The Celtic peoples fed on a rich mixture of legend and myth which, in many versions and derivations, were told at the firesides of Europe since before literacy. The Celts' ancestors had come from the... This description may be from another edition of this product.
In Old English "corn" meant "grain",mainly wheat in England, and oats in Scotland [Hard to grow hay in cool,damp Ireland}.
Another great book from Delaney!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 18 years ago
Another one to add to your collection if you're an Irish story-teller and story-sharer like myself. Wonderfully written.
Corn and Maize
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 19 years ago
To the reviewer who found fault with the use of the word "corn" in this book: The word "corn" in Britain and Ireland can refer to wheat or oats. This is what Delaney means (he's Irish -- born in Tipperary). The "corn" you are thinking of would be called "maize" across the pond -- so Delaney's use of the word is not incorrect. I loved this book. ::I enjoyed this book for a while. Until I read "Cormac's Cup of Gold". There I ran across the line "Out on the plains of his royal meath, the green of the early corn waved to the breeze's patterns across the fields." This line then made me angry. Why you might ask? Because from every history class I have ever had, corn is a New World crop and would not have been used or available to the Celts. If this mistake was made in a single sentence, what does it say for the scholarship that went into preparing and writing this book?::
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