and Eve were in Paradise, clothed with glory and shining with praise, for three hours." (Tr. Budge, pp. 59-60).
87-8. This apparently refers to the naming of the birds : at least I can find no other story connecting Adam with birds. Syncellus. Chronography, gives the dates of the incidents of Adam's life thus: 1st day of week [3rd day of Creation of Adam, 8th of Nisan, 1st of April. 6th of Phamouthi] Adam named wild boasts : 2nd day. named cattle : 3rd day. named fowls : 4th day, named creeping things, etc., etc.
41 J. E. Hanauer, Folklore of the Holy Land (London, 1907), p. 9.
42 Proceedings, R.I.A., xxxvi, section C, p. 121.
NOTES ON SECTION I. 263
91. All the mss. read do nim, which is unmetrical, and incidentally nonsense. It seems best to emend it to do-gnim (gen. plur.) "of evil deeds," the complementary formation to so-gnlm, "a good deed."
96. These words spell the letters of the Tetra gramma ton i""niT the Hebrew divine name Ydhweh, inaccurately rendered "Jehovah" in European popular speech. The notion that the Devil was the first to invoke the name of God reappears in Salomon and Satumus (ed. cit. antea, p. 191) —
"Who first named the name of God? the devil first named) the name of God. ' '
We find the statement repeated in the Colloquy of Adrian and Ritheus (ibid., p. 204), and also by the Master of Oxford —
"Who cleped first God?— The devyll. •"
The basal idea doubtless is that the devil acquired power over the Deity by knowing and using His secret name.43 The poet 's knowledge of Hebrew was limited to the letters of the alphabet and their names, possibly learnt from the section-headings in Ps. exix (Vulgate cxviii) ; and to the external appearance of the Tetragrammaton. He did not even know that Hebrew is written and read from right to left, so that when he spelt out the letters of the divine name he enumerated them in the reverse order — the left-to-right order in which he was accustomed to read or write Latin or Irish.
97. An aetiological myth to account for the superiority of the right hand to the left. In an account of the Creation and subsequent events in T.C.D. ms. H 2 5, most of which follows LG closely, I find this : Ro hiomuil imorro Adamh an t-ubhall q ro bad tarnocht da eis, -\ les ta lamh chle seochus lamh dheas ann, mar as I an lamh chle sineadh chum an ubhaill. "A. ate the apple and became naked thereafter [compare Cod. Pal. Vat., p. 54] and therewith the left hand comes after the right hand, for it is the left hand that was stretched to the apple." I have not come across the idea elsewhere in apocrypha, though doubtless it exists.
43 For analogies see Frazer, Taboo and the Peril of the Soul, p. 387 ff.
264 NOTES ON SECTION I.
101. The expulsion of the errant pair to Egypt is un- orthodox : Damascus is the usual place of their exile. The "one palm" suggests that the poet did not know the difference between dates and figs.
105. Throughout the poem the name Cain is treated as a dissyllable. P sometimes emphasises this by spelling it Caidin.
109. The poet, writing presumably from memory, has forgotten that Cain's offering was "of the fruits of the earth." Once again we see a faulty couplet, with the end words having the same number of syllables.
124. Seth was the first man to grow a beard, for Adam was presumably created with his bea,rd, Abel died a beardless youth, and it was part of Cain's punishment to have no beard (as in the prose text fl 39). But no ancient authority known to me explains how Seth was a witness of the murder of Abel (which took place before he was born), why he "put Lis hand to the jawbone," or what he did with it.
127. That stones "grow" is still an article of popular belief : I have been shown, by a Co. Meath farmer, a stone with a mark upon it which, he believed, was produced by the pressure of another stone, while the marked stone was "growing." Salomon and Saturnus agrees with our poet that this growth had been stopped by the flow of Abel's blood. We there read —
"Tell me why stones are not fruitful?- — Because Abel's blood fell upon a stone when Chain his brother slew him with the jawbone of an ass."
Also in The Master of Oxford's Catechism —
"Why bereth not stonys froyt as trees? — For Cayne slough his brother Abell with the bone of an asse cheke. "
139. The tale of how Lamech accidentally slew Cain is cue of the most familiar legends of Apocrypha. It is of Jewish origin, and as stated above, in the notes to f 39, was probably imported into Christian tradition from a lost "Book of Lamech." See Seymour, op. cit., p. 130, for references to which add the quotation from Eabbi Solomon Jarchi in
NOTES ON SECTION I. 265
Eisenmerger's Entdecktes Judenthum, vol. i, p. 470. The weapon used by Lamech was, however, an arrow ; not an apple, as in the text before us.
142. The name Tubalchain must be scanned as a tetra- syllable, to give a rhyme for brig : we must therefore follow E in reading is, as against the ocus of other mss. On the other hand it is a trisyllable in line 144, unless E is right in emitting the following article. But D emphasizes the difference by a difference of spelling.
143. The words in car a are difficult to deal with. See Meyer, Contribb. s.v. cor for the meaning suggested in the translation.
145. I know of no other version of the almost nauseatingly silly story of the subsequent adventures of Abel's ram, narrated in this and the following quatrains.
148. It is common sense that this must refer to "the ram caught in the thicket," which provided a surrogate for Isaac : and that the original version ran dar cend meic Aprdni (not Apraim, which is forbidden by the rhyme : Apram is in declinable). Some meddler, however, older than the existing ms. tradition, oblivious of the story of the sacrifice of Isaac, assumed vaguely that the event must have been something or other in the history of the Children of Israel ; so he changed the genitive singular to genitive plural.
153. This quatrain seems out of place : it probably should follow quatrain no. 15. The name of the tree is given as Sezen in the Ethiopic Book of Mysteries of Heaven and Earth. (See Budge, Cave of Treasures, p. 66); as Deachuimhan ["tithing"] in the late version of Tenga Bithnua (Rev. Celt. xxviii, 300).
155. We have heard of "the plain of Aron" before, as the region over which the rivers of Paradise flow. This looks like a confusion based on some old misreading of the Hebrew source (the "7, d, in "Eden" being misread as "I r). The contrary mistake is made in the Greek version of Numbers xxvi. 36.
266 NOTES ON SECTION I.
163. Deicli mbliadan risin idle, i.e., ten years in addition to all the 930 years of Adam's life. That Eve survived Adam is generally agreed in apocryphal literature, hut the actual length of her widowhood is very variously stated.
166. The poet has misread .d.cccc.xii. in his authority, substituting .xu. for the last letters. On the other hand, he has not docked Seth's life by three hundred years, as the prose texts have done. The M text has altered the verse text to conform with the prose.
173. Jared's life was 962 years long. Here again .ii. has been misread as .u.
177. Most of the mss. agree on ochtmoga, but the variant seclitnwga is historically correct.
182. Lamech's life was 777 (Hebrew) 753 (Septuagint). The figure in the text 775 and H's correction 757 are both unauthorized. An owner of U has taken the trouble to look the matter up : see the footnote.
186. Adam's son Sile, and the three wives in line 188, reappear in Sex Aetates Mundi, but whence they reached that text I have failed to discover. Olla was Seth's wife, Pip was Cain's, Pithip was Sile's. Evidently there is some confusion between Seth and Shem, just as Cain and Ham (Cham) are sometimes interchanged. Pip and Pithip must therefore have some kinship with Oliva and Olivana, but the nature of the kinship is not clear.
193. On the names of these women see the note on the prose texts H 7.
205. On this quatrain and its mysterious geography, see the notes on the prose text ff 86, where we find the interesting back-formation Formenia > Armenia on the basis of ar < for.
212. D spells this word cubaat, and writes it thus (as nearly as can be represented in print) cub&ccc, the first two r 's being really a fantastic a. The same peculiarity was 1 robably also in yD, and has influenced E's cubatat. E was certainly not copied from D, but might well have come from
NOTES ON SECTION I. 267
VD- This is a good illustration of the way in which the external form of the mss. and their handwriting may sometimes give us some crumbs of information as to their relationship ; see ante, p. xxvii. It must be admitted that this peculiar way of writing a sequence of «'s and t's, in any combination, is a trick of Muirges 6 Maoil Conaire, the scribe of D, and that it reappears in the Book of Fenagh, another of his productions. It is not, however, a regular habit : it looks more like an artificial affectation, in which he indulges whenever he remembers to do so, and he may have made it his own after learning it from \/~D.
215. The cheville cen bron is more than usually meaning- less here if we give to the word bron its ordinary meaning "sorrow.''' K. Meyer, Contribb. gives (with a query) an alternative meaning "burden" which helps slightly, but not much. But we need not expect a poet in metrical difficulties to be intelligible all the time : our present poet is better in this respect than many of his colleagues.
218-219. In both these lines the o of ro is metrically elided. Several of the scribes have failed to notice this, and have endeavoured to emend wThat they took to be the faulty measure of the rhythm.
