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<bibl n="1">Dissertation, Memoirs of the Right Honourable The Marquis of Clanricarde, Lord Deputy General of Ireland, containing Several Original Papers and Letters of King Charles II, Queen Mother, the Duke of York, the Duke of Lorrain, the Marquis of Ormond, Archbishop of Tuam, Lord Viscount Taaffe, &amp;c. relating to the Treaty between the Duke of Lorrain and the Irish Commissioners, from February 1650, to August 1653. Publish'd from his Lordship's Original MSS. To which is Prefix'd a Dissertation, wherein some Passages of these Memoirs are illustrated. With a Digression containing several curious Observations concerning the Antiquities of Ireland. (London 1722).</bibl>
<bibl n="2">Brian &Oacute; Cu&iacute;v, &Eacute;igse 9, 263&ndash;269, reproduced pp cxvii&ndash;cxxxii.</bibl>
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<head>Secondary literature</head>
<bibl n="1">R. H. Plomer, Irish Book Lover 3 (Dublin 1912) 127&ndash;25 [sequence of controversy between Thomas O'Sullevane and Dermot O'Connor].</bibl>
<bibl n="2">Terence Francis O'Rahilly,  'Irish scholars in Dublin in the early eighteenth century', Gadelica 1:3 (1913) 156&ndash;62 [poem by Tadhg &Oacute; Neachtain about the Irish scholars in Dublin].</bibl>
<bibl n="3">Olof Rudbeck, [Atlantica:] Atland eller Manheim, in Swedish and Latin. Uppsala: Henricus Curio, '1675' [1681]; 1689; volumes III&ndash;IV: for the author, 1698&ndash;99; volume IV: Stockholm: 1863.</bibl>
<bibl n="4">Olaus Rubeck, Olof Rudbeks Atland, eller Manheim, Olaus Rudbecks Atlantica, svenska originaltexten. Pa uppdrag av L&auml;rdomshistoriska samfundet utgiven av Axel Nelson (Uppsala 1937).</bibl>
<bibl n="5">C. E. and C. Ruth Wright (eds), The Diary of Humphrey Wanley, 2 vols. [Vol. 1 1715&ndash;1723; vol. 2 1724&ndash;1726] (London: Oxford University Press for the Bibliographical Society, 1966) [entries relating to Wanley's acquaintance with Thomas O'Sullevane].</bibl>
<bibl n="6">May H. Risk, (ed.), 'Two poems on Diarmaid &Oacute; Conchubhair', &Eacute;igse 12 (1967/68) 37&ndash;38, 330.</bibl>
<bibl n="7">David Berman &amp; Alan Harrison, 'John Toland and Keating's History of Ireland',  Donegal Annual 36 (1984) 25&ndash;29.</bibl>
<bibl n="8">Diarmaid &Oacute; Cath&aacute;in, 'Dermot O'Connor: translator of Keating', Eighteenth Century Ireland: Iris an D&aacute; Chult&uacute;r 2 (1987) 67&ndash;87.</bibl>
<bibl n="9">Alan Harrison, Ag Cruinni&uacute; Meala: Anthony Raymond (1625&ndash;1726), minist&eacute;ir Protast&uacute;nach agus l&eacute;ann na Gaeilge i mBaile &Aacute;tha Cliath (Baile &Aacute;tha Cliath [Dublin]: An Cl&oacute;chomhar, 1988) [much material on the controversy Anthony Raymond versus Dermot O'Connor on one hand; and Thomas O'Sullevane versus Dermot O'Connor on the other].</bibl>
<bibl n="10">Justin Champion, ''Manuscripts of mine abroad': John Toland and the circulation of ideas, c. 1700&ndash;1722', Eighteenth-Century Ireland: Iris an D&aacute; Chult&uacute;r 14 (1999) 9&ndash;36.</bibl>
<bibl n="11">Alan Harrison, The Dean's Friend: Anthony Raymond 1675&ndash;1726, Jonathan Swift and the Irish Language. (Baile &Aacute;tha Cliath [Dublin] 1999).</bibl>
<bibl n="12">Bernadette Cunningham, The World of Geoffrey Keating. History, myth and religion in seventeenth-century Ireland (Dublin 2000).</bibl>
<bibl n="13">Justin Champion,  'John Toland, the druids, and the politics of Celtic scholarship', Irish Historical Studies 32 (2001) 321&ndash;342.</bibl>
<bibl n="14">Diarmuid Breathnach &amp; M&aacute;ire N&iacute; Mhurch&uacute; (eag.), 1560&ndash;781 Beathaisn&eacute;is, uimhir a seacht, Leabhair Taighde, an 89&uacute; Imleabhar, (Baile &Aacute;tha Cliath [Dublin]: An Cl&oacute;chomhar, 2001) 171&ndash;172 s.v. &Oacute; S&uacute;illeabh&aacute;in [O'Sullevane], Tom&aacute;s.</bibl>
<bibl n="15">Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford 2004).</bibl>
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<head><sup resp="BF">Thomas O'Sullevane's Dissertation</sup></head>
<mls unit="&Eacute;igse p" n="263">
<pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxvii">
<p>This is what I thought proper to write upon these Memoirs, by way of Illustration, and to open some of the State-Intrigues of those Times, either not well discerned, or wittingly omitted, by such as have treated of the Affairs of the said Kingdom, in the Course of that War.<note type="auth" resp="BF" n="1">The Confederate War of 164&ndash;1646 ending with the peace treaty 30 July 1646.</note>  And it may be assuredly said, 
<pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxviii">
that the Accounts given, not only of the <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph> Transactions then, but before and after, are very imperfect, and deserve to be corrected and supply'd; especially now, when fresh Endeavours are in foot to impose upon the World in a grosser manner, by an English Version of Doctor <emph rend="ital">Keating's</emph> pretended History, which is getting ready for the Press. Concerning which, I shall, for the sake of Truth, and in Vindication of the real Antiquities of that Nation, (without any other View or Design
<mls unit="&Eacute;igse p" n="264">
whatsoever) venture to say that it will not at all answer the Character, given it in late Advertisements; as being, for the most part, an heap of insipid, ill-digested Fables, and the rest but very indifferently handled. The Owner of the Copy (for the Original belongs to the Lord Baron of <emph rend="ital">Cahir</emph> in <emph rend="ital">Ireland</emph>) assumes the Name of an <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph> Antiquary, which (for ought I know) he may make some claim or Title to; tho' I verily believ'd there was none of that sort remaining in the Country. The Study of the present Generation reaching no farther than to comprehend and write the common Dialect of their Language; and not one in six thousand that can pretend even to that, which doubtless has occasioned this unpardonable Presumption. Nor could it have been well 
<pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxix">
otherwise, where not so much as one Country School of that kind, hath been frequented since the Beginning of the Wars of 1641; the Gentlemen, and Quality, for the most part, that countenanc'd and supported that sort of Learning, having been thrust out of their Estates, tho' under the Peace of 48, and the general Indemnity, or Pardon, sent from Breda, a little before the Restoration. But if reading and writing alone be sufficient to make an Antiquary, modestly speaking, there are three Parts of four, of the People in Great Britain, Antiquaries too; and so in the same Proportion in other Kingdoms.</p>
<p>The first Part of this Work consists of idle Stories, first vented by Druids or Bards, soon after the Propagation of the Gospel in <emph rend="ital">Ireland</emph>, when a Notion of the Flood, and the Ancient World, first came to be establish'd there: And these were then receiv'd or suffer'd by way of Romance, for Pastime and Diversion only, which some in the late Degeneracy of the Times (when the <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph> Literature became almost extinct) finding written, took them for Genuin and good History. Whence it is, that we are told of a Colony settled in <emph rend="ital">Ireland</emph>, so many Days or Months before the Flood; and that all the Inhabitants thereof, were not lost in the Flood itself: 
<pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxx">
of many Settlements very early after the Flood, with particular Circumstances to each; and so down to to the Arrival of the <emph rend="ital">Milesians</emph>, or old <emph rend="ital">Spaniards</emph>, which alone of all they have hitherto deliver'd, seems to be justifiable: Yet not upon their Authority, (which is none at all) but because it may be otherwise sufficiently accounted for.</p>
<p>The Levity of the former Relations, is also clear'd by the Conveyance, which is as odd, as the things themselves there treated of. For there was no Tradition or Writing in the Case, but some of the Druids, that had seen all the Changes and Alterations, which happened in the said Isle from the Beginning, liv'd (as it seems) to the time aforesaid; not in the same Shapes or Forms, as Men do now-a-days, but under several, succeeding each other; as that of a Hind, that of a Wolf, that of a Roe, Kite, Eagle, Salmon, and other Creatures in their Turns. <emph rend="ital">Giraldus Cambrensis</emph>, who accompanied 
<mls unit="&Eacute;igse p" n="265">
the Earl of Morton (afterwards King <emph rend="ital">John</emph>) into <emph rend="ital">Ireland</emph>, and there pick'd up all that fell in his Way, in order to write a History of the country; assures us, that one <emph rend="ital">Ruanus</emph> (which he, or his Copist mistook, for <emph rend="ital">Tuan</emph>, or <emph rend="ital">Fiontuan</emph>, for so also it is sometimes written) having liv'd from near the Flood to <emph rend="ital">St. Patrick's</emph> <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxxi"> time, (that is to the middle of the 5th Century) acquainted him with all that had pass'd in the said Kingdom before; which shews what sort of Antiquaries <emph rend="ital">Cambrensis</emph> convers'd with there. To make amends for the Extravagancy of this Account, taken, as <emph rend="ital">Cambrensis</emph> pretends, out of the most ancient Histories of the Country, he adds this for a Salvo or Excuse: <emph rend="ital"><frn lang="la">Sed qui Historias primo scripserint, ipsi viderint, historiarum enimvero enucleator venio, non impugnatur:</frn> Let them that have broach'd those things, answer for the Reality of 'em;</emph> for I don't take upon me to criticize, but to illustrate Matters; which alone may demonstrate, that his full Design was to ridicule the said Histories under the Colour of those Fables, that are no Part of 'em. Doctor <emph rend="ital">Keating</emph> likewise, either ignorantly or designedly, fell into the same gross Error; and after him, little <emph rend="ital">Peter Walsh</emph>, who tho' he owns it was not well done of the Doctor, to have minded such silly Tales; yet for fear they should be lost, minutely sets 'em forth himself in their bright Colours. So that <ps><rn>Bishop</rn> <sn>Stillingfleet</sn></ps> in his <title type="book">Origines Britannicae</title> &amp;c. having no other Handle to make Sport with the <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph> Antiquities, than the said Fables, publish'd by the above-mentioned <emph rend="ital">Walsh</emph>, had more expos'd himself, than by <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxxii"> any thing else if the Grounds of his Reflections were known.</p>
<p>The pretended Transmutation of the <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph> Druids and bards as is aforesaid, was agreeable to the <emph rend="ital">Pythagorean</emph> Doctrine in that Respect; as certainly the Tenets of the <emph rend="ital">Gallick</emph> Druids have been, from whom the former might have receiv'd theirs: whereof the Learned Mr. <emph rend="ital">Edward L'huid</emph>, in his <title type="book">Archaeologia Britannica</title>, (under the Title of <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph> Manuscripts, Page 136,) gives a Specimen, which he found in an old <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph> Volume kept in the <emph rend="ital">Bodley</emph> Library at <emph rend="ital">Oxford:</emph> These are his Words: <cit><qt>This Book, as is common in old <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph> Manuscripts, has here and there some <emph rend="ital">Latin</emph> Notes, intermix'd with <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph>, and may possibly contain some Hints of the Doctrine of the Druids; as may be guess'd from these Words in the 103d Leaf: (the <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph> Caracters I only change into the common, and what is left in that Language, I express in <emph rend="ital">Latin</emph> along with the rest, to make the Sense perfect, to such as may not understand the former.) <frn lang="la">Tuan fuit in forma viri centum annis, postea apud Hibernos viginti annis in forma cervi, centum annis in forma aquilae, sex annis sub aquis in forma piscis: iterum in forma hominis, dum venerit ad tempus Finneni, ab nepotis Fiathaci.</frn></qt><bibl></bibl></cit> And such are the choice Historians 
<mls unit="&Eacute;igse p" n="266"> followed by <emph rend="ital">Cambrensis, Keating, Walsh,</emph> and the learned Bishop <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxxiii"> <emph rend="ital">Stillingfleet</emph> himself; which (if they had been of any Weight whatsoever) 'tis not very probable, that either <emph rend="ital">Innisfalensis</emph> in his Enquiry into the Antiquities of that Country, Tiegernacus in his Chronicle, or the Writers of the <emph rend="ital">Ulster</emph> Annals, all ancient and reputable Authors, would have pass'd by them, and their Accounts, in deep Silence. I said reputable Authors, for so they are generally taken to be, being capable of undergoing the severest Criticism, and Scrutiny imaginable; unless you would think the learned Primate <emph rend="ital">Usher</emph> was out in his Judgment, who found such an Exactness and Veracity in them, and especially in the <emph rend="ital">Ulster</emph> Annals, that he gives them preference to several of the kind, and thereby corrects many ancient and modern Writers, even venerable <emph rend="ital">Bede</emph> himself in things that fell out about the time he was born 712, <emph rend="ital">&amp;c.,</emph> and the age next before. But why do I mention that learned Prelate, with Relation to these presumptive Historiographers of our own Time. They know as much of him, as of the Authors now named, tho' Natives of the same Land; and as much of both, as they do of the <emph rend="ital">Thracian Orpheus,</emph> or <emph rend="ital">Sanchoniathon,</emph> who wrote before the <emph rend="ital">Trojan</emph> War.</p>
