Once there was a witch named
Ceridwen, and she had two children. The one, her
daughter, was as beautiful
a child as you could ever hope to see; the other,
her son Morfran, was so ugly, ill-favored
and stupid that he sickened everyone who saw him.
Ceridwen was grieved that
Morfran was so horrible, and resolved by her
magic arts to make him into such a
great bard that no one would mind his ugliness.
She began to cast a great spell. Many were the
plants that she cast into her cauldron, many the
incantations said over it. An old blind man named
Morda was set to keep the fires burning beneath
it, assisted by a young boy, Gwion.
The Cauldron of Wisdom and
Inspiration must be kept boiling for a year and a
day, and then the first three
drops from it would impart ultimate knowledge to
the one who drank them. But the rest of the
liquid would be deadly poison.
Long labored Ceridwen,
roaming far to find the rare and exotic herbs she
required, and so it chanced that
she fell asleep on the last day of the spell. The
boy Gwion was stirring the brew when three
drops flew out onto his thumb, and they were
scalding hot, so that he thrust it into his mouth to
stop the burning. Instantly, he had the wisdom
and inspiration of ages, and the first thing that
occurred to him was that Ceridwen would be very
angry.
He ran away from the house
of Ceridwen, but all too soon he heard the fury
of her pursuit. Using his new
magical powers, he turned himself into a hare.
She turned into a greyhound bitch, and gained ever
more on him. He came to a river, and quick as
thinking became a fish. She became an otter. He
leapt from the water, and in the middle of his
leap became a bird of the air. The witch Ceridwen
became a hawk. In desperation, he looked down and
saw a pile of wheat. He dived, landed, and
as it scattered he turned into a single grain.
Then she landed and became a hen, and pecked at
the grain until she had swallowed Gwion.
Soon after, Ceridwen found
herself with child, though she had lain with no
man. When she realized
that the baby was Gwion, she resolved to kill it,
and Morfran wanted her to also, in revenge for
his not becoming a bard. In due course, the babe
was born, and Morfran would have slaughtered
him on the spot, but the mother said no, because
it was the most beautiful child ever seen. But
she took him and, sewing him in a bag, set him
adrift on the ocean.
Now there was at that time
in Gwynedd, a lord named Gwyddno Garanhir, who
had a son, Elphin, that
was reckoned the most unlucky man alive. There
was a weir on Gwyddno's land that had always
had a huge catch of salmon in it on May Eve, so
Gwyddno resolved to let Elphin have it to help
turn his luck.
So it was that on May Eve,
Elphin and two of his father's men went to the
weir. Net after net he pulled, but
there were no fish.
"Why, you've turned the
luck of the weir," they growled."Just
wait," said Elphin, "I haven't finished
yet. There might still be something..."
There were no fish. But just as they were about
to go, Elphin noticed something caught on a pole
of the weir. He waded out and brought it back.
"More bad luck,"
grumbled the men. "There may be a treasure
inside." Elphin replied as he carefully slit
open the greased leather bag he held. To his very
great astonishment, he saw the forehead of a
baby, so white and beautiful that it seemed to
shine. "A radiant brow!" he exclaimed.
(tal iesin in Welsh.) "Yes, Taliesin, that
will do well enough," said the baby. Elphin was
so surprised he nearly dropped it. The men
muttered and made the sign against evil. He put the
child in front of him on the horse and they rode
for home. While they rode, Elphin's thoughts
were gloomy, as he realized they still had no
salmon. But the babe in front of him spoke, saying
"Fair Elphin, cease your lament! Swearing
profits no one. It is not evil to hope nor does
any man see what supports him, Not an empty
treasure is the prayer of Cynllo, Nor does God
break his promise. No catch in
Gwyddno's weir was ever as good as tonight's.
Fair Elphin, dry your cheeks! Such sorrow
does not become you, Although you consider
yourself cheated Excessive sorrow gains nothing,
Nor will doubting God's miracles."
"Although I am small, I
am skillful. From the sea and the mountain, From
the river's depth God gives
His gifts to the blessed. Elphin of the generous
spirit, Cowardly is your purpose, You must not
grieve so heavily. Better are good than evil
omens. though I am weak and small, Spumed with
Dylan's wave, I shall be better for you than
three hundred shares of salmon."