221. I know of no authority for the extravagant dimen- sions here ascribed to the tower.
228. The list of the heroes of Nimrod's Tower agrees with that in Auraicept, except that Peleg and Rabiath (= Rifath) Scot are here omitted. Dardan appears in Auraicept as "Bardanius." The names are selected, on some random principle which it is futile to try to determine, from a list of the immediate descendants of Noah ; with such incongruous additions as Nabcodon, Latinus, and Longbardus. The first of these comes from an Ogham alphabet of names : see Calder's Auraicept, p. 20, and also below, line 257.
240. The sense of the couplet seems to be "though God be no respecter of persons — though the abbot and the king be all one in His sight — mav He grant me the favour of a long life."
268 NOTES ON SECTION I.
251-2. These lines appear in the order as printed in all the mss., but as the tetrasyllable Ibitena should follow the tri- syllable il-berla they should be transposed. The city of Ibitena is apparently an echo of the name of the Median city of Ecbatana. As the table of va/riae lectiones shows, this name assumes a variety of forms. Keating gives another version, Eathena, and quotes this quatrain as from Cin Droma Snechta — which seems to suggest that this poem was contained in that important manuscript.
257 ff. This is the Ogham-alphabet list of the chief persons of Nimrod's Tower, from -which one set of names for the Ogham letters was derived. For metrical reasons the alphabetic order has been disturbed (see for the proper arrangement Ca.lder's Auraicept, p. 20) and some of the names have been modified. Mored, Gad, Hidomus correspond respectively to Muiriath, Grotli, and Iudonius. Ordmor (possibly meant for Ord Mor, but the variae lectiones suggest that it is one word) corresponds to Ordines (Ordonus in M). Srti, the Stru of the Ogham list, has been lost from all the mss. except M; and additional names have been interpolated (Nenual, Gaedel, Cainan, Ionan).
VI.
Metre : debide scailte.
273. On the characters ascribed to the rivers in this poem, see the note on the prose H 28.
274. The name Nuchal here given as the fountain-head of the four rivers, can hardly be dissociated from Nuehul, given as the name of an African river in the Geographical Poem of Eos Ailithir (P.R.I. A., xvi, p. 241). Its (probably erroneous) identification with the Nile, and the identification of the latter with Gihon, may have led to the transference of the name to the well-spring of Paradise.
278. We must read felicitias for the sake of the metre.
284. I suspect that tibes is wrong, but I take it as I find it in the mss.
NOTES ON SECTION I. 269
VII.
Metre : debide scdilte.
VIII.
Metre : rannaigecht becc.
This quatrain, and the following poem, found in H only, are printed exactly as they appear there, with the addition of punctuation marks only.
IX.
Metre : debide scdilte.
296. In this poem Nae has become a monosyllable ; a fact emphasised by the spelling of the genitive Naee in line 304.
END OF VOLUME I.
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(Signed) M. C. LYNCH, Hon. Treasurer.
The undersigned, having had access to all the Books and Accounts of the Society, and having examined the foregoing statements and verified them with the Books, Deeds and Documents, etc., relating thereto, now signs the same as found to be correct.
(Signed) ROBERT W. FARRELL, F.L.A.A., Certified Accountant. 28th January, 1933.
8
GENERAL RULES
Objects
1. — The Society is instituted for the purpose of promoting the publication of Texts in the Irish Language, accompanied by such Introductions, English Translations, Glossaries and Notes as may be deemed desirable.
Constitution
2. — The Society shall consist of a President, Vice-Presidents, an Executive Council, a Consultative Committee and Ordinary and Life Members.
Officers
3. — The Officers of the Society shall be the President, two Honorary Secretaries and the Honorary Treasurer.
Executive Council
4. — The entire management of the Society shall be entrusted to the Executive Council, consisting of the Officers of the Society and not more than ten other Members, to whom the Executive Council may add by co- optation not more than two members, who shall retire annually.
5. — All property of the Society shall be vested in the Executive Council, and shall be disposed of as they shall direct by a two- thirds majority.
6.- — Three members of the Executive Council shall retire each year by rotation at the Annual General Meeting, but shall be eligible for re-election, the Members to retire being selected according to seniority of election, or, in case of equality, by lot. The Council shall have power to co-opt Members to fill up casual vacancies occurring throughout the year. Any Member of Council who is absent from five consecutive Ordinary Meetings of the Council to which he (or she) has been duly summoned, shall be considered as having vacated his (or her) place on the Council.
Consultative Committee
7. — -The Consultative Committee, or individual Members thereof, shall give advice, when consulted by the Executive Council, on questions relating to the publications of the Society, but shall not be responsible for the manage- ment of the business of the Society.
Members
8. — Members may be elected either at the Annual General Meeting, or from time to time, by the Executive Council.
Subscription
9. — The Subscription for each Member of the Society shall be £1 Is. Od. per annum (American subscribers, $5), entitling the Member to one copy (post free) of the volume published by the Society for the year, and giving the right to vote on all questions submitted to the General Meeting of the Society. Regular members, whose subscriptions have been paid up to date, may, however, fill up gaps in their sets of back volumes, prior to volume 22, at 10/6 a volume. The payment of a single sum of £12 12s. Od. (Colonial or foreign members £13 0s. Od., American members 65 dollars) entitles to life membership. Life members will receive one copy of each volume issued subsequently to the receipt of this sum by the Society.
10.- — Subscriptions shall be payable in advance on 1st January in each year.
11. — -Members whose Subscriptions for the year have not been paid are
not entitled to any volume published by the Society for that year, and any Member whose Subscription for the current year remains unpaid, and who receives and retains any publication for the year, shall be held liable for the payment of the full published price, viz. 25/- of such publication. '
12. — The publications of the Society shall not be sold to persons other than members, except at the advanced price of 25/-.
13. — Members whose Subscriptions are in arrear shall not have the right of voting at the Annual General Meeting of the Society.
14.- — Members wishing to resign must give notice in writing to the Honorary Secretary, before the end of the year, of their intention to do so ; otherwise they will be liable for their subscriptions for the ensuing year.
Editorial Fund
15. — -A fund shall be opened for the remuneration of Editors for their work in preparing Texts for publication. All subscriptions and donations to this fund shall be purely voluntary, and shall not be applicable to other purposes of the Society.
Annual General Meeting
16. — A General Meeting shall be held each year in the month of January, or as soon after as the Executive Council shall determine, when the Council shall submit their Report and the Accounts of the Society for the preceding year, and when vacant seats on the Council shall be filled up, and the ordinary business of a General Meeting transacted.
Audit
17. — The Accounts of the Society shall be audited each year by an auditor appointed at the preceding General Meeting.
Changes in these Rules 18. — With the notice summoning the General Meeting, the Executive Council shall give notice of any change proposed by them in these Rules. Ordinary Members proposing any change in the Rules must give notice thereof in writing to the Honorary Secretary seven clear days before the date of the Annual General Meeting.
10
LIST OF IRISH TEXTS SOCIETY'S PUBLICATIONS
— n—
(Out of print)
(i.) 51oUA An puS4- [The Lad of the Ferrule]
Cacc^a Clomne R15 tia ft-1of\uAi-oe. [Adventures of the
Children of the King of Norway] Edited by PROFESSOR DOUGLAS HYDE, LL.D., D.Litt., M.R.I. A.
(Out of print)
(2.) 'pie-o t)f\icpen-o [The Feast of Bricriu] (From Leabhar na h-Uidhre). Edited by GEORGE HENDERSON, M.A., Ph.D.
(Out of print) See Volume 3a New Edition.
(3.) "DAncA Ao-CA^Airi Hi ft.at.AiUe [The Poems of Egan O'Rahilly]
Edited, chiefly from mss. in Maynooth College, by The REV. P. S. DINNEEN, D.Litt.
(Volume for 1909) (See No. 3)
(3a) T)atica Ao-OAgAin tli UAtAiUe [New Edition of the Poems
of Egan O'Rahillv]
Revised by PROFESSOR TADHG O DONNCHADHA and
The REV. P. S. DINNEEN, D.Litt.
(Volume for 1901)
(4 ) yo|\Ar T^T4 Ap 6i|Mtm [History of Ireland.] By Geoffrey Keating. Part I. (See Vols. 8, 9, 15).
Edited by the late DAVID COMYN, M.R.I.A.
II
{Volume for 1902)
(5.) CAit|\eim Con$Ail CUininjnit; [The Martial Career of Conghal Clairinghneach]. Edited by The REV. P. M. MacSWEENEY, M.A.
(Volume for 1903)
(6.) Virgil's iEneid, the Irish Version, from the Book of Ballymote. Edited by The REV. GEORGE CALDER, B.D., D.Litt.