<p>It's worth observing also, that the above-quoted Mr. <emph rend="ital">L'huid,</emph> in the Catalogue he gives, <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxxiv">
in the same Place, of the <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph> Manuscripts of <emph rend="ital">Trinity</emph> College in <emph rend="ital">Dublin,</emph> which were thoroughly view'd, and examin'd by himself, mentions no such Book as <emph rend="ital">Psaltair-Tara</emph> or <emph rend="ital">Tarach,</emph> which our Present Antiquary pretends in his very Advertisements to be there; and that he has a Transcript, or some Part of it copied from thence, to embellish and enlarge his said <emph rend="ital">Keating</emph> with. And it is very strange, it being only to be translated by him, that he would give himself the Liberty to add to, or make any Variation from the Original; (I mean the Copy in his Hands.) But the truth is, his Name is only made use of for a flourish, or outward shew, whilst others behind the Curtain are hard at Work, in licking this ill-born Cub into some Shape, under the Direction of a certain Gentleman, who already has render'd himself famous by new Schemes of Doctrine and Religion, upon the Authority of some old Manuscripts no body else could see or come at besides himself. But finding by the printed Papers, that the said Gentleman, who was Mr. <emph rend="ital">Toland</emph><note type="auth" resp="BF" n="2"> John Toland (1670&ndash;1722), freethinker and philosopher. His most famous work, <title type="book">Christianity not Mysterious</title>, anonymously appeared late in 1695 (1696 imprint). He had lifelong interests in religious toleration and civil liberty. All his life, even though he was erudite and polyglot, his many writings (and behaviour) continuously challenged propriety, which generated great hostility and prevented him from securing a steady office. He died in poverty in Putney, and was buried in an unmarked grave. (Source: DNB.)</note>, is now dead, I'll cease <emph rend="ital">(Quia de mortuis nil nisi bonum)</emph> to say more of him, only this, that he seem'd to be so well qualified for the Work, he was employed in, that the loss of the Undertakers must be very sensible to them, <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxxv"> and hardly to be retriev'd. As to Dr. <emph rend="ital">Keating</emph>, because it was in Esteem with the Bards of the Time, that ingenious and noble Lord, the Earl of <emph rend="ital">Orrery</emph>, Grandfather to the present Earl, (out of Curiosity to know the Contents) had it translated into <emph rend="ital">English</emph> for him about the Year 1668;<note type="auth" resp="BF" n="3">According to Cunningham (2000) 1668 refers to the year the copy of the translation was made, rather than the translation itself.</note> <mls unit="&Eacute;igse p" n="267"> which the before-mentioned <emph rend="ital">Walsh</emph>, in his Prospect of <emph rend="ital">Ireland</emph>, says, he had borrowed from the Earl of <emph rend="ital">Anglesea</emph> Lord Privy-Seal, to furnish him with Matter for his said Book. But neither the illustrious Owner, nor any of the Family ever since, that appears, thought it deserv'd being brought to Light, and therefore 'twas condemn'd to perpetual Darkness. Now, indeed it may be, this new Translation will fetch it out again, which I would have the present Undertakers take particular Notice of; that they may act with all Candour, and Sincerity.</p>
<p>Having spoken of the Nature of this Collection, 'tis but just I should say something of the Author; how qualified to write, what Motives he had in making the said Collection, and whether he design'd it for a just History of the Country.</p>

<p>Dr. <emph rend="ital">Keating</emph> was born towards the End of Queen <emph rend="ital">Elizabeth's</emph> Reign, in the County of <emph rend="ital">Tipperary</emph>, ten Miles to the South-West of <emph rend="ital">Clonmell,</emph> <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxxvi">
near a Village call'd <emph rend="ital">Burgess</emph>; where a Seminary or School for <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph> Poetry had been kept for a considerable time. As his Parents (who were of good Reputation, and in warm Circumstances) design'd him for the Service of the Church, they took care to give him early Education, such as that part of the Country could best afford; so that being often in Company with the Masters and Scholars of the said Seminary, by Conversation and Use, he attain'd to a competent Skill in the Dialect, and Strains peculiar to that Profession: Hereof there are many instances; and, among the rest, two elegant Poems, <emph rend="ital">viz.</emph> an Elegy upon the Death of the Lord <emph rend="ital">Desies</emph>, and a Burlesque Poem, in praise of a Servant of his own, nam'd <emph rend="ital">Symon</emph>, whom he compares with the ancient Heroes. Being arriv'd at a proper Age, he took holy Orders, and went abroad to perfect his Studies. Upon his Return, (which was about the second Year of King <emph rend="ital">Charles</emph> the First's Reign) he preached in many Places, and in a little time gain'd great Applause: So that where-ever he was to preach next, (which always was advertis'd at the last meeting) a vast Concourse of People flock'd to partake of his Instructions.</p>
<p>It fell out very unluckily, that to one of his Sermons came a Gentlewoman, whose
<pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxxvii"> Maiden Name was <emph rend="ital">Elinor Laffan</emph>, then married to 'Squire <emph rend="ital">Moclar</emph>, an easy good sort of Gentleman. She was very handsome, and somewhat vain from hearing much of her own Praises, and the Perfections of her Beauty. This the Libertines, who knew her weak Side, never miss'd of filling her Ears with, as the Musick she lik'd best, and so getting into a greater Freedom and Familiarity with her, might possibly have improv'd some few Minutes to her Disadvantage; in so much that she became the common Subject of Discourse in those Parts. To make the Accident more fatal to her, and the Preacher, his Sermon was chiefly upon <mls unit="&Eacute;igse p" n="268"> Morality, and the Blessings which commonly attend it, with relation to either Sex. In the Detail, as he spoke of Modesty on the one side, he touch'd upon Lubricity and Vice on the other; and even enlarg'd upon the last, as if of set purpose to work a present Reformation in this Gentlewoman. Whether he levell'd at her in this Discourse, is now hard to be rightly guess'd at; nor is it very material, since she took it so, and would not be persuaded to the contrary: But what much added to her Confusion was, that when ever the Priest hinted upon any amorous Intrigue, that was suitable to her Conduct, most of <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxxviii"> the Congregation would turn their Faces towards her; perhaps out of Curiosity to see, whether she kept her Countenance, under so severe a Lecture. In a Word, she was upon tenters till the Entertainment was over, and then retir'd galled to the Heart; and full of Wrath and Revenge against an Enemy, that had so publickly declar'd himself against her, as she verily thought he did. Nor was her Stay longer at home, than she could get her Equipage ready for a Journey; having (through the Indulgence of an over-fond Husband) the reins of Government in her own Hands.</p>

<p>Amongst her Admirers was a noble Earl, then Lord President of the Province, upon whom, it seems, she had conferr'd some of her Favours. To him she goes streight, he being then at <emph rend="ital">Lymerick</emph>, and lays open the harsh Treatment she had met with, from first to last. That upon his Account she had been made a Game of, and expos'd to Ridicule in the Face of the whole Country, &amp;c. Therefore if he expected the Continuance of her Good-will, he must vindicate her Honour, by an exemplary Punishment upon the Person, who in so open and vile a Manner, took the Liberty to tarnish it.</p>

<p>The Eloquence of <emph rend="ital">Demosthenes</emph>, or <emph rend="ital">Cicero</emph>, never more effectually wrought upon the 
<pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxxix"> Passions of their Auditories, nor excited a greater Heat in them, than did these the Complaints of the said Lady mingled with her Tears, operate upon that Lord; he taking the Indignity as partly done to himself, and that thereby he ran a risque of losing a Conversation, that was so very dear to him. The Result was, that Orders were immediately issued for Horse and Foot, to go in quest of our Preacher, as obnoxious to the Laws provided against Seminary Priests, &amp;c. and a great Reward was offer'd to any that should apprehend him. This so scar'd the poor Man, that immediately he chang'd both Garb and Name, kept in close Retirements for some Months, and at length quitted the whole Province. In this Misfortune, he lurk'd, sometimes in one Place, and sometimes in another, but mostly at the Abodes of the Poets, with whom he had contracted a Friendship in his Youth; where meeting with good Store of old Books, and Manuscripts, to divert his Thoughts, he would now and then look over some, and copy out what he took a <mls unit="&Eacute;igse p" n="269"> Fancy for. Which being continued for about two Years, and in several Places, at last compleated this Collection, which now goes under his Name. The Bards and Poets, indeed, extremely lik'd it, because it would save them <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxxx"> the Trouble of searching for Characters that were suitable to their Occasions, and for that reason took several Copies of it, in the Beginning. But when the Storm blew over, and the Doctor had an Opportunity to confer with more judicious Men, concerning his Work, he found it would not stand the test of an History; not only for that the first Part of it, which preceded the <emph rend="ital">Milesian</emph> Conquest, was without any Probability or Appearance of Truth; as having ever been exploded by all Criticks, (I mean the Substance and Contents of it, gather'd from the empty Notions of the <emph rend="ital">Metempsychosis</emph>, or Shape-changing Doctrine of the Druids) but because in the second, which reaches down from the said Conquest; though the Series, and Succession of the Kings, with many of their Actions, might be depended upon, in the main, for reality; yet these also were so blended and interwoven with Fables, that they would carry no greater Weight than the first. Since therefore he could not help what was done, by getting in the Copies already taken, which was not in his Power to accomplish; he desir'd it should never be translated into any other Language, nor otherwise regarded than as a Miscellany of indigested things, wherein judicious and discerning Natives <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxxxi"> might find something worth their perusal at leisure Hours. This took well for a time, and the nature of the Work itself made that Caution necessary; so that tho' several <emph rend="ital">English</emph> Gentlemen in high Posts in that Country, desir'd a Translation of it at any Price, yet none ever prevail'd, before the said noble Lord; and it was the Father of a Gentleman lately deceas'd in <emph rend="ital">London</emph>, (who commonly went by the Name of Count <emph rend="ital">Conniers</emph>) that was won by this Lord (he being a Neighbour, and one who understood the <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph> pretty well) to perform that Task. This was so generally resented, that he gain'd not only the Ill-will of many, but was even attack'd, and in danger of losing his Life several times on the same Account. Such as it is, let it have its Weight: But as 'tis far from being an History, I believe no man of Judgement will take it for one, or from the Imperfection thereof, censure the real and ancient Monuments of that Kingdom; which may deserve a better Consideration. What hath pass'd hitherto, might have been done out of Ignorance, and want of a right information of the Case, as is here set forth; but if another new Translation of the Fables above-mentioned be obtruded upon the World, for the sake of a little present Gain, I believe that every <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxxxii"> true and understanding Native will look upon it as an Injury done to their Country, and explode it accordingly.<note type="auth" resp="BF" n="4">Extract reproduced by &Oacute; Cu&iacute;v ends here.</note></p>
<p>Having before mention'd a Seminary, or School for Poetry; to obviate a Notion, which otherwise might be entertained, <emph rend="ital">viz.</emph> that it was of the same nature with Schools and Colleges in other Countries, in which not only Poetry, but the other liberal Sciences, with the learned Languages, are taught and acquir'd: I think I may in this Place shew the Difference, it being of another kind; as rather agreeing with Customs us'd in very ancient and remote Parts, where no one eminent Calling was suffer'd to interfere with any other, each having their Professor peculiar to themselves, and these within certain Tribes strictly tied up to it, under very severe Penalties provided against Transgressors: Which as to Poetry, and most of the rest, was still preserv'd in Ireland upon the same Footing, till the Beginning of the Troubles in 1641. This is an Argument of the great Antiquity of the People, and that their Origin was very wide of those Nations, Mr. <emph rend="ital">Camden</emph>, and other modern Writers would fetch it from, grounding themselves upon Conjectures, that seem not to have very much in 'em; and passing <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxxxiii"> (at the same time) such clear Indications as could not (being well weighed) but have afforded them a great deal of Light in their Searches, and at last perhaps have gratified their Labour, by the Discovery of the thing, they sought for. That this was the Custom of the <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph>, <emph rend="ital">viz.</emph> that the liberal Arts and Sciences should be in collegiat, and hereditary Bodies alone; you have the Testimony of the same Mr. <emph rend="ital">Camden</emph>. 
