Revue celtique, 第 10 巻

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Kraus Reprint, 1889
 

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83 ページ - Now, whenever the doorway would come (in its revolution) opposite to them, they used to see (through it) the whole island, and all that was therein, and all its indwellers, even human beings beautiful, abundant, wearing adorned garments, and feasting with golden vessels in their hands. And the wanderers heard their ale-music. And for a long space were they seeing the marvel they beheld, and they deemed it delightful.
405 ページ - AD 473. vagae tepentes infrequentesque utque sic dixerim oscitabundae supplicationes, quae saepe interpellantum prandiorum obicibus hebetabantur, maxime aut imbres aut serenitatem deprecaturae ; ad quas, ut nil amplius dicam, figulo pariter atque hortuloni non oportuit convenire.
217 ページ - He (the hanged man) then drinks a draught from each of them, and scatters the last sip from his lips at the faces of the people that were in the house, so that they all died. Henceforth it is not good to have either a tub for washing or bathing or a fire without raking, or a slop-pail in a house after sleeping.
71 ページ - He squeezed some of the berries into a vessel and drank (the juice), and it cast him into a deep sleep from that hour to the same hour on the morrow. And they knew not whether he was alive or dead, with the red foam round his lips, till on the morrow he awoke. (Then) he said to them, 'Gather ye this fruit, for great is its excellence.
225 ページ - I was in fair lands . . . with great treasures and precious things, with plenty of garments and food, and of wonderful treasures." 44 In the stories so far referred to we find evidence of the Celtic belief in an Other World located on an island; within a fairy mound (sid); under the waves (to be reached sometimes by a loch or sometimes by a well); or through the mist. There is hardly a trace, except perhaps in some of the islands...
63 ページ - Then they see another island (standing) on a single pedestal, to wit, one foot supporting it. And they rowed round it to seek a way into it, and they found no way thereinto ; but they saw down in the base of the pedestal a closed door under lock. They understood that that was the way by which the island was entered.
63 ページ - ... the sea. It does not occur in any charts before the seventeenth century. After that they came to a large island, and there was a great plain therein, and on this a great table-land, heatherless but grassy and smooth. And near the sea was a fortress, large, high, and ' strong, and a great house therein, adorned, and with good couches. Seventeen grown-up girls were there preparing a bath.
63 ページ - ... there were eight oarstrokes of the boat. And not a single sod of earth was about it, but only the boundless ocean. And they saw not how its base was below nor how its summit was above. Out of its summit came a silvern net far away from it ; and the boat went under sail through a mesh of that net. And then they heard a voice from the summit of yonder pillar, mighty, and clear, and distinct. But they knew not the tongue it spake, nor the words it uttered.
215 ページ - ... night, and quickly would he come back into the house. "I will have the prize from thee," said Nera, "and I shall go out." "Truly thou shalt have this my gold-hilted sword here," said Ailill. Then Nera went out towards the captives, and put good armor on him. He put a withe round the foot of one of the two captives. Thrice it sprang off again. Then the captive said to him...
75 ページ - So (the wanderers) werein hiding, n-watching what the bird would do. Because of its weariness, it remained for a while at rest. (Then) it began to eat some of the fruit of the tree. So Mael duin went till he was at the edge of the hill on which the bird was, to see whether it would do him any evil, and it did none. All his people then went after him into that place.

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