By Marie 'Barnfieicf

By Marie 'Barnfieicf

ilQoRG CeLtic InfLaences: Ylumenon anxy the Seconty Oge by Marie 'Barnfieicf The genesis o f the legend Ireland and many names besides, and its dwellers come not into these tales."4 In my article on Celtic influences on the (I should stress that the concept of Britain and First Age (in M a llorn 28) I claimed that the Ireland having once formed a single island has Second Age was "worthy of separate study in its no historical validity; both were originally own right” , despite the fact that it is joined to the continental mass, and Ireland dominated not by the encouragingly Arthurian- broke away much earlier than Britain.5) sounding Beleriand but by the island of Numenor, which owes its story to the Greek The pre-Akallab£th legends all centre legend of Atlantis, its culture to ancient Egypt around the coming of a Saxon elf-friend, Eriol and its religion to the Hebrews1. I shall start or Alfwine, to an Elvish island; in the earliest by stressing that Tolkien’s purpose in versions the story was to end with the Elves beginning his island tales was not to invent a conveniently annihilated by other agencies and, new Celtic mythology. The work that he in due course, the Saxons inheriting the land. planned was an Anglo-Saxon English mythology, So far we have a very anglocentric tale, with needed, he felt, because England lacked "stories the B rlth on in and Guidlln dismissed as hostile of its own (bound up with its tongue and soil) mortal invaders who preceded the Saxons and ... of the quality that I sought (and found) ... had insufficient reverence for the fairies.* in legends of other lands. There was Greek, However, the theme of mortals coming to and Celtic, and Romance, Germanic, reside in a land hallowed by earlier divine Scandinavian, and Finnish (which greatly inhabitants is one that we find in Celtic myth; affected me); but nothing English, save it is the same motive that lies at the heart of impoverished chap-book stuff."2 The Numenor the Irish conquest of the Tuatha De Danann7, story as it finally appeared in The Silmarillion and as I demonstrated in my previous article it incorporates elements of The Book of Lost was very largely on the Tuatha De Danann that Tales originally connected either with Tol Tolkien’ s Elves were based. Eressea, or with that remnant of Beleriand known in the Second Age as Leithian, Luthien And immediately we find a second Celtic or Luthany. The island of Leithian itself was link. In order to turn Tol Eressea into viewed as a fairy isle comprising what are now England, Tolkien apparently planned a scenario the separate islands of Britain and Ireland, under which it would be drawn by a great whale which at that time, we are told, formed a single from its position far out in the ocean, coming mass. Of the sundering of the two parts to rest close to the Great Lands "nigh to the Tolkien wrote: promontory of Ros”fl, which Christopher "Osse is wroth at the breaking of the Tolkien tentatively identifies as Brittany9 ( ro s roots of the isle he set so long ago ... is, incidentally, the Irish word for that he tries to wrench it back; and the "promontory”). The great battle of Ros at western half breaks off, and is now the which the Elves were to be attacked and isle of Iverln.”3 defeated by the forces of evil may be a Quenya I r c r in is clearly cognate with "real” reference to the cosmic conflict upon Mont Dol names for Ireland derived from the tribal name christianised as a battle between St. Michael Ir e r n i, (such as Ireland, Erin, Hibernia). and the Devil.1“ Elsewhere we learn that: ” ... that part that was broken was called Perhaps Tolkien himself felt uneasy at 6 the way in which he had been forced to dismiss into these tales” , but Ireland, Vales and Britain’ s Celtic past and the Roman occupation Cornwall all lie between England and the as interludes inconveniently sandwiched between Atlantic. A mythology based on westward the Elvish days and the coming of his Saxons, voyages from England which had no reference to particularly as England has in the Arthurian these Celtic areas would seem a little false. cycle a strong tradition of Celtic-derived myth. Also, the tradition of the Land of Promise is at Anyway, he gradually abandoned the best only inferred in the British Celtic material: identification of Alfwine’s elvish isle with it was in the Irish im ram a, or voyage tales of England, though still retaining the notion that mortals to a western Otherworld, that Tolkien elves had once dwelt here. Instead, he sent his found his garbled memories of Valinor.1* It hero westward from