Hennessy's "
Chronicum
Scotorum," pp.
O'Hanlon - Lives of the Irish Saints - v5
458
Kerry," sheet 34.
5* Here too is shown a well dedicated to
St. Brendan, as may be seen on the Maps alluded to, on sheet 35.
5? The journey, however, is often accom- plishcd by riding on the mountain ponies of
that district, which the guides are always ready to procure.
^s \ similar rude roadway is traceable at the other side of the mountain, leading from far-famed Keelmalchedar to the same des- tination, a distance of nearly seven mUes.
—
59 See James J. Long's "Mount Saint
Brandon Religious Celebration
Christians uitje regulam dederit. " Ibid.
^'' See " Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Scotorum," tomus i. , lib. ii. , Num. 143,
p. 82.
°5 in " Lignum Vitce," lib. ii.
*^ In a very singular manner, Thomas
Dempster has mention of a St. Brandan, Abbot, and different from him, who was Apostle of the Orcades; and, he is said to have written " Qua;dani Prrecepta ad Fra- tres," lib. i. He flourished, accordino' to Dempster, in 1066, being very dear to Mal- colm H. The Scottish Breviary is quoted as authority for the statement, tliat he was venerated, on the i6tli of May, temples and altars having been dedicated to him through- out Scotland. His Acts have perished, ac- cording to Dempster. See " Historia Eccle- siastica Gentis Scotorum," tomus i,, lib. ii. .
the Scenery, Antiquities, and History of West Kerry,"
pp. 5 to 8.
*°See " Scriptorum Illustrium Majoris
Britanniae, quam nunc Angliam, et Scotiam vocant, Catalogus," cent, xiv. , No. Ixxxviii. , p. 236.
*' This begins with these words: "Con- fiteor tibi summe, increate," &c.
*^ This commences with the vi'ords " Quisquis sapiens hcereditatem uendi," &c. *' This latter work is said to have been dictated to him by an Angel. However, the following words are amusing, as showing forth the peculiar spirit of Bale, in this com- ment : "Sedexecrabilishabeatur (inquitapos- tolus Paulus) angelus ille, quisquis fuerit, qui praeter id quod accepistis, Evangelium, ant
;
:—
May 1 6. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 459
The first burst of the prospect, when here, as seen from the top of the preci- pitous ascent, is startHng in the extreme. The view which meets the eye at the other side is bewilderingly beautiful. We are nearly a thousand feet above the point, from which we surveyed this scene, when on the stage below. We are now standing on an elevation of 3,125 feet. All below and about is rolled out before us—a living map. Brandon Bay and Tralee Bay seem all but united. Thethinlineoflandthatseparatesthemvariestheexpanseofwater, while the bright sandy coasts of each, glowing like burnished gold in the sun's brilliant rays, set off to greater advantage the broad green valleys and the dark brown hills that adjoin. The Samphires and Magherees are small but lovely. Farther on is Kerry Head. Farther still is the lordly Shannon crowned by Loop Head. Farther on, again, Avran Islands seem to realize the fairy idealofHy-Brasail. TheConnemaramountainsrimthehorizontowardsthat point. The Atlantic from Brandon Head out is seen for a vast distance, until the sea and sky get confused. The eye needs rest, after straining to take in this vast prospect. Lofty Slievemish is below that level. Turning to the west, the bay of Smerwick presents itself. Sybil Head, and the pretty hills, known as the the "Three Sisters," the magnificent Blasquet group of islands, and Marhan Mountain—all are seen, and challenge attention. On towards the south, the broad expanse of Dingle Bay, with the most interesting points on the coast to the sparkling Skelligs, and with glimpses so far as Bantry, makeaprospect,whichwecouldlovinglydwellonforhours. Lookinginland, the Tralee, Killarney, and ^Dme oftlie Cork mountains, present a rare illustra- tion of mountain scenery. What a place for contemplation was this ! How
happily could the saintly soul withdraw from the world to commune with God here ! Can we any longer wonder, why Brandon selected this spot for his prayerful Retreat ? Can we not almost fancy again the outpourings of those heavenly feelings, which proceeded from his pure soul, as he knelt in lowly reverence here, on the heights of the eternal hills, and surrounded by the mira- culous works of the Creator's hand ? 59
If we credit the statements of certain writers, St. Brendan devoted some time to literary pursuits, but we are at a loss to verify the record. The following
works are attributed to him, by Bale :^° Confessionem Christianam,^' lib. i.
