This article is meant to review what is so far my favourite epic of them all. And why? This riveting Celtic epic contains some of my favourite hallmarks:
- Strong women,
- queer/sexually deviant heroes,
- struggles for power,
- a great overarching war sprung up from serious business
- a twist ending that leaves no one indifferent
- and a setting reminiscent of both the Kingdom of Rothgar in the Land of Venden or the Stormlands/Dornish Marches of Westeros (no urban areas at all, warrior nobility residing in Great Halls, gender equality), and the Holy Roman Empire of the Habsburgs (like Westeros as a whole, there are several semi-independent regional kingdoms, each with its own ruling dynasty, laws, etcetera, but all of them united by a common language and culture, and subordinate to a central liege lord [here titled High King]).
The High King (at the time of the story, Conchobar [pronounced "Curkhoor"]) is lord of all the country lying for many leagues around; but every semi-independent province has its own royal dynasty and laws, being a vassal to the central power. One of these vassals is weak-willed Ailill ("Allele"), married (obviously, it was an arranged marriage) to the more powerful and fascinating Queen Medb ("Mayv").
This is a realm still untouched and unsullied by Christianity and by civilization. The solitary and waste places, a lonely hut far from the high-road, the farms and tilled fields, the hill-pastures, some lonely and desolate place, the waste places and the hills, the head of a valley, a little garden lying in a curl of the valley, in the centre of a lawn... The largest communities are all wooden towns. No Catholic priest or mason has landed here yet, and no money has been coined either: farm animals are used as currency, cattle (cows) being especially valuable (the 500-euro notes of the place and era).
This country-esque land is reminiscent, thus, of the Stormlands, and of the Kingdom of Rothgar in the Land of Venden, in the North Country, yet women here are as powerful as men, both at court and on the battlefield; and homosexuality is not condemned, but rather seen as yet another kind of love.
This is a story about war in this realm. About the absurdity of warfare, the power of women, and the weakness of men. And about how warfare and intoxication can break the strongest ties between family, friends, and lovers.
It would make up for a nice shonen OVA, or epic film, or Genesis-style concept album, or all three at once. So bizarre and so philosophical that I cannot give this story enough accolades.
Oh, and I give pronunciation for the names. The "kh" sound in the phonetic transcription is the initial sound in "khmer" or the g in Spanish "general".
The title of the epic?
Táin Bó Cúailnge. Or, in the Queen's English, The Cattle Raid of Cooley.
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Literature/TainBoCuailnge
So the story begins one night in the royal bed of Ailill's Great Hall, where we witness him having a marital spat with his wife, Queen Medb. Yes, this is the Queen Mab mentioned by Mercutio. Only that she was actually human and ten times more badass than Mercutio ever said.
Maybe this marital spat of royalty inspired the Bard for writing MSND. And what are they quarreling for? Not a changeling, but the wealth that both of them have added to their (obviously by their parents arranged) marriage...
Queen Medb ("Mayv") and King Ailill ("Allele") of Connacht are having a bit of a marital spat. Ailill is congratulating himself for having drastically improved his wife's standard of living.
At one point, the Morrigan (goddess of warfare and death, who has also hidden the bull away to prolong the wall) turns into an eel, which Cú Chulainn ties into a bow; into an alpha wolf leading her pack, whose eye he puts out; and into a white cow leading a cattle stampede, whose four legs Cú Chulainn breaks. Later on, an exhausted and thirsty Cú Chulainn, resting after the umpteenth single combat, is given three cupfuls of milk by a one-eyed old crone with both her legs broken, milking a cow with three udders (guess who this old crone is? Right, the Morrigan, retaining the injuries received while transformed!). After he has drained the three glasses, the Morrigan is healed of her injuries and Cú Chulainn gains her protection.
Basically, this is a harsh land of feudal kingdoms where everyone is a badass.
