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The Making Of Mann

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Editor's Notes:
Sophia Morrison
Manx Fairy Tales
David Nutt, London
1911
Isle Of Man
The Making Of Mann: origins, mythic creation, identity, place, wonder.
Public Domain (copyright expired)
n/a

The Making Of Mann

Thousands of years ago, at the time of the Battles of the Giants in
Ireland, Finn Mac Cooil was fighting with a great, red-haired Scotch
giant who had come over to challenge him. He beat him and chased
him eastwards towards the sea. But the Scotch giant was a faster
runner and began to get ahead of him, so Finn, who was afraid that
he would jump into the sea and escape, stooped down and clutched a
great handful of the soil of Ireland to throw at him. He cast it,
but he missed his enemy, and the great lump of earth fell into the
midst of the Irish Sea. It is the Isle of Mann, and the great hole
which Finn made, where he tore it up, is Lough Neagh.

There were men, too, in Ireland in those days as well as giants,
and to some of them it seemed to happen in a different way. Men do
not always understand the doings of giants, because men live, it may
be said, in the footprints of the giants. It seems that at this time
the Irish tribes were gathered in two great forces getting ready to
meet the plunderers who had left Scotland and were at work on their
own coast. Their blood got too hot and they went into each other in
downright earnest, to show how they would do with the rascals when
they came. To their confusion, for they lost hold over themselves,
they got into boggy ground and were in great danger. The leaders,
seeing that it was going to mean a big loss of life, got all their
men together on a big patch of dry ground that happened to be in
the bog-land, when all of a sudden a darkness came overhead and
the ground began to shake and tremble with the weight of the people
and the stir there was at them, and then it disappeared, people and
all. Some said that it took plunge and sank into the bog with the
people on it. Others said that it was lifted up, and the people on
it dropped off into the swamp. No doubt the darkness that was caused
by the hand of Finn made it hard to see just how it happened. However
that may be, a while after this they said the sea was surging dreadful,
and the men in the boats had to hold to the sides, or it's out they'd
have been thrown. And behold ye, a few days after this there was land
seen in the middle of the sea, where no man ever saw the like before.

You may know that this story is true because the Irish have always
looked on the Isle of Mann as a parcel of their own land. They say
that when Saint Patrick put the blessing of God on the soil of Ireland
and all creatures that might live upon it, the power of that blessing
was felt at the same time in the Island.


Saint Patrick was a mighty man,
He was a Saint so clever,
He gave the snakes and toads a twisht!
And banished them for ever.


And there is proof of the truth of the saying to this day, for while
such nasty things do live in England they cannot breathe freely on
the blessed soil.

The island was much larger then than it is now, but the magician
who for a time ruled over it, as a revenge on one of his enemies,
raised a furious wind in the air and in the bosom of the earth. This
wind tore several pieces off the land and cast them into the sea. They
floated about and were changed into the dangerous rocks which are now
so much feared by ships. The smaller pieces became the shifting sands
which wave round the coast, and are sometimes seen and sometimes
disappear. Later the island was known as Ellan Sheaynt, the Isle
of Peace, or the Holy Island. It was a place where there was always
sunshine, and the singing of birds, the scent of sweet flowers, and
apple-trees blossoming the whole year round. There was always enough
there to eat and drink, and the horses of that place were fine and
the women beautiful.

Folktales, Fairytales, myths, legends, stories, fantasy

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