Celtic Otherworld
Filed by Aine MacDermot
OSSIAN’S RETURN FROM FAIRYLAND
Ossian too, like Cuchulainn, was enticed into Fairyland by a fairy woman:–She carries him away on a white horse, across the Western Ocean; and as they are moving (p. 347) over the sea-waves they behold a fair maid on a brown horse, and she holding in her right hand a golden apple. After the hero had married his fairy abductress and lived in the Otherworld for three hundred years, an overpowering desire to return to Ireland and join again in the councils of his dearly beloved Fenian Brotherhood took possession of him, and he set out on the same white horse on which he travelled thence with the fairy princess, for such was his wife. And she, as he went, thrice warned him not to lay his ‘foot on level ground’, and he heard from her the startling announcement that the Fenians were all gone and Ireland quite changed.
Safe in Ireland, Ossian seeks the Brotherhood, and though he goes from one place to another where his old companions were wont to meet, not one of them can he find. And how changed is all the land! He realizes at last how long he must have been away. The words of his fairy wife are too sadly true.
While Ossian wanders disconsolately over Ireland, he comes to a multitude of men trying to move an enormous slab of marble, under which some other men are lying. ‘Ossian’s assistance is asked, and he generously gives it. But in leaning over his horse, to take up the stone with one hand, the girth breaks, and he falls. Straightway the white horse fled away on his way home, and Ossian became aged, decrepit, and blind.’ 1

Brian Lee wrote:
I know this story, it differs from this, only in one way. It is a Welsh legend and not Irish. Even tho the Irish came on the scene later. Makes sence, seeing that the Welsh are the Celts, and the Irish are Gaelic/Manx. A lot of Wales`s scripts where either destroyed by the English or where hidden by Welsh royalty that lived in Ireland. Ireland & Scotland have also stolen a lot of the Welsh history to use as their own. Rhiannon was a Welsh princess who was abused by her husband (Irish noble), she managed to get word back to her father, hence war. And so the story begins.
Posted on 23-Jan-08 at 3:47 pm | Permalink
Blackbird wrote:
Umm…the Irish are Celts as well. Irish speak q-Celtic and Welsh speak a LATER form of p-Celtic…since it is based on linguistics (and the early mainland Celts spoke q-Celtic)…the Irish are most definitely Celts.
Posted on 03-Mar-08 at 9:39 am | Permalink