THE

HISTORY OF MUSIC LIBRARY

CHAPTER VI.

MEDIEVAL HARPS AND HARPERS

In the Church of St. George, Boscherville, in Normandy, there is a fine bas-relief exhibiting an eleventh-century concert. It forms the capital of a pillar in this old abbey-church, and the reader can best judge of the mediaeval instruments from the subjoined illustration.

Sir Samuel Ferguson refers to the appearance of a harp on the cover of an Irish manuscript in the Stowe Library, which harp is a cruit, having a fore-pillar and Sounding board. There is also a drawing of a harp of twenty-nine strings on a relic-case containing the Fiacail Phadraig (tooth of St. Patrick), dated 1350, formerly belonging to Sir Valentine Blake of Galway.

 

MEDIEVAL ORCHESTRA (ELEVENTH CENTURY).

Under date of A.D. 1100, the Annals of Ulster (Rolls Series) chronicle the death of Ferdomnach the Blind, Lector of Kildare, who is described as a Cruiterechta, or “Master of Harping”. Some years later—namely, in 1119—there is a record of the death of Dermod O'Boylan, “Chief Music Master of Ireland”.

John of Salisbury, about the year 1168, declares that in the Crusade of Godfrey of Bouillon, in 1099, there would have been no music at all had it not been for the Irish harp, or, as Fuller says, “the consort of Christendom could have made no music if the Irish harp had been wanting”.

Brompton, writing in the reign of Henry II, praises the skill of Irish musicians, especially the performers on the cruit, timpan, and bag-brompton pipe. Above all, he was astonished at the superior playing of the Irish harpers, their “animated execution, sweet and pleasing harmony, quivering notes, and intricate modulations”, etc.

But even Brompton is eclipsed in eulogy by that strenuous Welsh ecclesiastic known as Giraldus Cambrensis, or Gerald Barry, Archdeacon and Giraldus Bishop-elect of St. David’s, who came over Cambrensis to Ireland in 1183. He thus writes of the on the School of Irish Harpers:—

“They are incomparably more skilful than Irish any other nation I have ever seen. For Harpers their manner of playing on these instruments [cruit, clarsech, and timpan], unlike that of the Britons, to which I am accustomed, is not slow and harsh, but lively and rapid, while the melody is both sweet and pleasing. It is astonishing that in such a complex and rapid movement of the fingers the musical proportions [as to rhythm] can be preserved, and that throughout the difficult modulations on their various instruments the harmony—notwithstanding shakes and slurs, and variously intertwined organising—is completely observed”.

The Latinity of Giraldus is not easy to give in an English dress, but he evidently wishes to display his knowledge of musical technicalities as then in vogue. He describes “the striking together of the chords of the diatesseron [the fourth degree of the scale] and diapente [the fifth] introducing B flat”, and “the tinkling of the small strings coalescing charmingly with the deep notes of the bass”. He concludes as follows:—"They delight with so much delicacy, and soothe so softly, that the excellence of their art seems to lie in concealing it2."

In 1225, the Annals of Loch Cé, in an obituary of Aedh O'Sochlann, Vicar of Cong, described him “a master of vocal music and harp-making, and the inventor of a new method of tuning”. This entry is important as showing that this clerical harper had devised a new harp as well as a new plan of tuning the national instrument. The pity of it is that no particulars are given as to the new method of tuning.

FIFTEEN-STRINGED HARP (twelfth century).

During the twelfth century, in England, there are some references to harps and harpers. Passing over Blondel, the minstrel of Richard I, we find in Madox’s History of the Exchequer that, in 1183, Geoffrey the Harper had a pension from the Benedictine monks of Hyde, near Winchester. Again, Abbot Samson, of Bury St. Edmunds, entertained harpers and minstrels; and, in 1242, there is a record of a payment ordered to Richard the Harper, and a pipe of wine to Beatrice, the wife of the said Richard.

Burney says that “all the most ancient poems, whatever was their length, were sung to the harp on Sundays and on public festivals”. He adds that Robert de Brun (1303) sings thus of Grosteste, Bishop of Lincoln (1235-1253):—

 

“He loved much to hear the harp,

For man's wit it maketh sharp;

Next his chamber, beside his study

His harper's chamber was fast the by.

Many times by nights and days

He had solace of notes and lays”.

 

Prince Edward (afterwards King Edward I) took his harper Robert with him to the Holy Land, in 1270, who, when his royal master was wounded at Ptolemais, “rushed into the apartment during the struggle and killed the assassin”. Certain it is that in the State Papers of the fifth of Edward I (1276), a payment is entered on the Exchequer Rolls for Robert, the King’s harper.

There is an illustration of a king playing on a small portable harp in Strutt’s Dresses of the English People. This figure of the thirteenth century is represented as having the harp resting on his knees, and the number of strings may be taken as fourteen. From the illustration it is evident that this instrument is a replica of the cruit, a small Irish harp, and it is beautifully ornamented.

Not so long ago it was generally believed that the inclusion of the harp in the arms and coinage of Ireland dated only from the reign of Henry VIII, but the fact is that the national instrument appears on coins issued by King John and Edward I; and, in 1251, we read that “the new coinage was stamped in Dublin with the impression of the King’s head in a triangular harp”. A harp was originally the peculiar device of the arms of the Leinster province, and it was subsequently applied to the whole kingdom of Ireland—namely, in heraldic language, “on a field vert, a harp or, stringed argent”.

Ralph Higden, a distinguished historiographer at the beginning of the fourteenth century, describes the music of the Irish harp as “musica peritissima”; and John de Fordun, a Scottish priest, who wrote in the same century, says that Ireland “was the fountain of music in his time, whence it then began to flow into Scotland and Wales”.

The European fame of the Irish harp was well maintained at the close of the thirteenth century, as is attested by the following quotation from Vincenzo Galilei, who gives Dante (1265-1321) as his authority:—

“This most ancient instrument was brought to us from Ireland (as Dante says), where they are excellently made, and in great numbers, the inhabitants of that island having practised on it for many and many a century. Nay, they place it in the arms of the kingdom, and paint it on their public buildings, and stamp it on their coinage, giving as a reason their being descended from the royal prophet David. The harps which these people use are considerably larger than ours, and have generally the strings of brass, and a few of steel for the highest notes, as in the clavichord. The musicians who perform on it keep the nails of their fingers long, forming them with care in the shape of the quills which strike the strings of the spinet”.

Some Irish minstrels and harpers accompanied King Edward I in his expedition to Scotland, in 1301, and again in 1303.

Let us now turn to England. The future King Edward II wrote, as Prince of Wales, to the Abbot of Shrewsbury, “asking that a famous fiddler in the Abbot's household should teach the prince’s rhymer the minstrelsy of the crowdy, and that the rhymer might be housed at the convent whilst he was learning”.