"Elphin of noble
generosity, Do not sorrow at your catch. Though I
am weak on the floor of my basket, There are
wonders on my tongue. While I am watching over
you, no great need will overcome you. Be mindful
of the name of the Trinity and none shall
overcome you."
"How can this be, that
you, a babe, can talk?" marveled Elphin.
Again Taliesin replied with a poem. "Firstly
I was formed in the shape of a handsome man, in the hall
of Ceridwen in order to be refined. Although
small and modest in my behavior, I was great
in her lofty sanctuary. While I was
held prisoner, sweet inspiration educated me and laws
were imparted to me in a speech which had no
words; but I had to
flee from the angry, terrible hag whose outcry
was terrifying.
Since
then I have fled in the shape of a crow, since then I
have fled as a speedy frog, since then I
have fled with rage in my chains, - a roe-buck
in a dense thicket."
"I have fled in the
shape of a raven of prophetic speech, in the shape
of a satirizing fox, in the shape
of a sure swift,
in
the shape of a squirrel vainly hiding. I have fled
in the shape of a red deer, in the shape
of iron in a fierce fire, in the shape
of a sword sowing death and disaster, in the shape
of a bull, relentlessly struggling.
"I have fled in the
shape of a bristly boar in a ravine, in the shape
of a grain of wheat. I have been
taken by the talons of a bird of prey which
increased until it took the size of a foal.
"Floating like a boat
in its waters, I was thrown
into a dark bag,
and
on an endless sea, I was set adrift. Just as I
was suffocating, I had a happy omen, and the
master of the Heavens brought me to
liberty."
By the time he finished,
they had arrived at the court of Gwyddno. Everyone
crowded round to see how big the catch was.
Elphin held up Taliesin for them all to see. "What
is that? Where is the catch?" asked Gwyddno. "Here
is the catch, father, see, I have caught a
bard.""Well, what use is that? Don't
you have a good wife, who can bear you many
strong sons of your own?"
"He will get more
profit from me than the weir ever gave you,"
said Taliesin.
"Can you speak, and you
so small?" asked Gwyddno.
"Indeed, I am better
able to answer than you are to question me."
claimed the baby.
Then Gwyddno asked him what
else he had to say, and Taliesin replied with
another poem.
SoElphin rejoiced,
that his luck had turned, and gave Taliesin to
his wife to care for. She loved the baby very much, and
time passed and he grew up.
The king of the land at that
time was Maelgwn, a somewhat vain man who
surrounded himself with toadies
and fawning sycophants. The year that Taliesin
turned thirteen, Elphin received a summons from
the king, demanding his presence at the Christ
Mass feast at midwinter. Elphin would much
rather have stayed home with his wife and foster
son, but as a dutiful subject (and a relative of
the king besides) he went.
As they all sat around the
high table, the other men vied with one another
to see who could praise Maelgwn the
most. Elphin was an honest man, and he couldn't
honestly say that the king's bards were better
or the queen a fairer woman, than those waiting
at his home.
"What, so silent,
Elphin? Can our
loyal subject then find nothing to praise his
king for?" said Maelgwn.
"Well, my lord,"
said Elphin,
"I would say that though I am not a king,
yet my wife is as fair and as virtuous as any woman in the
kingdom - and my bard the best in Gwynedd."
"Insolence!"
roared Maelgwn.
"Throw
him in our deepest dungeon! Let him be chained
there until the falsity of his monstrous claim can be
shown once and for all! And we think we know just
how to do that..."
Taliesin was out skating. As
he bent down to take the skates off, he glanced
at a patch of ice, and fell into a
trance, where he saw all that had befallen
Elphin. When he woke, he rushed home to tell Elphin's
wife.
Maelgwn had a son named
Rhun, a lecher so revolting that to be seen with
him would tarnish a woman's
reputation beyond repair. This son he sent to
Elphin's home, to seduce his wife and show the
falsity of his claim. When Rhun came to the gate,
he was welcomed, if not warmly, then civilly, by
young Taliesin. He showed the prince into the
hall, where sat a woman dressed in finery, with rings
upon her fingers and a golden torque.
