Cover art for Triad by Enya

Triad

Enya
Track 10 on Enya 

Produced by

Triad Lyrics

St. Patrick

[English Lyrics]

[Verse]
Tabhair dom ghrása
Fiormhac Dé
Tabhair dom do neartsa
An ghrian gheal ghlé

[Verse]
Tabhair dom ghrása
Fiormhac Dé
Tabhair dom do neartsa
An ghrian gheal ghlé

[Verse]
Tabhair dom ghrása
Fiormhac Dé
Tabhair dom do neartsa
An ghrian gheal ghlé

Cú Chulainn

[Instrumental]
Oisin

[Instrumental]

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About

Genius Annotation

10th song off her debut 1987 album The Celts.

Q&A

Find answers to frequently asked questions about the song and explore its deeper meaning

What did Enya say about "Triad"?
Genius Answer

Roma Ryan wrote in the album’s liner notes where she explains the meaning of the triad:

St. Patrick

The son of a Roman official, Patrick was captured by a raiding party of Celts when a boy, and spent six years in captivity. He escaped, became a priest and returned to Ireland. According to legend it is St. Patrick who is responsible for Ireland’s conversion to Christianity and the final loss of the old Celtic beliefs.

Cú Chulainn

Cú Chulainn means the “hound of Cullan”. As a child his name was “setanta” meaning ‘the little’. He became Cú Chulainn when he killed the watchdog of the smith Cullan, and so undertook to guard the smiths house in place of the dog. Cú Chulainn is one of the great Irish heroes. The most famous deeds of this hero are found in the saga Táin Bó Cualgne (the cattle raid of Cooley).

Oisin

Oisin which means “little fawn” left his home to journey to Tir na n Og, the Land of Youth, with Niamh Cinn Oir, “Niamh of the Head of Gold”. Timelessness – he stayed 300 years, though never aged. On his return to Ireland he found his contemporaries long dead, and Ireland now had St. Patrick and Christianity. Putting his foot upon the earth, he lost Tir na n Og, and so aged and died.

Credits
Produced By
Written By
Mastering Engineer
Engineer
Arranger
Lyricist
Vocals
Instrumentation
Recorded At
Aigle Studios, Artane, Dublin, Ireland; BBC Enterprises Studio Woodlands, Wood Lane, London, UK
Release Date
March 1987
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