Celtic Mysticism
In all Celtic literature there is
recognisable a certain spirit which seems to be innate
in the very character of the people, a spirit of mysticism
and acknowledgment of the supernatural. It carries
with it a love of Nature, a delight in beauty, colour
and harmony, which is common to all the Celtic races.
But with these characteristics we find in Ireland
a spiritual beauty, a passion of self-sacrifice, unknown
in Wales or Brittany. Hence the early Irish heroes
are frequently found renouncing advantages, worldly
honour, and life itself, at the bidding of some imperative
moral impulse. They are the knights-errant of
early European chivalry which was a much deeper and
more real inspiration than the carefully cultivated
artificial chivalry of centuries later. Cuchulain,
Diarmuit, Naesi all pay with their lives for their
obedience to the dictates of honour and conscience.
And in women, for whom in those early days sacrifice
of self was the only way of heroism, the surrender
even of eternal bliss was only the sublimation of
honour and chivalry; and this was the heroism of the
Countess Cathleen.
The Cathleen Legend
The legend is old, so old that its
root has been lost and we know not who first imagined
it; but the idea, the central incident, doubtless
goes back to Druid times, when a woman might well have
offered herself up to the cruel gods to avert their
wrath and stay the plagues which fell upon her people.
Under a like impulse Curtius sprang into the gulf
in the Forum, and Decius devoted himself to death to
win the safety of the Roman army. In each case
the powers, evil or beneficent, were supposed to be
appeased by the offering of a human life. When
Christianity found this legend of sacrifice popular
among the heathen nations, it was comparatively easy
to adopt it and give it a yet wider scope, by making
the sacrifice spiritual rather than physical, and
by finally rewarding the hero with heavenly joys.
It is to be noted, too, that even at this early period
there is a certain glorification of chicanery:
the fiend fulfils his side of the contract, but God
Himself breaks the other side. This becomes a
regular feature in all tales that relate dealings with
the Evil One: all Devil’s Bridges, Devil’s
Dykes, and the Faust legends show that Satan may be
trusted to keep his word, while the saints invariably
kept the letter and broke the spirit. To so primitive
a tale as that of “The Countess Cathleen”
the pettifogging quibbles of later saints are utterly
unknown: God saves her soul because it is His
will to reward such abnegation of self, and even the
Evil One dare not question the Divine Will.
The Story. Happy Ireland
Once, long ago, as the Chronicles
tell us, Ireland was known throughout Europe as “The
Isle of Saints,” for St. Patrick had not long
before preached the Gospel, the message of good tidings,
to the warring inhabitants, to tribes of uncivilised
Celts, and to marauding Danes and Vikings. He
had driven out the serpent-worshippers, and consecrated
the Black Stone of Tara to the worship of the True
God; he had convinced the High King of the truth and
reasonableness of the doctrine of the Trinity by the
illustration of the shamrock leaf, and had overthrown
the great idols and purified the land. Therefore
the fair shores and fertile vales of Erin, the clustered
islets, dropped like jewels in the azure seas, the
mist-covered, heather-clad hill-sides, even the barren
mountain-tops and the patches of firm ground scattered
in the solitudes of fathomless bogs, were homes of
pious Culdee or lonely hermit. There was still
strife in Ireland, for king fought with king, and
heathen marauders still vexed the land; but many warlike
Irish clans or “septs” turned their
ardour for fight to religious conflicts, and often
every man of a tribe became a monk, so that great
abbeys and tribal monasteries and schools were built
on the hills where, in former days, stood the chieftain’s
stronghold (rath or dun, as Irish legends
name it), with its earth mounds and wooden palisades.
Holy psalms and chants replaced the boastful songs
of the old bards, whilst warriors accustomed to regard
fighting and hunting as the only occupations worthy
of a free-born man, now peacefully illuminated manuscripts
or wrought at useful handicrafts. Yet still in
secret they dreaded and tried to appease the wrath
of the Dagda, Brigit of the Holy Fire, AEngus the
Ever-Young, and the awful Washers of the Ford, the
Choosers of the Slain; and to this dread was now joined
the new fear of the cruel demons who obeyed Satan,
the Prince of Evil.
The Young Countess
At this time there dwelt in Ireland
the Countess Cathleen, young, good, and beautiful.
Her eyes were as deep, as changeful, and as pure as
the ocean that washed Erin’s shores; her yellow
hair, braided in two long tresses, was as bright as
the golden circlet on her brow or the yellow corn
in her garners; and her step was as light and proud
and free as that of the deer in her wide domains.
She lived in a stately castle in the midst of great
forests, with the cottages of her tribesmen around
her gates, and day by day and year by year she watched
the changing glories of the mighty woods, as the seasons
brought new beauties, till her soul was as lovely as
the green woods and purple hills around. The
Countess Cathleen loved the dim, mysterious forest,
she loved the tales of the ancient gods, and of
“Old, unhappy, far-off
things,
And battles long ago;”
Wordsworth.
but more than all she loved her clansmen
and vassals: she prayed for them at all the holy
hours, and taught and tended them with loving care,
so that in no place in Ireland could be found a happier
tribe than that which obeyed her gentle rule.