<cit><qt>These Lords (says he) have their Historians about them, who write their Acts and Deeds: They have their Physicians also; and Rymers, whom they call Bards; yea and their Harpers, who have every one of them their several Livelihoods, and Lands set out for them. And of these there be in each Territory several Professors; and those within some certain, and several Families; That is to say the Brehons (Judges) be of one Stock, and Name, the Historians of another; and so of the rest, who instruct their own Children and Kinsmen, and have some of them always to be their Successors.</qt><bibl></bibl></cit> In like manner does Sir <emph rend="ital">John Davis</emph>, Attorney-General to King James I., in that Kingdom, observe in his Treatise of <emph rend="ital">Ireland</emph>, who hereupon is quoted by the former: which Institution was the very same formerly in Use with the <emph rend="ital">Arabians, Egyptians, Chaldeans</emph>, and some other <emph rend="ital">Asiatic</emph> Nations, while they <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxxxiv"> enjoyed their own Laws and Liberties, as <emph rend="ital">Herodotus</emph>,<note type="auth" resp="BF" n="5">O'Sullevane's references are not reproduced, as the print copy is too poor to decipher them.</note> <emph rend="ital">Diodorus Siculus</emph>, the Geographer, and others inform us. Nor is this the only Argument that can be made use of in such an Enquiry: There are several besides as convincing, especially those brought from Manners, and Customs at large, from Laws, Rites, Worship, the Language of the Natives, with its Idioms, and Dialects, proper Names of Men, Women, Names of Mountains, Rivers, Promontories, &amp;c. These and the like, the Judicious <emph rend="ital">Varro</emph>, and <emph rend="ital"><ps reg="Publius Cornelius Tacitus"><sn>Tacitus</sn></ps></emph>, think very fit to be examin'ed upon such Occasions, so that without 'em, hardly any Certainty can be attain'd; which having not been done by such as have professedly treated of <emph rend="ital">Ireland</emph>, (except as hereafter mentioned) 'tis not to be wonder'd they had so little Success. And perhaps that was the reason, which occasioned a Censure by this Verse upon the said Mr. <emph rend="ital">Camden</emph>: 
<text type="poem">
<body>
<lg type="couplet">
<l>Perlustras Anglos oculis, Cambdene duobus,</l>
<l>Uno oculo Scotos, caecas Hibernigenas.</l></lg></body></text>
who certainly was a Learned Writer, and very capable of making better Discoveries, with relation to Ireland, if he had either had the Assistance of any honest and judicious Native thereof, or had seen more of the ancient <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxxxv"> Historians, and other Writers of that Place, than he did. The Affinity he found between some Words us'd by the ancient <emph rend="ital">Gauls</emph>, <emph rend="ital">Britons</emph> and <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph>, chiefly made him conclude; That from the first, the second were descended, and from these the last. But it is more than probable, and perhaps demonstrable, that the said Words originally were neither <emph rend="ital">Gallick</emph> nor <emph rend="ital">British</emph>, but foreign to both Nations, till introduc'd therein upon Commerce; and Intercourse had with Strangers, as divers religious Rites and Customs were by the same means establish'd. So that if a thing, which with humble Submission, I think, is very probable, may be suppos'd (and the Learned <emph rend="ital">Bochart</emph> in a great Measure has already done it to my Hands) Mr. <emph rend="ital">Camden's</emph> Scheme or Account loses all its Force, and falls to the Ground. For I take it for granted, that the Notion of all Countries to have been first inhabited, <emph rend="ital">viz.</emph> each from the next adjoyning, to be now too threadbare to sway with any body, when the <emph rend="ital">Phoenicians</emph> and the <emph rend="ital">Greeks</emph> are irrefragably known to have inhabited Places at vast Distances from home. And <emph rend="ital"><ps reg="Publius Cornelius Tacitus"><sn>Tacitus</sn></ps></emph> acquaints us, (<title type="book">de morib. German.</title>) that such as in ancient Times made remote Settlements, had steer'd their Course thither by Sea, and not by Land. But 'tis otherwise with Mr. <emph rend="ital">Camden</emph>, when <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxxxvi"> he treads upon sure Grounds, as may appear by his Derivation of Jerin, or Erin, the principal Name of <emph rend="ital">Ireland</emph>, which he fetches from the Word <emph rend="ital">Hiere</emph>, signifying in the Language or Tongue of the old Natives, <emph rend="ital">West</emph>. This Conjecture, he corroborates from the Situation of the Isle, being reputed, till of late, the most Western Part of the known World; and the same Name in remote Antiquity fix'd upon a Cape or Promontory, in the very extreme of <emph rend="ital">Spain</emph> to the West, doubtless then believ'd also to be the End of the World, and a <frn lang="la">nihil ultra</frn> on that Side; whence <emph rend="ital">Hercules</emph> was suppos'd to have erected his Pillars there; also the most Western River in <emph rend="ital">Spain</emph> nam'd <emph rend="ital">Jerna</emph>, and another of the like Signification in <emph rend="ital">Ireland</emph>, &amp;c. But besides these, mention'd by the said Author to have had an affinity to the aforesaid Name; and a Mountain in the former bordering upon the Ocean so call'd, there was another much to his Purpose, <emph rend="ital">viz.</emph> <emph rend="ital">Erythia</emph>, an Isle three Miles long and one broad, as <emph rend="ital">Pliny</emph> tells us, stretching in sideways between <emph rend="ital">Cales</emph> and the main Continent of <emph rend="ital">Spain</emph>, long since sunk, or overwhelmed by the Salt Water, which <emph rend="ital">Hesiod</emph> in his Story of the <emph rend="ital">Theban Hercules</emph>, calls <emph rend="ital">Iere</emph>, or <emph rend="ital">Ierne</emph>; <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxxxvii"> adding that it was from thence the said Hero had carried off the Herd of the famous <emph rend="ital">Geryon</emph>, upon vanquishing him there. <emph rend="ital">Pliny</emph> in the same Place calls it <emph rend="ital">Erythia</emph>, upon the Authority of <emph rend="ital">Ephorus</emph>, and <emph rend="ital">Philistides</emph> from <emph rend="ital">Timaeus</emph>, and <emph rend="ital">Silenus Aphrodisias</emph> from the Natives of the Place, the Isle of <emph rend="ital">Juno</emph>. <emph rend="ital"><ps type="author"><fn>Strabo</fn></ps></emph> also speaks of it, and many other both <emph rend="ital">Greek</emph> and <emph rend="ital">Latin</emph> Authors. But why was it called <emph rend="ital">Iere</emph>, unless for the Situation of it in the West, as the said other Places mention'd? For without doubt they that first impos'd the Name, had a regard to the Position to the Place's particular Quality, or some visible distinguishing Marks upon them; as in that of <emph rend="ital">Albion</emph>, reputed the most ancient Name of <emph rend="ital">Great Britain</emph>, to which the white Cliffs of it on the Channel, as the common Opinion is, had probably given Occasion. But there being nothing of that sort on the West of <emph rend="ital">Spain</emph>, which was very particular, the Situation seems to have been chiefly consider'd on this Occasion. And therefore the said Name might have well had its Birth from thence in the said different Places: For the reason of severally imposing it must have been common to all the Places so nam'd, and nothing was so but the Site, or Position as aforesaid. It likewise follows from thence, that the Word <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxxxviii"> <emph rend="ital">Hiere</emph> or <emph rend="ital">Iere</emph>, implying the <emph rend="ital">West</emph>, had the same Acceptation in the Language of those that impos'd the said Names; as, on t'other side, the Identity and perfect Agreement of the Name in several Places, implies, that the Authors us'd the same Language, or some Dialects of it, which is all one.</p>
<p>That the said Part of <emph rend="ital">Spain</emph> was generally reckon'd, in old Times, to be the most westerly of the World, is made out by the unanimous Sense and Concurrence of Ancient Writers. Many of the <emph rend="ital">Greeks</emph>, till after <emph rend="ital">Alexander's</emph> Time, took it for granted, that the Sun set on the <emph rend="ital">Spanish</emph> Coast in the very Brink of the Ocean, with a terrible and tremendous Noise, occasion'd by the Intercourse of two contrary Elements, <emph rend="ital">viz.</emph> Fire and Water; and that thereupon dark Night ensued, under which the rest of the Ocean, or outward Sea eternally, lay; of which Opinion was <emph rend="ital">Pindaras</emph>, <emph rend="ital">Possidonius</emph>, and <emph rend="ital">Artemidorus</emph>, &amp;c., as <emph rend="ital"><ps type="author"><fn>Strabo</fn></ps></emph> relates. But the going down of the Sun implies the West, as the rising of it does the East, acording to the common Notion of Mankind. The <emph rend="ital">Roman</emph> Writers also, that improv'd by the <emph rend="ital">Greeks</emph>, had the same Idea as to the Situation of that part of <emph rend="ital">Spain</emph>, <emph rend="ital">viz.</emph>, that it was in the extreme West, <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxxxix"> whence <ps reg="Publius Ovidius Naso"><sn>Ovid</sn></ps> speaking of it, delivers himself [1. <title type="poem">Met.</title>] thus, 
<text type="poem" lang="la">
<body>
<lg type="verse">
<l>Vesper, &amp; occiduo quae littora sole repescunt,</l>
<l>Proximia sunt Zephyro.</l></lg>
</body>
</text>

And <emph rend="ital">Claudian</emph> [L. 2 de Rap. Pros.]

<text type="poem" lang="la">
<body>
<lg>
<l>Solus amazonio cinctus Stymphalidas area</l>
<l>Appetis: occiduo ducis ab orbe greges.</l>
</lg>
</body>
</text>

As also <emph rend="ital"><ps reg="Quintus Horatius Flaccus"><sn>Horace</sn></ps></emph> [Lib. 1 Carm.]