;
Chartam Cselastis Hsereditatis,^^ lib. i. ; Monachorum Regulam, lib. i. ,^3 and anotherbook. Again,Dempster^*andArnoldWion^snametwootherworks of his : De fortunatis Insulis, lib. i. , and Revelationes de futuris Temporibus. ^^ He is also said to have written some Epistles. Bishop Tanner mentions him as having been the author of many works, and among these, one upon the
——
460 LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [May 16.
Fortunate Islands f^ while, the Abb^ de la Rue with great plausibility con- jectures, that his having made a voyage thither was probably the basis for that legend, which describes him as having voyaged to Paradise. ^^ Allusion is made, likewise, to the Purgatory of St. Brendan, on which . Alexander Necham has composed a Tetrasticon. ^9 A prayer of St. Brendan in Irish has been preserved. '" Wehavealsopublished,theLatinversionofan"OratioS. Brendani,"whichhasthecharacterofaLitany;7i and,itissaidtohavebeen dictated by the Archangel Michael,7^ while the holy Navigator crossed the seven seas, in quest of the Island of Promise, which he sought for seven con- tinuous years. For the singing or recital of this one hundred times, on bended knees, or stretched on the ground, a great spiritual favour was re- served for one's self, or for a friend or familiar, living or dead, viz. , remission ofallsins,andsafetyfromthepainsofHell. 73 InaFranciscanManuscript,74 there is a list of Moral Maxims and Aphorisms, with abriefdescriptionofHeaven and Hell, alleged to have been addressed by St. Brendan to a Bishop Moinenn, after a trance, in which the saint's soul had visited Heaven and Hell. This is theonly"VisioBrendani,"Mr. Hennessyhadseen but,thebeginningof
;
this tract is so defaced, that it is difficult toascertain, whether the Brendan in- tended was St, Brendan of Clonfert, or St. Brendan of Birr. 75 A prophecy of 192 verses, and delivered by way of a Dialogue, between St. Senan of Iniscathy and St. Brendan, is extant. '^ In his age, none of the saints were more respected than was the latter illustrious Abbot; and now, destined for that true Paradise beyond this world, he was about to receive those rewards, which he had been the means of procuring for so many thousands. 77
On a Sunday, while St. Brendan—now very old—was at the convent of
^ See " Bibliotheca Britannico-Hiber- nica," p. 123.
^ See Blackwood's Edinburgli Magazine, vol. xxxix. . No. ccxlviii. , June, 1836. " Tlie Anglo-Norman Trouveres," p. 807.
*>9 This is cited, by some writers, as fol- lows :
" Asserit esse locum solennis fama di- catum
Brendano, quo lux lucida scepe niicat.
Purgandas animas, datur liic transire per ignes,
UtdignK facie judicis esse queant. " 7° Among the Books and Manuscripts, which formerly belonged to Baron Sey- mour of P'iorence, were the following, announced for sale, in London, December, 187 1, by Sothby, Wilkinson and Hodge. They were thus numbered and described, on the Catalogue : 664. Brandaiii Sancti
( Hiberni) Oratio. A Manuscript on vellum. 4to sa. c. XV, There is a Prayer in Italian prefixed. 665. Brandano (I>cato) Devotis- sima Oiati<jne. A Manuscript on vellum, 4t0, SJEC. XV.
7' This has been published, from a Sesso- rian Library MS. , by Most Rev. Patrick Francis Moran, in his "Acta S, Brendani," pp. 27 to 44.
7^ See 15ishop Tanner's " Bibliotheca Bri- tannico-IIibernica," p. 123.
" The statement in our text is in Rubric, in the Sessorian MS.
" Belonging to the Convent, Dublin, at
p. 17, col. I.
