The sorrows
1st ed.
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Word Count
71,000 words, Guess
Page Count
284 pages
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL59262M
- ISBN-100312870280
- OCLC Control Number43185965
- Internet Archivesorrows00eick
- Library of Congress Control Number99087476
and 2 more
- LibraryThing174757
- Goodreads2889463
Classifications
- DDC813/.54
- LCCPS3555.I23 S6 2000
- LCCPS3555.I23S6 2000
Description
This book includes three stories that symbolically portray Ireland's cultural heritage. They tell the stories of: three brothers who must pay for murdering an enemy; an evil stepmother who turns her husband's four children into swans; and a king who tries to force a princess to marry him. The first story, "The Fate of the Children of Tuirenn," is the Irish equivalent of the Greek legend of Jason and the Argonauts. It's the story of three brothers who must pay a "blood-fine" for murdering an enemy of their clan. This tale reflects the great sorrow of civil war, which has plagued Ireland for centuries. The second story, "The fate of the children of Lir ," which tells of an evil stepmother who turns her husband's four children into swans for 900 years, after which they are released from their fate. This story symbolizes the triumph of Christianity over paganism as well as the tragedy of the Irish being driven from their homeland. The third story, "The exile of the sons of Usnech," is more commonly known as "The Story of Deirdre." In this tale, Conchobor, the Red Branch King, tries to force Deirdre to be his wife, symbolizing England's attempt to force the Irish into servitude and rendering Deirdre a tragic symbol of both ancient and modern Ireland.
Subjects
Topics
Genres
- Adaptations
- Fiction
Series Statement
- Ulster cycle ;
- bk. 3?
Other Editions
- The sorrows
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Collected, edited, translated, and annotated by J. MacDougall. With an introd. by Alfred Nutt, and 3 illus. by E. Griset. London, D. Nutt, 1891.
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