<text type="poem" lang="la">
<body>
<lg>
<l>Qui nunc Hesperia victor ab ultima.</l>
</lg>
</body>
</text></p>

<p>The Difficulty then lies, which of three Nations, (for none less could pretend to it) were those that have given the said Name to so many Places in <emph rend="ital">Spain</emph>; whether the <emph rend="ital">Aborigines</emph>, or first Inhabitants thereof; the <emph rend="ital">Phoenicians</emph> who (in process of Time) made very early Voyages thither; or the <emph rend="ital">Greeks</emph>, that likewise made Settlements there, if we may give Credit to <emph rend="ital">Livy</emph>, [Dec. 3. lib. 1. Florus, &amp;c.] and other late Authors. Not the last, because the said name has been fix'd many Ages, before ever they came so far Westwards, as may appear by the last mentioned <emph rend="ital">Greek</emph> Authors, that were not very early, and yet knew nothing of those Parts, which has occasion'd their giving such fabulous Accounts of 'em. 'Tis true, <emph rend="ital">Colaeus</emph> the <emph rend="ital">Samian</emph>, sailing for <emph rend="ital">Egypt</emph>, was in spight <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxl"> of himself and Crew, by a <corr sic="Sorm" resp="BF">Storm</corr> and strong easterly Winds rising, forc'd back from his Course, and hurried all along to the <emph rend="ital">Streights Mouth</emph> and <emph rend="ital">Tartessus</emph> [L. 4 p. 314 ], as <emph rend="ital">Herodotus</emph> writes; which <emph rend="ital">Colaeus</emph> liv'd about 600 Years before the Birth of Christ, and is believ'd to have been the first Sailor of Greece, that ever reach'd to the Coast of <emph rend="ital">Spain</emph>. But neither he, nor Posterity, were much improv'd thereby, as remaining still in the same Ignorance; which is plain by the Error of the Philosopher, who believ'd, that the Continent of <emph rend="ital">India</emph>, was adjoyning to the Pillars of <emph rend="ital">Hercules</emph>. And <!--[Ibid. p. 271 &amp; p. 273]--> <emph rend="ital">Herodotus</emph> absolutely denies the Being of an Ocean at all, or any Sea surrounding the main Continent; whereof, as far as it is habitable, <emph rend="ital">Plato</emph> [Plat. in <uncl>Phadere (?)</uncl>] makes <emph rend="ital">Phasis</emph>, a River of <emph rend="ital">Colchis</emph> on the East, and the said Pillars of <emph rend="ital">Hercules</emph> on the West, to be the two greatest Extremes. For what <emph rend="ital">Homer</emph>, <emph rend="ital">Hesiod</emph>, and <emph rend="ital">Onomacritus</emph> the Writer of the <emph rend="ital">Argonauts</emph>, have observ'd of the West of <emph rend="ital">Europe</emph>, they had learnt it by hearsay, and chiefly from the <emph rend="ital">Phoenician</emph> Traders, who from thence carried Tin, Lead, Amber, and other valuable Commodities to the Markets of <emph rend="ital">Greece</emph>. And the said Notions being very exact, and form'd as it seems upon good Experience, it is very strange, that the subsequent Ages, till the Time aforesaid, <emph rend="ital">viz.</emph>, the <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxli"> Rise of the <emph rend="ital">Macedonian</emph> Empire, had no manner of Regard thereto, so as to form a right Judgment by it, as they might have done. But the truth is, they took 'em to be purely poetical and fabulous, as most of the rest deliver'd by the said Authors. [Vid. Odys. et de Atlante &amp; columnis Herc. Odys. 7 v. 254 &amp; v. 267] As to the certainty of the said Notions, what can be more exact as to the Situation of <emph rend="ital">Ireland</emph> in the Western Ocean, and the Distance of it from the <emph rend="ital">Streights Mouth</emph> and the <emph rend="ital">Mediterranean</emph>, than about ten Days sailing, which <emph rend="ital">Homer</emph> gives <emph rend="ital">Ulysses</emph>, as well as in his Course thither, as when he fetches him back from thence; wherein <emph rend="ital">Onomacritus</emph> almost agrees with him, making the same Course, taken by the <emph rend="ital">Argonauts</emph>, to have been of twelve Days only; and the small Difference noted might be imputed to the Accidents of the Wind and Weather, suppos'd to have serv'd on the said Occasions. Not that the said Voyages had ever been made by either <emph rend="ital">Ulysses</emph> or the <emph rend="ital">Argonauts</emph>; tho' the last of them, <ps><fn>Olaus</fn> <sn>Rudbeck</sn></ps>,<note type="auth" resp="BF" n="6">Olof Rudbeck the Elder, or Olaus Rudbeckius (1630&ndash;1702), a Swedish scientist, linguist and writer, professor of medicine and author of the treatise <title type="book">Atlantis (Atland eller Manheim).</title> in which he argued that Sweden was Atlantis and Swedish the language of the bible. He was criticized and satirized by other linguists for this.</note> in his <title type="treatise:Atlantis">Atlantic</title>,<note type="auth">C. 26 See Hernius in his Maps.</note> would endeavour to justifie, discovering in the North, certain Channels and lakes, whereby he makes a Communication or Passage by Water, between the <emph rend="ital">Tanais</emph> and the <emph rend="ital">Baltick</emph>; as also Dr. Keating first fetching the <emph rend="ital">Millesians</emph> or ancient <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph> in Ships from <emph rend="ital">Scythia</emph> that Way. But the Poets aforesaid hearing <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxlii"> of the Isles in the Western Ocean, to magnifie the Sea-Navigations of their Heroes, feigned them to have touch'd upon the most Western of all, which seems to be the reason why they mentioned <emph rend="ital">Ireland</emph>, and no other; <emph rend="ital">Orpheus</emph> or <emph rend="ital">Onomacritus</emph> calling it by its most common Name <emph rend="ital">Jerno</emph>, and <emph rend="ital">Homer</emph> by that of <emph rend="ital">Ogygia</emph>. 'Tis Pleasant enough that Sir <emph rend="ital">James Ware</emph>,<note type="auth">Disq. de Hib. (=De Hiberniae et antiquitatibus ejus disquisitiones) 6.1.</note> against the Current of all Writers, would deny <emph rend="ital">Ireland</emph> to be <emph rend="ital">Ogygia</emph>, because <emph rend="ital"><ps reg="Mestrius Plutarchus" type="author"><sn>Plutarch</sn></ps></emph>, tho' placing it to the West of <emph rend="ital">Britain</emph>, makes the Distance between both to be five Days sailing. It might be so for ought <emph rend="ital">Plutarch</emph> knew, as it takes up more very often in our own Time. And the <emph rend="ital">Romans</emph> themselves, notwithstanding the vast Extent of their Power, did not as yet fully discover the Nature and Dimensions of the <emph rend="ital">British</emph> and <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph> Sea, as appears by <emph rend="ital"><ps reg="Publius Cornelius Tacitus"><sn>Tacitus</sn></ps></emph>, in the Life of <emph rend="ital">Agricola</emph>, by whom Britain itself was but a little before discover'd to be an Island;<note type="auth">p. 35.</note> and <emph rend="ital">Solinus</emph> believ'd the said Sea to be navigable only a few Days in Summer. Nor was it a less Mistake of Mr. <emph rend="ital">Camden</emph> to say, that <emph rend="ital">Orpheus</emph> in the same Voyage meant <emph rend="ital">Britain</emph> of the plentiful Isle under the Dominion of <emph rend="ital">Ceres</emph>, when he expresses it was after twelve Days sailing from <emph rend="ital">Ireland</emph>, and getting out of the Ocean, the sharp <emph rend="ital">Lynceus</emph> made <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxliii"> it at a vast Distance, and for a farther Mark of it observes, that it was therein <emph rend="ital">Proserpina</emph> being inveigled out by her Relations, (meaning <emph rend="ital">Venus</emph>, and <emph rend="ital">Pallas</emph>) under Pretence of gathering Flowers, had been betrayed by <emph rend="ital">Pluto</emph>, which Particulars and Circumstances can relate to no other than <emph rend="ital">Sicily</emph> alone; so that Mr. <emph rend="ital">Camden's</emph> Labour upon the said Passage to prove the fertility of <emph rend="ital">Britain</emph>, from the great Supplies of Corn sent from thence to the <emph rend="ital">Roman</emph> Armies in Gaul, might have been well spar'd.</p>
<p><emph rend="ital">Hesiod</emph> also is right in his Description of his <emph rend="ital">Spanish Ierne</emph>, otherwise <emph rend="ital">Erythia</emph>, though wrong in making <emph rend="ital">Geryon</emph> and the <emph rend="ital">Theban Hercules</emph> to have been ever there,<note type="auth">Apian in Iberici. Arian l. 2. Anabas.  Eustach. in Dionisiac.</note> being therein contradicted by sincere and good Authors in following Ages. The grounds of this Invention were, that the said <emph rend="ital">Hesiod</emph>, and other <emph rend="ital">Greek</emph> Writers, finding the <emph rend="ital">Tyrian Hercules</emph> to have made several lucky Expeditions towards the Ocean, fix'd many Colonies of his People upon the Borders of it, and thereby got a great Renown, attributed most of his Actions to their own <emph rend="ital">Hercules</emph>, who was ten Generations later than him. Nor is it to be omitted, that the <emph rend="ital">Grecian</emph> Traders, upon several successful Voyages to <emph rend="ital">Spain</emph>, and the Ocean, where-ever they found <emph rend="ital">Iere, Ierin,</emph> <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxliv"> or any Declension of that Name, they translated it according to their own Sense of the Word, <emph rend="ital">Sacred</emph>, for the meaning of <emph rend="ital">Ieros, Iera, Ieron</emph>, being an Adjective of three Terminations in their Language, is <emph rend="ital">Sacred</emph>; which the <emph rend="ital">Romans</emph> likewise did upon their Authority. Whence we find <emph rend="ital">Ireland</emph> called <emph rend="ital">Insula Sacra</emph>, <note type="auth">Fest. Avienus in oris Maritim.</note> that Cape of <emph rend="ital">Spain</emph> upon the Ocean, formerly called <emph rend="ital">Ierne, Promontorium Sacrum</emph>; <note type="auth">Strab. lib.</note> and even a whole Nation of People besides the <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph>, from the Situation of their Country to the West, so call'd, as hereafter shall be seen, call'd by Mistake, or a wrong Exposition of the Word, which instead of <emph rend="ital">Sacred</emph> should have been render'd <emph rend="ital">Westerly</emph>, or on the <emph rend="ital">West</emph>.</p>
<p>As to the <emph rend="ital">Aborigines</emph>, or those beyond the Memory of all Times, planted in <emph rend="ital">Spain</emph>, severally imposing the said Name; this could hardly be, <note type="auth">Arist. in mirabil.  Herodot lib. 4</note> howsoever rich from the happy Soil they liv'd in, for so they are said to have been even upon the Testimony of holy Writ, as 'tis generally taken. <note type="auth">Gen. x. 4. Ezech. xxvii. 27</note> Yet as they were not strong enough to oppose the many Settlements that were made by Foreigners in their Country, and consequently not populous enough to occupy it all themselves, they did not give Names to several Places, and especially in the extreme Parts of the Land on the <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxlv"> side of the Ocean, when the first Adventurers came and settled there. Besides, the same People that established <emph rend="ital">Iere</emph> in <emph rend="ital">Spain</emph>, must be suppos'd to have done it in <emph rend="ital">Ireland</emph> likewise, by reason of the Identity of the Name, and the Motives for it as strong here as in the former. But the <emph rend="ital">Aborigines</emph> cannot be suppos'd to have gone so far by Sea, being found without Shipping, or any naval Stores worth taking Notice of. It naturally then follows, that the old Phoenicians, who began their Navigation in <emph rend="ital">Joshua's</emph> time, if not before, sailed all over the <emph rend="ital">Mediterranean</emph>; fix'd many Colonies on the Coasts of it; and finally, (which strengthens the rest) planted Colonies over all this<note type="auth"><q lang="la">Oram eam universam originis Poenorum existimavit Marcus Agrippa.</q> Plin lib 4. <sup resp="BF">recte Plin. De nat. hist. 3.8; a variant reading is: <q lang="la">oram universum originis</q>.</sup> <q lang="la">Porro in isto littore stetere crebra civitates antea, Phoenix que <uncl>..tus</uncl> habuit hos pridem locos.</q> Fest. Avienus ibid. <sup resp="BF">recte Ora Maritima ll. 433&ndash;35: <q lang="la">Porro in isto litore / stetere crebrae civitates antea / Phoenixque multus habuit hos pridem locos.</q> (Avienus, Ora Maritima &amp; Periegesis seu Descriptio Orbis Terrarum, in: Fontes Hispanicae Antiquae, vol. 1, ed. A. Schulten, Barcelona 1922.)</sup></note> Wester Part, probably uninhabited before. <note type="auth">Strab. l. 6. Sil. ital. l. 17, v. 25.</note> Were the true Authors of the said Name enquired into, their Language seems to have had so great an Affinity with the <emph rend="ital">Hebrew</emph>, that any two of both Nations qualified to speak, might understand one another without Interpreters, as is visible by the Passage of the Spies of <emph rend="ital">Joshua</emph>, and the <emph rend="ital">Canaanitish</emph>, or <emph rend="ital">Phoenician</emph>, (which are <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxlvi"> Synonimous) Harlot, that shelter'd them in her House, as the Scripture mentions; setting forth all the material Circumstances, even the very Names of all the Parties concern'd in that Transaction. But in one Sense, the West in this Tongue being <emph rend="ital">Hereb</emph>, or <emph rend="ital">Ere</emph>, which seems to include <emph rend="ital">Hiere</emph>, at least to have the same Radix with it, may much conduce to justifie the true Meaning of the Word <uncl>I(ere)[?]</uncl> given as aforesaid, and in the <emph rend="ital">Phoenician</emph> itself, <emph rend="ital">Hereb</emph> properly signifies the West, which makes the Intendment stronger. <note type="auth">Vide Frag...[?]  San...[?] apud Eusebium Pamphili.</note></p>