Dearth and Famine
One year there fell upon Ireland,
erewhile so happy, a great desolation “For
Scripture saith, an ending to all good things must
be" and the happiness of the Countess
Cathleen’s tribe came to an end in this wise:
A terrible famine fell on the land; the seed-corn
rotted in the ground, for rain and never-lifting mists
filled the heavy air and lay on the sodden earth;
then when spring came barren fields lay brown where
the shooting corn should be; the cattle died in the
stall or fell from weakness at the plough, and the
sheep died of hunger in the fold; as the year passed
through summer towards autumn the berries failed in
the sun-parched woods, and the withered leaves, fallen
long before the time, lay rotting on the dank earth;
the timid wild things of the forest, hares, rabbits,
squirrels, died in their holes or fell easy victims
to the birds and beasts of prey; and these, in their
turn, died of hunger in the famine-stricken forests.
“I searched all day:
the mice and rats and hedgehogs
Seemed to be dead, and I could
hardly hear
A wing moving in all the famished woods."
Distress of the Peasants
A cry of bitter agony and lamentation
rose from the starving Isle of Saints to the gates
of Heaven, and fell back unheard; the sky was hard
as brass above and the earth was barren beneath, and
men and women died in despair, their shrivelled lips
still stained green by the dried grass and twigs they
had striven to eat.
“I passed by Margaret
Nolan’s: for nine days
Her mouth was green with dock
and dandelion;
And now they wake her.”
The Misery Increases
In vain the High King of Ireland proclaimed
a universal peace, and wars between quarrelling tribes
stopped and foreign pirates ceased to molest the land,
and chief met chief in the common bond of misery; in
vain the rich gave freely of their wealth soon
there was no distinction between rich and poor, high
and low, chief and vassal, for all alike felt the
grip of famine, all died by the same terrible hunger.
Soon many of the great monasteries lay desolate, their
stores exhausted, their portals open, while the brethren,
dead within, had none to bury them; the lonely hermits
died in their little beehive-shaped cells, or fled
from the dreadful solitude to gather in some wealthy
abbey which could still feed its monks; and isle and
vale which had echoed their holy chants knew the sounds
no more. Over all, unlifting, unchanging, brooded
the deadly vapour, bearing the plague in its heavy
folds, and filling the air with a sultry lurid haze.
“There is no sign of
change day copies day,
Green things are dead the
cattle too are dead
Or dying and on
all the vapour hangs
And fattens with disease,
and glows with heat.”
Cathleen Heartbroken for her People
Round the castle of the Countess Cathleen
there was great stir and bustle, for her tender heart
was wrung with the misery of her people, and her prayers
for them ascended to God unceasingly. So thin
she grew and so worn that the physicians bade her
servants bring harp and song to charm away the sadness
that weighed upon her spirit; but all in vain!
Neither the well-loved legends of the ancient gods,
nor her harp, nor the voice of her bards could bring
her relief nothing but the attempt to save
her people. From the earliest days of the famine
her house and her stores were ever ready to supply
the wants of the homeless, the poor, the suffering;
her wealth was freely spent for food for the starving
while supplies could yet be bought either near or
in distant baronies; and when known supplies failed
her lavish offers tempted the churlish farmers, who
still hoarded grain that they might enrich themselves
in the great dearth, to sell some of their garnered
stores. When she could no longer induce them to
part with their grain, her own winter provisions,
wine and corn, were distributed generously to all
who asked for relief, and none ever left her castle
without succour.
Her Wide Charity
Thus passed the early months of bitter
starvation, and the Countess Cathleen’s name
was borne far and wide through Ireland, accompanied
with the blessings of all the rescued; and round her
castle, from every district, gathered a mighty throng
of poor not only her own clansmen who
all looked to her for a daily dole of food and drink
to keep some life in them until the pestilential mists
should pass away. The wholesome cold of winter
would purify the air and bring new hope and promise
of new life in the coming year. Alas! the winter
drew on apace and still the poisonous yellow vapours
hung heavily over the land, and still the deadly famine
clutched each feeble heart and weakened the very springs
of life, and the winter frosts slew more than the
summer heats, so feeble were the people and so weakened.
