#The colloquy of Colum Cille and the youth at Carn Eolairg #### Corpus of Electronic Texts Edition ### Background details and bibliographic information The colloquy of Colum Cille and the youth at Carn Eolairg ========================================================= Author: Unknown --------------- ### File Description Kuno Meyertranslated by Kuno MeyerElectronic edition compiled by Ruth Murphy Funded by University College, Cork 1. First draft, revised and corrected.Extent of text: 1030 words#### Publication CELT: Corpus of Electronic Texts: a project of the Department of History, University College, Cork College Road, Cork, Ireland—http://www.ucc.ie/celt (2009) Distributed by CELT online at University College, Cork, Ireland. Text ID Number: T306001Availability [RESTRICTED] Available with prior consent of the CELT project for purposes of academic research and teaching only. #### Sources **Manuscript of the Irish text**2. Dublin, Trinity College Library, H. 3.18 part II, pp. 542-564; 16th century. **The edition used in the digital edition**2. **Kuno Meyer**, The colloquy of Colum Cille and the youth at Carn Eolairg in Zeitschrift für Celtische Philologie. volume 2, Halle/Saale, Max Niemeyer (1899) page 316–317 ### Encoding #### Project Description CELT: Corpus of Electronic Texts #### Sampling Declaration The present electronic text covers Kuno Meyer's translation on pp. 316-317. #### Editorial Declaration ##### Correction Text has been proof-read twice. ##### Normalization The electronic text represents the edited text. Text supplied by the editor is tagged sup resp="KM". ##### Quotation Direct speech is marked q. ##### Hyphenation Soft hyphens are silently removed. When a hyphenated word (hard or soft) crosses a page-break, this break is marked after completion of the hyphenated word. ##### Segmentation div0=the whole text. Paragraphs are marked p. ##### Interpretation Names are not tagged, nor are terms for cultural and social roles. ### Profile Description Created: Translation by Kuno Meyer (1899) #### Use of language ##### Language: [EN] The translation is in English. ##### Language: [LA] Some words are in Latin. ### Revision History * (2009-02-04) Beatrix Färber (ed.) * File proofed (2); markup modified. Header modified; file parsed; SGML and HTML files created. * (2008-01-06) Ruth Murphy (ed.) * Text proof-read (1); structural and content markup added; header compiled. * (2008-01) Ruth Murphy (data capture) * Text keyed in. --- #### Corpus of Electronic Texts Edition: T306001 ### The colloquy of Colum Cille and the youth at Carn Eolairg: Author: Unknown --- p.316 Some say he was Mongan the son of Fiachna. Said Colum Cille to him: ‘Whence has thou come, O youth?’ said Colum Cille. Respondit iuvenis: ‘I have come’, said the youth, ‘from unknown lands, from known lands, that I may know from thee the spot in which knowledge and ignorance have died, and the spot where they were born, and the spot in which they are buried’. Respondit Colum Cille: ‘A question’, said Colum Cille. ‘What was this lake which we see, formerly?’ Respondit iuvenis: ‘That I know. It was yellow, it was flowery, it was green, it was hilly, it was full of drink, it was ..., it was rich in silver, it was full of chariots. I abandoned it(?) when I was a deer before deer, when I was a salmon, and when I was a seal of great strength, when I was a roving wolf, when I was a man, I took up my abode(?) with sails, a yellow sail, it carried a green sail, it drowned a red sail under ... of blood. Women shouted to me. Though I know neither father (nor) mother ... I speak(?) to living men ... to the dead’. Said Colum Cile again to this youth ‘... islands to the west of us, what is underneath them?’ The youth answered: ‘There are underneath them tuneful longhaired men, there are terrible pregnant kine underneath --- p.317 them whose lowing is musical, there are herds of deer, there are horsely horses, there are double-heads, there are triple-heads, in Europe, in Asia, in unknown lands, a green land above its many borders(?) to its estuary(?)’ ‘Enough so far’, said Colum Cille. Colum Cille went aside with him to converse with him and to ask him about the heavenly and earthly mysteries. While they were conversing for half a day or from one hour to the same hour on the next day, Colum Cille's monks were looking at them from afar. When the conversation had come to an end, they suddenly beheld the youth vanishing from them. It is not known whither he went. When his monks asked Colum Cille to make known to them something of the conversation, Colum Cille said to them that he could not tell them even one word of all that he had spoken to him, and he said it was a proper thing for men not be told. Finit.