<p>Nor do I think it too bold to advance, that the famous <emph rend="ital">Cerne</emph>, a little Isle over-against the most westerly Point of <emph rend="ital">Africk</emph>, has the same Origin, for the Reasons above-mentioned, and that by right it should be written <uncl reason="end illegible">Jerne</uncl> and not <emph rend="ital">Cerne</emph>; for this we have from suspected Hands, <emph rend="ital">Greeks</emph>, and <emph rend="ital">Romans</emph>, each of whom was apt to model Foreign Names on the Genius of his own Tongue: and sometimes in old manuscripts one Letter by Erasion, or some accidental Blemish, might be so alter'd, as afterwards to pass for another, as may be seen by several Passages in the Classics whose Sense by that means became doubt[ed?]: In the <emph rend="ital">Cadmean</emph> or old <emph rend="ital">Ionick</emph> Alphabet, which was first had from the <emph rend="ital">Phoenicians</emph>, and afterwards practised by both the said Nations, <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxlvii"> <emph rend="ital">Gamma</emph>, that therein did the Function of <emph rend="ital">e</emph>, differs but very little from the small <emph rend="ital">Iota</emph>, which likewise might have occasioned the Mistake. This Supposition is the more rational, in that the Natives of this Tract of <emph rend="ital">Afric</emph>, over-against <emph rend="ital">Cerne</emph>, were called <emph rend="ital">Ieroi</emph>, or <emph rend="ital">Sacred</emph>; which must be taken for <emph rend="ital">dwelling on the West</emph>, for the Reasons given before: as also the Region it self <emph rend="ital">most sacred</emph>, or rather the <emph rend="ital">most westerly</emph> Part of the Continent: For so <emph rend="ital">Scylax Caryandaeus</emph> in his <emph rend="ital">Periplus</emph>, or Sea Circuit, calls both the said Nation and Region. Whence it is plain, there were more <emph rend="ital">Irelands</emph> formerly than one; and that the present <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph> were not the only People that were called from the Situation of the Country they liv'd in. So that Mr. <emph rend="ital">Camden's</emph> Conjecture seems not to be without a solid Foundation, and if he had work'd farther in the same Mine, 'tis probable he might have found a great deal more of pretious Oar there; whereas rambling at large, or out of the way, is subject to Incertainties and lots of Time, <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxlviii"> in a great Measure, as has been the Fate of most of the said Authors, that have treated of <emph rend="ital">Ireland</emph>. For it is not the bare Authority of a Writer, that will prevail with Men of Sense, in Dissertations of this kind, but the coercive Force of his Arguments, and the Clearness of his Reasons, grounded upon Principles and Authorities that are solid, and agreeable to the things treated of. Now compare the Derivation of <emph rend="ital">Ierin</emph>, brought by Mr. <emph rend="ital">Camden</emph>, as aforesaid, with that of the fabulous <emph rend="ital">Druids</emph> in <emph rend="ital">Keating</emph>, which is to the effect, <emph rend="ital">viz. that when the old</emph> Spaniards <emph rend="ital">invaded the said Isle, the Government thereof was in a legue Brothers, three by Name,</emph> Ethur, Cethur, and Tethur, <emph rend="ital">otherwise called</emph>, Mac Cuil, Mac Ceit, <emph rend="ital">and</emph> Mac Greine; <emph rend="ital">that these being respectively married to three Women,</emph> viz. <emph rend="ital">Fodhla,</emph> Banaba, <emph rend="ital">and</emph> Eire, <emph rend="ital">they govern'd in their turn each for a Year; the King in being giving the Name of his Queen to the Country during Administration: whence</emph> Ireland <emph rend="ital">ever afterwards retain'd the said three Names,</emph> Eire, Banaba, <emph rend="ital">and</emph> Fodhla; <emph rend="ital">the first indeed commoner than any of the rest, for that</emph> Eire <emph rend="ital">and her Husband were the last that had the Regency, when expell'd by force to yield to the said conquering invaders.</emph> I say, upon comparing those two Derivations, the Solidity of the one, and <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cxlix"> Levity of the other, will appear at first View. For the <emph rend="ital">Druids</emph> (like ancient Philosophers, who to cover their Ignorance, or Laziness, set up hidden Qualities, as the only Reasons to be given of natural Effects, which they could not account for,) meeting with hard Names of Countries, Rivers, Mountains, &amp;c. they invented Heroes, or great Actors, as of remote Antiquity, in affinity of Sound with the same, pretending they were the true Authors thereof. As <emph rend="ital">Geoffrey of Monmouth</emph>, or the first Broacher of that History of the ancient <emph rend="ital">Britons</emph>, that is commonly taken for his Work, attributes the Name <emph rend="ital">Britain</emph>, to his intraceable <emph rend="ital">Brutus</emph>; but the more Judicious concur with the learned <emph rend="ital">Bochart</emph><note type="auth" resp="BF" n="7">Samuel Bochart, 1599&ndash;1667; French protestant pastor and biblical scholar.</note>, who apprehends it to be a Compound of two Words,<note type="author">[l. 2 de Colon. &amp; ling. Phoen.</note> <emph rend="ital">viz.</emph> <emph rend="ital">Boerat</emph> and <emph rend="ital">anac</emph>, signifying the distinctive, Land, and Tin; but together, as here, Land or Country, where Tin is found, and traffick'd with as a Native Commodity; in which they follow the Direction of <emph rend="ital">Plato</emph>, in his <emph rend="ital">Cratylus</emph>, with relation to the ancient Names of Places, viz. that the Etymology of 'em should be sought for among Foreigners, whereby he meant those Foreigners, who had in the earliest Times frequented the said Places. In like manner, Bishop <emph rend="ital">Lesley</emph>, in his History of the <emph rend="ital">Scots</emph>, relating many <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cl"> things out of the Archives of their Kingdom, in the North of Great Britain, of higher Date than the Birth of Christ by several Centuries, among their great Men produces on <emph rend="ital">Thanaus</emph>, a Person of wonderful Sagacity and Wisdom, come from <emph rend="ital">Spain</emph> into <emph rend="ital">Ireland</emph>, to compose some intestin Broils between the <emph rend="ital">Scots</emph> then living there; who upon Success therein, advis'd them to chose a King, and propos'd <emph rend="ital">Simon Breck</emph> as the Man, which being done accordingly, (as our Historian reports) the said <emph rend="ital">Simon</emph>, out of Gratitude promoted him to great Preferments; and that it was from the said <emph rend="ital">Thanaus</emph>,<note type="auth"><uncl>Ware, dis. de Hib. ... ...</uncl> p. 29</note> that the chief Governors of Provinces in <emph rend="ital">Scotland</emph> even in latter times were called <emph rend="ital">Thanes</emph>, &amp;c. And yet it does sufficiently appear, that the Word <emph rend="ital">Thane</emph> is of <emph rend="ital">German</emph> or <emph rend="ital">Teutonick</emph> Extraction still in Use amongst the <emph rend="ital">Danes</emph>, in the very Sense of the Prelate; and consequently borrowed from, or introduc'd by them in the said Kingdom, upon their reducing a great Part of it under their Dominion. But it may be said in favour of the Bishop, that his Derivation of the <emph rend="ital">Thanes</emph>, is by a great deal modester, than the aforesaid Stroke of the <emph rend="ital">Druids</emph> in <emph rend="ital">Keating</emph>, concerning the Origin of the name <emph rend="ital">Eire</emph>. For how came such a fantastical Government to have enter'd into the <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cli"> Brains of any Man, without either Precedent or Reason to recommend it? that one or other of the said three Collegues should be king'd, and unking'd every Year, and that peaceably, and without Bloodshed, so contrary to the Nature of Royalty, and the sad Experience of all Ages, whereby we find that old Remark to be very just, <emph rend="ital">Infida Regni Societas</emph>; or as <emph rend="ital">Philip</emph>, the last of that Name, King of <emph rend="ital">Macedon</emph>, in the Feud between his two Sons, about the Succession of his Kingdom, expresses it in <emph rend="ital">Livy</emph><note type="auth">Dec.4 l. 10.</note>&mdash;<emph rend="ital">Nec Fratrem, nec Patrem potestis Pati. Nihil Chari, nihil Sancti est, in omnium vicem, Regni unius insatiabilis Amor successit.</emph> What then became of the <emph rend="ital">Ex-rex</emph>? or how was he regarded during his Recess? Why the Name of the Country changeable every Year along with the Queen? or was the Authority vested in the governing Woman alone, that she could name the Kingdom as she pleas'd? And this being yielded, what prevail'd with the Conquerors, to jump in the same Whim and Humour, with the Conquer'd. As to the Men <emph rend="ital">Cethur</emph>, <emph rend="ital">Ethur</emph>, and <emph rend="ital">Tethur</emph>, why so call'd, and in what Language or Tongue to be accounted for? Or if the said Kings were Sons of <emph rend="ital">Cearmada</emph>, as our goodly Authors say, why were they nicknam'd by the <emph rend="ital">Mac Cuil</emph>, <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clii"> <emph rend="ital">Mac Ceit</emph>, <emph rend="ital">Mac Greine</emph>, and not every one of them <emph rend="ital">Mac Cearmada</emph>, which should have been, by the ancient Custom of the Country,<note type="auth">Ware disq. de Hib.</note> which never till the Invention of Sirnames therein, about the eleventh Century, added <emph rend="ital">Mac</emph> to any but the Name of the Father when both affirmed of the Son by way of Distinction. But the more one enquires into the said Fiction, and the like; the greater light he gets of these Impostures, which should be the only reason of making the least mention of 'em, and consequently
 they are to be exploded by all sincere and judicious Men.</p>

<p>The Custom touch'd above, restraining the Practice of Sciences to certain Families or Tribes, in every large Territory tho' not entertain'd any where else in <emph rend="ital">Europe</emph> had Motives of its own, perhaps not very contemptible. For the Experience being engross'd by People of the same Consanguinity, nothing was made a Secret, and every one improv'd, as well by the Essays, or Tryals of each other, as by his own, and <emph rend="ital">vice versa</emph>. Then the Observation of all, that had pass'd before, within the same Country and People lay ready for their Perusal, either recorded in Books, or otherwise conceiv'd in such a manner as might serve to inform their Understanding; <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cliii"> and not only the said Observations, but the great Dispositions, or prevailing Humours of the great Families they had in their Care. As for Example, in curing the Ailings of human Bodies, of what use would it be to know the natural Inclinations of the Patient, and the Habits receiv'd by him from his Parents, together with his Blood? which being well consider'd of by an able Physician, with the Indication then appearing, could not but confer much to his making a speedy and effectual Cure. And what is said of Pharmacy alone, may relate as well to other Professions. Besides, in the said Colleges, Nature had no sooner done her own Work in ripening the Comprehension of the Youth for Learning, than he was enter'd upon the Rudiments thereof, under careful Masters, whose Interest it was to promote him therein as soon as possible; so that he became an able Proficient, if not a Master in his Profession, before Men otherwise apply themselves. Then being destin'd to the one Calling from his Birth, he made that his sole Business, having neither Ambition nor Inclination for any other, because debarr'd by the Constitution. For having the Advantages of his own, he might not with Impunity encroach upon the Province of another; whereas with us, or such <pb ed="Memoirs" n="cliv"> Nations as exclude the said Custom, the Reverse is observ'd for the most part. We spend a good part of our Youth (not to speak of the avocations of Pleasure, and Libertinism,) in the inferior Schools, where no more than small Gleanings of Erudition at best, and thin Sketches of the learned Languages, are gone through; a Misfortune, the Circumstances of many Ages make us lyable to, not at all, or but very little experienc'd by the Ancients. So that before a fit Disposition for the Sciences is acquir'd, we are pretty far gone in Years; and having afterwards run out the time appointed in Universities, or elsewhere, for taking Degrees in any Faculty, tho' we be allowed of as capable to Practice, and do receive Credentials for the same; yet our Knowledge being but a Theory, and mere Speculation, we are still to seek, and therefore must run out a long course of dangerous Experiments, before we fix our Notions right, and that generally at the Cost or Danger of such as seek our Help. And it falls out very often, that useful Discoveries or Secrets are lost, upon the Surprize of the Party that has 'em, by Death; as perhaps having no Children, or near Relations of his own, to acquaint them therewith in time; which Misfortune would be prevented the other <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clv"> way. Add to this, that an early Application having not been fix'd, the Students are seldom hearty and in earnest, gratifying rather Parents, Friends or Relations, who might have made the choice for 'em, than their own Inclinations; whence being come to riper Years, and left at full Liberty, they may take to any other Calling, and consequently be short in the necessary Perfections, either of the one or the other. Nor is there any effectual Course taken with Empericks, or Quacks, that intermeddle in Professions they have not been brought up to, with so much Injustice to the real Professors of 'em, and Risque to those that have the Misfortune to come under their Hands. As we have but a slender Notion of that excellent Institution, which center'd the Knowledge and Experience of many Ages in every Master of Arts, the great Advantages receiv'd by it, cannot be so well apprehended by us, being Strangers, as those that felt and perceiv'd 'em themselves in Fact. I'll instance one ancient Writer upon this very Head, <emph rend="ital">viz.