Lawlessness Breaks Out
At last, even in the Isle of Saints,
the bonds of right and wrong were loosened, all respect
for property vanished in the universal desolation,
and men began to rob and plunder, to trust only to
the right of might, thinking that their poor miserable
lives were of more value than aught else, than conscience
and pity and honesty. Thus Cathleen lost by barefaced
robbery much of what she still possessed of flocks
and herds, of scanty fruit and corn. Her servants
would gladly have pursued the robbers and regained
the spoils, but Cathleen forbade it, for she pitied
the miserable thieves, and thought no evil of them
in this bitter dearth. By this time she had distributed
all her winter stores, and had only enough to feed
her poor pensioners and her household with most scanty
rations; and she herself shared equally with them,
for the most earnest entreaties of her faithful servants
could not induce her to fare better than they in anything.
Soon there would be nothing left for daily distribution,
and her heart almost broke as she saw the misery of
her helpless dependents; they looked to her as an
angel of pity and deliverance, while she knew herself
to be as helpless as they. Day by day Cathleen
went among them, with her pitifully scanty doles of
food, cheering them by her words and smiles, and by
her very presence; and each day she went to her chapel,
where she could cast aside the mask of cheerfulness
she wore before her people, and prayed to the Blessed
Virgin Mary and all the saints to show her how to
save her own tribe and all the land.
Cathleen Has an Inspiration
As the Countess knelt long before
the altar one noontide she passed from her prayers
into a deep sleep, and sank down on the altar steps.
In the troubled depths of her mind a thought arose,
which came to her as an inspiration from Heaven itself.
She awoke and sprang up joyfully, exclaiming aloud:
“Thanks be to Our Lady and to all the saints!
To them alone the blessed thought is due. Thus
can I save my poor until the dearth is over.”
Then Cathleen left her oratory with
such a light heart as she had not felt since the terrible
visitation began, and the gladness in her face was
so new and wonderful that all her servants noticed
the change, and her old foster-mother, who loved the
Countess with the utmost devotion, shuddered at the
thought that perhaps her darling had come under the
power of the ancient gods and would be bewitched away
to Tir-nan-og, the land of never-dying youth.
Fearfully old Oona watched Cathleen’s face as
she passed through the hall, and Cathleen saw the
anxious gaze, and came and laid her hand on the old
woman’s shoulder, saying, “Nay, fear not,
nurse; the saints have heard my prayer and put it
into my heart to save all these helpless ones.”
Then she crossed the hall to her own room, and called
a servant, saying, “Send hither quickly Fergus
my steward.”
She Summons her Steward
Shortly afterwards the steward came,
Fergus the White, an old grey-haired man, who had
been foster-brother to Cathleen’s grandfather.
He had seen three generations pass away, he had watched
the change from heathenism to Christianity, and of
all the chief’s family, to which his loyal devotion
had ever clung, there remained but this one young
girl, and he loved her as his own child. Fergus
did obeisance to his liege lady, and kissed her hand
kneeling as he asked:
“What would the Countess Cathleen
with her steward? Shall I render my account of
lands and wealth?”
Demands to Know what Wealth she Owns
“How much have I in lands?”
the Countess asked. And Fergus answered in surprise:
“Your lands are worth one hundred thousand pounds.”
“Of what value is the timber
in my forests?” “As much again.”
“What is the worth of my castles
and my fair residences?” continued the Countess
Cathleen. And Fergus still replied: “As
much more,” though in his heart he questioned
why his lady wished to know now, while the famine
made all riches seem valueless.
“How much gold still unspent
lies in thy charge in my treasure-chests?”
“Lady, your stored gold is three
hundred thousand pounds, as much as all your lands
and forests and houses are worth.”
The Countess Cathleen thought for
an instant, and then, as one who makes a momentous
decision, spoke firmly, though her lips quivered as
she gave utterance to her thought:
“Go Far and Buy Food”
“Then, Fergus, take my bags
of coin and go. Leave here my jewels and some
gold, for I may hear of some stores of grain hoarded
by niggard farmers, and may induce them to sell, if
not for the love of God, then for the love of gold.
Take, too, authority from me, written and sealed with
my seal, to sell all my lands and timber, and castles,
except this one alone where I must dwell. Send
a man, trustworthy and speedy, to the North, to Ulster,
where I hear the famine is less terrible, and let
him buy what cattle he can find, and drive them back
as soon as may be.”
“Keeping this house
alone, sell all I have;
Go to some distant country,
and come again
With many herds of cows and
ships of grain.”
The Steward Reluctantly Obeys
The ancient steward, Fergus the White,
stood at first speechless with horror and grief, but
after a moment of silence his sorrow found vent in
words, and he besought his dear lady not to sell everything,
her ancient home, her father’s lands, her treasured
heirlooms, and leave herself no wealth for happier
times. All his persuasions were useless, for
Cathleen would not be moved; she bade him “Farewell”
and hastened his journey, saying, “A cry is
in mine ears; I cannot rest.” So there
was no help for it. A trusty man was despatched
to Ulster to buy up all the cattle (weak and famine-stricken
as they would be) in the North Country; while Fergus
himself journeyed swiftly to England, which was still
prosperous and fertile, untouched by the deadly famine,
and knowing nothing of the desolation of the sister
isle, to which the English owed so much of their knowledge
of the True Faith.