'1^ Most likely it was the former, as the
treatise is followed at the end of the column, by a short tract, containing a few notes re- lating to prodigies, which preceded the birth of St. Brendan of Clonfert, son to Fidlug, son of Elchu, son of Delta, who is stated to have l:)cen of the Ciarriagi Luachra, and of the Altraighe Chaille, in particular. The prodigies, such as fire falling from Heaven, &c. , as related in his Life, were seen by his mother and by Bishop Ere.
'* A copy, written by Michael Oge O'Longan, in or after the year 1799. is in the lietham Collection of Manuscripts, in the Royal Irish Academy, folio paper, vol. iv. , pp. 50 to 53.
" The old French metrical Chronicle thus expresses it :
"Quantvintaltensqueil finat, Ralat se Deus lui destinat
Al regne de Dcu, en alat il,
Par lui en vunt plusur que mil. "
These lines, which have been here quoted from that curious mediaeval romance, are thus rendered into English metre : —
" And when at length that time did come
For God to call him to his home, To that blest kingdom did he go.
To which iie pointed thousands
moe. "
'^ See Most Rev. Patrick I'rancis Moran's
num. 134, p. 76.
May i6. ] LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. 461
Enachduin, after he had offered the Most Holy Sacrifice of the Body and Blood of Christ, the venerable senior said to his sister, and to his monks, who were present : " My dear ones, to-day the Lord my God calls me to eternal happiness, and I adjure you, in the name of Christ, to carry out my instructions, if you desire my benediction. Conceal my death from the people here, so that my corpse may be brought to my city of Clonfert. There, I have selected the place of my resurrection. If these people here learn about my deatli, I should be buried in the spot I have not desired. Act now, as I direct : place my corpse on a waggon, and disguise other matters so well, that only one of my monks shall accompany it, while he shall answer to all asking, that he is conveying the property of Brendan to his city of Clonfert. Only one shall question him, in a troublesome manner. A soldier, named Currynn, blind in the left eye, shall meet him on the way, and more astute than others,
' Tell me what you so secretly convey in the waggon,' and moreover, he shall search it. When seeing my dead body, he shall cry out, in a threatening manner, ' Leave here with us the Saint of God. ' And he shall say to my corpse, ' In our place shalt thou be gloriously interred, so that thy resurrection shall be there, O Saint of God. ' Then, the brother shall look into an adjoining trench, and he shall there see a mass of pure gold. He shall offer it to the soldier,
saying,' Receive,Oman,thegoldsentbytheAlmighty,andleaveusfree. ' And then, the soldier shall answer, ' Indeed, I shall not. ' The monk shall reply, * Allow us to depart, and thou shalt have power in thy nation, as also thy posterity after thee. ' But, incredulous, he shall still refuse. Then, the monk shall say, 'You shall not obtain life eternal, unless you permit the saint of God to be buried in the place he has chosen, and I give you a certain sign,
man, for in thy heart, on meeting us, thou hast resolved to hold an inherit- ance, by killing your own relations. ' Then, that soldier, hearing tliis from another, and having a consciousness of its truth, shall know, that the pro- phecy of the monk must be verified. He shall then allow the monk to go away in security, with my body. And, the brother shall cordially bless him, while afterwards going on his way rejoicing. " The sister of our saint and his monks, hearing these directions and prophecies, declared they should observe thecommandsofthevenerablesenior. ? ^ Then,themostholyBrendanblessed his sister and his monks. Rising up, he entered the house and stepped on the lintel, saying with his eyes fixed on Heaven : " Into to thy hand, O Lord, 1 commend my spirit, release me, O Lord, my God. " Afterwards, he de- parted this life.
We are told, moreover, by certain writers, that St. Brendan flourished in the year 560,79 or 566. ^° The date for his death is variedly set down at 570,^^ 571,^^ and 575-^3 The year 576 is noted, however, by someof our annalists,^* as that in which St. Brenainn, Abbot of Cluain-ferta-Brenainn, was taken from this world, and when he sought rest among the blessed. Others have it, at
he shall say to the brother, not believing him, these words
:
this, or during the succeeding, year. ^s
"ActaSancti Brendanf," Vita S. Brendani, cap. xxviii. , pp. 24, 25.