In 1309, harpers attended the installation ceremony of Ralph, Abbot of St. Augustine’s, Canterbury, and in 1310, Robert, harper to King Edward II, was present with other minstrels at York, when a sum of forty marks was distributed among the musicians. On April 14th, 1311, Edward II granted a safe conduct under privy seal in favour of Raymond Cousin, “the King's minstrel”, who was going on a pilgrimage to Santiago. In 1329, there is allusion to Thomas Morsel, the harper, whilst another entry has reference to Alexander Williamson, the bishop’s harper.

At the battle of Bragganstown, near Ardee (Co. Louth), on June 10th, 1329, was slain Maelrooney O'Carroll, Chief Harper of Ireland. The Irish Annals describe him as pre-eminent in his art, and he is said to have played on a double harp. One contemporary chronicler styles him a timpanist as well as harper, and “the inventor of chord music”, whilst the annalist of Clonmacnoise adds that “no man in any age ever heard or shall hereafter hear a better harper”.

Among the Records of the Guildhall of London there is a document to the effect that, about the year 1334, minstrels were wont to be employed by the London Corporation at their entertainments. It is well, however, to point out that jongleurs, or minstrels, must not be confounded with harpers. The latter body looked down on the minstrels, who, as a rule, were Bohemians of a not too savoury character. At the same time it must be borne in mind that the French minstrels, in 1331, built the Church of St. Julien des Menestriers. The Germans, too, had their minstrels: the minnesingers were highly-cultivated amateur musicians, whilst the meistersingers were the professional minstrels.

In the well-known advice to a jongleur by De Colenson, who died in 1211, it is mentioned that a skilful jongleur should play on the citole as well as on the mandore and monocnord. Chaucer, in his Knight’s Tale (1375), alludes to “a citole” in the hands of a fair dame; whilst Wickliffe writes of “harpes and sitols, and timpans”. (2 Samuel VI.)

The citole was a form of cruit, and the name seems derived from cithara, although it may be more immediately from cither. Strangely enough the late Mr. Hipkins gives it as from cistella = a small box, meaning a box-shaped psaltery, although he admits that the name probably indicates the rota. It continued in use as late as 1545, and may be regarded as a high-class crowd or crotta. Edward III had a citoler in his band of music, as also a fidler; and in the Squyr of Lowe Degre, written circ. 1480, it is alluded to under the name of sytolphe, whilst among instruments of the harp genus are mentioned the getron, santry, rote, and ribible.

 

CHAPTER VII.

ENGLISH, SCOTCH AND IRISH HARPERS

 

The Lamont Harp

Under King Richard II, in 1380, John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster, erected a court of minstrels at Tutbury, in Staffordshire, and granted a charter empowering the minstrels to elect annually a “King of the Minstrels”, as also four assistants, “to preside over the institution in Staffordshire, Derby, Nottingham, Leicester, and Warwick”.

Thomas of Elmham gives an account of the coronation of King Henry V, at Westminster, in 1413, and he mentions that “the harmony of the harpers drawn from their instruments, struck with the rapidest touch of the fingers, note against note, and the soft angelic whisperings of their modulations, were gratifying to the ears of the guests”. According to this author, the orchestra consisted of “a prodigious number of harps in the hall”—no other instrument being mentioned.

Henry V was undoubtedly a great patron of music, and was himself a harpist and composer. In 1415 he engaged John Cliff and seventeen other minstrels to follow him to Guienne, receiving Harpist forty pounds as their wages (Rymer). In October, 1420, he ordered a new harp to be sent over to him to France; and there is an entry in the Exchequer Rolls for £8 13s. 4d.—being the price of two harps—paid to John Bore, harp-maker, of London. It is assumed that one of the two harps was for Queen Katherine, whom the English king had married at Troyes, on June 3rd, 1420. We are told by Rymer, in his Foedera, that Henry V expended a hundred shillings annually as payment to twelve minstrels, which amount continued to be paid by his successor. He died at Vincennes, in August 1422, leaving a name inseparably associated with the victory of Agincourt.

On September 20th, 1467, King Edward IV granted ten marks yearly to William Eynsham, the King’s Minstrel. In the following year there is allusion to Robert Hanyes, of Little Malvern, minstrel. About the same time we find an entry on the Patent Rolls referring to Thomas Briker, harp-maker, and to William Dent, of Selby, harper. In 1474 John Hawkins was King's Minstrel, and in the succeeding year reference is made to Robert Green, King’s Minstrel.

Under Edward IV the Chapel Royal and the King’s Band of Music were put on a secure basis; and on April 24th, 1469, letters patent were granted incorporating the Musicians' Company of the City of London as a perpetual of the Guild of Minstrels, with Walter Haliday as first Marshal. London

Among the harps still existing in Scotland is the famous Clarsach Lumanach, or Lamont harp, also called the “Lude” harp, supposed to have been brought from Argyllshire by Lilias Lamont on her marriage into the family of Robertson of Lude. Not improbably this fine instrument belonged to Rory dall O'Cahan, a famous Ulster harper, who died in Scotland about the year 1650. Gunn, in 1807, describes it as thirty-eight inches high and furnished with thirty-two strings; and Hudson, in 1840, says that this harp is probably Irish. It certainly has all the well-known Irish characteristics.

One of the loveliest harp melodies at the close of the fourteenth century is the Irish air “Eibhlin a Ruin” (Eileen, my treasure), known also as “Robin Adair”. It was composed in 1386 by Carrol O'Daly, a famous Irish harper. Disguised as a minstrel, O'Daly so captivated Eileen Kavanagh, of Polmonty Castle, Co. Carlow, that she eloped with him on the evening of her intended betrothal to a rival lover. In the song, which he sung with such effect to the accompaniment of the harp, were two expressions rendered immortal by Shakespeare—namely, “ducdame” and “cead mile failte” (a hundred thousand welcomes), whilst the melody itself was much admired by Handel during his stay in Ireland.

Carrol O'Daly, the author and composer of this immortal song, is styled by the Irish annalists as “chief composer of Ireland, and ollav (doctor) in music of the country of Corcomroe” (Co. Clare). His death is chronicled in the year 1405.

By the Statute of Kilkenny, in 1367, it was made penal to receive or entertain Irish harpers or minstrels within the English Pale in Ireland. The working of this enactment is evident from a licence on the Patent Rolls of the year 1375 (49 Edw. III.), granting permission to Donal Kilkenny O'Moghan, an Irish minstrel, to dwell within the Pale. Two famous Irish harpers of this period were John MacEgan and Gilbert O'Barden, both of whom died in the year 1369. Ten years later (1379) is chronicled the death of Gillacuddy O'Carroll, described as “the most delightful minstrel of the Irish”.

In 1433, the Irish Annals place the obit of Aedh O'Corcrain, a remarkable harper; and in 1438 died Seanchan MacCurtin, described as “historian, poet, and musician”. An entry on the Patent Rolls of the year 1435 (15 Henry VI) shows that the Statute of Kilkenny was being disregarded. It is stated that Irish harpers and timpanists (Clarsaghours and Timpanours) and crowthers (performers on the cruit) “went amongst the English and exercised their arts and minstrelsies”. In consequence, the English monarch, as we read, “finding such laws ineffectual, and his lieges paying grandia bona et dona in exchange for Irish music, commissioned his Marshal in Ireland to imprison the harpers; and, in order to stimulate his activity, authorised him to appropriate to his own private use their gold and silver, their horses, harnesses, and instruments of minstrelsy”.