Buys Stores in England
In England Fergus spent all the gold
he brought with him, and then sold all the Countess
Cathleen bade him sell lands, castles, forests,
pastures, timber all but one lonely castle
in the desolate woods, where she dwelt among her own
people, with the dying folk thronging round her gates
and in her halls. Good bargains Fergus made also,
for he was a shrewd and loyal steward, and the saints
must have touched the hearts of the English merchants,
so that they gave good prices for all, or perhaps
they did not realize the dire distress that prevailed
in Ireland. However that may have been, Fergus
prospered in his trading, and bought grain, and wine,
and fat oxen and sheep, so that he loaded many ships
with full freights of provisions, enough to carry
the starving peasantry through the famine year till
the next harvest. At last all his money was spent,
all his ships were laden, everything was ready, and
the little fleet lay in harbour, only awaiting a fair
wind, which, unhappily, did not come.
His Return Delayed
First of all Fergus waited through
a deadly calm, when the sails hung motionless, drooping,
with no breath of air to stir them, when the fog that
brooded over the shores of England never lifted and
all sailing was impossible; then the winds dispersed
the fog, and Fergus, forgetting caution in his great
anxiety to return, hastily set sail for his own land,
and there came fierce tempests and contrary winds,
so that his little fleet was driven back, and one or
two ships went down with all their stores of food.
Fergus wept to see his lady’s wealth lost in
the wintry sea, but he dared not venture again, and
though he chafed and fretted at the delay, it was nearly
two months after he reached England before he could
sail back to his young mistress and her starving countrymen.
The trusty messenger who had been sent to buy cattle
had succeeded beyond his own expectation; he also
had made successful bargains, and had found more cattle
than he believed were still alive in Ireland.
He had bought all, and was driving them slowly towards
the Countess Cathleen’s forest dwelling.
Their progress was so slow, because of their weakness
and the scanty fodder by the way, that no news of
them came to Cathleen, and she knew not that while
corn and cattle were coming with Fergus across the
sea, food was also coming to her slowly through the
barren ways of her own native land. None of this
she knew, and despair would have filled her heart,
but for her faith in God and her belief in the great
inspiration that had been given to her.
Deepening Misery in Ireland
Meanwhile terrible things had been
happening in Ireland. As in England in later
days, “men said openly that Christ and His saints
slept”; they thought with longing of the mighty
old gods, for the new seemed powerless, and they yearned
for the friendly “good people” who had
fled from the sound of the church bell. Thus many
minds were ready to revolt from the Christian faith
if they had not feared the life after death and the
endless torments of the Christian Hell. Some few,
desperate, even offered secret worship to the old heathen
gods, and true love to the One True God had grown
cold.
Two Mysterious Strangers
Now on the very day on which Fergus
sailed for England, and his comrade departed to Ulster,
two mysterious and stately strangers suddenly appeared
in Erin. Whence they came no man knew, but they
were first seen near the wild sea-shore of the west,
and the few poor inhabitants thought they had been
put ashore by some vessel or wrecked on that dangerous
coast. Aliens they certainly were, for they talked
with each other in a tongue that none understood, and
they appeared as if they did not comprehend the questions
asked of them. Thus they passed away from the
western coasts, and made their way inland; but when
they next appeared, in a village not far from Dublin,
they had greatly changed: they wore magnificent
robes and furs, with splendid jewelled gloves on their
hands, and golden circlets, set with gleaming rubies,
bound their brows; their black steeds showed no trace
of weakness and famine as they rode through the woods
and carefully noted the misery everywhere.
Their Strange Story
At last they alighted at the little
lodge, where a forester’s widow gladly received
them; and their royal dress, lofty bearing and strange
language accorded ill with the mean surroundings and
the scanty accommodation of that little hut.
The dead forester had been one of the Countess Cathleen’s
most faithful vassals, and his holding was but a short
distance from the castle, so that the strangers could,
unobserved, watch the life of the little village.
As time passed they told their hostess they were merchants,
simple traders from a distant country, trafficking
in very precious gems; but they had no wares for exchange,
and no gems to show; they made no inquiries or researches,
bargained with no man, seemed to do no business; they
were the most unusual merchants ever seen in Ireland,
and the strangeness of their behaviour troubled men’s
minds.
Mysterious Behaviour
Day by day they ate, unquestioning,
the coarse food their poor hostess set before them,
and the black bread which was the best food obtainable
in those terrible days, but they added to it wine,
rich and red, from their own private store, and they
paid her lavishly in good red gold, so that she wondered
that any men should stay in the famine-stricken country
when they could so easily leave it at their will.
