Irish Druids And Old Irish
Religions
IRISH DRUIDS
Who were the Druids?
This question has agitated the minds of the learned for a long period; and
various, as well as contradictory, have been the replies. Tradition preserves
their memory as of a pious and superior race, prominently associated with the
British Isles and France, and, in a lesser degree, with Belgium, Holland,
Germany, and the lands of Scandinavia.
Much romance has been long attached to them. We hear their chants in the
Stone Circles. We listen to the heaven-inspired utterances of the Archdruid, as
be stands on the capstone of a cromlech, in the eye of the sun, surrounded by
the white-robed throng, with the bowed worshippers afar. We see the golden
sickle reverently cutting off the sacred mistletoe. We follow, in imagination,
the solemn procession, headed by the cross-bearer. We look under the old oak at
the aged Druid, instructing disciples in mystic lore, in verses never to be
committed to writing. We gaze upon the assembly of kings and chieftains, before
whom the wise men debate upon some points of legislation.
Then, again, we recognize the priests as patriots, resisting the invaders of
their homes, and loudly chanting the Battle Hymn. We are at the convocation of
Brehons, in their deliberations on law, and, awestruck, wait upon the observers of sun and
stars, or of the signs of the times in the investigation of terrestrial
phenomena. We go with them to the judgment upon offenders of an unwritten code,
and witness the dread ordeal, or the fiery human sacrifice.
But our inquiry is, What has Irish tradition or literature to say to these
interesting details concerning Druids?
Were the Irish Druids like those of whom we read belonging to other lands?
Did they spring up from among the Irish people, or were they strangers from
another and distant shore? Could they have formed a distinct community, like the
tribe of Levi, intermarrying among themselves only? Amidst much ignorance, and
even barbarism, can the Druids have been distinguished by the learning and
refinement attributed to them?
With our conceptions of the ancient religions of Ireland, should we credit
the Druids with the introduction 'of Sun worship, Serpent reverence, and the
adoration of Idols? Were they, on the contrary, new corners, arriving subsequent
to the establishment of these various forms of paganism, and merely known a
little before the rise of Christianity in Erin?
 
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