(Volume for 1904)
(7.) "OuATiAife pnn. The Poem Book of Finn. [Ossianic Poems]. Part I. Edited by PROFESSOR EOIN MacNETLL D.Lttt.
(Volume for 1905)
(8.) pofAf "pe^f-A Ap6inmn [History of Ireland]. By Geoffrey Keating. Part II. Edited by The REV. P. S. DINNEEN, D.Litt.
(See Vols. 4, 9, and 15).
(Volume for 1906)
(9.) pof-Af VeAV A AP 6itMnn [History of Ireland]. By Geoffrey Keating. Part III.
Edited by The REV. P. S. DINNEEN, D.Litt.
(See Vols. 4, 8, and 15).
(Volume for 1907)
(10.) Two Arthurian Romances [e.ACqA4 tTUcAoirh an 1oUMp ^5uf e^ccn^ An rtlA-onA iruoit] Adventures of the Eagle Boy and Crop Eared Dog. Edited by PROFESSOR R. A. S. MACALISTER, M.A.. D.Litt.
12
(Volume for 1908)
(n.) Poems of David O'Bruadair. (Parti.)
Edited by The REV. J. MacERLEAN, S.J.
(See Vols. 13, 18).
(Volume for 1909— see 3a supra.)
(Volume for 1910)
(12.) Buile Suibhne Geilt, A Middle-Irish Romance. Edited by J. G. O'KEEFFE.
(Volume for 1911)
(13.) Poems of David O'Bruadair. (Part II.) • Edited by The REV. J. MacERLEAN, S.J.
(See Vols. 11. 18).
(Volume for 1912— Out of print)
(14.) An Irish Astronomical Tract, based on a Mediaeval Latin version of a work bv Messahalah. Edited by the late MAURA POWER, M.A.
(Volume for 1913)
(15.) "po|\Af pe^fA Af £itMnn [History of Ireland]. By Geoffrey Keating. Part IV. Containing the Genealogies, Synchronisms and an index, including the elucida- tion of place names and annotations to Parts I., II.,
III. (See Vols. 4, 8, 9 supra.) Compiled and Edited by REV. P. S. DINNEEN, D.Litt.
(Volume for 1914)
(16.) Life of St. Declan of Ardmore and Life of St. Mochuda of Lismore. Edited by The REV. P. POWER. M.R.I.A.
13 (Volume for 1915)
(17.) Poems of Turlogh O'Carolan and additional Poems. Edited by PROFESSOR TOMAS O'MAILLE, M.A., Ph.D.
(Volume for 1916)
(18.) Poems of David O'Bruadair. (Part III.) Edited by The REV. J. MacERLEAN, S.J.
(See Vols. 11, 13).
(Volume -for 1917)
(19.) ^dtMicAf Sefvun^ liloif [The Wars of Charlemagne]
Edited by PROFESSOR DOUGLAS HYDE, LL.D., D.Litt., M.R.I. A.
(Volume for 1918)
(20.) lomA^ttAj riA r/ple<vo [The Contention of the Bards] Part I. Edited by The REV. LAMBERT McKENNA, S.J., M.A.
(Volume for 1919)
(21.) lotnAHbAj nA t>1?ile<vo (Part II.)
Edited by The REV. LAMBERT McKENNA, S.J., M.A.
(Volume for 1920)
(22.) Poems of C-At)5 DaU. O 11111511111 (Vol. I. Text.) Edited by ELEANOR KNOTT.
(Volume for 1921)
(23.) Poems of CA65 T)aU O 11111511111 (Vol. II. Translation.) Bv ELEANOR KNOTT.
14
(Volume for 1922)
(24.) The Pursuit of ^nuAi-O 5Fuu1~f°lur-
Edited from a ms. in Trinity College, Dublin, by CECILE O'RAHILLY, M.A.
{Volume for 1923)
(25.) Rosa Anglica. An Early Modern Irish Translation of Part of John of Gaddesden's Text-Book of Mediaeval Medicine. Edited by WINIFRED P. WULFF, M.A., Ph.D.
{Volume for 1924)
(26.) Cditri6irn Uoitv6ealrj.Ai$ [The Triumphs of Turlough].
Edited by DR. STANDISH HAYES O'GRADY. (Vol. Text).
(Volume for 1925)
(27.) CAicfeim t"oif"6e4tt)Ai5 [The Triumphs of Turlough].
Edited by DR. STANDISH HAYES O'GRADY (Vol. II. Translation).
(Volume for 1926.)
(28.) Duanaire Fhinn. The Poem Book of Finn. Part II. The last part of the Poems with translations. Edited and translated by GERARD MURPHY, M.A.
(Volume for 1927.)
(29.) Instructio Pie Vivendi — Holy Life and Heavenly Thought. Part I. Latin and Irish versions with Glossary of Irish words. Edited by The Rev. JOHN MacKECHNIE, M.A., B.D.
15
(Volumes in Preparation)
The Great Blasket. A Collection of tales told by Corner- O CtMomtAinn and recorded by ROBIN FLOWER, D.Litt. with poems by Sean O "OmnnfteiVte (in the Press).
Duanaire Finn. Part III. Containing Notes to all the Poems, Glossary, Indices, etc. Edited by GERARD MURPHY, M.A.
Instructio Pie Vivendi — Holy Life and Heavenly Thought. Part II. English translation of the Irish version, with Notes, etc. Edited and translated by REV. JOHN MacKECHNIE, M.A., B.D.
The Harrowing of Hell and other New Testament Apocrypha.
Edited and translated from Irish Manuscripts of the 15th century, with a critical study of the sources and with notes. By ROBIN FLOWER, D.Litt.
Irish versions of three tales by Montalvan, with the original Spanish text and synopsis in English.
Cinn-Lae Amhlaoibh Ui Shuilleabhain. Humphrey O'Sullivan's Diary, 1827-1835. Two volumes.
The revised edition of the Society's Larger Irish- English Dictionary (1340 pp.), edited by Rev. P. S. DINNEEN, D.Litt., (price 12/6 net ; post free 13/-) can be purchased from The Educational Company of Ireland, Ltd., 89 Talbot Street, Dublin. The Smaller Irish- English Dictionary (240 pp.) by the same editor, can be had of Messrs. M. H. Gill & Son, 50 Upper O'Connell Street, Dublin, and of Messrs. Simpkin, Marshall, Ltd., 4 Stationers' Hall Court, London, E.C.4. (price 3/- net.).
i6
LIST OF MEMBERS.
(N.B. — Members are earnestly requested to send Notice of any Change of Address to the Hon. Sec, Irish Texts Society, c/o National Bank, Ltd., 15, Whitehall, London, S.W.I,, to avoid loss of books and notices).
NAMES.
Honorary Life Members :
ADDRESSES.
Hull, Miss Eleanor, D.Litt.
... 2, Gloucester Gardens, (58) Richmond Hill, Richmond, Surrey.
Life Members :
Bradley, The Rev. Michael, P.P. Knockloughrim, Co. Deny.
Braunholtz, Prof. G. E. K., m.a. 22, Old Road, Headington, Oxford.
Byrne, G. P. ... ... ... 24 College Square North, Belfast.
Byrne, The Rev. J. ... ... Castlehead, Grange-over-Sands, Lanes.
Crotty, The Rev. Michael, P.P. Abbeyside, Dungarvan, Co. Waterford. Curran, The Rt. Rev. Monsignor Irish College, Rome, 24. M.J.
Dalton, J. P
De Paor, Eamonn Diolun, Maolra, M.A., Ph.D. Donnellan, J. P. Doolan, Thomas Dowling, Frank ...
Farrell, R. W„ f.l.a.a. ...
FitzGerald, T. D., b.a. ...
Fleming, The Rev. R., ph.d.
Gahagan, F. Evatt Goblet, Professor Yan M. Gourley, C. E.
19 Belgrave Square, Monkstown, Co. Dublin Fatha, Eadarghoil, Bantry, Co. Cork. University College, Dublin. Killeany, Aran Isles, Co. Galway. 31-32 Great George's Street, Waterford. 950 South Street, Roslindale, Mass., U.S.A.
Clonbrone, Arundel Road, Durrington,
Worthing, Sussex, c/o National Bank, Ltd., 15 Whitehall,
London, S.W.I. Rathmines, Dublin.
31, Harrington Sqr., London, N.W.I. 178 Rue de la Pompe, Paris, xvi. 70 Claremont Road, London, E. 7.
Hackett, J. D 132 East 16th Street, New York, U.S.A.
Harley- Walker, The Rev. C. T. The Yews, East Hanney, nr. Wanstead,
Berks. Havard- Jones, The Rev. H. T., The Vicarage, Spaldwick, Huntingdon.
M.A.
Haynes, Miss Muriel Sturgis ... 22, Embankment Road, Boston, Mass.,
U.S.A. Horsford, Miss C. 27 Craigie Street, Cambridge 38, Mass.,
U.S.A.