In the second half of the fifteenth century Irish minstrels were frequent visitors to Scotland; and in Dauney’s Scottish Melodies there are given several items regarding payments made to the various musicians at the Scottish Court, e.g. Courts “April 19th, 1490. To Martin, the clairsach player, and the other Irish harper, at ye King’s command, 18 shillings. May 30th, 1490. To an Irish harper, at ye King's command, 18 shillings”.

In the year 1490 there is an entry in the Annals of Ulster recording the death of “the son of MacDonnell of Scotland”, at the hands of an Irish harper named Dermot O'Carbry. Another annalist says that Mac-Donald, Lord of Eigg, “was slain in treachery at Inverness by Diarmuit Ua Cairpri”. This affords additional evidence as to the constant visits of Irish harpers to Scotland. Five years later Hugh roe O'Donnell, accompanied by his harper, paid a visit to King James IV of Scotland, “who received the Irish prince with much distinction”.

English harpers were also welcomed by King James IV of Scotland, and in the accounts of the Lords High Treasurers of Scotland there are a few entries in regard to the sums paid to the “Inglis harparis”.

King Richard III was a patron of music, and sanctioned an enactment for the impressing of choir­boys and men for the service of the Chapel Royal. He gave much largesse to harpers and minstrels, as did also his successor, Henry VII. (1485-1509). In the Privy Purse expenses for the year 1498 there is an entry of five pounds paid as wages to the "three string minstrels," and of fifteen shillings to "a string minstrel" for one month's wages.

A MINSTREL
HARP (FIFTEENTH
CENTURY).

An interesting side-light on the grievances of the City of London minstrels is to be seen in a petition, of about the year 1499, setting forth their dire poverty owing to the continual recourse of foreign minstrels, and asking that the Guild might be permitted to levy a fine of three shillings and four-pence on any manner of foreigner playing on any instrument within said city. It would seem that the members of this guild had to confine their teaching to their own apprentices, and these musical apprentices had to serve a term of seven years. It may here be well to give an illustration of the “minstrel’s harp” of the fifteenth century.

The supremacy of the harp was given a rude shock at this epoch by the spread of viols, recorders, lutes, virginals, and clavichords; but, above all, the violin had just come to stay. Still, the harp was very popular, especially in Ireland. Two famous Irish harpers—Florence O'Corcoran and William McGilroy—are particularly noticed in the Annals of Ulster, whose deaths are chronicled in 1496 and 1497 respectively. Thierry writes: “Every house preserved two harps, always ready for travellers, and he who could best celebrate the liberties of former times, the glory of patriots, and the grandeur of their cause, was remunerated with a more lavish hospitality”. John Major (d. 1525) gives unstinted praise to the Irish harpers, and he sums up his eulogy in one sentence: “Hibernenses qui in ilia arte praecipui sunt”.

The art of music-printing from movable types, first introduced by Conrad Fyner, of Esslingen, in 1473, was destined to effect a revolution in every department of music.

 Yet, it was not until 1495 that De Worde printed, in England, the first book with musical notes; whilst it was in 1502 that Octaviano Petrucci began music-printing at Venice. Later on, in 1530, Wynkyn de Worde issued the first collection of English songs with music.

 

CHAPTER VIII

THE HARP IN THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY.

 

Many entries in the Irish Annals testify to the fame of harp-making in Ireland during the first half of the sixteenth century; and Dr. Petrie describes for us a very beautiful harp which bore the date 1509, but which has, unfortunately, disappeared since 1810. “It was small”, he writes, “and but simply ornamented, and on the front of the pillar or fore-arm, there was a brass plate on which was inscribed the name of the maker and the date—1509”.

It is not a little remarkable that the drawing of the harp, or Harffen, given by Sebastian Virdung in his Musica Getustacht, printed at Basil, in 1511, is the mediaeval harp of Ireland as generally represented.

The English minstrels had fallen into disrepute at the beginning of the sixteenth century, as the following extract from Brandt’s Minstrels “Ship of Fools”, written in 1494, serves to prove:—

 

“The Furies fearfully sprong of the floudes of hell,

Bereft these vagabonds in their mindes so

That by no meane can they abide ne dwell

Within their houses, but out they nede must go;

More wildly wandering than either buck or doe.

Some with their harpes, another with their lute,

Another with his bagpipe, or a foolish flute”.

 

In 1515, the King’s Minstrels, for having to journey to Cambridge to perform there, were given seven shillings; and a similar payment was given them a few years later. Henry VIII was a musician and composer, and, in 1526, his Band of Music consisted of a harp, two viols, a fife, three lutes, four drumslades, three rebecs, three taborets, ten sackbuts, and fifteen trumpets. In 1530 there was a slight change in the constitution of this band, as a virginal and three minstrels were added. Under Edward VI, in 1547, a bagpipe was included, whilst the number of viols was increased to seven, and we also find a Welsh minstrel.

Polydore Vergil, in his History of England, in 1534, writes thus of Irish harpers:—"Cujus musicae peritissimi sunt; canunt enim tum voce tum fidibus eleganter, sed vehementi quodam impetu, sic ut mirabile sit in tanta vocis linguaeque atque digitorum velocitate, posse artis numeros servari, id quod illi ad unguem facuint”. This passage fully confirms the unrivalled skill of the Irish harpers, especially in the difficult matter of accompaniment. Vergil marvels at the “wonderful sympathy between voice and strings”, notwithstanding “the surprising rapidity of execution by the fingers”; but, as he adds, “this the Irish harpers do to a nicety”.

About this time it was enacted: “That noe Irish minstralls, rymers, ne bardes, be messengers to desire any goods of any man dwelling within the English Pale”, upon pain of “forfeiture of all their goods, and their bodies to be imprisoned at the King’s will”. In 1537 Robert Cowley, Collector of Customs in Ireland, wrote to Secretary Cromwell that “harpers, rhymers, Irish chroniclers, bards, etc., commonly go with praises [elegies] to gentlemen in the English Pale, praising in rhymes”, etc. The two most famous Irish harpers of this period were Bryan O'Keenan and Edmond O'Flynn, whose deaths are duly chronicled in 1537 and 1553 respectively.

Foreigners were again a trouble to the musicians of the city of London in 1555, and, accordingly, a decree was issued forbidding “foreign minstrels” to exercise their art within the city, under a penalty of 3s. 4d.

About this time flourished a celebrated Neapolitan harpist and composer, Giovanni Leonardo Primavera, known as “dell Arpe”, from his extraordinary skill on the harp. He published several volumes of madrigals and canzonets between the years 1560 and 1573, printed at Venice.