Gradually, too, speaking now in the Irish tongue, they
began to ask her cautious questions of the people,
of the land, of the famine, how men lived and how
they died, and so they heard of the exceeding goodness
of the Countess Cathleen, whose bounty had saved so
many lives, and was still saving others, though the
deadly pinch of famine grew sorer with the passing
days. To their hostess they admired Cathleen’s
goodness, and were loud in her praises, but they looked
askance at one another and their brows were black with
discontent.
Professed Errand of Mercy
Then one day the kingly merchants
told the poor widow who harboured them that they too
were the friends of the poor and starving; they were
servants of a mighty prince, who in his compassion
and mercy had sent them on a mission to Ireland to
help the afflicted peasants to fight against famine
and death. They said that they themselves had
no food to give, only wine and gold in plenty, so
that men might exert themselves and search for food
to buy. Their hostess, hearing this, and knowing
that there were still some niggards who refused to
part with their mouldering heaps of corn, setting
the price so high that no man could buy, called down
the blessing of God and Mary and all the saints upon
their heads, for if they would distribute their gold
to all, or even buy the corn themselves and distribute
it, men need no longer die of hunger.
A New Traffic
When she prayed for a blessing on
the two strangers they smiled scornfully and impatiently;
and the elder said, cunningly:
“Alas! we know the evils
of mere charity,
And would devise a more considered
way.
Let each man bring one piece
of merchandise.”
“Ah, sirs!” replied the
hostess, “then your compassion, your gold and
your goodwill are of no avail. Think you, after
all these weary months, that any man has merchandise
left to sell? They have sold long ago all but
the very clothes they wear, to keep themselves alive
till better days come. Such offers are mockery
of our distress.”
“We mock you not,” said
the elder merchant. “All men have the one
precious thing we wish to buy, and have come hither
to find; none has already lost or sold it.”
“What precious treasure can
you mean? Men in Ireland now have only their
lives, and can barely cherish those,” said the
poor woman, wondering greatly and much afraid.
Buyers of Souls
The elder merchant continued gazing
at her with a crafty smile and an eye ever on the
alert for tokens of understanding. “Poor
as they are, Irishmen have still one thing that we
will purchase, if they will sell: their souls,
which we have come to obtain for our mighty Prince,
and with the great price that we shall pay in pure
gold men can well save their lives till the starving
time is over. Why should men die a cruel, lingering
death or drag through weary months of miserable half-satisfied
life when they may live well and merrily at the cost
of a soul, which is no good but to cause fear and
pain? We take men’s souls and liberate
them from all pain and care and remorse, and we give
in exchange money, much money, to procure comforts
and ease; we enrol men as vassals of our great lord,
and he is no hard taskmaster to those who own his
sway.”
Slow Trade at First
When the poor widow heard these dreadful
words she knew that the strangers were demons come
to tempt men’s souls and to lure them to Hell.
She crossed herself, and fled from them in fear, praying
to be kept from temptation; and she would not return
to her little cottage in the forest, but stayed in
the village warning men against the evil demons who
were tempting the starving people, till she too died
of the famine, and her house was left wholly to the
strangers. Yet the merchants fared ever well,
better than before her departure, and those who ventured
to the forest dwelling found good food and rich wine,
which the strangers sometimes gave to their visitors,
with crafty hints of abundance to be easily obtained.
Then when timid individuals asked the way to win these
comforts the strangers began their tempting, and represented
the case to be gained by the sale of men’s souls.
One man, bolder than the rest, made a bargain with
the demons and gave them his soul for three hundred
crowns of gold, and from that time he in his turn
became a tempter. He boasted of his wealth, of
the rich food the merchants gave him at times, of
the potent wine he drank from their generously opened
bottles, and, best of all, he vaunted his freedom
from pity, conscience, or remorse.
Trade Increases
Gradually many people came to the
forest dwelling and trafficked with the demon merchants.
The purchase of souls went on busily, and the demons
paid prices varying according to the worth of the soul
and the record of its former sins; but to all who
sold they gave food and wine, and in gloating over
their gold and satisfying hunger and thirst, men forgot
to ask whence came this food and wine and the endless
stores of coin. Now many people ventured into
the forest to deal with the demons, and the narrow
track grew into a broad beaten way with the numbers
of those who came, and all returned fed and warmed,
and bearing bags heavy with coin, and the promise of
abundant food and easy service. Those who had
sold their souls rioted with the money, for the demons
gave them food, and they bought wine from the inexhaustible
stores of the evil merchants. The poor, lost people
knew that there was no hope for them after death,
and they tried by all means to keep themselves alive
and to enjoy what was yet left to them; but their
mirth was fearful and they durst not stop to think.