John, E. T.
63 Warwick Square, London, S.W.I.
i7
NAMES. Kelly, Paul Herrick Kennedy, Chief Justice Hugh ... Kennedy, Patrick J., m.a.
Lewis, The Hon. A. L. ...
MacErlean, Andrew A., ll.b. ... MacFhinn, An t-Athair Padraig
Eric, D.D. MacLoughlinn, James L. Mclnnes, Wm. Mac Arthur
Malone, Prof. Kemp.
Mitchell, The Rev. Joseph, Canon OBuacalla, Micheal OCarroll, Jos., m.d. OCasaide, Seamus, m.a., b.l.,
m.r.i. a. OCianain, S. F., m.b. OCorcura, Micheal ODubhgaill,The Rev. T.,b.a.,b.d. OSullivan, The Rev. T.
ADDRESSES. 132 Cheapside, London, E.( .2. Newsread, Clonskeagh Road, Dublin. 1? Irishtown, Clonmel. Co. Tipperary.
The Hill, Abergavenny, Mon.
119 East 57th Street, New York, U.S.A. Colaiste na h-Ollsgoile, Gaillimh.
60, Waterloo Road, Pembroke, Dublin.
c/o McLaren, 55, Randolph Road, Broom- hill, Glasgow.
Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.A.
President, St. Mary's College, Galway.
108, Rock Rd., Booterstown, Co. Dublin.
Lynwood, Dundrum, Co. Dublin.
Bothair Lorcain, Clontarf, Dublin.
Ballinalee, Edgeworthstown. 2 Mulgrave Road, Cork. St. Columb's College, Derry. 173 Botanic Road, Dublin.
Perry, Miss A. M., m.a. ... Sheehan, The Most Rev. M.
Ua Concheanain, Tomas Ua Corcra, Domhnall Ua Cuileamhain, Sean ..
Van Hamel, Dr. A. G. ..
Walker, Charlton, b.a. ..
... 79 South End Road, Hampstead, N.W.3.
d.d. Archbishop of Sydney, Juverna, Homebush, Sydney, N.S.W.
... Lios na Mara, Bothar na Tragha, Galway.
... 1 Auburn Villas, Ashburton, Cork.
... Dun Cormac, Wexford.
... 19, Prins Hendriklaan, Utrecht.
... 16 Seaton Avenue, Plymouth.
Ordinary Members :
Andrews, Mrs. Edmond Ashbourne, Lord...
Banks, Mrs. M. M.
Bartholomew, J.
Beaslai, Piaras, Major General
Bell, S
Bergin, Prof. Osborn J., d.litt. Beynon, The Rev. E. D.
Boland, John P. Boswell, C. S. Boyd, E. A.
561 Surf Street, Chicago, 111., U.S.A. 17 Rue des Domeliers, Compiegne, Oise, France.
16, Hornton Court, Kensington, W.8. Nunholm, 9 Victoria Circus, Glasgow, W.2. 8, Eden Park, Sandycove, Co. Dublin.
3, Southdean Gardens, Wimbledon.
10, Grosvenor Place, Rathmines, Dublin. 847.5 Dearborn Avenue, Detroit, Michigan, U.S.A.
4, Stone Buildings, Lincoln's Inn, W.C.2. Gatcombe, nr. Seaton, South Devon.
131 East 19th St., New York City, U.S.A.
i8
NAMES.
Bradley, W., m.d.
Brady, Very Rev. J. Canon, p.p.
Breathnach, Caitlin
Breathnach, Cormac
Breen, The Rev. D.
Bright, William, ll.d., t.c.d. ..
Briley, W. P
Brophy, Michael M
Brown, Professor A. C. L.
Brown, Thomas
Brown, Prof. W. Edward
Buckley, James, m.r.i.a.
Burns, Samuel
Byrne, O. A
ADDRESSES.
Nevonstown House, Navan, Co. Meath.
Keady, Co. Armagh.
23 Main Street, Carrick-on-Suir.
Central Model Schools, Dublin.
Dingle, Co. Kerry.
Willowdale, Glenageary Rd., Dunjeary,
Co. Dublin. 18, Temple Park, Blackrock, Co. Dublin. 48, Approach Road, Margate. Northwestern University, Evanston, U.S.A. 20, Nassau Street, Dublin. Lafayette College, Easton, Pa., U.S.A. 11, Homeneld Road, Wimbledon, Surrey. 13 Warrington Road, Newcastle-on-Tyne. Villa Faraldo, 3, Rue Bel Respiro, Beau
Soleil, A/M., France.
Calder, Rev. Geo., b.d., d.litt. Clarke, John J. ...
Coffey, Brian MacMahon, m.d. Cohalan, The Most Rev. Dr. Costello, Thomas, m.d. ... Coyne, Dr. Gerard Cox, Prof. Edward G., ph.d.
Creed, The Rev. CM
Crone, J. S., m.d., j.p., m.r.i.a.
Cross, Professor Tom Peete
Cullinan, Rev. Thos. Curran, C. P., m.a. Curtis, Prof. E. ...
4 57
Oakfeld Terrace, Glasgow, W.
Place, Lr. Newtown,
St. Aubyn's Waterford. 12, Denny Street, Tralee, Ireland.
Bishop of Cork, Farranferris, Cork.
Bishop Street, Tuam, Co. Galway.
Mount Pleasant, Ballinasloe, Co. Galway.
University of Washington, Seattle, Wash- ington, U.S.A.
Durrus, Bantry, Co. Cork.
Castlereagh, 34 Cleveland Road, Ealing, London, W. 13.
Dept. of Comparative Literature, Uni- versity of Chicago, 111., U.S.A.
P.O. Box 89, Cradock, S. Africa.
15, Garville Avenue, Rathgar, Dublin.
37, Trinity College, Dublin.
De Barra, Liam
De Bhal, An t-Athair Tomas,
S.P., PH.D.
De Bharra, Sean De Blacam, Aodh De Blaghd, Earnan
De Lury, Alfred T. Digby, Everard W. Dioliin, Thomas Dobbs, Miss M. C. Donnellan, P., m.d.
Dowley, Miss Brigid Dowling, Mrs. D.
Doyle. Miss M
Dunn, Professor Joseph...
Dunne, The Rev. J.
Beech Walk, Roscrea, Co. Tipperary. Cill Curnain, Co. Limerick.
61, Patrick St., Drumcondra, Dublin.
Lios Greine, Artane, Co. Dublin.
6 Temple Villas, Palmerston Road, Dublin,
S.W.I. University of Toronto, Canada. 47, Charleville Rd., London, W. 14. Teach an Daingin, Galway. Port na Gabhlann, Cushendall, Co. Antrim. St. Mary's, 13, Maylield Rd., Terenure,
Dublin. Westgate, Carrick-on-Suir, Co. Tipperary. Ard na Greine, Ballymacelligott, Tralee. 56 Hunter St., London. W.C.I. Catholic University, Washington, D.C.,
U.S.A. Rathroc, Tullow, Co. Carlow.
19
NAMES.
Eadie, Lieut. -Colonel J. Inglis, D.S.O.
England, Thomas A., ll.d. Enschede, M. Johannes
Esmonde, Sir T. Grattan, Bt. ,
ADDRESSES.
c/o. Messrs. Grindlay & Co., 54, Parliament Street, London, S.W.I.
11a Caithness Rd., London, W.14. Huize, Ipenrode, Heemstede, The Nether- lands. Ballynastragh, Gorey, Co. Wexford.
FitzGerald, M. J. FitzGerald, Rev. Wm., c.c. FitzSimmons, B. Fitzsimons, Patrick J. ... Flower, Robin, d.litt. ...
Flynn, Francis
Franklin, M
Freeman, A. Martin Fynes-Clinton, O. H.
Gaftney, J. S., b.a., Solicitor Gaidoz, Professor Henri Gates, H. C.
Gill, Mrs. M
Gogan, L. S.
Green, J. S., Lt.-Col., r.a.m.c. m.r.i. a.
Griffen, Harold D., m.a. Griffin, Henry Farrand ...
Grosjean, The Rev. Paul, s.j. Gwynn, Dr. Edward
18, King St., Snow Hill, London, E.C.I. Thurles, Co. Tipperary.
Sheepshead N. School, Kilcrohane, Bantry. 48, Longstone Street, Lisburn. Dept. of MSS., British Museum, London, W.C.I.
4, Avon Place, Bothwellhaugh, Bothwell,
Scotland. 74, St. Lawrence Rd., Clontarf, Dublin. 166, Lauderdale Mansions, London, W.9. Weirglodd Wen, Bangor, N. Wales.
86, O'Connell Street, Limerick. 22 Rue Servandoni, Paris vi. 24, Bayswater Terrace, Skircoat Green, Halifax, Yorks.