In 1563 we meet with the first Elizabethan enactments against harpers in Ireland, the reason alleged being that “under pretence of visiting, they carry about privy intelligence between the malefactors in the disturbed districts”. Ten years later, a Westmeath harper, Richard O'Malone, was pardoned, as appears from the Fiants of Elizabeth. Very different was the attitude of the Queen towards Welsh harpers. We read that by a commission, dated May 26th, 1567, an Eisteddfod on a grand scale was held at Caerwys, at which twenty harpers assisted.

The oldest specimen of a harp connected with Scotland is the celebrated “Queen Mary2 harp, said to have belonged to Mary Queen of Scots, and to have been presented by her to Beatrix Gardyn, of Banchory, in 1563. Whatever opinion may be formed as to the exact date of this instrument, it is almost certainly of Irish origin, and has all the characteristics of an Irish harp of the sixteenth century. It is 30 inches high, and measures 18 inches from back to front, being furnished with twenty-nine brass strings, subsequently increased to thirty. As became a royal harp, it was richly ornamented, being embellished with the portrait of the unfortunate Scottish Queen, and with the royal arms, which, however, were stolen in 1745. On March 12th, 1904, this harp was sold by auction in Edinburgh, and was acquired for eight hundred and fifty guineas by the Antiquarian Museum of that city.

 

QUEEN MARY HARP

 

An English Jesuit, William Good, who taught a school at Limerick in 1564, thus writes of the Irish people:—"They love music mightily, and, of all instruments, are particularly taken with the harp, which, being strung with brass wire and beaten with crooked nails, is very melodious”.

Between the years 1570 and 1576 various commissions were issued by Queen Elizabeth in Ireland to “banish all Irish harpers”, etc.; and, in 1576, the Privy Council issued stringent orders against “rhymers, harpers, and other Irishmen” within the English Pale. Four distinguished harpers of this period were Donogh MacCreedan, Thady Creedan, Bryan MacMahon, and James O'Harrigan. A little later flourished Donal MacNamara and Donal O'Heffernan. However, one harper is especially lauded by Stanihurst in 1580—namely, Richard Cruise :

“In these days lived Cruise, the most remarkable harper within the memory of man. He carefully avoids that jarring sound which arises from unstretched and untuned strings; and, moreover, by a certain method of tuning and modulating, he preserves an exquisite concord, which has a surprising effect upon the ears of hearers, such that one would regard him rather as the only, than the greatest, harper”.

From Derricks’ Image of Ireland, “made and devised anno 1578”, dedicated to Sir Philip Sidney, we can form an idea of the ordinary wandering Irish harper of the period.

Crowned Harp Badge of Ireland on the Great Seal of Queen Elizabeth

The instrument somewhat resembles that seen on the crowned harp badge of Ireland on the great seal of Queen Elizabeth.

In 1581, pardon was granted to three harpers—namely, Mac Loughlin roe O'Brennan, Walter Brenagh (Walsh), and Donogh O'Creedan, as recorded in the Fiants of Elizabeth.

Vincenzo Galilei, writing in 1583, says:—"I had an opportunity, a few months since (by the civility or an Irish gentleman), of seeing an Irish harp, and after having minutely examined the arrangement of its strings, I found it was the same which, with double the number, was introduced into Italy a few years ago, though some people here, against every shadow of reason, pretend they have invented it, and endeavour to make the ignorant believe that none but themselves knew how to tune and play on it”. He goes on to say that the compass of the harp is fifty-eight strings, comprehending four octaves and one tone, in the manner of keyed instruments—the lowest string being “double C in the bass, and the highest D in alt”. Unfortunately, he then goes in for a method of tuning on the Pythagorean system, and attacks Zarlino very caustically. This attack he follows up in a second edition of his Dialogo, published at Florence, in 1602.

Galilei definitely states that from the harp is derived the harpsichord, and this “by reason of the resemblance in name, in form, and in the numbers, disposition, and materials of its strings”. The English name “harpsichord” is the self-same as “Arpicordo”, with the introduction of the sibilant. An examination of the two oldest dated harpsichords (of the years 1521 and 1531) proves them to be, as Galilei describes, merely variants of the “Arpa giacenti”, or “horizontally-placed harp”, and were of about four octaves in compass. This view is also held by Kircher.

About the year 1585, William Bathe, a young Dublin student at Oxford (author of the first standard English work on the Art of Music), presented Queen Elizabeth with “a harp of new device”, as is recorded in the State Papers. Strange to say, notwithstanding the Queen’s enactment against harpers, she herself kept an Irish harper named Donal, and had harps in her Band of Musick. From the Cecil manuscripts we learn that on September 4th, 1597, the Countess of Desmond presented Sir Robert Cecil with an Irish harp. As maybe expected, Shakespeare makes some allusions to the harp. Ophelia's song in Hamlet was originally sung to a harp, as is evident from the fact that the two bars of symphony are now sung to the words: “Twang, lang, dillo dee.”

Bacon, in his Sylva Sylvarum says: “The harp hath the concave not along the strings but across the strings; and no harp hath the sound so melting and prolonged as the Irish harp”. Again, he refers to the Irish harp: “And so, likewise, in that music which we call broken music or consort music, some consorts of instruments are sweeter than others—a thing not sufficiently yet observed: as, the Irish harp and bass viol agree well; but the virginals and the lute, or the Welsh harp and the Irish harp, or the voice and pipes alone, agree not so well”.

As an instance of an “orchestra” at this epoch, it may be well to mention that in the “Ballet Comique de la Royne”, performed at the chateau de Montiers, in 1581, on the occasion of the wedding of the Duc de Joyeuse and Margaret of Lorraine, the following instruments were included: “Harps, lutes, hautboys, flutes, cornets, trombones, viole di gamba, ten violins, and a flageolet”. However, no combination of these instruments was attempted, as we read that “the performers were divided into ten bands”, and, for particular scenes, violins played alone, whilst in another scene harps and lutes played. What may be regarded as the first commencement in the history of the modern orchestra, was the band or concert at a double royal wedding, at Ferrara, in 1598, when the music consisted of a combination of lutes, double harps, and viols.

It is remarkable that although the harp is not scored for in Euridice, nor yet in La Rappresentassione dell' Anima ed il Corpo—both produced in the same year (1600)—this omission was supplied, a few years later, in Orfeo. Monteverde, in this opera, employed the large Irish double harp for the chorus of nymphs. In all, he scored for thirty-six instruments, a veritable Wagner in posse; and his Prelude is an embryo of the Introduction to the Rheingold.

 

CHAPTER IX

THE IRISH HARP UNDER JAMES I.

 

During the year 1601 ten Irish harpers were pardoned, as was also a famous harp-maker, Tadhg O'Dermody, whose son, Donal, was the maker of the still preserved “Dalway” harp. In the following year nine harpers were received into favour, as appears from the Fiants of 1601 and 1602. Two notable harpers, who were also composers—John and Harry Scott—flourished at this date, of whom Bunting makes mention.

