Page:Athletics and Manly Sport (1890).djvu/226

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THE CHIEF GAME OF ANCIENT IRELAND.
201

nounced shelig, Fiach does not mean hunt; it means simply a deer; but, at last, it came to mean a hunt, because a deer was the animal usually hunted. No. 28.
ANCIENT CHESSMAN.
A king—found with several others in a bog, in the county of Meath,
Ireland. Preserved in the Royal Irish Academy.

"The great in-door game,—in fact, the only one mentioned,—is chess; Fithchill (pronounced Fichill; feat-fichille, a chessman). Innumerable are the mentions of this game in Gaelic MSS. There is every reason to think the game was played just as it is now; but the pieces were very large, made of bronze; some of them have been found. You will see a drawing of one in the 'Book of Rights.' [See Figure No. 28.]

"You must bear in mind that we know only very little yet about ancient Ireland, and cannot know all until all the