Castle Street, Carrick-on-Suir, Ireland. 373, North Circular Road, Dublin. Air Hill, Glanworth, Co. Cork.
William Woods' College, Fulton, Missouri,
U.S.A. Barnstable, Massachusetts, U.S.A., per
Stevens & Browne, Ltd. 24, Boulevard St. Michel, Brussels. Provost's House, Trinity College, Dublin.
Haran, Dr. J. A. Hayden, The Rev. E. M. Headlam, M. F., c.b. Healy, A. Collins, b.a. ..
15, Shelley Road, Beechen Cliff, Bath. St. John's Rectory, Clinton, 111., U.S.A. 5, Tedworth Square, London, S.W.3. 521 West 124th Street, New York City, U.S.A.
Heggarty, The Rev. J. M. ... 114E, 2nd St., Los Angeles, Cal., U.S.A.
Henry, Prof. Robert Mitchell, m.a. Queens' University, Belfast.
Hickey, The Rev. B. ... ... St. Mary's, Wellington Road, Ashton-
under-Lyne. Hodges, Figgis & Co. ... ... 20, Nassau Street, Dublin.
Hogan, John ... ... ... 7 Prince Arthur-Terrace, Leinster Square,
Rathmines, Dublin. Hogan, The Rev. Stanislaus, o.p. Holvrood, East Camberwell, Melbourne. Houlihan, The Rev. M. J. ... 43 Maple St., Hvde Park, Mass., U.S.A.
Hull, Yernam E. 29 Randolph Hall, Cambridge, Mass., U.S. A.
Hurley, The Rev. T. A. ... The Monastery, Killarney, Co. Kerry.
Hyde, Professor Douglas, d.litt., 65 Adelaide Road, Dublin.
20
NAMES. Jarcho, Saul W. ... Jennings, Rev. T. A., m.a. Johnston, J. P., SC.D. ...
Joyce, Francis, m.b. Joyce, Wm. B., b.a. Joynt, Ernest E....
Keappock, The Rev. Thomas
Keenan, L. F. , m.d. Keliher, Thomas Kiernan, T. J., m.a., ph.d.
King, Michael J., b.a. ...
Lankford, J. R
Leslie, Shane Lewis, Timothy ...
Liddell, M. F
Lloyd, Joseph H., m.r.i.a. Lynam, E. \V., b.a., m.r.i.a. Lynch, M. C. Lynch, Timothy
Macalister, Prof. R. A. S., m.a.
MacAoidh, Ian ... MacAoidh, Micheal MacBhloscaidh, P. MacBride, A., m.d. MacBride, Joseph M. MacCana, Peadar MacCarrthaigh, Tadhg ...
McCarthy, P. J., n.t
MacClintock, Major H. F. MacColuim, Fionan MacCosgair, Liam T. MacDermott, The Very Rev. J.
Canon MacDiarmuda, An t-Athair M. MacDomhnaill, F. S.
MacDonald, The Rev. Archibald
MacEochagain, Stiobhan Padraig
MacGinley, P. T.
MacGiolla Seannaigh, an t-Athair
McGrath, Patrick
McGreevy, Thomas
: .rianna, D. MacKay, Donald
MacCarvill, Mrs. Eileen.
ADDRESSES. 303 West 106th Street, New York, U.S.A. St. Jarlath's College, Tuam, Co. Galway. Royal College of Science, Upper Merrion
Street, Dublin. 190 Camberwell Road, London, S.E.5. 1 Effra Road, Rathmines, Dublin. Kingston, Tyrconnell Road, Inchicore,
Dublin.
Parochial House, Collinstown, Co. West-
meath. 58 Upper Clapton Road, London, E.o. 134, Upper Thames Street, London, E.C.4. Office of the High Commissioner, Irish
Free State, 33-37 Retrent St., London,
S.W.I. Borrisone, Co. Limerick.
7 Ashburton Hill, St. Luke's, Cork.
Glaslough, Co. Monaghan.
University College, Aberystwyth, Wales.
35, Trinity College, Dublin.
Buaile na Greine, Stillorgan Park, Dublin.
British Museum, London, W.C.I.
2o East Bank, Stamford Hill, London, N.16.
Sun Lodge, 65 Sunday's Well, Cork.
18 Mount Eden Road, Donnybrook, Dublin,
S.E.I. 33 Curzon Rd., Muswell Hill, London, N.10. Teach Druim, Drum Amharc, Dan na nGall. 17 Sraid Caitrin, Limerick. Infirmary House, Castlebar, Co. Mayo. Mallow Cottage, Westport, Co. Mayo. 25 Mary Street, Drogheda. X.S., Kinnegad, Co. Meath. Shannon Mew, Glin, Co. Limerick. Red House, Ardee, Co. Louth. Department of Education, Dublin. Beechpark, Templeogue, Co. Dublin. Croghan, Boyle, Co. Roscommon.
Keady, Co. Armagh.
i o. Barclays Bank, 9 Russell Square,
London, W.C.I. Kiltarlity Manse, Beauly, Invernesshire. Lome House, Coleham, Shrewsbury.
Drumcondra Road, Dublin. Spiddal, Galway. 20 East Essex Street, Dublin. 15, Cheyne Gardens, London, S.W.3. On, Lindsay Road, Glasnevin, Dublin, c/o Miss M. MacKay British Bank of South
America Ltd., Caixa Postal, 83 Sao
Paulo, Brazil. 8 Fitzwilliam Square, Pir lin.
21
NAMES.
McKenna, The Rev. L. McLees, William H.
MacLennan, The Rev. Malcolm,
D.D.
MacLeod, The Rev. Malcolm, m.a
MacLoingsigh, The Rev. Peadar MacLysaght, E. MacMurnaigh, Micheal ... Macnaghten, The Hon. Helen ... MacNeill, James MacNeill, Patrick Charles MacNiocaill, S. ... MacSeain, The Rev. Sean MacSuibhne, Padraic MacSwiney of Mashanaglass,
The Marquess, m.r.i.a. MagFhloinn, Liam Mahony, J. J. - Meaghar, The Rev. J. R.
Meehan, Francis
Merriman, Professor P. J., m.a.
Mhic Chathmhaoil, Mairead, Bean
Micheal, an t-Athair, o.s.f.c. Miller, Miss Anna Irene
Miller, C. R. D
Miller, The Rev. W. Moloney, Francis Moynihan, James Miihlhausen, Prof. Docktor Ludwig
Mulcahy, Timothy, b.a.... Mullen, The Rev. E. J., Munn, Dr. James Buell Murphy, F. T. ... Murphy, J. J. Fintan Murphy, William, n.t. . Murphy, Dr. Philip Murray, Sir Hubert Murrin, James B.
ADDRESSES.
s.j. ... Rathfarnham Castle, Co. Dublin.
... 379 Grant Avenue, Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.
6 Polwarth Terrace, Edinburgh.
United Free Church Manse, Lochgilphead
Argyllshire. St. Columb's College, Deny. Raheen, Tuamgraney, Co. Clare. St. Anne's, Anne St., Dundalk. Runkerry, Bushmills, Co. Antrim. Dundrum, Co. Dublin. 27, Edenvale Road, Rathmines, Dublin. 46 Oakley Road, Ranelagh, Dublin. Omagh, Co. Tyrone. 5 High r eld Avenue, Cork.
39 Upper Fitzwilliam Street, Dublin. Xewtown School, Waterford. Suite 608, Ashland Block, Chicago, U.S.A.. St. Thomas of Canterbury, Waterloo,
Liverpool. Leitrim, Ireland.
President, University College, Cork. Westpoint House, Strand Rd., Sutton,
Co. Dublin.
Fr. Mathew Hall, Queen St., Cork. 242<i Eutaw Place, Baltimore, Maryland, I .S.A.
301, Craigie Hall, Cambridge, Mass., U.S.A.
Braganza House, Carlow.
74 State Street, Boston, Mass., U.S.A.
34 Dunbar St., Cork.
Ruldolfstr, 48, Hamburg, 34.
... 2 Tivoli Terrace, Clonmel.
c.c. ... Carrick, Tirconaill.
... 58 Garden St., Cambridge. Mass, U.S.A.
... 4 Highland Park, Roxbury, Mass, U.S.A.
... 16 El/ra Road, Brixton Hill, London, S.W.2
... 53 Harbour Row, Cobh, Co. Cork.
... Main Street, Carrick-on-Suir, Co. Tipperary.
... Government House, Port Moresby, Papua.,
... Carbondale, Pennsylvania, U.S.A.
Nesbit, Mrs. M. K. Newlin, Nicholas... Ni Bhruadair, Gobnait
Nic Dhonnchadha, Lil. Nic Eochagain, Seosaimhin Nic Mhathghamhna, Lil.