England to a second island was perhaps inevitable, therefore, that Ireland where the elves still dwelt.11 But his purpose should eventually find its way into the Alfwine remained that of rooting his elvish "traditions" soup. firmly in England’ s Anglo-Saxon past. Eriol/Alfwine’ s sojourn amongst the Elves, In the 1930s the development of the whether in England or the new place, was a "island saga” took a new turn, for Tolkien made device enabling him to commit to writing that a bargain with C.S.Lewis to write a time-travel which he had seen for the benefit of his own story, and he chose the theme of Atlantis. people: "thus it is that through Eriol and his Thus was begun The Lost Road, in which the sons the Eagle have the true tradition of the name Num enor appears for the first time. For fairies, of whom the Ira s and the Wealas tell this book Tolkien retained the story of garbled things. "12 Eriol/Alfwine’ s voyage to the Vest, but took him not to a fairy paradise but, via the lost In one sense this statement reinforces the Straight Road, back in time to a mortal island- view that Tolkien’ s mythology was to be kingdom located far across the Sea but yet east specifically English and not Celtic. Looked at of the Elvish Isles. Tolkien’ s notes show that the other way, however, he seems to have been in fact he planned to work backwards to the suggesting that he planned to tell the "true” story of Numenor via the voyages of several version of the stories told in garbled form by Alfwine figures. These included a twentieth- the Irish and Velsh - /,<?., that the English century father and son named Alboin (Lombardic mythology he is about to invent is to be at base version of Alfwine) and Audoin Errol, who seem a reconstruction of Celtic myth, which he was to represent Tolkien himself and one of his later to like to "a broken stained-glass window sons (probably Christopher). reassembled without design.” 13 Indeed, where else would he turn for Inspiration for an English The Professor’s other choice of westward mythology? He himself bemoaned the fact that voyagers to complete the tale altered as work there was no English material to draw on save progressed. The original conception seems to "impoverished chap-book stuff” ; Germanic have been for a purely Germanic selection.13 materials would be useful, but only to a limited However, as plans progressed, Irish matter extent: they were ethnically related to any tales began to intrude in the shape of an outline the English might have told, but not "bound up story of a Saxon father and son who fled from with [England’ s] ... soil” . The legends of the the Danish victory at Ircingafeld to Dyfed, and insular Celts would provide for these the ideal thence to Ireland. It was in Ireland that the complement: they were not Germanic, but were pair were to hear tales of the Vestern paradise sprung of the soil of Luthany and looked out attained by Brendan and Maelduin (these two are upon the world from the same vantage point as the subjects of im ram a), and from Ireland that Eriol Elf-friend. they were themselves to set out on the same quest. The outline of this story ends: "this Indeed, in adopting so whole-heartedly the leads to Finntan” .!® vision of a happy Otherworld in the Vest, Tolkien was posing himself a problem. He had Tolkien had apparently read of the story declared that the dwellers of Ireland "come not of Finntan (usually spelt F in ta n ), the Irish sage 7 who had survived the Deluge, in Magnus reality that has been so great a part of its Maclean’s Literature of the Celts.17 How he appeal. planned to use the testimony of "the oldest man in the world", his notes do not make clear, but Foundation and culture presumably "Finntan” would have remembered the Isle of Numenor and its Downfall and the Numenor, as the Drowned Land, carries parting of Earth from the Straight Path to the echoes not only of Atlantis but of the foundered West. Nothing came of these plans other than kingdoms of Celtic myth. The name the poem "The nameless Land”, reproduced in Westernesse is reminiscent in form of Zyonesse, Christopher Tolkien’s edition of The Lost Road. the sunken land beyond Cornwall of Arthurian Nothing, that is, except for one small legend2i, and the motif of a deluge sent by God philological detail. to end the influence of a demonic power over the ruling family is also to be found in the In his papers on the subject, the Breton legend of Is.22 The motif of the Land of Professor glossed Finntan as " N a rk il White Gift may have been derived from the wishful Fire”.

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