"How delicious!"
thought Rhun. "I'll enjoy this, I can
tell."
She made him welcome and
they supped together. Rhun poured cup after cup
of wine for her,
and
foolishly she drank it all. Soon she was giggly
and silly, and she assented to his request to withdraw
with him to some place more private. Rhun waited
until she fell asleep in a drunken stupor, then
tried to remove the ring from her plump hand. It
would not come off, so quick as lightning he
cut the finger off, ring and all. Laughing, he
rode back to his father's house. Maelgwn was
delighted with his son's performance. He called
for Elphin to be brought forth.
"Well, cousin, how say
you now? The prince Rhun has had your wife with
her willing cooperation. Do you
persist in your stupid claim that she is so very
fair and virtuous?"
Elphin paled, and feared for
his wife, for he did not really believe that any
woman, let alone she, would lie with Rhun by
choice. "How do you know this, my
king?" he asked.
"My son's word is good
enough for me - and should be for you, too."
"I'm sorry, my king,
but even the money-lenders ask for solid proof
where the prince Rhun is concerned."
The king growled, but the
courtiers were, this once, murmuring in agreement
with Elphin.
"Since that's not
enough for you, see here is her finger. Do you
deny that this is her ring?"
Elphin looked closely at the
severed digit. "Indeed, my lord, it is her
ring, but I do deny that it's on her
finger."
"How so, knave?"
roared the enraged monarch.
"For three reasons, my
king. First, my wife is a small woman, and this
ring sits loosely on her thumb, but it's jammed
so tightly on this finger that it won't come off.
Second, ever since I've known her, my wife has
trimmed her nails every Sabbath Eve, and this
nail hasn't been trimmed this month, I'd say.
Third, we keep servants for kneading bread dough
- I certainly don't require my lady wife to do
it. And yet you see under this nail and in the
creases of the finger, traces of the rye dough
this hand was lately kneading. I fear that the
prince has despoiled some innocent kitchen wench,
but whoever it was, it wasn't my wife."
The court cowered before
Maelgwn's fury. "You won't get away from it
that easily!" Maelgwn declared. "If
your bard is so great, let him come and compete
with ours. Now take him away, before we get tired
of him."
Hurriedly, the guards took
Elphin back to the cell. Taliesin was
already seeing about provisions for the journey,
while Elphin's wife looked after the poor
nine-fingered maidservant. He arrived at the
court two days later, and slipped through the gates. He
made his way to the throne room and sat in the
corner. When the king's bards filed in, he pouted
his lips at them and played blerwm, blerwm on
them, and the bards stood still and played
blerwm, blerwm on their lips instead of praising
Maelgwn. Maelgwn finally ordered a guard to
strike Heinnin Fardd, his chief bard. This broke
their trance enough that Heinnin Fardd could
explain to Maelgwn that there was a devil in the
form of a child who had cast a spell on them.
Then Maelgwn had Taliesin
brought out, and questioned him. "I have
come to salvage Elphin's honor and his freedom.
Taliesin am I,
Primary chief poet
Am
I to Elphin.
And
my native country
Is
the place of the Summer Stars.
John
the Divine
Called
me Merlin,
But
all future kings
Shall
call me Taliesin.
I
was nine full months
In
the womb of Ceridwen.
Before
that I was Gwion,
But
now I am Taliesin.
I
was with my king
In
the heavens
When
Lucifer fell
Into
the deepest hell.
I
carried the banner
Before
Alexander.
I
know the names of the stars
From
the North to the South.
I
was in Caer Bedion
Tetragrammaton.
I
accompanied Heon
To
the vale of Hebron.
I
was in the canon
When
Absalom was slain.
I
was in Llys Don
Before
the birth of Gwydion.
I
was patriarch
To
Elijah and Enoch.
I
was there at the crucifixion
Of
the merciful Mabon.
I
was the foreman
At
the construction of Nimrod's Tower.
I
was three times
In
the prison of Arianrhod.
I
was in the ark
With
Noah and Alpha
I
witnessed the destruction
Of
Sodom and Gomorrah.
I
was in Africa
Before
the building of Rome.
I
came here
To
the remnant of Troy .
I
was with the Lord
In
the manger of the ass.