</emph> <emph rend="ital">Diodorus Siculus</emph>, [L. 3 c. 8] who, making a Parallel between the <emph rend="ital">Chaldean</emph> Sages, and the <corr sic="Graeciar" resp="BF">Graecian</corr> Philosophers, starts most of the Differences aforesaid. <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clvi"> <q>Now,</q> says he, <q>that nothing worth relating should be omitted by us, it seems meet we should speak of the <emph rend="ital">Chaldeans</emph> of <emph rend="ital">Babylon</emph>, who (being of a very ancient Standing) had the Place or Rank allotted them there, which the Order of the Priests held in <emph rend="ital">Egypt</emph>. For being chiefly addicted to the Worship of the Gods, they studied Philosophy most of their Time, and besides other Heads of it cultivated by them, they were reputed to be very profound, and knowing in Astrology. For it is not after the manner of the <emph rend="ital">Greeks</emph> that they acquire Learning, the Children being always confin'd to the Business of the Tribe, are carefully instructed therein by their Parents, not minding any other Cares; so that the Dificulties of the Art being easily overcome by a constant Application begun in a very tender Age, at last they become most accomplish'd and learned. But amongst the <emph rend="ital">Greeks</emph>, 'tis only in riper Years any can attain a Proficiency, and even then it self very fickle, and unsteady therein they commonly give themselves over to more profitable Employments, and but very few mind the former Study. Nor are they constrain'd by their Laws to the respective Callings of their <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clvii"> Families, but suffer'd to follow whatever they may have a fancy for; whereas Foreigners with great Constancy persist in the same Application or Exercise all along. But the former, for the sake of Lucre, as hinted before, running to Novelties, and strenuously contending with one another, even in matters of the greatest Moment, are so far from preparing the Youth, under their Care, with just Notions of things, that (as far as it lies in them) they rather confound and leave 'em without any solid Foundation, in a Fluctuation or Uncertainty the whole Course of their Lives. So if one did but enquire into the Opinions of the most famous of their Philosophers, he would find them very different, and bandyed about with great Heat, and Obstinacy by their Followers. But the <emph rend="ital">Chaldeans</emph> unanimously hold, that the World had no Beginning, nor shall have any End. That the wonderful Order, and beautiful Variety to be seen in the Universe, are truly owing to divine Providence, as their efficent Cause. That the Heavens, the celestial Orbs, and all that's contain'd therein, were not the Work of Chance, or produc'd by themselves, but brought forth, and fix'd by the determinate Will <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clviii"> and Power of the Gods, acting by the most perfect Reason and Judgment imaginable. The said <emph rend="ital">Chaldeans</emph>, having by diligent Observations, and length of Time, rightly apprehended the Oppositions, Motions, and Course of the Planets, and what thereupon usually falls out in the inferior World, which receives an Impression or Influences from them. They foretel many things which happen, and that with a great deal of Truth and Certainty.</q></p>
<p>Concerning the Poetical Seminary, or School, from which I was carried away to clear other things that fell in my way; it was open only to such as were descended of Poets, and reputed within their Tribes: And so was it with all the Schools of that kind in the Nation, being equal to the Number of Families, that followed the said Calling: But some more or less frequented for the Difference of Professors, Conveniency, with other Reasons, and seldom any come but from remote Parts, to be at a distance from Relations, and other Acquaintance, that might interrupt his Study. The Qualifications first requir'd, were reading well, writing in the Mother-tongue, and a strong Memory. It was likewise necessary the Place should be in the solitary Recess <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clix"> of a Garden, or within a Sept or Inclosure, far out of reach of any Noise, which an Intercourse of People might otherwise occasion. The Structure was a snug, low Hut, and Beds in it at convenient Distances, each within a small Apartment, without much Furniture of any kind, save only a Table, some Seats, and a Conveniency for Cloaths to hang upon. No Windows to let in the Day, nor any Light at all us'd but that of Candles, and these brought in at a proper Season only. The Students upon thorough Examination being first divided into Classes; wherein a regard was had to every ones Age, Genius, and the Schooling had before, if any at all; or otherwise. The Professors, (one or more as there was occasion) gave a Subject suitable to the Capacity of each Class, determining the Number of Rhimes, and clearing what was to be chiefly observ'd therein as to Syllables, Quartans, Concord, Correspondence, Termination, and Union, each of which were restrain'd by peculiar Rules. The said Subject (either one or more as aforesaid) having been given over Night, they work'd it apart each by himself upon his own Bed, the whole next Day in the Dark, till at a certain Hour in the Night, Lights being brought in, they committed it to writing. <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clx"> Being afterwards dress'd, and come together into a large Room, where the Masters waited, each Scholar gave in his Performance, which being corrected, or approv'd of (according as it requir'd) either the same or fresh Subjects were given against the next Day. This part being over, the Students went to their Meal, which was then serv'd up; and so, after some time spent in Conversation, and other Diversions, each retir'd to his Rest, to be ready for the Business of the next Morning. Every <emph rend="ital">Saturday</emph>, and on the Eves of Festival Days, they broke up and dispers'd themselves among the Gentlemen and rich Farmers of the Country, by whom they were very well entertain'd, and much made of, till they thought fit to take their Leaves, in order to reassume their Study. Nor was the People satisfied with affording this Hospitality alone, they sent in by turns every Week from far and near, Liquors, and all manner of Provision towards the Subsistence of the Academy, so that the chief Poet was at little or no Charges, but on the contrary got very well by it, besides the Presents made him by the Students, upon their first coming, which always was at <emph rend="ital">Michaelmas</emph>; and from thence till the 25th of <emph rend="ital">March</emph>, during the cold Season of the Year only, did that close Study <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clxi"> last. At that time the Scholars broke up, and repair'd each to his own Country, with an Attestation of his Behaviour and Capacity, from the chief Professor, to those that had sent him.</p>
<p>The resaon for so long a Vacation was, that being under the hard Duties of the School, the Students could not bear the intense Heat of the other six Months. Nor did they feel much Cold in the very  rigour of Winter; whether from the Closeness of the Place, there being but little or no Passage for the cold Air to enter; or so great an Occupation of the Brain, and inward Senses, that the outward were stupefied, or became blunt in their Functions, is matter of Reflection, the Fact it self being very true. But certain it is, that the Imagination, or more immediate working of the Soul, is stronger, and of greater Force, than that which depends upon the ministry of the Organs; as may be seen by lunatic, hair-brain'd People, and Madmen, who tho' tenderly brought up, yet being in the Transports of the said Distempers, undergo many Extremes, which otherwise they could never bear; even so as to lie, and walk naked in bad Weather, without receiving much Harm by it, that can be discern'd. And in <emph rend="ital">Ireland</emph>, before the Woods <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clxii"> were destroyed, and Mountains clear'd of over-grown Heath, Furze, and other Embarassments, nothing was commoner, than to find many of both Sexes, who from too much Melancholy, or some such prevailing Cause occasioned by Grief, Love, Fright or eminent Danger of Life, being turn'd in the Brains, had ran thither, and there liv'd in Tatters several Years, subsisting upon Herbs, Berries, raw Fruit, and the like, as mostly the brute Beasts do; which has given Occasion to a Report of the being of wild People in that Country. Wild indeed they were during the time; and when any of 'em were taken, (which was very difficult to ///compal...[? meant: to do] by reason of their great Nimbleness, and Pernicity, exceeding even that of the common Game) it was with long and extraordinary Care and Management, that they were brought to their Senses again, but ever remain'd affected or light. And perhaps  if <emph rend="ital">Bedlam</emph> were set open, there would be <uncl>some</uncl> living Scarecrows to be soon heard of, and seen, in the Woods and Mountains of England also; as in the like case it would be in other Countries.</p>
<p>The Reason of laying the Study aforesaid <uncl>in</uncl> the Dark, was doubtless to avoid the Distraction, which Light, and the variety of Objects represented thereby, commonly  occasions. <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clxiii"> This being prevented, the Faculties of the Soul occupied themselves solely upon the Subject in hand, and the Theme given; so that it was soon brought to some Perfection, according to the Notions or Capacities of the Students. Yet the Course was long and tedious, as we find; and it was six or seven Years, before a Mastery, or the last Degree was conferr'd; which you'll the less admire, upon considering the great Difficulty of the Art, the many kinds of their Poems, the Exactness and Nicety to be observ'd in each; which was necessary to render their Numbers soft, and the Harmony agreeable and pleasing to the Ear. Examples hereof may be seen in the Preface of Mr. <emph rend="ital">Lhuid's</emph> <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph> Vocabulary, annex'd to his <title type="book">Archaeologia Britannica</title> mention'd above; which being in a great Variety, saves me the Trouble of enlarging upon 'em here. I have read several of the said Poems, but could not in any of 'em, observe either Dress or Fancy in Imitation of the Classick Poets, or those usually read in the <emph rend="ital">Latin</emph> Schools. The greatest Beauty of the Composition consisting in a certain Contexture of corresponding Vowels and Consonants, so plac'd in every Metre, which contain'd four equal Sentences or Parts, that it made it very taking to such as had a Gust <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clxiv"> that way. For which, both Vowels and Consonants receiv'd several Divisions; the first, (being either bare Vowels, <sic corr="Diphthongs" resp="BF">Dipthongs</sic>, or <sic corr="Triphthongs" resp="BF">Tripthongs</sic>,) into Broad and Small, Short, Long, Midling or variable. The second also were no less distinguish'd, and set apart in Ranges, each by it self, under certain Denominations; as Changeable and Permanent, Soft and Hard, Rough and Robust, Light, Weak, Barren, and Hollow: The Distinctions, and several Uses whereof, especially in Verse, was a sort of Learning that requir'd time, and very necessary to any that might pretend to an Insight in <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph> Poetry, which may be us'd as a strong Argument, that Letters being essential thereunto, especially short and long Vowels, *<note type="auth">Short and long Vowels being chiefly regarded in Quantity, as the most perfect kind of Metre, called by the <emph rend="ital">Greeks</emph> [///word of c 6 letters illegible] Emmetios8, imply Letters of Course: Whereas on the other [///word of 2 or 3 letter; illegible] corresponding Words or Syllables are only required, which for <uncl>that</uncl> Reason the term'd ///Greek ame...[only first three letters certain, another inedcipherable one follows  rho]  ... that is verse without <uncl>Ad... ment</uncl>. And this being natural, was practis'd by all Natives, even by the <emph rend="ital">Greeks</emph> themselves, as may be gather'd from <uncl>Eu..thius</uncl> upon the first Iliad.</note> the Use of 'em hath accompanied all along. And there are elegant Pieces of this kind still extant, whose Date vastly exceeds the Beginning of the 5th Century, when Father <emph rend="ital">Bolandus</emph>, in his Account of St. <emph rend="ital">Patric</emph>,<note type="auth">///Ad 17 <uncl>Marti . .</uncl></note> thinks <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clxv"> that Country had first receiv'd Letters. But so grossly mistaken he is, that upon Request of the Natives, as we read, one of the Tryals there,<note type="auth">Vid. Prob. <uncl>Joccl. aliosq;</uncl> vita S. Patrici Script.</note> between the said Bishop <emph rend="ital">Patric</emph>, and his Clergy on the one side, and the Heathen Druids on the other, was by the Books of Rites belonging to each Party, <emph rend="ital">viz.</emph> that they should be left under Water for a considerable Time, the Victory to be of that Side, whose Books should be found less blemish'd, or chang'd by that Element; which accordingly was put in Execution, and the Issue prov'd (as Authors report) to the Advantage of Christ and the Gospel. But there was a Christian Church settled there, and Episcopal Chairs, and Jurisdictions, long before the said Bishop carrying his Mission thither; and even the Light of the Gospel was known in the said Land from the Apostle's time, if we may believe <emph rend="ital">Eusebius</emph>, <emph rend="ital">Pamphili</emph>, <emph rend="ital">Nicephorus</emph>, <emph rend="ital">Callisthus</emph>, and many other excellent Authors, hereupon quoted by the Learned Primate <emph rend="ital">Usher</emph>. <note type="auth">De Prim. Eccl. Brit. p. 740.</note> But the Nature of the <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph> Alphabet, what it is, whence had, and how long practis'd in that Kingdom, requiring a Treatise by it self, I'll say no more of it at present; it being sufficient to shew, that it is of greater Antiquity, than the said <emph rend="ital">Bolandus</emph> imagined; or those than would fetch it from the <emph rend="ital">Saxons</emph> of <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clxvi"> <emph rend="ital">Great Britain</emph>, wherein they are contradicted by the above-mention'd Mr. <emph rend="ital">Camden</emph>,<note type="auth">Camd. Rem p. 19 <uncl>varr. asq.</uncl> de Hib.</note> and other more judicious Writers, than themselves, who upon good Grounds advance the quite reverse of that Assertation, <emph rend="ital">viz.</emph> that the <emph rend="ital">British Saxons</emph> had their Letters from the <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph>; nor could they, speaking of the thing it self, have well avoided it, when they knew upon the Authority of venerable <emph rend="ital">Bede</emph>,<note type="auth">Lib/ 3. Hist. Eccl. gent. Ang. c. 3 &amp; c. 25.</note> that most of the Northern and Inland <emph rend="ital">Saxons</emph>, down from the Borders of the Kingdom of <emph rend="ital">Kent</emph>, had been converted to Christianity by <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph> Missioners and Bishops, and consequently first had their Letters and Learning from them; for which end the said Missioners not only educated English Youth, in <emph rend="ital">Great Britain</emph>, but also sent vast Numbers of 'em into <emph rend="ital">Ireland</emph>; to whom, as the said venerable Author expressly has it, the Nation, or People there gave free Entertainment, Books, Instruction, and Schooling <emph rend="ital">Gratis</emph>. It adds much Strength to this, that it does not fully appear by any one Instance, that the said <emph rend="ital">Saxons</emph> had the Use of Letters before; but the contrary is implied by the said <emph rend="ital">Bede</emph>,<note type="auth">De nat. Rer. cap. 18.</note> where he observes, that the old <emph rend="ital">Saxons</emph> in general made their Computations of Months and Years, by the Spring and Neip-tides, which happen at stated Times. For as <emph rend="ital">Germany</emph> it self had not the Use of <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clxvii"> Letters,  as is clear by <emph rend="ital"><ps reg="Publius Cornelius Tacitus"><sn>Tacitus</sn></ps></emph>,<note type="auth"><title type="book">De Morib. Germ.</title></note> it probably remain'd in the same Ignorance till <emph rend="ital">Charlemaign's</emph> Time,<note type="auth">This is meant of the common use of Letters, for <emph rend="ital">Othfrid</emph> the Monk of Wittenburg, who flourish'd about the Year 876, is thus to have been the first, that committed the German Tongue to Writing.</note> by the means of whose Victories the Gospel got a footing in those Parts, and consequently Letters, that never fail to accompany it.</p>
