Definition of "clàrsach"
clàrsach
noun
plural clàrsachs
Alternative spelling of clarsach.
Quotations
Thrice, with the same result, his hand / Upon the chords he laid— / He turned the keys, but harsher sound / The trembling clàrsach made: / In honor of the mother, then, / A planxty he composed, / And perfect was the harmony / Until the strain was closed.
1854, William H[owe] C[uyler] Hosmer, “Carolan’s Prophecy”, in The Poetical Works of William H. C. Hosmer, volumes II ([…]), New York, N.Y.: Redfield, […], page 338
In the sea-loch now known as that of Tarbert of Loch Fyne, but in the old far-off days named the Haven of the Foray, there was once a grianân, a sunbower, of so great a loveliness, that throughout all lands of the Gael the strings of the singing men’s clàrsachs ceaselessly stirred to it, as at a breath of the beauty of all beauty.
1899, Fiona Macleod , section III, chapter section I, page 275
My harp, my clàrsach, my fiddle, my stringed instruments wherever I go: when I was young, a little girl, your coming would cheer my spirits, you’d get a kiss without having to ask, and I feel now you have a right to one.
2020, Dorothy Brown, “From ‘A Song to Alasdair Mac Colla’”, in Peter MacKay, Jo MacDonald, editors, 100 Dàn as Fheàrr Leinn / 100 Favourite Gaelic Poems, Luath Press, published 2023