The children of Lir
Manage episode 444001523 series 3606146
The Children of Lir.
Lir, a powerful Irish chieftain, had married the eldest of three
beautiful maidens, and in course of time they had four fair
children--a daughter and three sons. Sad to say, the mother died
when they were still very young; and Lir married again. His new
wife, who was named Eva, was also very beautiful, but, though no one
knew it, she was a very wicked sorceress. She could not bear to see
her husband go to fondle and play with his children, and at last she
determined to do away with them altogether. So one day she enticed
them to a lonely spot among the mountains, near a smooth lake, and,
leaving them to play together, she tried to bribe her servants to put
them to death. But they would not, and so she returned to them
determined to do the deed herself. Now, when she reached the spot,
and saw how fair they looked as they ran races about the valley, her
heart failed her, and she could not do this wicked thing. But she
was determined that they should not return to their father Lir, so
she called to her an ancient Druid who lived in a cave near that
spot, and persuaded him to use his enchantment to obtain her wish.
When the Druid had advised her what to do, she called the little ones
to her, and said to them: "Children dear, how warm you are with your
running! Come and let me bathe you in Lake Dairbreak, that you may
be cool and refreshed."
The children were delighted to do so, and were soon splashing about
in the clear water, but no sooner had the water covered them than by
the magic spells of Eva and the Druid they were all four changed into
swans.
"Birds shall ye be," chanted the Druid from the bank as the change
took place, "until, long ages hence, ye hear the voice of a Christian
bell."
So the four beautiful milk-white swans swam sadly away over the
smooth water; and when the cruel Eva saw what she had done, she
feared to face her husband, and repented bitterly of her evil deed.
But it was too late. All she could do was to grant to the birds the
use of their native speech, their human reason, and the power of
singing plaintive fairy music, so sweet that those who heard it
should be soothed and calmed, however sad and angry they had been
before.
A terrible punishment overtook their wicked persecutor. When the
King of that country heard of her cruel deed, he sent for her, and
asked: "What shape of all others on the earth, or below the earth, or
over the earth, do you most abhor?" She replied: "A demon of the
air."
Then the King pronounced judgment on her: "A demon of the air shalt
thou be till the end of time."
Meantime hundreds of years passed away, and still the beautiful swans
swam up and down their lake and looked for deliverance. Sometimes
they took flight, and entered the Western Sea, and sailed around the
coast; but all Ireland was in heathen darkness, and never the sound
of a Christian bell was heard.
The dwellers of those coast lands used to visit the shore in crowds
to hear their sweet music and watch their graceful movements. But
after a time they were caught by the strong current of Mull, and this
drove the fair birds into the stormy seas between Erin and Alba.
Here they endured many a woe; for sometimes they were separated from
one another by the storm and darkness, and sometimes they were almost
frozen to death in the icy floods. And so, tormented by the restless
waves and the chill winds of winter, they waited for three hundred
years. But one soft spring morning, when the ice-floes had drifted
away and the wind sang gently over the mountains, as they floated
along their own Lake Dairbreak, they heard the sound of a Christian
bell. For St Patrick had come to Ireland with the glad Gospel news,
and everywhere men were building churches, and hastening to fill them
with worshippers.
So when the sound of the distant bell floated over the water, the
spell was broken, and the Children of Lir returned to their own
shapes. But they had lived so long that, after they had learnt the
Christian faith, they were glad to lie down and rest for ever. They
were all buried in the self-same tomb, and after their death men made
songs about them; and every Irish boy and girl to this day loves to
hear the story of the Swan-Children of Lir.
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