Cathleen Hears of the Demon Traders
At first the Countess Cathleen knew
nothing of the terrible doings of the demons, for
she never passed beyond her castle gates, but spent
her time in prayer for her people’s safety and
for the speedy return of her messengers; but when
the starving throng of pensioners at her gates grew
daily less, and there were fewer claimants for the
pitiful allowance which was all she had to give, she
wondered if some other mightier helper had come to
Ireland. But she could hear of none, and soon
the shameless rioting and drunkenness in the village
came to her knowledge, and she wondered yet more whence
her clansmen obtained the means for their excesses,
for she felt instinctively that the origin of all
this rioting must be evil. Cathleen therefore
called to her an old peasant, whose wife had died
of hunger in the early days of the famine, so that
he himself had longed to die and join her; but when
he came to her she was horror-struck by the change
in him. Now he came flushed with wine, with defiant
look and insolent bearing, and his face was full of
evil mirth as he tried to answer soberly the Countess’s
questions.
“Why do the villagers and strangers
no longer come to me for food? I have but little
now to give, but all are welcome to share it with me
and my household.”
The Peasant’s Story
“They do not come, O Countess,
because they are no longer starving. They have
better food and wine, and abundance of money to buy
more.”
“Whence then have they obtained
the money, the food, and the wine for the drinking-bouts,
the tumult of which reaches me even in my oratory?”
“Lady, they have received all
from the generous merchants who are in the forest
dwelling where old Mairi formerly lived; she is dead
now, and these noble strangers keep open house in
her cottage night and day; they are so wealthy that
they need not stint their bounty, and so powerful
that they can find good food, enough for all who go
to them. Since Brigit died (your old servant,
lady) her husband and son work no more, but serve
the strange merchants, and urge men to join them; and
I, and many others, have done so, and we are now wealthy”
(here he showed the Countess a handful of gold) “and
well fed, and have wine as much as heart can desire.”
“But do you give them nothing
in return for all their generosity? Are they
so noble that they ask nothing in requital of their
bounty?”
“Good Gold for Souls”
“Oh, yes, we give them something,
but nothing of importance, nothing we cannot spare.
They are merchants of souls, and buy them for their
king, and they pay good red gold for the useless, painful
things. I have sold my soul to them, and now
I weep no more for my wife; I am gay, and have wine
enough and gold enough to help me through this dearth!”
“Alas!” sighed the Countess,
“and what when you too die?” The old peasant
laughed at her grief as he said: “Then,
as now, I shall have no soul to trouble me with remorse
or conscience”; and the Countess covered her
eyes with her hand and beckoned silently that he should
go. In her oratory, whither she betook herself
immediately, she prayed with all her spirit that the
Virgin and all the saints would inspire her to defeat
the demons and to save her people’s souls.
Cathleen Tries to Check the Traffic
Next day Cathleen called together
all the people in the village, her own tribesmen and
strangers. She offered them again a share of all
she had, and the daily rations she could distribute,
but told them that all must share alike and that she
had nothing but the barest necessaries to give scanty
portions of corn and meal, with milk from one or two
famine-stricken cows her servants had managed to keep
alive. To this she added that she had sent two
trusty messengers for help, one to Ulster for cattle,
and Fergus to England for corn and wine; they must
return soon, she felt sure, with abundant supplies,
if men would patiently await their return.
In Vain
But all was useless. Her messengers
had sent no word of their return, and the abundant
supplies at the forest cottage were more easily obtained,
and were less carefully regulated, than those of the
Countess Cathleen. The merchants, too, were ever
at hand with their cunning wiles, and their active,
persuasive dupes, who would gladly bring all others
into their own soulless condition. The wine given
by the demons warmed the hearts of all who drank,
and the deceived peasants dreamed of happiness when
the famine was over, and so the passionate appeal
of the Countess failed, and the sale of souls continued
merrily. The noise of revelry grew daily louder
and more riotous, and the drinkers cared nothing for
the death or departure of their dearest friends; while
those who died, died drunken and utterly reckless,
or full of horror and despair, reviling the crafty
merchants who had deceived them with promises of life
and happiness. The evil influence clung all about
the country-side, and seemed in league with the pitiless
powers of Nature against the souls of men, till at
last the stricken Countess, putting her trust in God,
sought out the forest lodge where the demon merchants
dwelt, trafficking for souls. The way was easy
to find now, for a broad beaten track led to the dwelling,
and as the evil spirits saw Cathleen coming slowly
along the path their wicked eyes gleamed and their
clawlike hands worked convulsively in their jewelled
gloves, for they hoped she had come to sell her pure
soul.
She Visits the Demons
“What does the Countess Cathleen
wish to obtain from two poor stranger merchants?”
said the elder with an evil smile; and the younger,
bowing deeply said: “Lady, you may command
us in all things, save what touches our allegiance
to our king.” Cathleen replied: “I
have no merchandise to barter, nothing for trade with
you, for you buy such things as I will never sell:
you buy men’s souls for Hell. I come only
to beg that you will release the poor souls whom you
have bought for Satan’s kingdom, and will have
mercy on my ignorant people and deceive them no more.
I have yet some gold unspent and jewels unsold:
take all there is but let my people go free.”
