I recently ran across this clip on youtube, where Paddy Doherty explains the tragic death of his son on the Late Late Show; where upon seeing him in hospital, was so overcome with grief, that he drank his blood as a comfort, so that his son would be forever with him.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jRmiDakoNMgMany traveler customs are inherited from earlier Irish culture, the drinking of a relative's blood is not unheard of as a means of dealing with grief and providing comfort. For instance, in Caoineadh Airt Uí Laoghaire 'The Keen of Art Ó Laoghaire', a lament attributed to Eibhlín Dhubh Ní Chonaill, aunt of the emancipator Daniel O'Connell, a verse is mentioned where Eibhlín supposedly drank the blood of Airt, her dead husband, after he was killed at the hands of Abraham Morris, Sheriff of county Cork, and his men in 1773.
In the sixth verse Eibhlín discovers the body of her dead husband by a small furze bush and proceeds to drink his blood:
"Do bhuaileas go luath mo bhasa
is do bhaineas as na reathaibh
chomh maith is bhí sé agam,
go bhfuaras romham tu marbh
Cois toirín ísil aitinn,
gan Pápa gan easpag,
gan cléireach gan sagart
do léifeadh ort an tsailm,
ach seanbhean chríonna chaite
do leath ort binn dá fallaing –
do chuid fola leat 'na sraithibh;
is níor fhanas le hí ' ghlanadh
ach í ól suas lem bhasaibh."
Translation:
[Eibhlín upon getting up on the horse]
I (Eibhlín) clapped my palms quickly
and I took off with haste
as hard as I could,
'till I found you dead before me
by a low furze-bush
with no Pope or bishop
or clergy or priest
to read a psalm over you
but a spent old woman
who spread her cloak corner
where your blood streamed from you,
and I didn't stop to clean it
but drank it from my palms.
My question is has anybody else ever encountered something similar while they were reading folklore?
Cian
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Is Fearr súil romhainn ná ḋá ṡúil inár ndiaiḋ
(Amhlaoibh Ó Súilleabháin)
Please wait for corrections/ more input from other forum members before acting on advice
I'm familiar with Munster Irish/ Gaolainn na Mumhan (GM) and the Official Standard/an Caighdeán Oifigiúil (CO)