Montilly, Sion Mills, Co. Tyrone. 1804 Pine St., Philadelphia, Penn., U.S.A. Baile an Chongnaimh, Cuan an Chaisleain, Cill Airne, Co. Ciarrai'*!he.
116, Lower Baggot St., Dublin. 87 Upper Dorset St., Dublin. Listellick, Tralee, Co. Kerry.
22
NAMES.
Ni Dhunlainge, Sighle ... Ni Locain, Maire... Nilsen, Eugene ... Ni Raghallaigh, Maire Ni Shuilleabhain, Eibhlin Nolan, P. J
ADDRESSES.
19 Finglas Rd., Glasnevin, Dublin. 136, Upper Drumcondra Rd., Dublin. 20, Ekebergueren, Christiania, Norway. 87 Upper Dorset Street, Dublin. Baile h-Eil, Co. Kilkenny. 624, Roosevelt Avenue, York, Penna., U.S.A.
OBeagain, R. S. ...
OBraoin, D.
OBriain, Art.
OBriain, Padraig
OBriain, Sean, b.a., b.com.
h.d.e. ... OBrien, The Rev. Denis, d.ph.,
D.D. OBrien, Michael ... OBrien, Edward, m.a. ... OBrolchain, Padraic
OBrosnachain, an t-Athair D. .,
OByrne, William
OCadhainn, Liam
OCadhlaigh, Cormac, m.a. OCallaghan, Jeremiah ...
OCaoimh, Micheal
OCarroll, J., b.a
OCarroll. J. T
OCeallaigh, Sean OCeallaigh, Sean T.
OCeileachair, The Rev. Sean . OCeochain, Domhnall ... OCinneide, An Bra. S.M. OConchobhair, Diarmuid OConchobhair, Risteard OConnell, Maurice, a.c.i.s.
OConnor, Denis Hayes OConnor, Michael OCriochain, an t-Athair Brian . OCuill, Sean
OCuinn, The Rev. Seamus OCurnain, The Rev. Tadhg ODalaigh, R
ODea, The Rev. D., b.a. ODomhnaill, an t-Athair M.
ODonachu, an t-Athair D. ODonnchadha, Prof. Tadhg,
D.LITT.
2, Wilmont Avenue, Sandycove, Dublin. 5 Ennismore Villas, Magazine Road, Cork. 15 Mecklenburgh Square, London, W.C.I. Ballyferriter, Dingle, Co. Kerry.
Ceimin, Dorgan's Rd., Glasheen, Cork. Errin, Kilmallock, Co. Limerick.
Ballymakeera, Co. Cork.
Falmore House, Moville, Derry.
Dun Bride, Nashville Park, Howth, Co.
Dublin. Colaiste Bhreannainn, Cill Airne, Co.
Chiarraidhe. Eascrach, Cruimghlinn, Co. Bhaile Atha
Cliath. Les Buissonnets, Bridgemount, Castlebar,
Co. Mayo. 5 Hill View, Cross Douglas Rd., Cork. 121 Duke Street, Sheffield. 3 Ashbourne Villas, Limerick. 2 The Terrace, Arklow, Co. Wicklow. 129 Queen's Road, Richmond, Surrey. Ros Cathaill, Cill Mhine, Westport. c/o. The Nation, 91 St. Stephen's Green,
Dublin. Colaiste Naoimh Eoin, Portlairge. Coolea, Macroom, Co. Cork. Mainistir na mBrathar, Dun Dealgain. Carrignaveeah, Sunday's Well, Cork. 7, George's Quay, Cork. Hill Mew, Marion Rd., Mill Hill, London, N.W.7. . Monster House, Charleville, Co. Cork. . Clooncurra N.S., Lispole, Co. Kerry.
Grange, Sligo. . 44 Mountjoy Street, Dublin. . Bessbrook, Co. Armagh. . The Presbytery, Dingle. . 63 Handside Lane, Welwyn Garden City,
England. . Newmarket-on-Fergus, Co. Clare. . Teach na Sagart, Castlerea, Co. Ros- common. . Tracton, Co. Cork. Croata, Glasheen Road, Cork.
23
NAMES.
ODonnell, The Rev. M. ODonnghaile, an t-Athair N. ODonovan, J. J- ODonovan, T. J., b.a. ... ODubhda, Peadar ODubhshlaine, F.
ODuibhir, Antoine ODwyer, Professor R. ... OFionnachta, S. ... OFlaherty, The Rev. Michael OFlynn, John
OFearghaill, Rev
OGabhlain, OGallagher,
A. Padraic M. ...
s.j.
OGlasain, Seamus OGorman, The Rev. J. J. OHalloran, The Rev. P., O h-Annrachain, Peadar OHanrahan, T. W. O h-Aodha, Seamus, m.a. OHegarty, P. S
OHegarty, The Rev. T., c.c. OKeeffe/The Rev. David
OKeeffe, J. G
O Kelly, Thomas
OKiely, Laurence, m.a. ...
OLoughlin, Colm
ADDRESSES.
Kilronan, Aran, Co. Galway. Galway.
2 Eden Terrace, Limerick. An Cappach, Brean Traigh, Co. Cork. Bothar Dealgan, Dun Dealgan. Customs and Excise Office, Glenamaddy,
Co. Galway. Roinn Josef, Colaiste Phadraig, Maynooth. 9 Upper Leeson Street, Dublin. 6, Warrenpoint, Clontarf, Dublin. Summerhill College, Sligo. Kirwan's Hotel, Carrick-on-Suir, Co. Tipperary. ... Colaiste Iognaid, Gaillimh. ... Cloongoonaugh, Aughamore, Co. Mayo. ... 1430 Plaisance Court, Chicago, U.S.A. ... Barry's Hotel, Rath Droma, Wicklow. , d.c.l. 193 Fourth Avenue, Ottawa, Canada, c.c. ... St. Mary's Nenagh.
... Dun Aoibhinn, an Scibrin, Co. Cork.
... Altamount, Kilkenny.
... Ive-Le-Bawn, Fermoy, Co. Cork.
... Highfield House, Highfeld Road, Rathgar,
Dublin. ... Ouigley's Point, Derry. ... St. Colman's Cathedral, Oueenstown. ... 1, Dynevor Rd., Richmond, Surrey. ... 40 Hilldrop Road, London, N.7. ... Crehana, Carrickbeg, Carrick-on-Suir.
... 5-6 Fleet Street, Dublin.
OMahoney, D., m.b.
OMaille, Prof. Tomas, m.a., ph.d.
OMaolcathaigh, Padraig
OMaolchatha, Seamus OMaoldhomhnaigh, an t-Athair
Mairtin OMeachair, Padraig
OModhrain, The Rev. S. OMoghrain, Padraig, m.a. OMorain, The Very Rev. P. S.,
Canon OMuimhneachain, Conchubhair OxMuirthile, An Br. D.L.
OMuimhneachain, Aindrias
OMurchadha, Colm
OMurchu, Micheal
ONeill, Sean
ORaghallaigh, Criostoir, m.a. ... ORahilly, Professor T. F., d.litt,
ORayla, Proinsias
Glasnevin Lodge, Glasnevin, Dublin.
Roigne, College Rd., Galway.
Colaiste Chnuic Mhelleri, Ceapach Chuinn,
Co. Waterford. An Ghrainseach, Clonmel, Co. Tipperary. Killaloe, Co. Clare.
2184, Valentine Avenue, Bronx, New
York, U.S.A. St. Jarlath's College, Tuam, Co. Galway. Knockloughra N.S., Westport, Co. Mayo. Claregalway, Ireland.
Beal Atha an Ghaorthaidh, Co. Cork. Colaiste Cacimhghin, Glas Naoidhean, Baile
Atha Cliath. Colaiste Caomhghin, Glas Naoidhean, Baile
Atha Cliath. Leinster House, Kildare St., Dublin. 33 Home Farm Rd., Drumcondra, Dublin. Customs and Excise, Swinford, Co. Mayo. 269 Clonliffe Road, Drumcondra, Dublin. ' Ballincurrig House, South Douglas Road,
Cork. 19 Munster Street, Phibs borough, Dublin.
=F
NAMES.
OReilly, The Rev. J. M. OReilly, The Rev. Robert ORiain, Liam P.
ORiain, The Rev. Nioclas ORiain, Art.
ORioghbhardain, Domhnall, o.s ORioghbhardain, M., b.a., f.r.g ORiordan, E. F., m.a. ...
ORiordan, J. P.
Ormond, The Rev. W., Adm. ..
ADDRESSES.
. Bekan, Ballyhaunis, Co. Mayo.
. Prior, Ballinskelligs.
. 15 Kempshott Rd., Streatham, London,
S.W.16. . Tipperary. . 3, Pairc Cille Muire, Dublin.