I
upheld Moses
Through
the water of Jordan.
I
was at the Cross
With
Mary Magdalene.
I
received the muse
From
Ceridwen's cauldron.
I
was a harping bard
To
Deon of Lochlin.
I
have gone hungry
For
the Righteous One.
I
was at the White Mount
in
the court of Cynfelyn.
In
stocks and in fetters
For
a year and a day.
I
was in the larder
In
the land of the Trinity.
And
no-one knows whether my body
Is
flesh or fish.
I
was instructor
To
the whole universe.
I
shall be until the judgement
On
the face of the Earth.
I
have sat in the perilous seat
Above
Caer Sidi.
I
shall continue to revolve
Between
the three elements.
There
is a marvel in the world
Which
I cannot reveal.
"And all this makes you
think you're better than my bards," sneered
Maelgwn, "My bards, who have trained
for twenty years."
"They are as nothing
beside me," declared Taliesin.
"Well then, my
lord," said Heinnin Fardd, so as not to be
left entirely out of the proceedings, "certainly
a contest will decide the matter."
"Why not? Me against
all the king's bards. The contest - to compose a
poem on the wind." Taliesin was serenely
confident. "Of course the king must
judge," fawned Heinnin Fardd.
"Who better?"
"And this contest will
take place in twenty minutes," Maelgwn
announced. (He was getting bored.)
"Twenty... my lord, I
entreat you, I implore you, how can an epic be
composed in -" Heinnin Fardd was desperate.
"Just do it, get on
with it, I'm getting sick of this."
Heinnin Fardd and the king's
bards huddled in the corner, consulting scrolls
of rhymes and metaphors.
Every so often, one let out a yelp of
frustration. Taliesin lounged on the floor,
laughing at their
discomfiture. When the time was up, the king's
bards stood in a line before the throne and
bowed.
"O greatest of kings,
hear our song.
Blerwm,
blerwm,
blerwm,
blerwm,
blerwm,
blerwm,
blerwm,
blerwm."
"Knaves! Fools!
Miserable swine! Was it for this that I paid you
in gold and precious gems?" The court had
never seen Maelgwn so angry. The bards groveled
in the rushes.
"Mighty king, it was not our
fault! It's that demon child." Taliesin,
admittedly, was smirking in a most irritating
fashion.
"So it's my turn?"
he asked. He stood up straight and began. While
he sang, a great wind arose and buffeted
the castle, shaking it to its foundations.
Maelgwn was afraid, and he called for Elphin to be
brought out. As soon as Elphin was brought out,
Taliesin stopped the wind, and sang a new song
that caused Elphin's chains to fall away from his
ankles and wrists. Then he cried out to Elphin's
wife to enter the hall, and she held her hands up
so that everyone could see that she had ten
fingers. Maelgwn was angrier than ever.
"You think you're so
great. You're nothing! I bet my horses are better
than yours, anyway." Taliesin smiled and
whispered to Elphin, "Take him up on it - I
know how to make us win."
"I accept, my
king."
"Then let there be a
horse race."
Elphin led the other two
home. On the appointed day, they returned,
leading a lame old horse. Maelgwn
rubbed his hands in glee. The horses started -
Taliesin riding old Dobbin. As each horse of the
king's overtook him, he struck it on the rump
with a holly twig, then let it fall. As the
king's horses got further and further ahead, no
one could understand why Taliesin was still
smiling. He slowed down and dropped his cap -
again, no one knew why.
Old Dobbin reached half-way,
and Taliesin stopped him for a rest. The king's
horses had long
since
passed them on the way back. Dobbin started back.
As the king's horses passed the discarded
holly twigs that Taliesin had struck them with,
they stopped, reared up on their hind legs, and
began to dance. The whole court was in fits of
ill-concealed laughter, except Maelgwn and Rhun. Taliesin and
Dobbin wandered past them to the finish line.
Maelgwn saw no alternative to letting them go. On
the way home, Taliesin bid Elphin stop where he
had dropped his cap. He had some men dig a
hole at the spot, and they dug up a great chest
full of treasure. "Truly,
Taliesin, never could I regret the day I pulled
you out from the weir," said Elphin as they rode away.