Literary Characters
OF THE BABY NAME RHIANNON
Rhiannon is a figure of Celtic and Welsh mythology, whose wrenching story has a happy ending. A goddess, she chooses to leave her exalted background, spurning a suitor, and takes as a husband the mortal Prince Pwyll of Wales. She bears him a son and as is the custom, the infant is placed in the care of six ladies-in-waiting so the mother may rest. You would think that among the six, at least one might manage to stay awake, but no, such is not the case. They all fall asleep, while the spurned suitor is able to kidnap the baby. Upon awakening, the ladies cover their own sins by killing a dog and smearing the blood on Rhiannon and strewing its bones around the bed, telling one and all that she murdered and ate her own baby! For punishment, Rhiannon is ordered to sit outside the city gates with a horse collar around her and proclaim to all visitors what her crime was and how she is atoning for it – she must offer to carry each traveler into the city on her back. This goes on for four years before a nobleman, his wife and their young son arrive one day and present her with a piece of cloth that had been part of her baby’s clothing. The young prince had been abandoned and found by the nobleman and his wife and raised as their own until they recognized the child’s likeness to the prince. So everyone is reunited, restored to the throne, reconciled in marriage and everyone forgives everyone else. Or so the story goes. Rhiannon’s legend takes many more twists and turns, but we’ll leave it here, because we like stories with happy endings. We suspect Rhiannon did, too.
Rhiannon is a figure of Celtic and Welsh mythology, whose wrenching story has a happy ending. A goddess, she chooses to leave her exalted background, spurning a suitor, and takes as a husband the mortal Prince Pwyll of Wales. She bears him a son and as is the custom, the infant is placed in the care of six ladies-in-waiting so the mother may rest. You would think that among the six, at least one might manage to stay awake, but no, such is not the case. They all fall asleep, while the spurned suitor is able to kidnap the baby. Upon awakening, the ladies cover their own sins by killing a dog and smearing the blood on Rhiannon and strewing its bones around the bed, telling one and all that she murdered and ate her own baby! For punishment, Rhiannon is ordered to sit outside the city gates with a horse collar around her and proclaim to all visitors what her crime was and how she is atoning for it – she must offer to carry each traveler into the city on her back. This goes on for four years before a nobleman, his wife and their young son arrive one day and present her with a piece of cloth that had been part of her baby’s clothing. The young prince had been abandoned and found by the nobleman and his wife and raised as their own until they recognized the child’s likeness to the prince. So everyone is reunited, restored to the throne, reconciled in marriage and everyone forgives everyone else. Or so the story goes. Rhiannon’s legend takes many more twists and turns, but we’ll leave it here, because we like stories with happy endings. We suspect Rhiannon did, too.