Page:Beside the Fire - Douglas Hyde.djvu/20

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xvi
PREFACE.

which, to say the least of it, there is no counterpart in the Gaelic from which he has translated.[1]

We have as yet had no folk-lorist in Ireland who could compare for a moment with such a man as Iain Campbell, of Islay, in investigative powers, thoroughness of treatment, and acquaintance with the people, combined with a powerful national sentiment, and, above all, a knowledge of Gaelic. It is on this last rock that all our workers-up of Irish folk-lore split. In most circles in Ireland it is a disgrace to be known to talk Irish; and in the capital, if one makes use of an Irish word to express one's meaning, as one sometimes does of a French or German word, one would be looked upon as positively outside the pale of decency; hence we need not be surprised at the ignorance of Gaelic Ireland displayed by littérateurs who write for the English public, and foist upon us modes of speech which we have not got, and idioms which they never learned from us.

This being the case, the chief interest in too many of our folk-tale writers lies in their individual treatment of the skeletons of the various Gaelic stories obtained through English mediums, and it is not devoid of in-


  1. Thus: "Kill Arthur went and killed Ri Fohin and all his people and beasts—didn't leave one alive;" or, "But that instant it disappeared—went away of itself;" or, "It won all the time—wasn't playing fair," etc., etc.