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124e91af1490904f9c538129256b6219
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<p><strong>The Oireachtas.</strong></p>
<p><strong>Third Festival.</strong></p>
<p>The third<em> Oireachtas </em>was held in the Rotunda, Dublin on Wednesday, June 7, 1899, opening with the competitions which took place during the earlier part of the day, and which were attended by large numbers of interested spectators. At four o'clock an informal reception of delegates took place in the Gresham Hotel. Here the sweet accents of the native tongue could be heard on all sides. The public festival, presided over by His Eminence Cardinal Logue, commenced at half-past seven o'clock. The Round Room of the Rotunda, the largest public hall in the city, was filled by an enthusiastic audience, which followed the proceedings throughout with the keenest interest, testifying to the power which the movement for the preservation of the native speech has become in the land. Those who had previously doubted the possibility of saving our language, there had all doubts dispelled, feeling assured that a movement which, in spite of so many difficulties, had in so short a time grown to the proportions of which the assembly there present was an evidence, must surely in the end achieve success. True, this was not the first year of the <em>Oireachtas</em>, but it may be said that the festivals of 1897 and 1898 were merely trials. Now, however, it was felt by all that the <em>Oireachtas </em>had become an institution, and that its influence for good in the fight for the language would be enormous.<br /><br />Amongst those present on the platform or elsewhere in the hall were: -Right Rev. Monsignor Gargan, D.D., President St. Patrick's College, Maynooth; Very Rev. Monsignor Walsh, Rev. Edmund Hogan, S.J., F.R.U.I., D.Litt.; Douglas Hyde, LL.D., President Gaelic League; John MacNeill, BA, Professor of Irish, St. Patrick's Training College, Drumcondra; David Comyn, Alfred Webb, Dr. J. P. Quinn, John Hogan, Manager, <em>Gaelic Journal</em>; Miss Norma Borthwick, Hon. Sec., Oireachtas;<em> </em>Miss Edith [end of page]</p>
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Page in booklet
Dublin Core
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Title
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Proceedings of the third <em>Oireachtas</em> festival held in 1899
Subject
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<em>Oireachtas na Gaeilge</em>, Irish cultural and literary festival
Description
An account of the resource
<p>An extract (page 9) from the proceedings of the third <em>Oireachtas</em> festival in Dublin in 1899. The <em>Oireachtas</em> was established by the Gaelic League in the Revival period and continues to this day to be a celebration of Irish language, literature, song and dance.</p>
<p>The style of the text is illustrative of the style parodied in lines 897-938 of the Cylcops episode in <em>Ulysses</em>.</p>
Creator
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S.J. Barrett (editor)
Publisher
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Original: The Gaelic League
Digital: https://archive.org/stream/1899imtheachtapr00gaeluoft#page/8/mode/2up
Date
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1899
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Format: PNG image
File size: 506 KB.
Dimensions: 376x571.
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Posted by Eoin Mc Evoy
Cyclops
Gaelic League
Oireachtas
style
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711b0f5aa64eb48076a5365a5f0fd0bd
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<p><strong>Chapter II. Cael and Credhe</strong></p>
<p>Now as to Finn, when it was shown to him that the enemies of Ireland were coming, he called together the seven battalions of the Fianna. And the place where they gathered was on the hill that was called Fionntulach, the White Hill, in Munster. They often stopped on that hill for a while, and spear-shafts with spells on them were brought to them there, and they had every sort of thing for food, beautiful blackberries, haws of the hawthorn, nuts of the hazels of Cenntire, tender twigs of the bramble bush, sprigs of wholesome gentian, watercress at the beginning of summer. And there would be brought to their cooking-pots birds out of the oak-woods, and squirrels from Berramain, and speckled eggs from the cliffs, and a salmon out of Luimnech, and eels out of the Sionnan, and wood-cocks of Fidhrinne, and otters from the hidden places of the Doile, and fish from the coasts of Buie and Beare, and dulse from the bays of Cleire.</p>
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Page of a book
Dublin Core
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Title
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Gods and Fighting Men
Subject
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Irish legend
Description
An account of the resource
<p>An extract from Lady Augusta Gregory's <em>Gods and Fighting Men</em>, an English translation of select Irish legends. The extract provides a detailed description of the foodstuffs Finn and his band of Fenian warriors discovered at the White Hill in Munster.<em><br /></em></p>
<p>The extract is from the exposition of Chapter II of Book III and begins halfway down page 207. It is illustrative of the style parodied in Cyclops, 12:68-85.</p>
Creator
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Lady August Gregory (translator)
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Original: John Murray, Albemarle Street, W., London
Digital: https://archive.org/stream/godsfightingmens00greguoft#page/206/mode/2up
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Translation published 1904
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Format: PNG image
File size: 431 KB
Dimensions: 336x555
Language
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English
Source
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Gaelic oral tradition: Fenian cycle
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Posted by Eoin Mc Evoy
Cyclops
Fenian Cycle
Lady Gregory
legend
prototype for parody
revival
style