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Clans and Families of Ireland and Scotland
IV. The Kingdom of the Picts: Christianity, Paganism and the Making of Gaelic Scotland


ancestor so described is of central epic importance to the founding of a Heroic-age kingdom. Thus we have Drust, son of Erp, a traditional, prehistoric king of the Picts (prehistoric in the sense that he flourished before the advent of written records in the sixth century) also described in the Pictish regnal lists as one who "fought a hundred battles." A similar epithet is probably at the root of the traditional "twelve battles of Arthur," and therefore these should not be interpreted literally (as they have been, often at great length) by writers and historians unfamiliar with the oral nature of Heroic society. However, such a stock phrase from oral tradition might be, and probably was, incorporated into a half-literate tradition of dynasic propaganda in the sixth and seventh centuries. The point is that we should avoid the anachronistic assumption by which we apply the modern literate mind’s bias towards literal history automatically on the oral or half-oral mind of the past.

The political struggles in Scotland between Episcopalianism and Presbyterianism, which culminated in the final defeat of the Stuart kings in 1746, reflect in part the deep cognitive tension between the oral and the literate mind. With the coming of the Scottish Reformation in the sixteenth century, the collective mysticism of a highly syncratic church was replaced by literal interpretations of scripture by individuals. The old Celtic pattern of literate priests serving an oral culture was assailed by the literate mind of the Lowlander—just as the easy cognitive flow of grammatical parataxis, which served the cultural mind, was replaced by the implosive neurosis of complex sentence subordination, which served the individual. The age of reason was attacking the Gothic past, setting the stage for the literary dichotomy between Neoclassical form and Romantic transcendentalism (to the Romantic mind, Shelley’s Neo-Platonic prophet was replaced by the minions of a harsh bureaucracy).

In the Gaelic linguistic culture of the Scottish Highlands can be found the last Germano-Celtic bastion of the unrepentant oral mind—a mind once shared by cultures to the south. Thus the mysticism of the Celt is foregrounded to the literate mind. The proud spirit of the Gael, Irish and Scottish, recorded by Samuel Johnson in his Journey to the Western Islands of Scotlandthe Western Islands of Scotland, is aptly reflected in the dying words of the celebrated Gaelic bard Aodhagan 0 Rathaille, who, though destitute in the wake of the destruction of Gaelic Ireland, refused to recite his songs to any but the sons of kings.

The Gaelic Heroic ethos comprised an aesthetic principal based on accumulated, orally transmitted cultural knowledge and perspectives. The oral word carried this meaning simultaneously on several levels: the literal level of the cultural present, the symbolic level of art and heraldry, and the archetypal and mythic level of depth psychology. Ultimately, the vitality of the Gaelic Heroic culture was shattered not by the military defeat of the Jacobite clans at Culloden in 1746—but by the introduction of a money economy from England into an agrarian-pastoral society in which the cow had always been


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