<p>As every Professor, or chief Poet, depended on some Prince, or great Lord, that had endowed his Tribe, he was under strict Ties to him and Family; as to record in good Metre the Marriages, Births, Deaths, Acquisitions made in War and Peace, Exploits, and other remarkable things relating to the same. He was likewise bound to offer an Elegy, on the Decease of the said Lord, his Consort, or any of their Children; and a Marriage-song, when there would be Occasion. But as to any Epick, or Heroick Verse, to be made for any other Lord or Stranger, it was requir'd, that at least a Paroemion, or Metre therein, should be upon the Patron, or the Name in general. A pleasant Instance of this happen'd in the last Age, when <emph rend="ital"><ps><fn>Donough</fn> <sn>O Brian</sn>, <rn>Earl</rn> of <pn>Thomond</pn></ps></emph>, was Lord President <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clxviii"> of the Province of <emph rend="ital">Munster</emph>; to whom one of his Rhimers (to acquit himself of that Obligation) in a Panegyrical Poem compos'd by him, in Honour of a Gentleman of the <emph rend="ital">Mac Carthies</emph>, who had much signaliz'd himself in Martial Exploits, wish'd that some war<uncl>like</uncl> Lord, or Captain of the <emph rend="ital">O Brians</emph>, then living, had by his Merit and Conduct acquir'd so excellent a Name. This immediately taking Wind, so disgusted the Earl, that in Revenge of the Slight or Affront, he vowed his Chastisement, whenever he fell into his Hands. Hereupon the Poet, dreading the Consequences, disappear'd, and kept out of the way for some Years. Notwithstanding, it happen'd that one time, going a Journey along with his Wife, they saw at a Distance the said Earl with his Equipage, and a great Company of Horse in his Attendance, coming towards them: There being no probability of escaping, the Poet told his Wife that he would feign himself dead as of a sudden, which she should humour by crying over him; that if the Earl ask'd the Reason, she should not conceal his Name, but beg Forgiveness for the great Folly he had been guilty of against his Lordship, and Family. The Woman acted her Part to the Life; and the Earl, when he was come up, being told <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clxix"> whose the Corps was, he had the Curiosity to put questions himself to her, and ask'd whether the Poet had repented of his undutiful Expression, with relation to the <emph rend="ital">O Brians?</emph> The Woman answer'd, he did heartily; and that being surpriz'd upon Sight of his Lordship's Equipage, the Horrour of his own Guilt most sensibly touching him, he fell down dead upon the Spot; but (in Addition) said farther, that since he was gone, and made some Atonement by the long Affliction, he had suffer'd under, his Lordship would forgive him; which accordingly the Earl did, being mov'd with Compassion, and flung down the Woman some Gold to bury her Husband. This being over, the reputed dead Man springs up in an Instant, and taking hold of the Reins of the Horse, on which the Earl was mounted, pronounc'd a very exquisite Poem in his Praise, which brought him into full Favour again. It was pretended, this Piece was extemporary, and made by the Poet whilst he there lay as dead. But 'tis more probable, that he had compos'd it before at his Leisure; and that all that was acted in this Place, was only a Farce design'd to gain a fit Opportunity, to beg and obtain the Earl's Pardon: For the Nature of the Poem, and great <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clxx"> Beauty of it shew, that it was a Work of Study and Time.</p>
<p>The last Part to be done, which was the <emph rend="ital">Action</emph> and <emph rend="ital">Pronunciation</emph> of the Poem, in Presence of the <emph rend="ital">Maecenas,</emph> or the principal Person it related to, was perform'd with a great deal of Ceremony, in a Comfort of Vocal and Instrumental Musick. The Poet himself said nothing, but directed and took care, that every body else did his Part right. The Bards having first had the Composition from him, got it well by Heart, and now pronounc'd it orderly, keeping even Pace with a Harp, touch'd upon that Occasion; no other musical Instrument being allow'd of for the said Purpose than this alone, as being Masculin, much sweeter, and fuller than any other. But the Harp, though the chief Ensign and Badge of the Country, is now neglected, and little understood in respect of what it has been, as may be gather'd from the Remark of the above quoted <emph rend="ital">Cambrensis</emph>; who, tho' a Favourite at the Court of <emph rend="ital">Henry</emph> II, King of <emph rend="ital">England</emph>, and consequently no Stranger to good Musick, yet gave the said Instrument, as then manag'd, Preference above all that he had ever heard of, or seen of the kind, as these his own Words testify. <emph rend="ital"><q lang="la">In musicis solum instrumentis commendabilem invenio gentis istius <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clxxi"> diligentiam, in quibus prae omni Natione, quam vidimus, incomparabiliter est instructa. Non enim in bis sicut in Britannicis (quibus assueti sumus) instrumentis, tarda &amp; morosa est modulatio, verum velox, &amp; praeceps, suavis tamen &amp; iucunda sonoritas. Mirum quod in tanta tam praecipiti digitorum rapacitate, musica servatur proportio arte per omnia <corr sic="indemui">indemni</corr><!-- check indemui--> inter crispatos modulos, organaque multipliciter intricata, tam suavi velocitate, tam dispari paritate, tam discordi concordia, consona redditur &amp; completur melodia.</q></emph></p>
<p>As to the Function of Poetry among the ancient <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph>, besides the common Subjects of it, almost the same in all Nations, it had the municipal Laws, and authentick Histories of the Country, no other Diction or Phrase being allowed of for that Purpose, but Metre alone: Which also having been practis'd by the ancient <emph rend="ital">Greeks</emph>, both before and after the <emph rend="ital">Trojan War</emph>,<note type="auth">Vide Euseb. Chron. Plutarch. &amp; Laert. in vit. Philosop.</note> doubtless was a Consequence of the use of Letters, communicated to them by <emph rend="ital">Cadmus</emph>; which Letters, some share of the <emph rend="ital">Phoenician</emph> Polity and Customs, may be well suppos'd to have accompanied into <emph rend="ital">Greece</emph>. It makes much for this Conjecture, <corr sic="That" resp="BF">that</corr> the <emph rend="ital">Turduli</emph> and <emph rend="ital">Turdetani</emph>,  living upon the Borders of the Ocean in <emph rend="ital">Spain</emph>, and consequently of the <emph rend="ital">Phoenician</emph> Colonies settled in those Parts, likewise had their Laws and Histories in <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clxxii"> Verse, as the Geographer<note type="auth">Strab. l. 3</note>  relates in this Manner. 
<q lang="la">Hi inter Hispaniae populos sapientia putantur excellere, &amp; Litterarum studiis utuntur &amp; memorandae volumina vetustatis habent, vatum codices: Leges quoque versibus conscriptas sex annorum millibus, ut aiunt.</q> As to the extravagant Date of the said Laws, reported by the <emph rend="ital">Turduli</emph>, &amp;c., the Author thinks it was a Mistake, <emph rend="ital">viz.</emph> that the Thousands there were put for Hundreds. For he does not give it upon his own Knowlwdge, but therein refers to others, and especially to <emph rend="ital">Polybius</emph>,<note type="auth">The Geography of Polybius is lost.</note>, whom he prefers for several Reasons. Likewise the said Mistake might have been occasioned from this, that the first Reporters of that Account being Foreigners, did not perhaps well understand the Language of the Natives, or the Manner of their Calculation and Writing. Or (to draw a greater Esteem upon those Laws) the Judges that had the Exposition of them, might have pretended, that they were of so great an Antiquity; so that in reason that Expression ought not to be carried further, than that they were very Ancient, and exceeding the Memory of the present Age as to the Commencement of 'em.</p>
<p>But in the other Part of that Passage, which relates to the Histories of the <emph rend="ital">Turduli, &amp;c.</emph>, <emph rend="ital"><ps type="author"><fn>Strabo</fn></ps></emph> is very careful not to give it any Date, even upon hearsay; for without doubt it <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clxxiii"> receiv'd new Additions from time to time, as the Feats or Actions of the said People requir'd it. This being the first mention'd by him, I'll begin with the Affinity it had to the ancient <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph> History, which likewise was compiled in Verse, as may appear from the common Tradition of <emph rend="ital">Ireland</emph>, and the Footsteps of that Custom, therein formerly established, still remaining, which are very considerable. But I cannot at present determine, whether this Province belong'd to the Historians themselves, or profess'd Poets, they being different in their Callings. However, I think it was the Property of the first by Right, because comprehended in the main Business of their Profession, and that these historical Poems were of a different Nature and Strain from the Performances of the others. For there was nothing laid in them but matter of Fact, <emph rend="ital">viz.</emph> the Causes and Turns of War, (it being he chiefest Subject) the just Characters and Casualties of the great Men and Captains concern'd therein, the Events by Peace, Composition or otherwise, with the Losses or Acquisitions occasion'd thereby: And all this in as brief and conspicuous a Manner as might be. No other Writings were counted more Authentic than these, and the truth of 'em was never doubted <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clxxiv"> of, so that they pass'd for absolute Records. I have often met with Quotations from them in historical Tracts, to support the truth of such things, as otherwise might be controverted; but never saw more than one entire and that bearing Date about the Year of Christ 940. It contains the bloody War of <emph rend="ital">Calachan</emph> (nick-nam'd of Cashel, the chief Seat of that Principality) King of Munster, and <sic>Leach Moagh</sic><note type="auth" resp="BF" n="8">Leath Moga</note>, or the Southern <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph>,<note type="auth" resp="BF" n="9">See http://www.ucc.ie/celt/published/G100030/index.html.</note> whereby, in seventeen Battels, he destroyed the Power of the heathen <emph rend="ital">Danes</emph> within his Dependencies, and delivered <emph rend="ital">Cork, Lymerick, Waterford</emph>, with many other Towns thereof  from their Exactions, and put many thousands of 'em to the Sword; so that though, upon fresh Supplies of Forces come out of the North of <emph rend="ital">Germany</emph> to them, they made a Head again, and obtain'd some footing after his Decease in the said Principality, yet the total Destruction of 'em was left easy by him to <emph rend="ital">Brian Boreamh</emph>, another Prince of the Line of <emph rend="ital">Heber</emph>,<note type="auth"><emph rend="ital">Heber and Erimon were Brothers, and Spaniards born, who funded the Kingdom of the antient Scots, or Irish, <uncl>in Ireland</uncl></emph>.</note> who afterwards came to the Regency of the said Province, and at length to the whole Kingdom. The said <emph rend="ital">Calahan</emph> is (in the right Line) <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clxxv"> great Ancestor to the noble Lord, the present Earl of <emph rend="ital">Clancarthy</emph>; his Lordship being the Stock of that antient Tribe, and the three and twentieth in Descent from him; as another noble Lord, <emph rend="ital">viz.</emph> the Earl of <emph rend="ital">Thuomond</emph>, in like manner represents the former, as Heir and head of his Family.</p>