Tamhain, Oran Mor, Co. Galway. s. X.S. Abbeydorney, Co. Kerry. . Suite 608, Ashland Block, Chicago, U.S.A.
59, Harberton Rd.,Highgate, London, N. 19. . Carrickbeg, Carrick-oh-Suir, Co. Tipperary.
OSeaghdha, Muircheartach, o.s. OSeochfhradha, Padraig
OShaughnessy, J. OShea, The Rev. John OSuilleabhain, Sean
OSullivan, D. J
OSullivan, D. K
OSullivan, Jerh. ... OSullivan, John ... OSuilleabhain, Tomas, Cigire . OTighearnaigh, P. S. OTreasaigh, an t-Athair M. OTuathail. Eamonn, m.a.
Parker, The Rev. P., p.p. Patterson, Fergus
Perry, The Rev. J. F
Phleimoinn, Maire Bean
Ard na Greine, Eadar Goil, Bantry.
119, Morehampton Road, Donnvbrook,
Dublin. Gifford Park, Bronxville, N.Y.. U.S.A. Carrick on-Suir, Co. Tipperary. Kinnard, Lispole, Co. Kerry. Cairn Hill, Foxrock, Co. Dublin. 89 Emmet Rd., Dublin. St. John's, Port Glasgow. Beni Suef, Egypt. 9 Geraldine \ illas, Traghli. 57 Palmerston Road, Dublin. St. Michael's, Pery Square, Limerick. 15, Lower Kenilworth Park, Harold's
Cross, Dublin. Cushenstown, Ballynabola, Co. Wexford. Stella Polaris, Westleigh Avenue, Putney,
London, S.YV. 15. Hern's Nest, Rugeley, Starts. An Sgoil, Sil Eiligh, Co. Wicklow.
Porter, Mrs. Valentine Mott. Probsthain, A. Purcell, Joseph
Box 211, Carmel, California, U.S.A. 41, Great Russell St., London, W.C.I. 2 Glenmalure Villas, Castleview Gardens, Limerick.
Redmond, Owen J. Reinhard, J. R. ...
Rice, The Rev. James
Rice, Ignatius J. Robinson, Prof. F. N. ...
Roche, Miss K.
Rohan, T., M.A. ...
Ross, The Rev. Neil, m.a., b.d.
. . 13 Lomond Avenue, Fairview, Dublin.
.. 328E. Huron St., Ann Arbor, Michigan, per
B.H. Blackwell, 50 and 51 Broad St.,
Oxford. .. St. Joseph's, Headley Road, Hindhead'
Surrey. . . Roselawn, Ballybrack, Co. Dublin. .. Harvard Universitv, Cambridge, Mass.,
U.S.A. .. Mater Dei Gymnasium, 59 Batavierenwe,
Nijmegen, Holland. .. 84, St. Lawrence Road, Clontarf, Dublin. The Manse, Laggan, Kingussie.
25
NAMES.
Saurin, C. J. Seton, Sir Malcolm Sheehan, John Sloane, C. Gordon Smith, J. A., ll.d. Smith, Prof. Roland M.
Smyth, F. Acheson
Suipeal, an t-Athair T., b.d.,b.a.
Taylor, Barry Thompson, Lady Thurneyson, Prof. Dr. L. Rudolf Tierney, Rev. John, d.ph. Townsend, E. R., Paymaster- Lieut., R.N. la Buachalla, Domhnall Ua Ciarain, Rev. A. Ua Fearachair, D.
Ua Gadhra, Proinsias
Ua Mathghamhna, Seosamh
Ua Tuama, D.
Ui h-Ainnin, Maire, Bean
Ui Chuinn, Maire, Bean...
Vendryes, Professor J. ...
Walsh, The Rev. Paul
Walsh, The Rev. R. F., c.c. ... Walshe, M. C., j.p
Walsh, Miss R6isin
Walshe, Rev. J. A
Waters, Eaton W., m.d.
Webster, K. G. T
Weisweiler, Dr. Phil. Josef. Whitehill, Walter Muir, Jr.
Williams, Professor Ifor. Williams, T. W.
Woulfe, The Rev. Patrick, c.c. Wulff, Miss Winifred P., m.a.,
PH.D.
Young, Miss Rose M.
ADDRESSES. 23 Grosvenor Road, Ilford. 26 Upper Park Rd., Haverstock Hill,N.W.3. William Street, Fermoy, Co. Cork. Platten Hall, Drogheda, Co. Meath. Magdalen College, Oxford. Dept. of English, Wesleyan University,
Middletown, Conn., U.S.A. 71 Harcourt Street, Dublin. Lixnaw, Co. Kerry.
5124 Calumet Avenue, Chicago, U.S.A.
39, Steele's Road, Hampstead, N.W.3.
Bonn. Mechenheimer Allee 55, Germany.
Edenderry, Offaly.
Boundary Oak, Waterloo ville, Cosham, Hants.
Maynooth, Co. Kildare.
Ballincondan, Ballina, Co. Mayo.
17 Grattan Square, Dungarvan, Co. Water- ford.
Ceibh na gCeannaidhe, Limerick.
Patrick Street, Listowel.
Kincora, Moreton, Cheshire.
Crecora, Patrickswell, Co. Limerick.
National School, Killala, Co. Mayo.
85 Rue d'Assas, Paris.
Stamullen, Co. Meath.
Draperstown, Co. Derry.
2b, Bickenhall Mansions, Gloucester Place,
London, W.l. Cypress Grove, Templeogue, Co. Dublin. Rossmuck, Maam Cross, Galway. Brideweir, Conna, Co. Cork. Gerry's Landing, Cambridge, Mass., U.S.A. Frankfurt a.M., Kurhessenstr, 68. c/o Barclay's Bank, (France), Ltd., 33 rue
du iv Septembre, Paris. Y Wenllys, Menai Bridge, Anglesey. Woolcombe, St. Mary's, Uplyme, Lyme
Regis. Kilmallock, Co. Limerick. Cypress Grove, Templeogue, Co. Dublin.
Portnagolan, Cushendall, Co. Antrim.
26
Libraries, Societies, Colleges, and Schools
Aberdeen, University Library ...
Aberystwyth, Library of Univer- sity College of Wales
Albany, U.S.A., New York State Library
Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.A., Enoch Pratt Free Library ...
Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.A., Johns Hopkins University Library
Belfast Central Public Library
Belfast, Clonard Monastery
Belfast Library and Society for Promoting Knowledge (Linen Hall Library)
Berlin, Indogermanisches
Seminar (Indo-germanic De- partment) of the University of Berlin.
Birmingham Public Library
Boston Public Library, Mass. ...
California University Library ...
Cardiff Central Library ... Carnegie United Kingdom Trust
Carrick-on-Suir, Convent of
Mercy Chicago, Newberry Library
Chicago Public Library Chicago University Library Cleveland Public Library
Clongowes Wood College Colaiste Bhrighde, an Falcarrach,
Tir Chonnaill Colaiste Caoimhin, Glas Naoid-
hean, Baile Atha Cliath Colaiste Einne, Teach Talb6id,
Baile Atha Cliath Colaiste Ide, Baile an Ghoilin,
Daingean Colaiste Moibhi, Glas Naoidhean,
Baile Atha Cliath
per Librarian, per Librarian.
per Stevens and Brown, 28-30, Little Russell St., London, W.C.I.
per E. G. Allen & Son, Ltd., 14 Grape St.,
Shaftesbury Avenue, W.C.2. per E. G. Allen and Son, Ltd.
per G. H. Elliot, Chief Librarian, Royal
Avenue, Belfast, per The Rev. Fr. Rector, C.SS.R. per F. J. P. Burgoyne, Librarian, Donegall
Square North, Belfast.
per Dr. Pokorny, Berlin, Charlottenburg, Stuttgarter Platz. 21.
Librarian, Reference Dept., Ratcliff Place,
Birmingham, per Bernard Quaritch, 11 Grafton Street,
New Bond Street, London, W.l.
per Stevens and Brown, 28-30 Little Russell St., London, W.C.I.
per Harry Farr, Librarian, Cardiff.
See under Coleraine, Dublin, Kilkenny, Lifford, Sligo, and Wicklow (below).
per The Reverend Mother.
per Stevens and Brown, 28-30 Little Russell St., London, W.C.I.
per Stevens and Brown.
per Stevens and Brown.
per B. Cjuaritch, 11 Grafton St., London, W.l.
per Rev. C. Mulcahy, s.j.
per An Priomh-Oide.
Do. Do. Do. Do.
27
Colaiste Muire, Leitir Ceanainn,
Tir Chonnaill Colaiste na Mumhan, Magh Ealla,
Co. Chorcaighe
Coleraine, Co. Deny, Carnegie
Libraries Concord State Library ...