Captain Barnaby Rich, in his New Description of Ireland, in 1610, says:—"The Irish have harpers, and those are so reverenced among them that in the time of rebellion they will forbear to hurt either their persons or their goods; . . . and every great man in the country hath his rhymer and his harper”.

The greatest harper under King James was Rory dall O'Cahan, who spent most of his life in Scotland, between the years 1601 and 1645. In 1603, in proof of his reconciliation with Lady Eglinton, he composed the lovely air, “Tabhair dham do lamh” (“Oh, give me your hand”), which is also known by its Latinised title of “Da mihi manum”."It has been printed by Bunting and Dr. Crotch. So popular did this air become, that King James sent for the composer to play it for the Scottish court.

He is best known as the composer of numerous puirts or ports—that is, lessons or airs for the harp, e.g. “Port Gordon”, “Port Athol”, “Port Lennox”, etc., generally named after the persons for whom they were composed. In the Straloch MS. (dated 1627-29) appears “Rory dall’s Port”, but there is a different air of the same name in Playford’s Dancing Master. The late Mr. John Glen, in his Early Scottish Melodies (1900), dismisses the Irish origin of this air thus: “It is a matter of indifference who Rory dall was, or who composed the tune. We have not found it earlier than the two sources named” —that is, Oswald and Walsh, in 1757. The real fact is that “Rory dall’s Port” was in print in 1670, and it was undoubtedly composed by the Irish harper.

Rory is also credited with the composition of the air, “Lady Catherine Ogle”, but he certainly composed the exquisite harp-melody known as “An bacach buidhe”, or “The Lame Yellow Beggar”. He died at the house or Lord Macdonald, leaving hat nobleman his harp and tuning-key. Dr. Johnson, in his Tour to the Hebrides (1773), tells us that a valuable harp key, finely ornamented with gold and silver, and with a precious stone, worth eighty to a hundred guineas, was then in possession of Lord Macdonald, who presented it to Echlin O'Cahan. It is worth noting that Sir Walter Scott introduces Rory dall as the musical preceptor of Annot Lyle, in his Legend of Montrose.

In the Fitzwilliam Virginal Book are some Irish airs, including two harp-melodies, not later than the year 1570. One of these, “Cailin og a stuair me”, derives an added interest from the fact that it is quoted by Shakespeare in william Henry the Fifth (Act II. Sc. 4); and the song to which it was sung was printed in A Handful of Pleasant Delites, in 1584. The air is in William Ballet’s Lute Book, a valuable musical manuscript, circ. 1590, now in Trinity College, Dublin.

As a proof of the estimation in which Irish harps were held at this time, there is an entry in the State papers, under date of March 8th, 1606-7, in which Sir John Egerton, son of the Lord Chancellor of England, writes to Sir John Davies, Attorney-General for Ireland, “reminding him of his Irish harp”.

There is still preserved a splendid Irish harp, dated 1621, of which a cast is in the South Kensington collection. This harp was made for Sir John Fitzgerald, of Cloyne, Co. Cork, but is generally known as the “Dalway” harp, as the instrument has been for two centuries in possession of the Dalway family of Bellahill, near Carrickfergus, Co. Antrim. Bunting gives a long account of it in his second volume of ancient Irish music (1809), but he fails to identify the maker, whose name appears as “Donatus Alius Thadei”. The harp-maker is none other than Donnchadh mac Tadhg O'Dermody, whose father received pardon in 1601, as previously mentioned.

Of a surety, the Fitzgerald (Dalway) harp deserves the title of “queen of harps”, which is engraved on it in Latin: “Ego sum Regina cithararum”. The arms of the owner (Sir John FitzEdmund Fitzgerald) are elaborately chased on the front pillar, and, as Bunting adds, “every part of the instrument is covered with inscriptions in Latin and in the Irish character”.

“By the pins, which remain almost entire, it is found to have contained in the row forty-five strings, besides seven in the centre, probably for unisons to others, making in all fifty-two, and exceeding the common Irish harp by twenty-two strings. In consequence of the sound-board being lost, different attempts to ascertain its scale have been unsuccessful. It contained twenty-four (recte twenty-two) strings more than the noted harp called Brian Boromha’s, and, in point of workmanship, is beyond comparison superior to it, both for the elegance of its crowded ornaments, and for the general execution of those parts on which the correctness of a musical instrument depends. The opposite side is equally beautiful with that of which the delineation is given; the fore-pillar appears to be of sallow, the harmonic curve of yew”.

The Dalway Harp

 

Though the original sound-board is missing, a restoration has been effected, and a cast of the restored instrument, as above given, is in the National Museum, Dublin. One of the inscriptions on the harmonic curve has thus been translated from the Irish by O'Curry:— “Giollapatrick MacCreedan was my Musician and Harmonist; and if I could have found a better, him should I have, and Dermot MacCreedan along with him, two highly accomplished men, whom I had to nurse me. And on every one of these, may God have mercy on them all”.

In 1614, there is reference to a harper, Tadhg O'Coffy, who was in the service of Dr. Geoffrey Keating, author of the Forus Feasa ar Eirinn (History of Ireland), and to whom Keating addressed a beautiful Irish poem of nine stanzas. About the same time we find William FitzEdward Barry, a blind harper, as a retainer of Lord Barrymore; and in 1620, Daniel O'Cahill was harper to Viscount Buttevant.

Great seal of King James I

Between the years 1622 and 1625 Father Robert Nugent, S.J., made considerable improvements in the Irish harp. This accomplished Jesuit was a cousin of Elizabeth, Countess of Kildare, who, in 1634, gave him Kilkea Castle, Co. Kildare, for a novitiate of his order. His improvements mainly consisted in having a double row of strings extended along the framework of the harp, giving two strings to each sound, which produced a rich and sonorous quality of tone. He also succeeded in affording increased facilities for the uninterrupted progression of the passages with either hand. The full Latin text detailing these improvements is in Lynch’s Cambrensis Eversus.

On the great seal of King James I, as will be seen from the subjoined illustration, the Irish harp appears upon the third quarter of the royal shield, as well as on the reverse, as a badge, crowned. The type of harp is almost the self­same as that of the “O'Brien” harp.

It was in the reign of King James, too, that the Irish harp was quartered in the royal arms—that is, a gold harp, with silver strings, on a blue ground. The Deputy Earl Marshal of England was not enthusiastic over the matter of having the Irish harp quartered in the royal arms, and he quaintly observed that "the best reason for the adoption of the harp was that it resembled Ireland itself in being such an instrument that it required more cost to keep it in tune than it was worth."

In the King’s Band of Musick, in 1628, we find one harp employed, in union with eleven violins, evidencing the growing popularity of the violin.

 

 

CHAPTER X

THE WELSH TRIPLE HARP.

