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Authors: Robert Graves

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BOOK: The White Goddess
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H
ANES
B
LODEUWEDD
 

line 142

 

Not
of
father
nor
of
mother

144

 

Was
my
blood,
was
my
body.

156

I
was
spellbound
by
Gwydion,

157

Prime
enchanter
of
the
Britons,

143

When
he
formed
me
from
nine
blossoms
,

149

   
Nine
buds
of
various
kind:

148

From
primrose
of
the
mountain
,

121

Broom,
meadow-sweet
and
cockle
,

   
Together
intertwined
,

75

From
the
bean
in
its
shade
bearing

76

A
white
spectral
army

150

   
Of
earth,
of
earthly
kind
,

152

From
blossoms
of
the
nettle
,

129

Oak,
thorn,
and
bashful
chestnut

[146

Nine
powers
of
nine
flowers,
 

145]

   
Nine
powers
in
me
combined,

149

   
Nine
buds
of
plant
and
tree.

220

Long
and
white
are
my
fingers

153

   
As
the
ninth
wave
of
the
sea.

In Wales and Ireland primroses are reckoned fairy flowers and in English folk tradition represent wantonness (cf. ‘the primrose path of dalliance’ –
Hamlet
;
the ‘primrose of her wantonness’ – Brathwait’s
Golden
Fleece
)
.
So Milton’s ‘yellow-skirted fayes’ wore primrose. ‘Cockles’ are the ‘tares’ of the Parable that the Devil sowed in the wheat; and the bean is traditionally associated with ghosts – the Greek and Roman homoeopathic remedy against ghosts was to spit beans at them – and Pliny in his
Natural
History
records the belief that the souls of the dead reside in beans. According to the Scottish poet Montgomerie (1605), witches rode on bean-stalks to their sabbaths.

To return to the Battle of the Trees. Though the fern was reckoned a ‘tree’ by the Irish poets, the ‘plundered fern’ is probably a reference to fern-seed which makes invisible and confers other magical powers. The twice-repeated ‘privet’ is suspicious. The privet figures unimportantly in Irish poetic tree-lore; it is never regarded as ‘blessed’. Probably its second occurrence in line 100 is a disguise of the wild-apple, which is the tree most likely to smile from beside the rock, emblem of security: for Olwen, the laughing Aphrodite of Welsh legend, is always connected with the
wild-apple. In line 99 ‘his berries are thy dowry’ is absurdly juxtaposed to the hazel. Only two fruit-trees could be said to dower a bride in Gwion’s day: the churchyard yew whose berries fell at the church porch where marriages were always celebrated, and the churchyard rowan, often substituted for the yew in Wales. I think the yew is here intended; yew-berries were prized for their sticky sweetness. In the tenth-century Irish poem,
King
and
Hermit
,
Marvan the brother of King Guare of Connaught commends them highly as food.

The remaining stanzas of the poem may now be tentatively restored:

(lines 110, 160, and 161)

 

I
have
plundered
the
fern
,

   
Through
all
secrets
I
spy
,

Old
Math
ap
Mathonwy

   
Knew
no
more
than
I.
 

 

(lines 101, 71–73, 77
and 78)

 

Strong
chieftains
were
the
blackthorn

   
With
his
ill
fruit,
 

The
unbeloved
whitethorn

   
Who
wears
the
same
suit.
 

(lines 116, 111–113)

 

The
swift-pursuing
reed
,

   
The
broom
with
his
brood
,

And
the
furze
but
ill-behaved

   
Until
he
is
subdued.
 

(lines 97, 99, 128, 141, 60)

 

The
dower-scattering
yew

   
Stood
glum
at
the
fight’s fringe,
 

With
the
elder
slow
to
burn

   
Amid
fires
that
singe
,

(lines 100, 139 and 140)

 

And
the
blessed
wild
apple

   
Laughing
for
pride

From
the
Gorchan
of Maelderw
,

   
By
the
rock
side.
 

(lines 83, 54, 25, 26)

 

But
I,
although
slighted

   
Because
I
was
not
big,

Fought,
trees,
in
your
array

   
On
the
field
of Goddeu
Brig.
 

The broom may not seem a warlike tree, but in Gratius’s
Genistae
Altinates
the tall white broom is said to have been much used in ancient times for the staves of spears and darts: these are probably the ‘brood’.
Goddeu
Brig
means Tree-tops, which has puzzled critics who hold that
Câd
Goddeu
was a battle fought in Goddeu, ‘Trees’, the Welsh name for Shropshire. The
Gorchan
of Maelderw (‘the incantation of Maelderw’) was a long poem attributed to the sixth-century poet Taliesin, who is said to have particularly prescribed it as a classic to his bardic colleagues. The
apple-tree was a symbol of poetic immortality, which is why it is here presented as growing out of this incantation of Taliesin’s.

Here, to anticipate my argument by several chapters, is the Order of Battle in the
Câd
Goddeu
:

 

It should be added that in the original, between the lines numbered 60 and 61, occur eight lines unintelligible to D. W. Nash: beginning with ‘the chieftains are falling’ and ending with ‘blood of men up to the buttocks’. They may or may not belong to the
Battle
of
the
Trees.

I leave the other pieces included in this medley to be sorted out by someone else. Besides the monologues of Blodeuwedd, Hu Gadarn and Apollo, there is a satire on monkish theologians, who sit in a circle gloomily enjoying themselves with prophecies of the imminent Day of Judgement (lines 62–66), the black darkness, the shaking of the mountain, the purifying furnace (lines 131–134), damning men’s souls by the hundred (lines 39–40) and pondering the absurd problems of the Schoolmen:

(lines 204, 205)

 

Room
for
a
million
angels

   
On
my
knife-point,
it
appears.

(lines 167 and 176)

 

Then
room
for
how
many
worlds

   
A-top
of
two
blunt
spears?

This introduces a boast of Gwion’s own learning:

(lines 201,200)

 

But
I
prophesy
no
evil
,

   
My
cassock
is
wholly
red.

(line 184)

 

‘He
knows
the
Nine
Hundred
Tales
’ –

   
Of
whom
but
me
is
it
said?

BOOK: The White Goddess
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