Then the merchants laughed aloud scornfully, and rejected
her offer. “Would you have us undo our work?
Have we toiled, then, for naught to extend our master’s
sway? Have we won for him so many souls to dwell
for ever in his kingdom and do his work, and shall
we give them back for your entreaties? We have
gold enough, and food and wine enough, fair lady.
The souls we have bought we keep, for our master gives
us honour and rank proportioned to the number of souls
we win for him, and you may see by the golden circlets
round our brows that we are princes of his kingdom,
and have brought him countless souls. Nevertheless,
there is one most rare and precious thing which could
redeem these bartered souls of Ireland’s peasants,
things of little worth.”
They Make a Proposal
“Oh, what is that?” said
the Countess. “If I have it, or can in any
way procure it, tell me, that I may redeem these deluded
people’s souls.”
“You have it now, fair saint.
It is one pure soul, precious as multitudes of more
sin-stained souls. Our master would far rather
have a perfect and flawless pearl for his diadem than
myriads of these cracked and flawed crystals.
Your soul, most saintly Countess, would redeem the
souls of all your tribe, if you would sell it to our
king; it would be the fairest jewel in his crown.
But think not to save your people otherwise, and beguile
them no longer with false promises of help: your
messenger to Ulster lies sick of ague in the Bog of
Allen, and no food comes from England.”
False Tidings
“We
saw a man
Heavy with sickness in the
Bog of Allen
Whom you had bid buy cattle.
Near Fair Head
We saw your grain ships lying
all becalmed
In the dark night, and not
less still than they
Burned all their mirrored
lanterns in the sea.”
When Cathleen heard of the failure
of her messengers to bring food it seemed as if all
hope were indeed over, and the demons smiled craftily
upon her as she turned silently to go, and laughed
joyously to each other when she had left their presence.
Now they had good hope to win her for their master;
but they knew that their time was short, since help
was not far away.
“Last night, closed
in the image of an owl,
I hurried to the cliffs of
Donegal,
And saw, creeping on the uneasy
surge,
Those ships that bring the
woman grain and meal;
They are five days from us.
I
hurried east,
A grey owl flitting, flitting
in the dew,
And saw nine hundred oxen
toil through Meath,
Driven on by goads of iron;
they too, brother,
Are full five days from us.
Five days for traffic.”
Cathleen’s Despair
The Countess then went back in bitter
grief to her desolate castle, where only faithful
old servants now waited in the halls, and whispered
together in the dark corners, and, kneeling in her
oratory, she prayed far into the night for light in
her darkness. As she prayed before the altar
she slept for very weariness, and was aroused by a
sudden furious knocking, and an outcry of “Thieves!
Thieves!” Cathleen rose quickly from the altar
steps, and met her foster-mother, Oona, at the door
of the oratory; and Oona cried aloud: “Thieves
have broken into the treasure-chamber, and nothing
is left!” Cathleen asked if this were true,
and discovered that not a single coin, not a single
gem was left: the demons had stolen all.
And while the servants still mourned over the lost
treasures of the house there came another cry of “Thieves!
Thieves!” and an old peasant rushed in, exclaiming
that all the food was gone. That, alas! was true:
the few sacks of meal which supplied the scanty daily
fare were emptied and the bags flung on the floor.
Now indeed the last poor resource was gone.
A Desperate Decision
When the Countess heard of this last
terrible misfortune a great light broke upon her mind
with a blinding flash, and showed her a way to save
others, even at the cost of her own salvation.
It seemed God’s answer to her prayer for guidance,
and she resolved to follow the inspiration thus sent
into her mind. She decided now what she would
do; her mind was made up, and the light which shines
from extreme sacrifice of self was so bright upon
her face that her old nurse and her servants, wailing
around her, were awe-stricken and durst not question
or check her. She returned to her oratory door,
and, standing on the steps, looking down on her weeping
domestics, she cried:
“I
am desolate,
For a most sad resolve wakes in my heart;
But always I have faith. Old men and women,
Be silent; God does not forsake the world.
Mary Queen of Angels
And all you clouds and clouds of saints, farewell!”
With one last long gaze at the little
altar of her oratory she resolutely closed the door
and turned away.
She Revisits the Demons
The next day the merchants in their
forest lodge were still buying souls, and giving food
and wine to the starving peasants who sold. They
were buying men and women, sinful, terrified, afraid
to die, eager to live; buying them more cheaply than
before because of the increase of sin and terror.
Bargains were being struck and bartering was in full
progress, when suddenly all the peasants stopped,
shamefaced, as one said, “Here comes the Countess
Cathleen,” and down the track she was seen approaching
slowly. One by one the peasants slunk away, and
the demon merchants were quite alone when Cathleen
entered the little cottage where they sat, with bags
of coin on the table before them and on the ground
beside them. Again they greeted her with mocking
respect, and asked to know her will.