 

Early in the seventeenth century the Welsh triple harp assumed its developed stage. Père Mersenne, in 1632, describes this form of harp, and assigns it a compass of four octaves, with seventy-five strings. Subsequently we find the Welsh harp comprising ninety-seven strings, namely, thirty-six bass strings, twenty-six treble strings, and thirty-five middle strings, tuned from double C in the bass to C in alto. However, Bingley in his History of North Wales says that the three rows contain ninety-eight strings, divided as follows:— “Thirty-seven on the right, or bass; twenty-seven on the left, or treble; and thirty-four in the middle, for the semitones”. As the two outer rows are diatonic and are tuned in unison, it will be seen that the Welsh triple harp is merely an evolution of the Irish double harp. According to Vincenzo Galilei (1589) the Italian “arpa doppia” was introduced from Ireland, and the only difference between the Irish double harp and the Italian was that the latter instrument was furnished with catgut strings instead of brass. The comparatively modern Welsh triple harp has a third or middle row of strings containing the sharps and flats—thus rendering the instrument available for the diatonic and chromatic scales.

In Evelyn’s Diary, under date of June 13th, 1649, we get a glimpse of a Welsh harper named Carew. The diarist writes as follows:— “I dined with my worthy friend, Sir John Owen, newly freed from sentence of death, among the lords that suffered. With him came one Carew, who played incomparably well on the Welsh harp”.

From Pepys, the better-known diarist, we learn of the sad end of Evans, the Welsh harper of the Restoration epoch. Writing on December 19th, 1666, he says:— “Talked of the King’s family with Mr. Hingston, the organist. He says many of the musique (King’s Band of Music) are ready to starve, they being five years behind-hand for their wages: nay, Evans, the famous man upon the harp, having not his equal in the world, did the other day die for mere want, and was fain to be buried at the alms of the parish, and carried to his grave in the dark at night without one link (torch), but that Mr. Hingston met it by chance, and did give twelve pence to buy two or three links”.

The subjoined illustration will give the reader a good idea of the Welsh triple harp.

 

 

 

We have stated that the Welsh harp has a triple row of strings, the inner row being for the accidentals. But it is rather a difficult instrument to handle. First of all, as the strings on the right-hand side are for the bass, the tuning has to be effected with the left hand, and, for the same reason, the instrument has to be held on the left shoulder, and performed on with the left hand in the treble; secondly, it is not easy to play accidentals on the middle or inner row of strings, especially in allegro movements, or passages that require to be played with rapidity. As Thomas says, “it is the only instrument of its kind that has ever been known with the strings on the right side of the comb”, one reason being that otherwise the player would not have a full view of the strings.

It is remarkable that the first published Tutor for the Welsh triple-string harp appeared only three years ago (November 1902). Mr. Parry, of 78 Granby Street, Liverpool, after a search of fourteen years discovered the long-lost MS. prepared by Ellis Roberts (Eos Meirion), harpist to the Prince of Wales, who died in London, December 6th, 1873. Its publication is due to the Hon. Augusta Herbert, of Llanover (Gwenyneu Gwent yr Ail), under the editorship of Dr. Charles Vincent, and the hope is expressed “that as there exists no longer the excuse of having no book of instruction for the playing of the 'Delyn Dair-Rhes', that great and rapid progress will be made in the use of the unique national instrument of our country (Wales)”. Following the preface is a long quotation from Edward Jones (1794), the important feature of which is the arrangement of the ninety-eight strings. It may be added that the triple harp is tuned in the key of G of the treble clef, proceeding by fifths and octaves alternately. The present compass of the instrument extends to five octaves and one note.

 

CHAPTER XI

CROMWELL AND THE IRISH HARP.

 

Under King Charles I, the Irish harp was even more fashionable than in the preceding reign, and no better proof of this need be adduced than the publication of a book of motets, in London, in 1630, by Martin Pierson, Mus. Bac, Master of the Children of St. Paul’s Cathedral—remarkable as being the first printed work in which tunes were arranged for the Irish harp.

There is a letter from the Earl of Cork, Lord Justice of Ireland, dated October 14th, 1632, sending an “Irish harpe” as a present to the Lord Keeper, accompanied by a “runlett of mild Irish whiskey”.

M. Boullaye le Gouz, writing in 1644, says that “the Irish are very fond of the harp, on which nearly all play, as the English do on the fiddle”. This popularity of the harp continued during the Confederate period—that is, from 1644 to 1648. It is worthy of note that Archbishop Laud (who was executed in January 1645) had an Irish harp, which he bequeathed to John Cobbe, the organist.

According to the testimony of Archdeacon Lynch, in his Cambrensis Eversus, the Cromwellians in Ireland not only destroyed organs, but also harps. As to organs, there is ample evidence of their Archdeacon destruction by the Puritans in Dublin, Cork, Waterford, Cashel, and elsewhere. But their rage seemed specially directed against the national instrument. “They broke all the harps they could find throughout Ireland”; and so violently did they act in the matter of harp-breaking that Lynch was of opinion that “within a short time scarce a single instrument would be left in Ireland”.

Lynch (who is a contemporary witness) was so impressed with the idea that not a harp would survive the universal destruction of the national instrument in Ireland at the hands of the Cromwellians, that he entered into the minutest details regarding the harp, believing that nothing but a merciful Providence could avert the complete annihilation of the clairsech. “The barbarous marauders”.m he writes, “vent their vandal fury on every harp which they meet, and break it in pieces”.

arms of ireland on the great seal of cromwell—for ireland (bearing the family arms of the lord protector).

Here it is interesting to give an illustration of the Arms of Ireland in the time of Cromwell. In the Great Seal of the Lord Protector we find an elaborately-designed Irish harp, having the family arms of Cromwell, as here given.

One of the most famous Irish harpers of the Puritan régime was Pierce Ferriter, of Ferriter’s Castle, Co. Kerry, popularly known as the “gentleman harper”. He headed a band of troops to defend his property, but surrendered on condition of quarter for his men and himself. Notwithstanding this, he was executed at Killarney in 1652. One of his most prized possessions was an exquisite harp which had been given him by Edmond mac an daill, of Moylurg, Co. Roscommon, on which he wrote an Irish poem in twenty-six stanzas, describing the corr (harmonic curve or cross-tree), the lamhchrann (front pillar), and the com (sound-board), with the names of the designer, maker, and decorator.

From Ferriter’s poem on the harp we can quite understand the importance attached to the construction of the instrument, but he specially dwells on the wealth of ornamentation wont to be lavished on good harps. His pet harp was decorated with gold by Partholan mor MacCathaill, and was “bound and emblazoned” by Benglann.

Under date of January 25th, 1654, Evelyn writes:— “Came to see my old acquaintance and incomparable player on the Irish harp, Mr. Clarke. He is an excellent musician. Such music before or since did I never hear, the Irish harp being neglected for its extraordinary difficulty; but, in my judgment, it is far superior to the lute itself, or whatever speaks with strings”.

 

 

CHAPTER XII.