Copenhagen, Royal Library
Cork, Public Library Cork Co. Council Carnegie
Library Service. Cork, University College Library per Librarian.
per An Priomh-Oide. Do.
County Book Repository, Coleraine.
per Arthur H. Chase, Librarian, Concord, N.H., U.S.A.
per Haase and Son, Levstroede, 8, Copen- hagen.
per Librarian, James Wilkinson, f.l.a.
25, Patrick St., Cork.
Derry, Convent of Mercy
Dresden, Saechsische Landes- bibliothek
Droichead Nuadh : Co. Kildare, Dominican College
Dublin, " An Fainne " ...
Dublin, Carnegie United King- dom Trust
Dublin County Council Library
Dublin, King's Inn, Hon. Society
Dublin, National Library of
Ireland. Dublin, Oireachtas Library Dublin, Royal Irish Academy .. Dublin, Royal Dublin Society .. Dublin, Trinity College Library Dundalk, Free Library Dundalk, St. Joseph's ...
Edinburgh Public Library Edinburgh University Library
Esker, Athenry, St. Patrick's .. Evanston, 111., U.S.A., North- western University Library
per The Superioress.
Dresden, Saxony.
per The Very Rev. The Prior, o.p.
per An Runaidhe, 25 Parnell Sqr., Dublin. 32, Merrion Square, Dublin.
The Courthouse, Kilmainham.
per Hodges, Figgis & Co., 20 Nassau Street,
Dublin, per Hodges, Figgis & Co.
per Controller, Stationery Office, Dublin.
per Hodges, Figgis & Co.
per Hodges, Figgis & Co.
per A. de Burgh, Librarian.
per Town Clerk, Town Hall, Dundalk.
per The Rev., The Rector, c.ss.r.
per E. A. Savage, Principal Librarian.
per J. Thin, 54-55 South Bridge, Edin- burgh.
per The Rev., The Rector, c.ss.r.
per Stevens and Brown, 28-30 Little Russell St., London, W.C.I.
Galway, University College Lib- per Hodges, Figgis & Co., 20 Nassau St.,
rary Dublin.
Glasgow, The Mitchell Library... per S. A. Pitt, City Librarian, North St.,
Glasgow. Glasgow University Library ... per Jackson, Wylie & Co., 73 West George
Street, Glasgow. Gottingen University Library . . . per Librarian, Prinzenstrasse 1 Gottingen,
Germany.
Hamburg, Seminar fur Verg- Hamburg, Universitat.
leichende, Sprachwissenschaft Harvard College Library ... per E. G. Allen & Son, Ltd.
28
Iowa City, la, U.S.A., The per Stechert & Co., 2 Star Yard, Carey Library, Library Annex, State Street, London, W.C.2.
University of Iowa.
Ithaca, N.Y., U.S.A., Cornell per E. G. Allen & Son, Ltd.
University Library
Kilkenny, Carnegie Free Library per Ed. McSweeney, Librarian, John's
Quay, Kilkenny. Kilkenny Carnegie Library Book Repository, John's Qua}', Kilkenny.
Service
Leeds, Central Public Library Leipzig, Borsenverein .der Deuts
chen Buchhandler Leipzig, Universitats-Bibliothek
Lifford, Tirconaill, County
Library Limerick, Carnegie Free Library Limerick, Connradh na Gaedhilgt
Limerick, Mary Immaculate
Training College Limerick, Mount St. Alphonsus Listowel, Co. Kerry, Presenta- tion Convent Listowel, Carnegie Free Library Liverpool Public Library London, Connradh na Gaedhilge
London, Irish Literary Society
London Library
London University College London, University Library
Los Angeles Public Library Louvain, Belgium, Bibliotheque
de l'LTniversite Catholique Louvain, College de Saint-
Antoine Lund, Sweden, University
Library
per T. W. Hand, Librarian. Konigstrasse, 3-5, Leipzig.
Beethoven Strasse 6, Leipzig, Germany per
A. Probsthain, 41 Gt. Russell Street,
London, W.C.I. The Librarian, County Book Repository,
Lirford, Co. Donegal, per J. P. McNamara, Director, per The Secretary, 17 Thomas Street,
Limerick, per The Principal.
per The Rev. Fr. Rector, c.ss.r. per Sister Michael.
per
per
per
per Veritas Coy., Ltd., Dublin, per G. H. Parry, Librarian.
The Secretary, 31 Red Lion Square,
London, W.C.I.
The Hon. Secretary, 39 Grosvenor
Place, London, S.W.I.
C. J. Hagbert Wright, Librarian, St.
James's Square, London, S.W.I. per Librarian, Gower Street, W.C.I. per The Goldsmiths' Librarian, University
Library, South Kensington, London,
S.W.I. per Stevens & Brown, per Dr. E. Van Cauwenbergh, Chief
Librarian, per Rev. Fr. Guardian.
per A. B. Gleerupska, Universitets Bokhandeln.
Manchester Reference Library . . . per Manchester, John Rylands per
Library Manchester.Yictoria University of per Maynooth, Co. Kildare, Cuallacht per
Chuilm Cille (St. Columba's
League) Meadville Theological School per
Library
Librarian, Piccadilly, Manchester. H. Guppy, Librarian, Deansgate, Manchester. Librarian.
The Secretary, St. Columba's League, St. Patrick's College, Maynooth.
Stechert & Co., 2 Star Yard, Carey Street, W.C.2.
29
Melbourne, Public Library ... (E. C. Armstrong, Librarian), per Sotheran,
Ltd., 43 Piccadilly, W.l.
Michigan University Library ... per Sotheran, Ltd., 140 Strand, W.C.2.
Minnesota University Library ... Minneapolis, Minn., U.S.A., per Stechert
& Co.
Monaghan, Convent of St. Louis per Sr. M. Laurentia.
Munich, Bavarian State Library per Asher & Co., Behernstrasse, 17, Berlin.
New York Public Library ... per Stevens & Brown, 28-30 Little Russell
Street, W.C.I. New York, Columbia University per Stevens & Brown do. do.
Library North Carolina, University of, per Stevens & Brown, London, W.C.I.
Chapel Hill. Nottingham Public Reference per Librarian, Central Public Library, Sher-
Library wood St., Nottingham.
Oslo University Library ... per Cammermeyers boghandel, Oslo.
Ottawa, Library of Parliament... per E. G. Allen & Co., Ltd., 14 Grape St.,
Shaftesbury Avenue, W.C.2. Oxford, Meyrick Library, Jesus per L. B. Cross, Librarian, Jesus College,
College Oxford.
Oxford, Taylor Institution ... per L. F. Powell, Librarian.
Paris, Bibliotheque de l'Uni- per C. Klincksieck, 11 Rue de Lille, Paris.
versite a la Sorbonne Paris, Bibliotheque Nationale ... do. do.
Pembroke Urban District per City Treasurer, Dublin.
Library, Ballsbridge Philadelphia Free Library ... per Stevens & Brown, 28-30 Little Russell
Street, London, W.C.I. Philadelphia, Mercantile Library per T. Wilson Hedley, Librarian, 10th St.,
above Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.A. Philadelphia Philo-Celtic Society 1504 N. Gratz St., Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.A. Princeton University Library ... per Sotheran, Ltd., 140 Strand, W.C.2.
Rathmines, Co. Dublin, Public per Librarian.
Library. Ring, Co. Waterford, Iol-Scoil per Seumas 6 h-Eochadha.
na Mumhan
San Francisco Public Library, per Stechert & Co., 2 Star Yard, Carey Civic Centre Street, London, W.C.2.
Sligo, Carnegie United Kingdom County Book Repository, Sligo. Trust
Stanford University Library, per Stechert & Co., 2 Star Yard, Carey California Street, London, W.C.2.
Strasbourg, Bibliotheque Uni- per M. Le Directeur. versitaire et Regionale
Swansea Public Library (Welsh per Librarian, and Celtic Dept.)
Swansea, University College Singleton Park, Swansea. ,
Library.
30
Thurles, Co. Tipperary, Carnegie
Libraries Toronto Reference Library
Uppsala Kungl. University
Library Urbana, University of Illinois,
U.S.A.
Washington, Library of Con- gress Waterford Public Free Library Wicklow, Carnegie Libraries
Yale University Library
per Librarian, County Book Repository,
Thurles. per Messrs. Dawson & Son, Cannon House,
Pilgrim Street, E.C.4.
Uppsala, Sweden.
per Stechert & Co., 2 Star Yard, Carey Street, London, W.C.2.
per Stechert & Co., 2 Star Yard, Carey
Street, London, W.C.2. per Librarian, Lady Lane, Waterford. County Book Repository, Wicklow.
per E. G. Allen & Co., Ltd., 14 Grape St., Shaftesbury Avenue, W.C.2.
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Leabhar gabhala Lebor gabala Erenn