Gaodhal, Volume 23M.J. Logan, 1904 - Ireland |
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... language To the student of Irish this little work will be found a most useful and helpful compen dium . Great care has been given to the com piling of the " Phonetic Key " system . By following instructions , every word given in the ...
... language To the student of Irish this little work will be found a most useful and helpful compen dium . Great care has been given to the com piling of the " Phonetic Key " system . By following instructions , every word given in the ...
Page 1
... LANGUAGE , Literature , Music , and Art of Ireland . VOL . XXIII . SERIES . NEW YORK , JANUARY , 1904 . TWENTY - THIRD YEAR OF PUBLICATION . INNY BREEN , step- ping over from Rathlashin to Cloch- ranbeg , a fe w perches short of the ...
... LANGUAGE , Literature , Music , and Art of Ireland . VOL . XXIII . SERIES . NEW YORK , JANUARY , 1904 . TWENTY - THIRD YEAR OF PUBLICATION . INNY BREEN , step- ping over from Rathlashin to Cloch- ranbeg , a fe w perches short of the ...
Page 14
... be at once faithful and pleasing , is in itself a difficult task . But two things make it still more difficult . The first of these is the ob- scurity of the language , many words and idioms of 14 January , 1904 . THE GAEL .
... be at once faithful and pleasing , is in itself a difficult task . But two things make it still more difficult . The first of these is the ob- scurity of the language , many words and idioms of 14 January , 1904 . THE GAEL .
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scurity of the language , many words and idioms of which even the best living scholars seem still unable to explain satisfactorily , so that , at any rate for some time to come , no perfect and final rendering is possible . But the ...
scurity of the language , many words and idioms of which even the best living scholars seem still unable to explain satisfactorily , so that , at any rate for some time to come , no perfect and final rendering is possible . But the ...
Page 17
... language she has chosen which , as Mr. Yeats rightly says , fits the stories admirably . But she allows her preconceived notions to affect the char- acters and incidents . For one of her pieces , the " Wedding of Maine Morgor ...
... language she has chosen which , as Mr. Yeats rightly says , fits the stories admirably . But she allows her preconceived notions to affect the char- acters and incidents . For one of her pieces , the " Wedding of Maine Morgor ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abbey ancient asked Bawn beautiful brother called Castle Celtic century chief church cloth Cong crannog Cuchulain daughter dear death Douglas Hyde Dublin Earl Eason & Son Edited Emmet English eyes fairy father Felim Fenian GAEL Gaelic Gaelic League Galway girl give grave hand harp head heard heart History of Ireland Irish history Irish language Irish literature Irish terrier James John Kilkenny King Kuno Meyer Lady Gregory land literary London looked Lord Maggie Meehan ment Miss mother National never night O'Connell O'Neill ould Patrick poems poet Price published replied Robert Emmet says sent Shane Slieve Donard Society song Stephens story street tell thee things Thomas thought tion told Tom Connor took Ulster W. B. Yeats William woman word writing York young
Popular passages
Page 142 - A state also of equality, wherein all the power and jurisdiction is reciprocal, no one having more than another ; there being nothing more evident than that creatures of the same species and rank, promiscuously born to all the same advantages of nature, and the use of the same faculties, should also be equal one amongst another without subordination or subjection...
Page 7 - All were fat; and well they might Be in admirable plight, For one by one, and two by two, He tossed them human hearts to chew Which from his wide cloak he drew.
Page 62 - He knelt, and leaning on the chair He prayed and fell asleep; And the moth-hour went from the fields, And stars began to peep. They slowly into millions grew, And leaves shook in the wind; And God covered the world with shade, And whispered to mankind. Upon the time of sparrow chirp When the moths came once more, The old priest Peter Gilligan Stood upright on the floor. "Mavrone, mavrone! the man has died, While I slept on the chair'?; He roused his horse out of its sleep, And rode with little care.
Page 29 - So she couldn't but choose to go off to the dancing. And now on the green the glad groups are seen, Each gay-hearted lad with the lass of his choosing; And Pat, without fail, leads out sweet Kitty Neil, — Somehow, when he asked, she ne'er thought of refusing. Now, Felix Magee puts his pipes to his knee, And with flourish so free sets each couple in motion; With a cheer and a bound, the...
Page 69 - Within her swelling bosom white. My Irish wife has golden hair, Apollo's harp had once such strings, Apollo's self might pause to hear Her bird-like carol when she sings. I would not give my Irish wife For all the dames of the Saxon land; I would not give my Irish wife For the Queen of France's hand...
Page 69 - Must bow before their ladies' grace. Take all my forfeited domain, I cannot wage with kinsmen strife — Take knightly gear and noble name, And I will keep my Irish wife. My Irish wife has clear...
Page 196 - Banim and Griffin are gone, and I will soon follow them - ultimus Romanorum, and after that will come a lull, an obscurity of perhaps half a century, when a new condition of civil society and a new phase of manners and habits among the people - for this is a transition state - may introduce new fields and new tastes for other writers...
Page 29 - Half the parish is there, and the dance is beginning. The sun is gone down, but the full harvest moon Shines sweetly and cool on the dew-whitened valley ; While all the air rings with the soft, loving things, Each little bird sings in the green shaded alley.
Page 62 - The old priest Peter Gilligan Stood upright on the floor. "Mavrone, mavrone! the man has died, While I slept on the chair"; He roused his horse out of its sleep, And rode with little care. He rode now as he never rode, By rocky lane and fen; The sick man's wife opened the door: "Father! you come again!" "And is the poor man dead?" he cried. "He died an hour ago," The old priest Peter Gilligan In grief swayed to and fro. "When you were gone, he turned and died As merry as a bird.
Page 206 - Trevor, and many honest gentlemen lying in the Newry, can witness that some old women of those parts used to make a fire in the fields, and divers little children driving out the cattle in the cold mornings, and coming thither to warm them, were by them surprised, killed, and eaten...