THE HARP UNDER CHARLES II

 

As is well known, at the Restoration, the gloom of Puritanism was dispelled, and Charles II requisitioned twenty-four instrumentalists at the Chapel Royal, with Thomas Baltzar as leader. The harp was still popular, though being steadily ousted by the violin and spinet. Some of the greatest scholars took up the Irish harp as a serious study, and Dr. Narcissus Marsh, Fellow of Exeter College, Oxford, in 1662, was wont to have “a weekly consort of instrumental music, and sometimes vocal, in his chamber, on Wednesdays in the afternoon, and then on Thursdays, as long as he lived in Oxford”. He wrote a work on the harp, the manuscript of which is now in Marsh’s Library, Dublin.

Evelyn, under date of November 17th, 1668, thus writes:— “I heard Sir Edward Sutton play excellently upon the Irish harp. He performs genteelly, but not approaching my worthy friend Mr. Clarke, who makes it execute lute, viol, and all the harmony an instrument is capable of. Pity it is that it is not more in use; but, indeed, to play well takes up the whole man, as Mr. Clarke has assured me, who, though a gentleman of quality and parts, was yet brought up to that instrument from five years old, as I remember he told me”.

We can form a tolerable idea of the “orchestra” of the Restoration period from an entry in Evelyn’s Diary in regard to the Portuguese band of music that accompanied Catherine of Braganza, Queen of Charles II., in 1662. He thus writes:— “I heard the Queen's Portugal musiq, consisting of pipes, harps, and very ill voices”. But we must not be so surprised at this, for even Alessandro Scarlatti, in his oratorio of St. John the Baptist, in 1676, employed two solo violins and violoncello, del concertino, and a large body of ripieni violins, tenors, and basses, del concerto grosso, for his double orchestra.

 

Wartburg,Wolkenstein, or Eisenbach Harp

In 1664 appeared a volume of Services and Anthems by Rev. James Clifford, having a frontispiece, in which King David is represented playing on a six-stringed harp. The following lines are printed beneath the picture of the Royal Psalmist:—

 

“See here the sacred harp with well-tun'd string,

Skilfully touched by a most pious king;

Of whose great actions after God's own heart:

This is recorded too, he played his part”.

 

It would seem that about this time Sir Samuel Moreland invented a new form of harp, but no particulars have survived, save for the entry by Evelyn, in 1667, who mentions Moreland’s invention of “a new harp”. To this same philosopher-musician must be credited the speaking-trumpet, and a mechanical harpsichord, worked on the principle of “a wheel and a zone of parchment”, thus anticipating the Angelus, Cecilian, Pianola, etc.

The crowned-harp badge of Ireland, on the Great Seal of King Charles II, is the development of the symbolic angel form of harp; and, as may be seen in the accompanying illustration, is the same as still used in the arms of Ireland.

A fine Irish harp is still preserved, known as the “Kildare” harp, inscribed “R. F. G., 1672”. This beautiful instrument, still preserved at Kilkea Castle, Co. Kildare, was formerly the property of Robert FitzGerald, second son of George, sixteenth Earl of Kildare, hence the name. Apparently it was manufactured for this nobleman in 1672, and his death is chronicled in January 1698.

FitzGerald Kildare Harp

This love of the harp by the Irish nobility of the Stuart period is alluded to in a description of Ireland, printed in London in 1673, as follows:— “The Irish gentry are musically disposed, and, therefore, many of them play singular well upon the Irish harp”. Seven years later, Dineley, in his Tour of Ireland, says: “The Irish are at this day much addicted on holydays, after the bagpipe, Irish Harp, or Jew’s Harp, to dance after their country fashion—that is, the Long Dance”.

Fogarty harp

There is another beautiful Irish harp of this period, known as the “Fogarty” harp, having belonged to Cornelius O'Fogarty, of Castle Fogarty, in 1684. An unsatisfactory drawing of it appeared in the Dublin Penny Journal, in 1838, and it was stated as then in the possession of James Lenigan, Esq., of Castle Fogarty. It contains thirty-five strings, and is now the property of Lieut.-Col. J. V. Ryan-Lenigan, of Castle Fogarty, near Thurles, Co. Tipperary.

Among the Irish harpers of the period 1660-85, the most celebrated were Myles O'Reilly, Thomas Connellan, and Laurence Connellan. Thomas Connellan was a composer as well as a performer, and a number of his harp-melodies are still popular. He lived over twenty years in Scotland, a worthy successor to Rory dall O'Cahan, and many of his airs have been claimed as Scotch. He returned to Ireland in 1689, and died in 1698.

Dr. Narcissus Marsh (of whom I have previously made mention) was appointed Provost of Trinity College, Dublin, in 1678, and he introduced the custom of “a weekly consort of music” in Dublin University—the harp being in evidence. Marsh played the harp very well, but he also practised the bass viol. In a remarkable paper on “Acoustics”, which he read before the Dublin Philosophical Society in 1683, he suggested, inter alia, the term Microphone.

It must not be forgotten that the great composer, Scarlatti, was known as a harpist in his early years—that is to say, from 1673-83.

The ingenious device of a Tyrolese, at this epoch, was destined to revolutionise the art of harp-playing. This device consisted of little hooks, or crooks of metal, screwed into the neck of the harp, which, being turned down, produced the required semitones. The disadvantage under which even the most accomplished player on the harp laboured, by reason of the diatonic nature of the instrument, suggested to a musical son of the Tyrol a plan whereby chromatic intervals could be played.

There were two notable defects in the “hook” system. The first was that one hand was temporarily lost to the performer when engaged in placing or releasing the crook. A second defect was owing to the fact that only one string (and not its octave) was affected by the mechanical arrangement. Still, the hooks paved the way for the pedal harp.

 

CHAPTER XIII

TURLOGH O'CAROLAN.

 

Turlogh O'Carolan occupies a very high place among Irish harpers, and his name has been immortalised by Goldsmith.

Born at Newtown, Co. Meath, in 1670, he became blind in his twenty-second year, and having displayed much proficiency on the harp, he was provided with a horse and an attendant by his Early patroness, Madame MacDermot of Alderford House, Co. Roscommon. Thus equipped, he began the role of professional harper in 1693, and made his début at the hospitable mansion of George Reynolds, Esq., of Letterfyan, where he composed the words and music of “The Fairy Queen”. This was followed by  “Planxty Reynolds” and “Grace Nugent”.

From 1694 to 1737 O'CaroIan frequented the houses of the nobles and county families, and composed over 200 airs, most of which were of a Pindaric nature, and addressed to his patrons. He was at the zenith of his fame in 1725, and in 1726 some of his airs were printed in Dublin. In Daniel Wright’s Arva di Camera, published in London in 1727, there are several airs by O'CaroIan, including “Grace Nugent” and “The Irish Tune”. Two years later a lovely melody of his was included in Charles Coffey’s Beggars’ Wedding, adapted to a song entitled “Once I had a Sweetheart”.

