Set in the Scottish land, the Y Goddodin is a similar piece of literature that gives everyone a glimpse into the complexities of a war that raged for several days and led to the death of some of the finest men in Welsh history, who were handpicked by the authorities to fight for Scottish rights against the Brittonic empire.
Like any other heroic poetry, the Goddodin is a compilation of history and war, all created through a language, a meter, and a storyline that grips any reader who understands Old Welsh even partly. It has a universal appeal of instilling in the reader the core instincts of strife, war, heroism, and the ability to face death.
The Book of Aneirin, which is a compilation of poems about the war, is a complete thesis of Scottish spirit in the 6th Century AD and serves as the epic representation of human strife akin to many other heroic poems. The Book of Aneirin was created through a series of poems written by Aneirin, the bard, who was serving during wartime and was not to be counted as a warrior. He was close to the warriors and could record every detail of the preparation for the attack and the process and outcome of the attack.
Although created by a lesser-known poet, the overall impact of the poems is equivalent to the timeless creation Iliad created by Homer about the Trojan war. If critics are to be believed then Homer created Iliad 400 years after the Trojan War ravaged the Bronze Age and the poem ended with the seizure of Troy by the Greek forces. The poem was a heroic description of the planning, efforts, preparation, and attacks during the Trojan War and closes after the climax war that led to winning over Troy.
However, the poem also has a well-known sequel known as the Odyssey created by Homer to depict the lives of people after the Trojan conquest. Yet again poetry proves to be the most effective tool that allows people to identify with a situation in history that turned the face of power in a land known well to future generations.
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