The Song of Amergin - The White Goddess
The Song of Amergin - The White Goddess
The Song of Amergin - The White Goddess
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for depth
for weight
for strength
for deftness
a dew-drop - for clearness
[no note]
for valour
'the pools of knowledge'
for extent
'and knowledge'
[no note]
(i.e. 'gives inspiration': Macalister)
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The ancient history of the Boyne makes the 1690 Battle of the Boyne seem comparatively very recent.
Boyne is in the county of Meath, north of Dublin, on the north-east coast of Ireland. Boyne is the site
of Br na Binne, also known as Brugh na Binne, meaning 'palace or dwelling place of the Boyne'.
Br na Binne is a settlement and ceremonial area more than 5,000 years old, which to put in
perspective existed at least 3,000 years before the baby Jesus was an an eye in God's twinkle, if you
will forgive the blasphemy.
Slieve Mis is a mountain range in Kerry. In Irish - Sliabh Mish - is named after a mythological Celtic
princess noted for her cruelty.
A 'tine' is an antler. Graves suggests that seven tines might refer to seven points on an antler, on the
basis that a stag having six or more points on each antler and being at least seven years old, was
regarded as a 'royal stag', although he does not explain further the meaning of a 'royal stag'.
More interestingly, Graves then explains that the poem in its original form (or as close to the original
form as Graves was able to determine) would most likely have been 'pied' - that is to say, its 'esoteric'
(subtle, purist) meaning would have been disguised. In other words, the meaning was intentionally
made difficult to decipher, 'for reasons of security'.
The weaving of hidden meanings into poetry is widely practised, although in more modern times this is
for artistic or sensual or subliminal appreciation purposes. Graves suggests that the hidden meanings
in the old Celtic poetry, of which the Song of Amergin is an example, held more strategic, perhaps
even sinister, implications: as if the poetry were an instrument of leadership or control, and its hidden
meanings empowered the chosen few who knew the code.
Graves decoded the Song of Amergin as follows, rearranging the statements of the first main verse
according to the thirteen-month calendar and his ideas about the Druid system of lettering, which (for
reasons too complex to explain here) linked trees with letters and months of the year:
The Song of Amergin (transitionary rearranged version - Graves)
Graves says, "There can be little doubt as to the appropriateness of this arrangement ..." on which
basis we might regard this to be Graves' definitive version.
God speaks and says:
I am a stag of seven tines,
(or) I am an ox of seven fights,
I am a wide flood on a plain,
I am a wind on the deep waters,
I am a shining tear of the sun,
I am a hawk on a cliff,
I am fair among flowers,
I am a god who sets the head afire with smoke,
I am a battle-waging spear,
I am a salmon in a pool,
I am a hill of poetry,
I am a ruthless boar,
I am a threatening noise,
I am a wave of the sea,
Who but I knows the secrets of the unhewen
dolmen?
Jan 21-Feb 17
Feb 18-Mar 17
Mar 18-Apr 14
Apr 15- May 12
May 13-June 9
June 10-Jul 7
Jul 8-Aug 4
Aug 5-Sep 1
Sep 2- Sep 29
Sep 30-Oct 27
Oct 28-Nov 24
Nov 25-Dec 22
Dec 23
Birch
Beth
Quick-beam (Rowan)
Ash
Alder
Willow
Hawthorn
Oak
Holly
Hazel
Vine
Ivy
Reed
Elder
Luis
Nion
Fearn
Saille
Uath
Duir
Tinne
Colle
Muin
Gort
Ngetal
Ruis
Robert Graves Copyright Trust, 1948, 1952, 1997. Reproduced from The White Goddess (1948, by
Robert Graves, edited by Grevel Lindop), under licensed permission from A P Watt Ltd on behalf of the
Trustees of the Robert Graves Copyright Trust. Publication of the Song of Amergin is not allowed
without permission from A P Watt Ltd.
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Robert Graves Copyright Trust, 1948, 1952, 1997. Reproduced from The White Goddess (1948, by
Robert Graves, edited by Grevel Lindop), under licensed permission from A P Watt Ltd on behalf of the
Trustees of the Robert Graves Copyright Trust. Publication of the Song of Amergin is not allowed
without permission from A P Watt Ltd.
Central to Graves rationale is the
dolmen arch, which in ancient Irish
history was symbolic of the seasons,
the calendar, letters linked with trees,
and at least one legendary journey of
lovers who bedded each night beside a
fresh dolmen. The 'alphabet' dolmen
arch was arranged thus, says Graves,
the posts representing Spring and
Autumn, the lintel Summer and the
threshold New Year's Day. Don't ask
me what happened to Winter. It's
extremely complicated, and if you
want to explore it further I recommend
you get the White Goddess book.
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