GAELIC STORYTELLER
TALES RECORDED FOR ALL TIME TRADITION STILL LINGERS In the remote island communities of the Outer Hebrides, where the tradition of oral folk' .lore lingers on, the last descendants of the line of storytellers which stretches back ' into unrecorded history are now telling their Gaelic sagas into a recording machine. During the winter evenings, recounting the old stories was once the sole form of recreation. Today here and there it fights a losing battle against novels, broadcasting, and, in the bigger communities, films. In Barra, where 100 storytellers used to enthral its 2000 inhabitants, now only James Mackinnon, an 80-year-old fisherman, keeps the art alive. In Benbecula, another octogenarian, Angus MacMillan, still presides at the ceilidhs, the house-visiting with which the islanders beguile the long nights. He is the last link in the island’s chain of storytellers, and until recently it seemed that the heritage would pass away with him. But an unexpected disciple arrived on the island. In Angus’s stone cottage 32-year-old Calum Maclean, a member of the Irish Folklore Commission, was found at his immense task of preserving the old man’s stories from oblivion. Angus cannot write Gaelic —folklore was handed down by word of mouth—so he dictates into a recording machine. Afterwards Maclean listens to the records and laboriously transcribes the stories in Gaelic on to paper, thus recording them for all time for a wider audience than Angus ever reached in his long life on the island. For eight years Maclean has been touring the remoter areas of Scotland and Ireland with his machine. He spent last winter in Barra with James Mackinnan. While there he heard the fame of Angus MacMillan.- He now believes that he has stumbled on the most remarkable storyteller in his experience and probably the greatest surviving, exponent of Jiis art in Europe.
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Bibliographic details
Opunake Times, 22 August 1947, Page 4
Word Count
304GAELIC STORYTELLER Opunake Times, 22 August 1947, Page 4
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