79 See John Bale's" Scriptorum Illustrium Majoris Britannias,"cent. xiv. , num. Ixxviii. , p. 236.
^° See Bishop Tanner's " Bibliotheca Bri- tannico-Hibernica. " p. 123.
^' According to the Bodleian copy of the Annals of Inisfallen.
^^ According to the Annals of Ulster and of Tigernach. See Rev. Dr. O'Conor's
According to a very general state-
" Rerum Hibernicarum Scriptores," tomus iv. , p. 26, and tomus ii. , p. 15 ! •
^3 According to the Dubhn copy of the Annals of Inisfallen.
^» See William M.
Hennessy's " Chronicum Scotorum," pp. 60, 61. Also Dr. O'Dono- van's " Annals of the Four Masters," vol. i. , pp. 208, 209.
*^s gee Sir James Ware, " De Scriptori- bus Hibernise," lib. i. , cap. ii. , p. 12.
"^^ See Ussher's " Britannicarum Ecclesia-
LIVES OF THE IRISH SAINTS. [May i6.
ment. ^^ however, on Sunday, the i6th day of May, a. d. 577,^^ he died at Enachdune, or Annaghdown. ^^ Notwithstanding the various fatigues of body and of mind he underwent, this holy Abbot reached an advanced age. It is related, that St. Brendan was ninety-three or ninety-four years old, at the time of his departure from this world. ^9 Another authority gives him even a more advanced age. when he was called to bliss. 9° In pursuance of those direc- tions he had given, his remains were placed on a waggon, and only one monk was sent to guide it. All that St. Brendan had predicted before his death happenedtohimontheway. Threedayswereoccupied,inconveyingthe remains of the illustrious St. Brendan from Eanachduin, to his city of Clon- iert. There, a great number of holy men assembled, and a honourable place was assigned for the interment. His body was deposited in the ground. Psalms and funereal hymns were sung. The sacred remains were thenceforward held in great veneration. 9' His body is said, by all our ancient writers, to repose at Clonfert,9^ which is incorrectly written Cluainarcha93 by John of Tin- mouth, by John Capgrave, and by John Bale. 9» The latter states, that this event occurred, while Maglocum 95 reigned in Britain.
In all our ancient Martyrologies and Kalendars, the festival of this illus- trious and holy servant of Christ is invariably marked, at the i6th of May. In his Feilire,9^ at this same date, St. ^ngus the Culdee notes the summonsofBrendanofCluainintothevictorious,heavenlykingdom. 97 In the Martyrology of TallaghjS^ at the j6th of May, the only mention made of him is the simple entry, giving the name Brendin of Cluana Ferta. 99 By Marianus O'Gorman, he is celebrated, as being without one particle of pride. '°° The Martyrology of Christ Church '°^ has him entered, as "Sanctus Bren- danus Abbas et Confessor. "'"^ In Convseus list of Irish Saints, St. Brandan, Abbot in the Happy Islands, is noted, likewise, at the same date. Again,
462
rum Antiquitates," cap. xvii. , p. 494. Also, Index Chronologicus, ad a. d. dlxxvii. ,
p. 532.
*^ WTiile the Annals of Ulster have the
alternative date of 576, Tighernach has an alternative date 577, for this event. See Rev. Dr. O'Conor's " Rerum Hibernicarum Scriptores," tomus iv. , p. 28, and tomus ii. , p. 153.
^ See Bishop Tanner's " Bibliotheca Bri- tannico-Hibernica," p. 123.
^ "II mount fort age, selon quelques- unes vers I'an 577, d'autres metteut sa mort dix ans apres. "—Heylot's " Hisloire des Ordres Monastiques, Religieux et Militiares, tomeii. , chap, xx. , p. 145.
who commenced his reign in 781. "The History of Great Britaine," Book vii. , chap, xii. , pp. 320, 321.
^^ In that copy contained, in the " Leab- har Breac," the following stanza occurs :
CojAipm bT\eii<MiTO CluAtid IpnmbichlAich nibuoiTDAij IDa]' GAIT) ch<Ni\iii5 p]\bAile V^il &x\ h. SiiAtiAig.
