THE WORLD'S DEBT TO THE IRISH
now be called a retreat. This is by the way one of
the earliest series of spiritual conferences on record.
He is said to have been wonderfully impressed with
what he saw at Kildare and to have declared that he
hoped that each one of the nuns received half as
much influence for good from what he had to say as
he himself had received from what he had witnessed
at Kildare.
St. Kevin of Glendalough, another of the great
scholars of the time, when a young man, visited St.
Bridget in order to consult her with regard to his
vocation in life. In accordance with her advice he
became an anchorite at first and then later the
founder of the famous monastery and schools of
Glendalough. Another founder of a great school,
that of Sletty, which was situated in Queens County
not far from the Carlow boundary, was also a visi-
tor who came to take counsel as a young man from
the “Mary of the Gaels,” or “Mary of Erin” as the
Irish came to call her in their love of the beauty of
her character. This was St. Fiech who afterwards
became a writer of great eminence in the Celtic
tongue. His poem in the praise of St. Patrick is one
of the classics in that dear old language. Another
distinguished ecclesiastical visitor to Kildare was St.
Ibar, the founder of a monastery for men on the
plains of the river Liffey. He came frequently to
ask advice from the abbess of Kildare, though it
should also be noted that he was of great help to
her in establishing her convent. Perhaps we of the
modern times are even more grateful to him for the
258