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Many
years ago on a
particularly clement
evening, my good
friend Rich and his
wife Diane hosted a
summer party at
their handsome row
house in
Brooklyn’s
Park Slope.
Most of the adults
mingled inside, but
the children played
in the spacious yard
behind the house. A
point of pride for
Rich, the
rectangular backyard
rolls away from the
rear stairs on a
carpet of lush grass
with a
well-maintained
garden and leafy
canopies of
old-growth oaks
overhanging the far
end.
On that magical
evening, with stars
visible in the
Brooklyn sky and
fireflies adding
their own
intermittent
constellations, the
sward unfurled its
green invitation all
the way to the Old
Sod itself. As it
grew dark, I stepped
outside to enjoy the
air, filled with the
shrieks of
frolicking kids.
One of my honorary
nieces, Cassandra,
spotted me and
rushed the whole
gang over to me.
Exhausted from an
hours-long game of
tag, they wanted me
to tell them a
story. With my young
audience sitting
around me on the
stairs, I told them
the following tale:
In ancient Ireland there was a great hero named Oisín [pronounced “Oo-sheen”]. His
name meant
“Little
Deer” and he
was the son of Finn
McCool, the
mightiest, most
valiant hero of them
all, renowned for
his strength and
good deeds. Like his
father, Oisín was
strong and brave, a
mighty warrior who
was always fair and
just.
Oisín
enjoyed walking
along the beach on
Ireland’s
coast, the sea
stretching endlessly
into the West. What
he didn’t know
was that he was
being
watched—by a
goddess!
Murmurs and whispers
circulated for a
second among my
young friends.
Niamh[the
anglicized spelling
counterintuitively
pronounced
“Neev”] was a goddess who lived across the ocean in a place called Tír na nÓg [Teer-na-nogue],
which literally
means “land no
age”—the
undying land, a
realm where no one
grows old. She had
watched Oisín, who
was so handsome and
strong, and
she’d fallen
in love with him.
So
one day, she
appeared to him.
Oisín suddenly saw
this beautiful
goddess with golden
hair riding toward
him over the waves
on a magnificent
white horse. She
galloped up to him
and from atop her
horse she said:
“I am Niamh of
Tír na nÓg. Come
away with me and be
my husband in the
land without sorrow
or death.”
Enchanted by her
beauty and beguiled
by her offer, Oisín
leapt up on her
horse and the two
rode west, far
across the waves to
Tír na nÓg.
The
gods greeted Oisín
with celebration and
wonderment. Every
night they held a
great feast in his
honor with music and
singing afterwards.
The songs of the
gods were so happy
and beautiful that
Oisín cried tears
of pure joy. Then
Oisín would sing
and his songs,
filled with sorrow
and loss, made the
gods weep for
sadness.
Life
went on this way for
Oisín and Niamh and
they were very
happy, but one day
Oisín said to
Niamh: “I miss
Ireland. I miss the
places I walked and
hunted. I miss the
cheerful company of
my father Finn and
our fellow
warriors.”
Niamh
now told him:
“Oisín, time
passes differently
in Tír na nÓg.
You’ve been
here a very, very
long time. What
seems years to you
has been centuries.
You can never set
foot on
Ireland’s soil
or else the ages you
have lived in Tír
na nÓg will catch
up with you.”
At this turn in the
tale, my young
audience showed
their extreme
concern with widened
eyes and open
mouths, as well as
little audible
intakes of breath.
Oisín
persisted.
“There must be
some way I could go
back just to look at
my old land.”
Niamh
grudgingly admitted
there was a way.
“Yes, you
could ride across
the waves on my
horse but you
mustn’t get
off the horse! Ride
along
Ireland’s
strand if you will,
but if your feet
touch its earth you
will pay for all the
time you’ve
enjoyed here.”
And
so Oisín rode
across the waves and
soon saw
Ireland’s
shores, but as his
horse trotted along
the beach he began
to notice that his
land had changed.
Villages now stood
where none had been
before. Mighty
castles—the
homes of his dearest
friends—lay in
ruins and, judging
by the moss grown
over the stones, for
quite some time.
How long had he been away?
Judging by the
expressions around
me, Oisín
wasn’t the
only one who
wondered.
Then
Oisín saw people in
the distance working
at something. When
he rode to them,
they looked up and
gasped in
astonishment! Who
was this striking
young man dressed in
the costume of an
ancient warrior of
Ireland?
Oisín
asked the men what
they were doing and
they explained that
they were lifting
stones from this old
ruin to build a
wall. Now Oisín
felt lightheaded
with a realization
that began to dawn
on him—this
ruin was once his
home. But before he
could give it
another thought, the
hero in him
compelled him to
jump down from his
horse to help the
men at their task.
Now several kids sighed “Oh no.”
The
men cried out with
fright at what
happened next.
Instantly, the
handsome young
warrior turned into
a wizened old man
bent over with age,
his wrinkled face
lost beneath a bushy
beard and long,
brittle hair, all
white as clouds.
Silence.
The fireflies
emitted their yellow
beacons like so many
lighthouses. Stars
twinkled. A slim
crescent of a moon
could now be seen.
Twilight enveloped
the garden, suddenly
grown vast and
exquisitely
mysterious.
Then came the questions:
“Why did Oisín get off his horse?”
“How come Niamh didn’t stop Oisín?”
“So how long was Oisín in Tír na nÓg?”
“Did he really miss Ireland that much?”
“Uncle Patrick, tell us that story again!”
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