The Poem-Book of the Gael
King of the
de, without
eate the fol
-living, eve
elements, sur
e the oce
h and North, in
contention
ysteries, who
lements, bef
rnal, comely
beginning,
eated lustr
rrogant, not
with its multit
powerful
t make the no
kness, with
the per
the very pe
shioned the
imary stuff o
o
ous forml
ed out of it
without restriction
estuous a
ate and i
d, gloriously
ery shapely
vy, rou
s, ... length a
ed within no
cle of the
obe, f
ly apple, t
med after th
asses about
th currents a
hill wat
sift the cold
-mass of the
the reservoirs[13
eir measures, w
he winds with
dained the
ut uncertainty,
ime winds H
fierce un
our other u
ned aut
the number, wit
nds, twel
oned the colou
them in sa
er, in well-orde
eties of each
, the cle
the very s
he red, sure
meetings wrath d
the grey, t
and the d
, darks
light, easi
ined them ove
wild und
down with
of the four
st, the smi
h, the pure w
the black bluste
, the babblin
the yellow
ite and
the blue, i
and the p
rk brown, hatefu
and dee
e speckled e
ack and
rdered th
osition wa
djustments,
r position and th
sterly, Norther
justed them, He
them with
d them according
rld with many
of them about a
b for the w
ged them in ha
ways, without over-
peaceful wa
r time, t
nts of th
e clear the measur
arth to th
it, clear
thickness of
urse of the s
irmament t
piter, Mer
, the very
bered, kingl
earth to
iles with a
e them in f
that c
in its aer
lled ... wi
nt, deligh
from the mo
clearly, with ab
miles, gre
ve and fo
t upper eth
without greatl
led, without
of the wond
ch, the differenc
firmament
en to calc
mighty! most
he perfec
ess, im
he opinion of t
led the Thir
es, bright
mes five hu
star-run cour
irmament t
ure of t
arth to th
easure of t
firmament
y-fou
rty hund
istance
the fi
e of the w
rth to the
that from th
he depths
vereign lord, v
force set goi
ecure to Him o
em from the
firmament about it, "like a shell encircling an egg." The passage of the sun through the constellations is then described, each of the twelve divisions through which it passes being provide
five items
of every inte
without appearan
ecclesiast
olar month, the
ide, with
, the festivals of
arness, with t
Whitley Stokes
in Senchus mòr, Ancient Laws o
Stokes' reading. Dr. R. T
aning, is a means or instrument for doing a thing. The verb gléasaim="to harness." It seems to have some such meaning here. The winds were
Or "t
e. the
"impur
chus mòr astronomical tract, Anc. Laws o
haps "bo