BRIDGET’S COMPANIONS AND SUCCESSORS
because of the feeling that divorce worked particular
injustice to the wife, that even to the present day
they stand firmly united still refusing to permit the
privilege of successive polygamy which so many
other civilized nations have adopted. As a result of
this, in the Irish Free State no legal recognition of
divorce has yet come. Under the terms of the legal
separation of the older time in Ireland, the wife was
granted the right to take with her all of her
marriage portion besides her marriage gifts, and an
amount over and above for damages. In a word
every phase of the old Gaelic law was calculated to
insure a woman's rights much better than under the
national law of any other country at the time, and
surprising though it cannot but seem, far beyond
woman's rights in the modern time.
It is not surprising then that when Christianity
came to set women free in other countries, the Irish
women proceeded to lift themselves up to heights
such as had never been enjoyed by women before
anywhere up to that time. Education became their
privilege and literature and the love of beautiful
things in a productive way became their occupation.
Knowledge of this preceding history of the pre-
Christian Irish presents the background on which
the lives of Bridget and her companions and suc-
cessors can be most readily and thoroughly under-
stood.
The place of women in the life of the Irish at the
beginning of the great period of Irish achievement,
is best appreciated from the position assigned to
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