The Coming of Cuculain
The Coming of Cuculain
A romance of the heroic age of Ireland -- battles, encounters, banquets, goblets, spears, Druids, enchantments, forays, shields clanging in battle, and forests and hills trembling at the sight are the embellishments.
Book Excerpt
se of their sounding melody and beauty. He turned his mind to
the problems of democracy and more especially of those workers who
are trapped in the city, and he pointed out for them the way of
escape and how they might renew life in the green fields close to
Earth, their ancient mother and nurse. He used too exalted a
language for those to whom he spoke to understand, and it might
seem that all these vehement appeals had failed but that we know
that what is fine never really fails. When a man is in advance of
his age, a generation unborn when he speaks, is born in due time
and finds in him its inspiration. O'Grady may have failed in his
appeal to the aristocracy of his own time but he may yet create an
aristocracy of character and intellect in Ireland. The political
and social writings will remain to uplift and inspire and to
remind us that the man who wrote the stories of heroes had a
bravery of his own and a wisdom of his own. I owe so much to
Standish O'Grady that I would like to leave it on record that it
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