“Merchants, do you still buy souls for Hell?”
“Lady, our traffic prospers,
for the famine lies long on the land, and men would
fain live till better days come again. Besides,
we can give them food and wine and wealth for future
years; and all in exchange for a mere soul, a little
breath of wind.”
“Perhaps the Countess Cathleen
has come to deal with us,” said the younger.
“Merchant, you are right; I
have come to bring you merchandise. I have a
soul to sell, so costly that perhaps the price is beyond
your means.”
The elder merchant replied joyfully:
“No price is beyond our means, if only the soul
be worth the price; if it be a pure and stainless soul,
fit to join the angels and saints in Paradise, our
master will gladly pay all you ask. Whose is
the soul, and what is the price?”
Her Terms
“The people starve,
therefore the people go
Thronging to you. I hear
a cry come from them,
And it is in my ears by night
and day:
And I would have five hundred
thousand crowns,
To find food for them till
the dearth go by;
And have the wretched spirits
you have bought
For your gold crowns, released,
and sent to God.
The soul that I would barter
is my soul.”
The Bond Signed
When the demons heard this, and knew
that Cathleen was willing to give her own soul as
ransom for the souls of others, they were overjoyed,
their eyes flashed, the rubies of their golden crowns
shot out fiery gleams, and their fingers clutched
the air as if they already held her stainless soul.
This would be a great triumph to their master, and
they would win great honour in Hell when they brought
him a soul worth far, far more than large abundance
of ordinary sinful souls. Very carefully they
watched while the trembling Countess signed the bond
which gave her soul to Hell, very gladly they paid
down the money for which she had stipulated, and very
joyously they saw the signs of speedy death in her
face, knowing, as they did, how soon the coming relief
would show her sacrifice to have been unnecessary,
though now it was irrevocable.
General Lamentation
Sadly but resolutely she turned away,
followed by her servants bearing the bags of gold,
and as she passed through the village a rumour ran
before her of what she had done. All men were
sobered by the terrible tidings, and the redeemed
people waited for her coming, and followed her weeping
and lamenting, for now their souls were free again,
and they recognised the great sacrifice she had made
for them; but it was too late to save her, though
now all would have died for her. Cathleen passed
on into her castle, and there in the courtyard she
distributed the money to all her people, and bade
them dwell quietly in obedience till her steward returned.
She herself, she said, could not stay; she must go
on a long and dark journey, for her people’s
need had broken her heart and conquered her; she was
no longer her own, but belonged to the dark lord of
Hell; she could not bid them pray for her, nor could
she pray for herself.
Cathleen Fades Away
Her people, who knew the great price
at which she had redeemed them, besought the Blessed
Virgin and all the saints to have mercy on her; and
all the souls she had released, on earth and in Heaven,
prayed for her night and day, and the blessed saints
interceded for her. Yet from day to day the Countess
Cathleen faded, and the demons, ceasing all other
traffic, lurked in waiting to catch her soul as she
died. Night and day her heart-broken foster-mother
Oona tended her; but she grew feebler, till it seemed
that she would die before Fergus returned.
The Steward Returns
On the fifth day, however, glad tidings
came. Fergus had landed, and sent word that he
was bringing corn and meal as quickly as possible;
also a wandering peasant brought a message that nine
hundred oxen were within one day’s journey of
her castle; and when the gentle Cathleen heard this,
and knew that her people were safe, she died with a
smile on her lips and thanks to God for her people
on her tongue. That same night a great tempest
broke over the land, which drove away the pestilential
mists, and left the country free from evil influences,
for with the morning men found the forest lodge crushed
beneath the fallen trees, and the two demon merchants
vanished. All gathered round the castle and mourned
for the Countess Cathleen, for none knew how it would
go with her spirit; they feared that the evil demons
had borne her soul to Hell. All had prayed for
her, but there had been no sign, no token of forgiveness.
Nevertheless their prayers were heard and answered.
The Demons Cheated
In the next night, when the great
storm had passed away and the vapours no longer filled
the air, when Fergus had distributed food and wine,
and the oxen had been apportioned to every family,
so that plenty reigned in every house, when only Cathleen’s
castle lay desolate, shrouded in gloom, the faithful
old nurse Oona, watching by the body of her darling,
had a glorious vision. She saw the splendid armies
of the angels who guard mankind from evil, she saw
the saints who had suffered and overcome, and amid
them was the Countess Cathleen, happy with saints
and angels in the bliss of Paradise; for her love
had redeemed her own soul as well as the souls of others,
and God had pardoned her sin because of her self-sacrifice.
“The light beats down:
the gates of pearl are wide,
And she is passing to the
floor of peace,
And Mary of the seven times
wounded heart
Has kissed her lips, and the
long blessed hair
Has fallen on her face; the
Light of Lights
Looks always on the motive,
not the deed,
The Shadow of Shadows on the
deed alone.”