Read Myths and Legends of the Celts (Penguin Reference) Online
Authors: James MacKillop
White-horned Bull of Connacht,
see
Finnbennach
White Silver, plain of,
110
wicker execution,
29
Wicker Man, The
,
29
‘Wife of Bath’s Tale, The’,
64–5
‘Wild Man of the Woods’ theme,
263
Wilde, Sir William,
104
Williams, Charles,
265
Williams, Edward,
xiii
Willingham Fen,
7
Wiltshire,
30
Windsor Castle,
52
Wisconsin,
265
witches, witchcraft,
79
,
103
,
143
,
216
,
270
,
289
,
304
;
witches’ Sabbath,
304
‘Women, Land of’,
110
,
111
,
112–13
;
see also
Tír na mBan
‘Wonders, The Land of’,
110
‘Wooing of Étaín, The’,
see
Tochmarc Étaíne
Works and Days
(Hesiod),
128
Wright, Frank Lloyd,
265
xana
,
303–4
Y Gododdin
,
261
yannig
,
32
Yeats, William Butler,
xxv
,
xxvi
,
88
,
107
,
116
,
122
,
123
,
222
,
231
,
240
,
250
Yeun, Yeun-Elez,
120
yn foldyr gastey
,
294
Ynys Afallon,
123
Ynys Prydain
,
261
Youdic,
120
Ystoria Taliesin
,
266–7
*
See the Scottish Gaelic variant on the death of Deirdre, linking her to the Milky Way Galaxy, p. 292.
*
The Modern Irish phrase
saol eile
may denote ‘another world’ in Lucan’s sense of a faraway place, such as China or Paraguay. In the poetry of Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill (b. 1952) and elsewhere in contemporary Irish usage
an saol eile
is a spiritual world that lies beyond empirical examination.
*
The reference ‘
Annals
’ without prefix usually refers to what is called in English ‘The Annals of the Four Masters’, compiled by Micheál Ó Cléirigh and three others in the seventeenth century, translated by John O’Donovan in the seven-volume
Annals of the Kingdom of Ireland
(Dublin, 1849–51) and much reprinted.
*
Possibly named for local hero Fergus Caisfiaclach [crooked tooth], whose sobriquet was
Bód fo Bregaigh
[fire of Brega]; allusions to the two Ferguses may have become conflated in the 1830s when the Lia Fáil was erected.
*
This sword was attributed to many heroes, more often Fergus mac Róich, and is often thought to be an antecedent of Arthur’s Excalibur.