
The Blind Poet
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Jane Francesca Agnes Wilde
Ancient legends, Mystic Charms & Superstitions of Ireland
Chatto And Windus, London
1919
Ireland
The Blind Poet: inspiration, loss, poetic vision, wisdom, endurance, song, dignity, memory
Public Domain (copyright expired)
n/a
The Blind Poet
As a proof of the magnetic, lucid vision obtained by the great ollamhs of poetry, it is recorded of the blind poet, Louad Dall, that his attendants having brought him the skull of an animal found upon the strand, they asked him to declare its history. And thereupon placing the end of his wand upon the skull, he beheld with the inner vision, and said—
“The tempestuous waters have destroyed Breccan, and this is the skull of his lapdog; and but little of greatness now remains, for Breccan and his people have perished in the waves.”
And this was “divination by the staff”—a power possessed only by the chief poets, and by none else.
Folktales, Fairytales, myths, legends, stories, fantasy