THE HEREDITARY DESCENT.
THE SCOTTISH-IRISH LAW OF DESCENTS.
CHAPTER XI.
"There is a double cause why I should be careful of the welfare of
that people [the Irish]: first, as the king of England, by reason
of the long possession the crown of England hath had of that land;
and also as king of Scotland, for the ancient kings of Scotland are
descended of the kings of Ireland." - Speech of King James I. at
Whitehall, Apr. 21, 1613.
F.R.A. Glover: There
is a passage in Scottish History, connected with Irish
Legend, which appears so extravagant in itself, that it has been
pronounced to be utterly beyond the possibility of reality; it has,
indeed, been stigmatized as much as if it had been invented, merely
to show how far absurdity could be carried or credulity taxed. If
it stood alone, one's wonder might almost be excited that any man
of so much mental culture as to have attained the position of a
chronicler, should have troubled himself to refer to such a poor
story; or, much more, have thought it worth the time occupied in
transcribing it. Therefore Mr. Moore's observations concerning it
are not altogether surprising.
It may, however, be neither untrue nor stupid; and it is, in any
case, doubtless, founded on fact.
When the Picts "first desired that some of the Milesian Women
should accompany them to Scotland," so runs the Legend, "they
pledged themselves solemnly that, should they become masters of the
country they were about to invade, the Sovereignty should ever
after be vested in the descendants of the female line" (Moore, i,
111). In so far there is nothing very extravagant; this was
evidently to secure that the Blood Royal of Scotland should be one
with the Blood Royal of Scotia Major, i.e., Ireland. What follows
is, however, treated in the comment of Mr. Moore, as being too
strong for his digestion. He says, " This matrimonial compact is,
thus, in a spirit far worse than absurd, misrepresented by
O'Halloran. 'They, at the same time, requested wives from Heremon;
engaging, in the most solemn manner, that not only then, but for
ever after, if they, or their successors, should have issue by a
British and again by an Irish woman; that the issue of this last
only, should be capable of succeeding to the inheritance! and which
law continued in force to the days of Venerable Bode; i.e., about
2000 years! A mark of such striking distinction, that it cannot be
paralleled in the History of any nation under the sun!" Vol. ii.
ch. 4, O'Halloran' (Moore i, 111, note).
Yet this story, absurd as it seems, and against which, as the
representation of a supposed state of things, the Historian found
it in his conscience to reclaim as above, must have had some
foundation of fact, on which to have been based; and, indeed, the
chronology corrected, - i.e. for 2000 Years read 1000, - might,
under certain imaginable circumstances, be not only reasonable but
true; and even by us, at this time, be reasonably held, according
to the view of the case taken by the imponents, to be a necessary
imposition. And, seeing that these certain circumstances trench
very closely on the hypothesis of this work, and that the Irish
King would, if such circumstances had existed, have had, on the one
hand, high authority to adduce for the laying down of the
stipulation; and the Scottish, on the other, would have had good
reason for accepting it; it almost becomes a duty in us, for the
credit's-sake of our ancestors, to inquire, whether such
circumstances did exist as, existing, would convert the absurd and
unreasonable into what would have been a perfectly intelligible and
justifiable requirement; and therefore reasonably likely on the
part of the Scottish, to be acquiesced in.
Can any good reason, then, be assigned for the stipulation, on the
part of the Irish Monarch, that could have produced such a willing
acquiescence on the part of the Scottish, as Bede declares to have
been the case in this matter, and to have had such a long
endurance?
It is not necessary, however, it must be remarked, that the
supposed facts, in such imaginable circumstances, should have ever
really existed. It is sufficient to make the story probable, that
the general belief was, that the case was as it was imagined to be.
And it may be remarked, generally, that it is hardly becoming in us
to travel out of the record, for the purpose, as it were, of
impugning the intelligence of our ancestors, by proving to our own
satisfaction that they were mere dupes; when, if we keep strictly
within it - as we ought, at least, not to neglect to do, -
investigation of the marks along the highway which they trode, may
show us, that those whom we think to have been unwise, because they
did not act just as we think we should have done, are, on the
contrary, the wise: .. those, whose acts bear witness for them, and
who do not, like some others, bear witness for themselves, and
"warm themselves in their own sparks" (Isa. 1:11). Credulity is a
poor thing, it may be; and our poor half-civilized ancestors may
have been credulous. Nevertheless, it is astonishing how much
credulity some people have, who are credulous of their own wisdom,
as they compare themselves with "ancient men and their good fathers
who begat them" (Ecclesiasticus 44). A wretched example of this
self-adulation has recently been most painfully presented to the
world! [JML: Does the reader know to what the writer, in 1861, is
referring?]
What good reason, then, - what sufficient reason can be assigned,
for the stipulation, on the part of the Irish King; and the
covenant entered into by the Scottish Petitioners? such as may
account for that willing acquiescence on the part of the latter,
which Bede declares to have been of so enduring a character among
their descendants?