It is thus translated, by Dr. \Miitley Stokes : " The calling of Brenann of Cluain into the eternal, victorious kingdom : the holy death
of Carncch the mighty the splendid feast of . Sunnach's descendant. "—"Transactions of the Royal Irish Academy," Irish Manu- script Series, vol. i. , part i. On the Calen- dar of Oengus, p. Ixxx.
9°Thus, Sir James Ware quotes an entry
from the Manuscript Annals of Inisfallen, in
his possession, but with an emendation :
" Quies Brendani Cluainfertensis 97. [al. 94]
annoKtatissua;. "—"DeScriptoribusHiber- ofBrendanofClonferttotheKingdomof
ni? e. " lib. i. , cap. ii. , pp. 12, 13.
9" See Most Rev. Patrick Francis Moran's
" Acta Sancti Brendani," Vita S. Brendani, cap. xxix. , pp. 25, 26.
9' See Dr. O'Donovan's " Annals of the FourMasters,"vol. i. . pp. 208,209.
9' See Ussher's " Britannicarum Ecclesia- rum Antiquitates," cap. xvii. , p. 494.
'>' See " Scriptorum Illustrium Majoris Bri- tanniic," cent, xiv. , num. xxviii. , p. 236.
'5 John Speed calls him Malgo Canonus, and ranks him as the ninth King of Britain,
God.
"^ Edited by Dr. Kelly, p. xxiv.
^9 Xhe Franciscan copy has b|\enT)ini
CUiAin Ve|\c<\.
'"^ See Most Rev. Patrick Francis Moran's
"ActaSanctiIkendani,"Prefacevii.
"" As Edited by John Clarke Crosthwaile, A. M. , and by Rev. Dr. James Henthorn
Todd,
"^^
See Introduction, pp. xlvii. , Ixii.
'°^ See O'Sullevan Beare's " Historic Catholicx Ibcrnist Compendium," tomus i. ,
9? a gloss adds, that this means the calling
:
—
lib. iv. , cap. x. , li. , xii. , pp. 48, 50, 52,
53-
'"* He quotes Petrus de Natalibus, in
" Chronica Mundi. "
'°s See wliat has been stated already, in
the First VoUime of this work, at that date, and in Art. viii.
"^ See the Bollandists' " Acta Sancto- rum," tomus iii. , Maii xvi. De S. Brendano seu Brandano Abbate de Cluainfertensi in Hibernia, cap. ii. , num. 14, 15. p- 603.
'°7 Edited by Drs. Todd and Reeves, pp. 128, 129.
Abbatis. "—" Mai'tyrologium Romanum Gregorii XIII. , jussu editum UrbaniVIII. et dementis X. auctoritate recognitum ac deinde anno mdccxlix. Benedict! XIV. , Lahore et Studio auctum et castigatum. Editio Novissima SS. D. N. Pio Papa IX, auspice et patrono in qua Sanctorum et Bea- torum extant Elogia pro omnibus etiam Regularibus, a S. Rituum Congregatione ad hrec usque Tempora approbata, p. 7O) Romse, 1878, foL
109 <i Petrus vero abbas loco laudato multa apocrypha accumulat, et vita ejus sanemul- tis affaniis et fabuHs intrusis est referta, ut in censura sua indicat Joannes Molanus. " Thomas Dempster's " Historia Ecclesias- tica Gentis Scotorum," tomus i. , lib. ii. , num. 143, p. 82.
"° See the Bollandists' " Acta Sancto- rum," tomus iii. , Maii xvi. De S. Brendano seu Brandano Abbate Cluainfertensi in Hibernia, cap. ii. , num. 13, 14, p. 603.
'" See " Britannia Sancta," part i. , p. 289.
"^ See " Lives of the Fathers, Martyrs and other principal Saints," vol. v. , May xvi.
"3 See at p. 137.
'"^ See Bishop Forbes' " Kalendars of Scottish Saints," pp. 13, lOO, 116, 152, 199, 237-
''S Thus : (16) xvii. Apud Hiberniam Kl. Jun. Natale Sancti Abbatis et Confessoris Brendini.
"* Thus : xvii. Kal. Sci brandani abbis et Conf. cu reg chi.
"7 Thus : xvii. Junii Brandani ab.
"^ Thus "xvii. KL. Junij.