Beginning with Queen Medb herself. Her decision to take away the prized bull (just like Paris's spiriting away of Helen, only without the victim being human and female) kickstarts it all. The sure inspiration for Shakespeare's Mab and Titania, but leading an army into battle herself and as awesome as a warrior queen can be. (Boudicca my arse!) Like Madame Thénardier, Cersei Lannister, and Catherine the Great, she rules her weak and inept husband, aside from her household and her vassal realm, with an iron fist. A warrior, an adulteress, a cougar, and the ruler of the roost, who won't hesitate to intoxicate younger men (the name "Medb/Mab/Maeve" is related to "mead" and to the sweetness of intoxication) to bind them to her will, if not to use her only daughter Finnabar as reward for their pledge for loyalty (Of course all her suitors are killed fighting each other for her hand, and Maeve's daughter dies of a broken heart, racked with guilt at their death...).
Already at the tender age of FIVE (5!), Setanta, the boy who would become Cú Chulainn, routed High King Conchobar's 50-strong youth brigade (of young boys his age, everyone -including Setanta himself- armed with wooden spears and swords, fifty to one... curb-stomping them when he Hulked out!), just like Gustavus did to Tilly at Breitenfeld, impressing His Grace so much that the five-year-old was made commander of the whole unit.
Destined for a short and epic life, and to leave a lovely corpse after a few decades of fighting and living dangerously.
Cú Chulainn was originally called Setanta (conceived when his virgin mother drank from an enchanted spring to quench her thirst, in a completely non-supernatural way), until, as a little boy, he accidentally killed the smith Culainn's one-headed Cerberus of a hound dog and had to replace the beast (which he had choked to death throwing a dramatic hurling curveball in self-defence) himself, guarding the forge from a kennel outside on all fours. Since then, he is Cú Chulainn, literally "Culainn's hound dog." And what's more, he is as straight as a rainbow, i e as straight as Monsieur Gustave or Oberyn Martell (i.e. completely bisexual), while also sharing their panache and chivalry. Only when he is not furious. For, when at least irate, his face is as distorted as his mind is clouded, and the best thing to do is run for your lives. Basically, this young hopeful is the Incredible Hulk and the Gustavus Adolphus of this 'verse. Only that he's far more hot-blooded and made of badassium than any of them.
He may have let the foe cross the border while neglecting his guard duty (for the usual wench of the week), but his quest for redress and all of these epic combats make up for such a dreadful mistake.Cú Chulainn will prove as hard to kill as Rasputin, but he dies as young and as epically as you might have expected; in a none-shall-pass moment, tied to a large stone after a crippling carriage accident so he can keep on fighting, standing tied to this rock right before the Connacht army (thousands to one, and that one a Hulk with a broken spine!) and basically speared Saint-Sebastian-style until -right when the pain is the most intense- a raven, the Morrigan (goddess of warfare and death), comes to take his soul away to much needed respite.
The Gáe Bulg is Cú Chulainn's spear and weapon of choice. Made from sea monster bone (as cool a material for a blade as space rock iron, don't you think?) "The Gáe Bulg had to be made ready for use on a stream and cast from the fork of the toes. It entered a man's body with a single wound, like a javelin, then opened into thirty barbs. Only by cutting away the flesh could it be taken from that man's body." Imagine Fer Diad with the spear, which unfolds like an umbrella, inside his abdomen. That would be like having been rammed with a sharpened umbrella up the rear end...
Scáthach is one of the most interesting female characters in world literature. A "Chironette" of sorts,
this veteran warrior gathers aspiring young heroes in a compound on her island of Skye to train them
in every possible discipline, just like the wise old centaur did on Mt. Pelion in Mediterranean lore. With such a teacher, it comes as no wonder that Fer Diad, Cú Chulainn, Scáthach's own sons and daughter (she's a mentor, a soothsayer, and a mother!), and many others are such badasses like her!
Fergus, Queen Medb's lover and Cú Chulainn's stepfather (also Conchobar's stepfather/usurper), is yet another badass. A sensible and graceful loser, but also able to cut the tops of hills. And to fight with an ersatz wooden sword. The most "present-day" of all the characters, and still another star in this choral star system. No surprise that he's the only sane man in this world of large hams, badassium, and outrageous insanity.
The twist ending, an unexpected draw just like in, for instance, Oberyn Martell vs. Gregor Clegane, is both surprising and interesting because no one expected it at all. Such a coda leaves no one indifferent. This is not a classic war epic ending like the Greeks storming Troy or the French leaving Russia, which everyone expects to happen, but it comes in as a surprise and makes the story even more original and worthwhile.
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