We know that from the time when it was declared that "the Seed of
the woman was to bruise the Serpent's Head," (Gen. 3:15) that "the
man from the Lord" (Gen. 4:1) appointed in the Divine Counsels to
do it, was "the desire of women:" (Dan. 11:37) and that, amongst
the Jews, this promised seed was so earnestly longed for by every
woman individually, that barrenness of the womb was held to be a
curse from the Lord amongst those of whom Messiah could possibly
come. And though, ultimately, the Shiloh, "the desire of all
nations," (Hag. 2:7) was announced as to come of Judah, still, the
feeling had been so strongly implanted in the minds of all, that
"the desire of women" continued a well-known form of expression:
however, in reality, universally recognized, that the field of the
possible occurrence of the Event was narrowed, even among, the
descendants of Judah, to the Root of Jesse: i.e., to the
Descendants of David. (Mic. v. 2.) Consequently, in the event of
any woman of the Seed Royal of David, being granted, in alliance,
beyond the pale of her own people, - (the possibility of the birth
of the Messiah through her womb, being a part of her endowment, and
may it not have been to this, that "the mystery not to be uttered,"
alluded?) - it would be natural, that those who were conscious of
this possibility of Descent, should stipulate, before they granted
the favour solicited, - viz. to spare a portion of the Elect Seed,
- for such terms as they felt would be necessary to secure, that
Descents from her, should take precedence of all other Descents.
For the expected Seed was to be, it is to be remembered, born, a
pre-eminent monarch. And if, on the one hand, those solicited,
explained to those who solicited, why they demanded this; and on
the other hand, those who solicited the favour and the honour,
believed that the others spoke the truth; then it was, would be,
would have been, entirely reasonable, that they who acknowledged
the reality of the declared endowment, should give in to such
demand, and, that all concerned in it, should acquiesce therein.
Now, if we suppose that the Royal Family, or the Chief Race in
Ireland, had reason to believe that they were of the Race from
which Messiah, the true Jodhan Moran, who was to be, according to
their notions, the bearer of the Stone back to the East, in
triumph, was to spring; .. and of which Race, they showed the
Standard, the Standard of Judah, as their own; being also, at the
same time, as they thought, able to affirm, that they had the mark
of the assurance of God's favour in the possession of that Stone,
of which it was declared, with great confidence, that it was to be
with their Race, until some one of those connected with them,
should return with it, to the East, as a Sceptred Monarch, as the
promised Messiah, as the Righteous Judge, the expected Shiloh; -
then, would they not only have been perfectly right in making the
alleged stipulation, but it would have been most culpable in them
to have neglected any thing which they should have thought to be
their duty, towards God and Man, with respect to a due provision
for such a possible Event.
But that is the very hypothesis; and which is assumed to be the
actual fact in the case: not, indeed, that the Messiah was to come
of that Stock, but that, they thought, He might come of it.
The Hebrews, down to the time of the coming of the Messiah, were
universally of opinion that He was to be the restorer of the
Monarchy of Judah, which would be a monarchy in "the East," as the
people in the West would see it, - and a universal King. The
belief, therefore, to the same effect, of these simple ones of the
West, was no more discreditable to them, than was the persistence
in that opinion to the learned hierarchy and fully-civilized
intelligence of Judea at the time of the Advent of Christ. For
entertaining that opinion, it is to be remembered, that the Jews
were never blamed. It was for their persistence in the opinion,
after proof sufficient had been exhibited to them that they
misunderstood the time rather than misread the predictions, that
they were blameworthy: and for which, and their conduct influenced
by such misunderstanding of the time, the Jews of the Crucifixion
and their descendants suffered. [JML: e.g., the Bar Cochba (=son of
the star = Messiah) rebellion and the consequent expulsion of the
Jews from Palestine].
The allegation, therefore, of the ancient Chronicler, becomes, not
a self-evident fiction, credulously accepted by "fanciful Old
Bede," but the credible declaration of a reasonable fact by the
Venerable Historiographer: and, the conversion, by such a
supposition, of what would be utterly extravagant, not to say
nonsensical and inconceivable among rational men, into
reasonableness and propriety, affords strong ground for presuming
that this was the very idea that possessed those who made the
stipulation; and that it was accepted as stated, as the Rule of
Succession, willingly, by those upon whom it was imposed. And the
rumour or declaration that such an extraordinary Rule of Succession
prevailed, and was acted upon, affords strong ground equally for
the belief that the stipulation was made, and by some of the
descendants of some branches of the original stock, maintained, and
to a comparatively late period, acted upon: and an argument, in so
far, that all the parties, respectively, believed that they had
amongst them the favoured Seed of the Perpetual Race to whom had
been assigned, the Throne of David, the Sceptre of Judah, and the
invaluable endowments of Jacob, as inherited from Abraham.
This is an argument that will have little weight with such as treat
the Revelation of God as an elaborate fiction. But the fiction of
Revelation is not now, nor here, the question. It is not, "Were
these people right, to believe so and so?" - but, "Are there fair
reasons for assuming that they did so believe?" If there are, they
acted as has been declared by Venerable Bede. And, so acting, as
they did not do so, without some assignable grounds for their
belief, those grounds are the marks along the highway which show us
by which road our ancestors travelled, and at the same time
indicate the reasons why they took that particular way. And we may
be erring against truth not less than against decency to pronounce
the record nonsense, or the reasonable conduct of the ancients,
incredible folly, because some dare to think Revelation, in which
our ancestors believed, a fiction, and themselves warranted in
denying premisses, on which they formed their conclusions.
Had Mr. Moore had any idea of the real value of this fact, which it
fell in his way to relate and comment on, or of the character and
name of the several persons and things connected with Irish and
Scottish ancient History, and of Tara in particular, of which he
has spoken with less consideration than they deserve, we may be
sure that he would have given the subject all the advantage that it
could have derived from being handled by one of his extensive local
knowledge.
From:
"England, the Remnant of Judah, and the Israel of Ephraim",
written by F.R.A. Glover, M.A., Chaplain to the Consulate at
Cologne. Published by Rivingtons, London, 1861. Based on research
commenced in 1844.