There is no need to print the harp-melody, composed by O'CaroIan as “The Princess Royal”, which was printed in 1727, and again in 1730 and 1735. It was so admired by Shield, the friend of John O'Keefe, that he re-christened it The Arethusa, and arranged it as one of the songs in his Lock and Key (1796). Hence it has come to be regarded as an English air, though Mr. Kidson points out properly that Shield never claimed it—which, of course, he could scarcely have done, seeing it was printed twenty-one years before he was born. Quite a dozen of O'Carolan’s airs were introduced into the ballad operas and musical plays that were in vogue from 1728 to 1748.

It is remarkable that O'Carolan was the first Irish composer to break away from the traditional tune-structure, and from 1725 to 1737 the influence of Corelli, Vivaldi, and Geminiani is very evident. Geminiani (who lived many years in Dublin, and died there, in 1762, whilst on a visit to Dubourg) pronounced O'Carolan as endowed with il genio vero della musica.

Beethoven, in a characteristic letter to Thomson, the Scottish publisher, says that had O'Carolan got a Continental musical training, he would have been the greatest ornament of the school of Irish music.

As a specimen of his work when he came under the influence of the Italian masters, we give here eight bars of his favourite concerto:—

 

On one memorable occasion, on Christmas Eve of the year 1726, he led a band of harps at midnight Mass in the oratory of O'Conor at Belanagare, when the Mass was sung by Bishop O'Rourke, O.F.M. His “Resurrection2 was composed for a Mass on Easter Sunday at Belanagare. Some of his airs appear in the early Methodist hymn-books.

But, though a master of all styles, he shone particularly as the writer and composer of bacchanalian songs. The best-known examples of this class are his “O'Rourke's Noble Feast” (English words by Dean Swift) and Bumpers, Squire Jones. His “Ode to Whisky” and “Receipt for Drinking” are incomparable of their class.

O'Carolan died at the house of his old patroness, Madame MacDermot, at Alderford, near Boyle, Co. Roscommon, on March 25th, 1738, and was buried five days later at the east end of the old church of Kilronan, overlooking Lough Meelagh. He bequeathed his favourite harp to Madame MacDermot, and it is now (1905) in the possession of the O'Conor Don, P.C., at Clonalis, near Castlerea. Another of his harps was taken to London by his son, who, in 1747, published an indifferent volume of his father’s compositions. Although no monument was erected over his remains, Lady Louisa Tenison got the cemetery enclosed, and had the following inscription engraved on the arch of the Irish-designed gateway:— “Within this churchyard lie the remains of Carolan, the last of the Irish bards, who departed this life March 25th, 1738. R.I.P.”

Lady Morgan presented a splendid bas-relief of O'CaroIan to St. Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin, which is placed in the north aisle, and which we have reproduced.

ERECTED BY THE DESIRE OF SYDNEY LADY MORGAN TO THE MEMORY OF CAROLAN, THE LAST OF THE IRISH BARDS.

 

Many of O'Carolan’s airs were adapted by Tom Moore for his Irish Melodies, e.g. “Planxty Peyton” (“The Young May Moon”), “Planxty Kelly” (“Fly not yet”), “Planxty Irwin” (“Oh! banquet not”), “Planxty Tyrrell” (“Oh! blame not the bard”), “Planxty Sudley” (“Oh! the sight entrancing”), and “Planxty O'Reilly” (“The Wandering Bard”), better known in Lover’s setting as “Molly Carew”.

Other famous Irish harpers, who were contemporaries of O'Carolan, are MacCabe, MacCuarta (Courtney), Lyons, Heffernan, and Murphy. Lyons was domestic harper to the Earl of Antrim, and composed some folk melodies, as well as variations for the harp. Heffernan resided in London from 1695 to 1725, and was in request as a harpist. John Murphy travelled on the Continent from 1708 to 1719, and had the honour of playing for Louis XIV. At a special performance, at Smock Alley Theatre, Dublin, on February 14th, 1738, Murphy was one of the attractions as a harp-soloist. He played for some seasons at Mallow, and died after the year 1753.

In addition to O'Carolan’s harp, there are four other Irish harps of this epoch still preserved. These four instruments are respectively dated 1702, 1707, 1726, and 1734—viz., “Hempson's” harp, the “Castle Otway” harp, the “Hehir” harp, and the “Bunworth” harp.

The “Hempson” harp was made by Cormac O'Kelly, of Ballynascreen (Draperstown), Co. Derry, as is evident from the inscription on it:—

 

“In the time of Noah I was green;

After his flood I have not been seen;

Until seventeen hundred and two I was found

By Cormac Kelly under ground;

He raised me up to that degree,

Queen of Music ye may call me.”

The workmanship of the harp is not equal to the “Dalway” harp, and the instrument passed through many vicissitudes in Hempson’s hands. On the next page is an illustration of it.

 

Denis Hempson 1695 - 1807

Denis Hempson was born in 1695 some four miles west of Garvagh in the townland of Craigmore. At the age of three he lost his sight as a result of smallpox; when he was twelve, he began to learn to play the harp, which was not unusual for a blind person at that time. His training continued over a period of years under various tutors, all of the old school. These included Laughlin Fanning from Connacht, an area famous at the time for the quality of its harp music.

In 1713 two residents of Garvagh, Doctor Bacon and Mr Gage, purchased a harp from Cormick O'Kelly of Draperstown and presented it to Hempson. This he treasured for the rest of his life. Hempson's harp is now known as the Downhill harp and is in the Guinness museum in Dublin. In 1745 Denis Hempson played before Bonny Prince Charlie in Scotland. He attended a great harp meeting in Belfast in 1792 at the age of 97 and told someone afterwards, that when he had played his piece the others harpers refused to play as a mark of respect. It was said that he was the only harper there who had the traditional long finger nails, associated with this profession.

Denis Hempson died at Magilligan on the 5th November 1807 aged 112. He had lived in three centuries and was one of the last great Irish Harpers who played in the traditional way. Just beside the museum, visitors can see the memorial stone, erected in 1992, in what was the garden of Lord Garvagh where Hempson began his musical career.

   

The Castle Otway” harp was also made by Cormac O'Kelly, and is now at Castle Otway, Co. Tipperary. John Kelly made the “Hehir” harp in 1726. It had thirty-three strings, and was made of red sally, and is said to have been five feet high. Walker gives an illustration of it, drawn by William Ouseley (father of Sir Frederick Gore Ouseley, Bart., Mus. Doc), the original instrument being then (1786) the property of Jonathan Hehir.

A very fine harp is that known as the “Bunworth”, made by John Kelly in 1734. It was expressly manufactured for Rev. Charles Bunworth, Rector of Buttevant, Co. Cork, whose house was ever open to the wandering harper. After his death, it passed into the possession of Crofton Croker, his great grandson, and was sold, in London, in 1854. It is now the property of Rev. F. W. Galpin, who lent it for exhibition last year (1904) at the Fishmonger’ Hall, London.

Castle Otway harp

Bunworth Harp

 

CHAPTER XIV INVENTION OF THE PEDAL HARP.