Acallam na Senórach. ModIr. Agallamh na Seanórach, Agallamh na Seanóirí [Ir., the colloquy of the elders, old men]. An Irish narrative of the
Fenian Cycle composed between 1175 and 1200 and preserved in the 15th-century manuscript
Book of Lismore and elsewhere.
The
Acallam is set many generations after the death of
Fionn mac Cumhaill, the central figure of the Fenian Cycle. Two survivors,
Oisín and
Caílte, along with a few companions, are wandering glumly in northern
Leinster. At first Oisín departs for the north to visit his mother while Caílte and the others continue. After crossing the
Boyne River to Druim Dearg, they meet St
Patrick, with whom they discuss the values of pre-Christian Ireland. The focus of the colloquy is Fionn mac Cumhaill, who is also Oisín's father. As St Patrick travels west and south through Ireland, Caílte explains the names of the places they visit, much in the manner of the
Dindshenchas. Sometimes Caílte can give an older name for a place than the one now in use. Some of this may reflect the juncture Irish society then faced, with the amalgamation of Norman invaders into Gaelic culture. Oisín joins the party and adds more of the heroic deeds of Fionn and the
Fianna, but Caílte is usually portrayed as the more important of the two pagans. Often the saint-pagan dialogue serves only as a frame to introduce stories of the Fianna. The narrative, in both prose and verse, has an Arthurian flavour, especially in the repeated mention of the generosity of Fionn. A general anticlerical humour often portrays St Patrick as a bigot, pronouncing the doom of hell upon the Fenians. At times St Patrick seems more tolerant, willing to trade Christian learning for ancient lore. The temper of the work is cheerful, in spite of Caílte's loneliness, decrepitude, and regard for the lost heroic past.
Many critics regard the
Acallam as one of the most successful works in Middle Irish.
Early ModIr. text:
Agallamh na Seanórach, ed. Nessa Ní Shéaghdha (3 vols., Dublin, 1942–5); ModIr. text:
Agallamh na Seanóiri, ed. Pádraig de Barra (Dublin, 1984); Myles Dillon,
Stories from the Acallam (Dublin, 1970). See also Darrell Figgis's novel based on the story
Return of the Hero (London, 1923; New York, 1930).