Authors: Robert Graves
Tags: #Non-Fiction, #Mythology, #Literature, #20th Century, #Britain, #Literary Studies, #Amazon.com, #Mysticism, #Retail
Red was the most honourable colour for dress among the ancient Welsh, according to the twelfth-century poet Cynddelw; Gwion is contrasting it with the dismal dress of the monks. Of the Nine Hundred Tales he mentions only two, both of which are included in the
Red
Book
of
Hergest
:
the
Hunting
of
the
Twrch
Trwyth
(line 189) and the
Dream
of
Maxen
Wledig
(lines 162–3).
Lines 206 to 211 belong, it seems, to
Can
y
Meir
ch
,
‘The Song of the Horses’, another of the Gwion poems, which refers to a race between the horses of Elphin and Maelgwyn which is an incident in the Romance.
One most interesting sequence can be built up from lines 29–32, 36–37 and 234–237:
Indifferent
bards
pretend
,They
pretend
a
monstrous
beast
,With
a
hundred
heads
,A
spotted
crested
snake
,A
toad
having
on
his
thighsA
hundred
claws
,With
a
golden
jewel
set
in
goldI
am
enriched;And
indulged
in
pleasureBy
the
oppressive
toil
of
the
goldsmith.
Since Gwion identifies himself with these bards, they are, I think, described as ‘indifferent’ by way of irony. The hundred-headed serpent watching over the jewelled Garden of the Hesperides, and the hundred-clawed toad wearing a precious jewel in his head (mentioned by Shakespeare’s Duke Senior) both belonged to the ancient toadstool mysteries, of which Gwion seems to have been an adept. The European mysteries are less fully explored than their Mexican counterpart; but Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Wasson and Professor Roger Heim have shown that the pre-Columbian Toadstool-god Tlalóc, represented as a toad with a serpent head-dress, has for thousands of years presided at the communal eating of the hallucigenic toadstool
psilocybe
:
a feast that gives visions of transcendental beauty. Tlalóc’s European counterpart, Dionysus, shares too many of his mythical attributes for coincidence: they must be versions of the same deity; though at what period the cultural contact took place between the Old World and the New is debatable.
In my foreword to a revised edition of
The
Greek
Myths
,
I suggest that a secret Dionysiac mushroom cult was borrowed from the native Pelasgians by the Achaeans of Argos. Dionysus’s Centaurs, Satyrs and Maenads, it seems, ritually ate a spotted toadstool called ‘fly-cap’ (
amanita
muscaria
),
which gave them enormous muscular strength, erotic power, delirious visions, and the gift of prophecy. Partakers in the Eleusinian, Orphic and other mysteries may also have known the
panaeolus
papil
ionaceus,
a small dung-mushroom still used by Portuguese witches, and similar in effect to mescalin. In lines 234–237, Gwion implies that a single gem can enlarge itself under the influence of ‘the toad’ or ‘the serpent’ into a whole treasury of jewels. His claim to be as learned as Math and to know myriads of secrets may also belong to the toad-serpent sequence; at any rate,
psilocybe
gives a sense of universal illumination, as I can attest from my own experience of it. ‘The light whose name is Splendour’ may refer to this brilliance of vision, rather than to the Sun.
The
Book
of
Taliesin
contains several similar medleys or poems awaiting resurrection: a most interesting task, but one that must wait until the texts are established and properly translated. The work that I have done here is not offered as in any sense final.
C
ÂD
G
ODDEU‘The Battle of the Trees’.
The
tops
of
the
beech
tree
Have
sprouted
of
late,Are
changed
and
renewed
From
their
withered
state.
When
the
beech
prospers,
Though
spells
and
litaniesThe
oak
tops
entangle,
There
is
hope
for
trees.I
have
plundered
the
fern,
Through
all
secrets
I
spy,Old
Math
ap
Mathonwy
Knew
no
more
than
I.
For
with
nine
sorts
of
faculty
God
has
gifted
me:I
am
fruit
of
fruits
gathered
From
nine
sorts
of
tree
–Plum,
quince,
whortle,
mulberry
,
Raspberry,
pear,Black
cherry
and
white
With
the
sorb
in
me
share.
From
my
seat
at
Fefynedd,
A
city
that
is
strong,I
watched
the
trees
and
green
things
Hastening
along.Retreating
from
happiness
They
would
fain
be
setInforms
of
the
chief
letters
Of
the
alphabet.Wayfarers
wondered,
Warriors
were
dismayedAt
renewal
of
conflicts
Such
as
Gwydion
made;Under
the
tongue
root
A
fight
most
dread,And
another
raging
Behind,
in
the
head.The
alders
in
the
front
line
Began
the
affray.Willow
and
rowan-tree
Were
tardy
in
array.
The
holly,
dark
green
,
Made
a
resolute
stand;He
is
armed
with
many
spear-points
Wounding
the
hand.
With
foot-beat
of
the
swift
oak
Heaven
and
earth
rung;‘
Stout
Guardian
of
the
Door
’,
His
name
in
every
tongue.
Great
was
the
gorse
in
battle,
And
the
ivy
at
his
prime;The
hazel
was
arbiter
At
this
charmed
time.Uncouth
and
savage
was
the
fir
,
Cruel
the
ash
tree
–Turns
not
aside
a
foot-breadth
,
Straight
at
the
heart
runs
he.The
birch,
though
very
noble
,
Armed
himself
but
late:A
sign
not
of
cowardice
But
of
high
estate.
The
heath
gave
consolation
To
the
toil-spent
folk
,The
long-enduring
poplars
In
battle
much
broke.
Some
of
them
were
cast
away
On
the
field
of
fightBecause
of
holes
torn
in
them
By
the
enemy
’s
might.Very
wrathful
was
the
vine,
Whose
henchmen
are
the
elms;I
exalt
him
mightily
To
rulers
of
realms.Strong
chieftains
were
the
blackthorn
With
his
ill
fruit,The
unbeloved
whitethorn
Who
wears
the
same
suit
,The
swift-pursuing
reed
,
The
broom
with
his
brood
,And
the
furze
but
ill-behaved
Until
he
is
subdued.
The
dower-scattering
yew
Stood
glum
at
the
fight’s
fringeWith
the
elder
slow
to
burn
Amid
fires
that
singe,
And
the
blessed
wild
apple
Laughing
in
prideFrom
the
Gorchan
of Maelderw
,
By
the
rock
side.
In
shelter
linger
Privet
and
woodbine
,Inexperienced
in
warfare
,
And
the
courtly
pine.
But
I,
although
slighted
Because
I
was
not
big
,Fought,
trees,
in
your
array
On
the
field
of Goddeu
Brig.