I went to St Andrew's Church Supply here in Vancouver today to pick up refills for the votive candles I use for my flame-tending shift. As I like to do, I noodled around looking at the statuary and cards and surplices and such. To my surprise there were two St Brigit statues--there have never been St Brigit statues there before. These two statues were nearly identical, except for the painting of the eyes. The one had perfectly symmetrical, belladona-widened eyes, giving her a pretty face. The other had one eye lower than the other, its pupil wider than its mate's, and the brow of that eye was arched.
She was not, of course, typically pretty. She was unique, and her face was a little startling. As I looked longer at it, I began to get a sense of a life behind these eyes, a history, wisdom perhaps, and pain.
It of course made me think of the story in Leabhar Breac of St Brigit's self-mutilation in order to avoid being married off when she wanted to be a monastic. It's a tad horrifying: be warned.
Shortly after that came a certain man of good kin unto Dubthach to ask for his daughter (in
marriage). Dubthach and his sons were willing, but Brigit refused. Said a
brother of her brethren named Beccán unto her: ‘Idle is the fair eye that is in
thy head not be on a pillow near a husband.’ ‘The Son of the Virign knoweth,’
says Brigit, ‘it is not lively for us if it brings harm upon us.’ Then Brigit
put her finger under her eye, and drew it out of her head until it was on her
cheek, and she said: ‘Lo, here for thee is thy delightful eye, O Beccán!’ Then
his eye burst forthwith. When Dubthach and her brethern beheld that, they
promised that she should never be told to go unto a husband. Then she put her
palm to her eye and it was quite whole at once. But Beccán's eye was not whole
till his death.
Corpus of Electronic Texts Edition
On the Life of St. Brigit (Leabhar Breac) (Author: Translated by Whitley Stokes)
It will not surprise you which statue I chose. Leaving the perfect one for another Brigidine who may wander in and find her with delight, I brought my new friend to the counter and from there, to my home.