<p>The said Poem is intitled, <emph rend="ital">The Marches of Calahan Cassuil</emph>; which being very Pithy and Concise, as comprehending only the main Particulars as aforesaid, has long Readings upon it, that take in all the Facts and Circumstances left out in the Text; which Method of commenting, I suppose, was always us'd upon Works of this Kind. Yet  I am told, there are many other <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph> Pieces of that sort still in Being: And the late Bishop <emph rend="ital">Stillingfleet</emph>, speaks of a Chronological Poem of the Kings of <emph rend="ital">Ireland</emph>, <note type="auth">Orig. sacr. in prooemio</note> written by one <emph rend="ital">Coeman</emph>, in the<corr sic="," resp="BF"></corr> 11th Century. Mr. <emph rend="ital">O Flaherty</emph><note type="auth" resp="BF" n="10">Roderic O'Flaherty, 1629-1718; Ogygia 1685.</note> likewise writes of a like Piece, in his own Hands, made for <emph rend="ital">Malcolm</emph>, (nick-nam'd <emph rend="ital">Ceanmore</emph>) whom <emph rend="ital"><ps><sn>Buchanan</sn></ps></emph> calls <emph rend="ital">Milcolumbus</emph> II, King of the <emph rend="ital">Scots</emph> in <emph rend="ital">North Britain</emph>, by the chief Historiographer of the Royal Family there, and presented to him upon his Accession to that Throne. 'Tis a Chronology of all his Predecessors of the <emph rend="ital">Scottish</emph> Race in the said Kingdom, from the first Foundation of <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clxxvi"> it, whereof he makes the Number but fifty-two in all, varying therein from the said <emph rend="ital"><ps reg="George Buchanan"><sn>Buchanan</sn></ps>, <ps reg="John Fordun"><sn>Fordon</sn></ps>, <ps reg="Hector Boetius"><sn>Boetius</sn></ps></emph>, and the rest of the late Historians of that Country, both in the Names and Series of their Kings, and entirely excludes their first Line, in as much as he speaks not one Word of it: But which of 'em were in the right, perhaps the said Poem it self, and a little time, will clear, to the Satisfaction of such as love Truth, and are unbias'd.</p>
<p>Being now come to the last publick Use Poetry had amongst the antient <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph>, which was in exhibiting the Text of their Laws, I'll beg the Reader's Patience for little, and then shall have done. There may be good Reasons assign'd for this Custom also tho' the great Antiquity of it were Reason enough to justify the Practice, nothing being contain'd therein that was against the Dictates of God and Nature. For the Letter being once unalterably fix'd, (which has a Reference to the historical Poems also) the meaning of the Law, which is the Life of it, was not too difficult to be found out, or guess'd at, as otherwise it is, when Word or Syllables, might be easily ras'd away and others foisted in, that would make it quite another thing. This could not be so much apprehended in the former Way, <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clxxvii"> because it resembled a Structure of certain Dimensions, built of polish'd square Stones, well put together, and cemented, to which no Addition could be made, but what would immediately be perceiv'd, nor no Breach of it repair'd with common Stones, or any other, but such as should come from the Hands of an able Artist. Then the Composition being in Metre, it much help'd the Memory, and it was not at all inconvenient, that the Laws, being the sacred Bands of Society, and the Fences of the People, should be conceiv'd in such a Manner and Style, as of it self drew Veneration and Attention. The Proof of this Custom also to have been observ'd by the ancient <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph>, is the same with that urg'd for their History, <emph rend="ital">viz.</emph> Tradition, and the Authority of their old Monuments, or Manuscripts, which acquaint us, that all along from the first coming of the said People into <emph rend="ital">Ireland</emph>, to the time of <emph rend="ital">Conchure</emph>, commonly call'd <emph rend="ital">Connor</emph>, Son of <emph rend="ital">Nessa</emph> Prince of <emph rend="ital">Ulster</emph>, who flourish'd little less than a hundred Years before the Birth of our Saviour, the Poets alone there had the Forum, and Courts of Justice in their own Hands, as the ordinary Judges of the Kingdom: which Custom was probably introduc'd, and establish'd in the said Country, <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clxxviii"> upon this People's carrying it by Conquest, or otherwise, as aforesaid. For if their Laws were conceiv'd in Verse, which is very likely, even from the Instance already given of the metrical Laws, of that Part of <emph rend="ital">Spain</emph>, they had next before liv'd in, the Poets of Course might have claim'd a Preference to continue or explain the same, and consequently to exercise that Jurisdiction.</p>
<p>Mr. <emph rend="ital">O Flaherty</emph>, in his <title type="book">Ogygia</title> is right enough, in relating the same thing out of old Manuscripts perus'd by himself: these are his Words in one Place;&mdash;<q lang="la">Ab Amergino usque ad Cornelium Nesseidem aliquanto ante Salvatoris ortum viventem, legum Oracula penes Poetas &amp; Philosophos erant: Nam sic promiscue sumebantur.</q> But he is very wrong in observing soon afterwards in this Manner; <q lang="la">Cornelii tempore ut dixi, leges fixas Scripto praefiniri comperimus, cum eo usque non Scripto jure, sed Poetarum placitis judicia instruerentur.</q> For first, his own Expressions are inconsistent, because <q lang="la">legum Oracula</q> implies a written or standing Law already defin'd and settled in Being;  which excludes <emph rend="ital">Placita</emph>, <emph rend="ital">viz.</emph> the arbitrary Resolutions of Judges; unless he meant it of the Exposition of the standing Laws, with relation to Cases, or the Construction the said Judges were pleas'd to put upon them; which must <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clxxix"> relate to Laws in Being, and therefore cannot be well called <emph rend="ital">Placita</emph>. Nor is it probable that the regular and nice Verse of the said <emph rend="ital">Amergin</emph>, (who had been made Chief Justice in <emph rend="ital">Ireland</emph>, upon the first settling the <emph rend="ital">Spanish</emph> Government there by the above-named <emph rend="ital">Heber</emph> and <emph rend="ital">Erimon</emph> his own Brothers:) being receiv'd Law in it self, was all along to the time aforesaid, <emph rend="ital">viz.</emph> somewhat before our Saviour's Birth, not committed to Writing; when the Author brings it for an Argument against <emph rend="ital">Bollandus</emph>, that the ancient <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph> had the use of Letters, long before St. <emph rend="ital">Patrick</emph>, the <emph rend="ital">British</emph> Bishop's first coming there. I take it for granted, that Mr. <emph rend="ital">O Flaherty's</emph> Notion in this Particular was right enough; and that the Inconsistency or Blunder, is owing to the imperfect manner of his Expression; it being in <emph rend="ital">Latin</emph>, of which it does appear, he was no great Master: And that instead of saying, that the Laws of <emph rend="ital">Ireland</emph> were not fix'd by Writing; he should have said, that the Judgments given thereupon with relation to Controversies, were not enter'd into Registers, and the same made Records and Precedents, fit to be produc'd in like Cases.</p>
<p>That this was the Point, I think (if I am not very much mistaken) I have as good Authority on my side, as the Author had, or as <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clxxx"> otherwise can be brought, <emph rend="ital">viz.</emph> a very old Irish Manuscript belonging to the Library of the noble Lord the Earl of <emph rend="ital">Oxford</emph>, or the noble Lord <emph rend="ital">Harley</emph>; to whom, both for their great Judgment in, and Expences by Purchasing a Multitude of most choice Books and Manuscripts, not only <emph rend="ital">Ireland</emph>, but <emph rend="ital">Great Britain</emph> also, is highly oblig'd. The said Manuscript handles the aforesaid Affair relating to the Jurisdiction of the Poets in <emph rend="ital">Ireland</emph>, <emph rend="ital">viz.</emph> shewing that it lasted from the Beginning of the Reign of the said Heber and Erimon, to the time of Connor aforesaid, when their Posterity were devested of it, (except in part of the North;) and that for these Reasons, <emph rend="ital">viz.</emph> that no Hold could be laid on their Decisions in Civil Causes, because no body else could tell whether they were agreeable to Equity and Right or the contrary. That they made too many Mysteries in things that should be plain and open to the World; and always took care to give their Resolutions in such dark and crabbed Terms, that the Exposition and Meaning of 'em must be sought for from themselves alone. This could not have been so much complain'd of, if the Judgments and Reasons thereof upon the Cases rightly stated, had been enter'd upon Rolls, or otherwise preserv'd for the <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clxxxi"> use of the Public. It is there also said, that the Princes and Nobility of the Nation being conven'd upon that Occasion, did depose or lay-by the Poets for those Reasons, and put other Persons in their Places. The Historian goes farther, and gives the particular Names of many Judges, who then soon and afterwards became famous for the Equity and Justice of their Judgments in Matters of Law: Which Judgments remain'd on Record, and were useful to Posterity. These are the respective Names of the Judges, <emph rend="ital">viz.</emph> <emph rend="ital">Eocha</emph>, the Son of <emph rend="ital">Luchta</emph>; <emph rend="ital">Fachna</emph>, the Son of <emph rend="ital">Senchath</emph>; <emph rend="ital">Moran</emph>; <emph rend="ital">Eoghan</emph> Son of <emph rend="ital">Durthacht</emph>; <emph rend="ital">D<uncl>. a</uncl>t Nemthinne</emph>; <emph rend="ital">Brig Anidu[.]</emph>; <emph rend="ital">Denchacht Oleg</emph>.&mdash;And so was the Jurisdiction at length taken away from the <emph rend="ital">Poets</emph>, and vested in others, that were more careful to acquit themselves well, by an equal Distribution of Justice; at least it must have been so for a considerable time afterwards. The ancient <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph> Law, (as that of most Countries) if not a Daughter of Reason, however is agreeable to the Dictates of it; otherwise would cease to be a Law, or bind at all, and therefore (of it self) requir'd no more than a plain Dress, little Ceremony, and a quick Dispatch. But Avarice, and greediness of Gain, so perplex'd it with abstruse Forms, preliminary Jangles, and winding Courses, that instead of remedying <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clxxxii"> Grievances, it became a great one self in the Practice; and that has occasion'd the Abolition or Change in the Irish Tribunals as aforesaid.</p>
<p>As to the said old <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph> Manuscript, it contains in the main two elaborate Pieces, the first in Metre, and the second in distinct Articles or Paragraphs in Prose, (as far as I can remember) both perfected much about the same time, <emph rend="ital">viz.</emph> the Year of the Lord 43<uncl>1</uncl>, when <emph rend="ital">Patrick</emph>, the pious <emph rend="ital">British</emph> Bishop above named, had converted to Christianity, most of the Princes and Nobility of that Kingdom, and became the Occasion of the said Work. For one of his Lay-attendants, by name Ora<uncl>no</uncl> being without any Provocation slain by <emph rend="ital">Eun<uncl>a</uncl></emph> nicknam'd <emph rend="ital">the Red</emph>, General of the Horse to <emph rend="ital">Loere</emph> or <emph rend="ital">Legaire</emph>, the then supreme King of <emph rend="ital">Ireland</emph>, a Complaint of the Murder was brought to the King; who immediately order'd it should be enquir'd into, and that thereupon Justice should be done to the said Prelate, for the loss of his Servant. This Enquiry, and the whole Affair, was by both Parties referred to <emph rend="ital">Dubtach</emph>, the King's chief Poet, though a Convert to Christianity for some time before: Who accordingly having fully inform'd himself of the Fact and Circumstances, published his Award for a Mulct or Fine, which he comprehends in the said <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clxxxiii"> Poem; the rest of it relates to Divinity, and Mysteries of the Christian Religion. There are large Notes and Illustrations upon it, that are suitable to the Subject.</p>
<p>The second Piece comprehends the Resolution of a Committee of nine, <emph rend="ital">viz.</emph> three Princes, three Bishops, and three learned Antiquaries or Poets. The Prelates were <emph rend="ital">Patrick</emph> himself, that promoted the Matter, <emph rend="ital">Benen</emph>, and <emph rend="ital">Carneach</emph>. The Poets, <emph rend="ital">Dubtach</emph> aforesaid, <emph rend="ital">Rossa</emph> and <emph rend="ital">Daire</emph>. The Princes, <emph rend="ital">Loere</emph>, (but whether the King or not, I can't tell;) <emph rend="ital">Corc</emph>, and <emph rend="ital">Feris</emph>; or as the lowland Scots pronounce the Name, <emph rend="ital">Fergus</emph>. Their Business was to purge or alter such of the standing Laws and Customs, as were not agreeable to Christianity, whereof there is a long Detail. The said Resolutions (as the Poem aforesaid) are in the large Hand, but the Reading upon them in a small Character. The Scholiast here (in the Preface) is pretty full upon the Word <emph rend="ital">Seanchas</emph>; because the Title of the Piece it self implies a Regulation of it, and shews, that tho' it be a Word of some Latitude, yet properly, and in it's genuin Sense, it signifies only the usual Ways and Customs of the Ancients, as it is taken in the said Piece. But Dr. <emph rend="ital">Keating</emph>, and other modern Antiquaries, took the said Word to signify <emph rend="ital">Chronology</emph>; and therefore gave out, that the said <pb ed="Memoirs" n="clxxxiv"> Committee sat upon correcting that alone, which is quite wrong, if we may depend upon the Authority of the said Scholiast who seems to have been very well vers'd in the Dialects of the Old <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph> Tongue. The said Reading is very long, and takes in here and there curious Pieces of ancient History, now hardly to be met with elsewhere. His Grace the Duke of <emph rend="ital">Chandos</emph>, also has several valuable Manuscripts in his Library relating to <emph rend="ital">Ireland</emph>, in which Collection are the Annals of <emph rend="ital">Tiegernach</emph>, the <emph rend="ital">Ulster Annals</emph>, and the Life of <emph rend="ital">Columcil</emph>, in Irish, much larger than that in <emph rend="ital">Latin</emph> in the 7th Centry, written by <emph rend="ital">Adamnan</emph>, one of his Successors in the Abby of <emph rend="ital">Hi</emph>, on the West of <emph rend="ital">Scotland</emph>. The said Volume contains some hundreds of antient <emph rend="ital">Irish</emph> Poems of all sorts, and possibly some very choice ones, which being already impair'd by Time, will probably be much more so soon, and even lost, if Copies be not taken from them.</p>
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