January 2 is the feast of Saint Scothin, an account of whose life can be found here. Below is a retelling of the most famous of the legends associated with him, by the Irish Anglican writer Maud Joynt:
LEGEND OF SAINT SCOTHINE
SCOTHINE, who dwelt at Tech Scothine, in Leinster, was a saint of great piety and of wondrous power; for he could make the journey from Ireland to Rome in one day and return the next; moreover, he could walk dryshod on the sea. One day while he was walking on the sea he met Saint Barre of Cork, who was in a boat.
" How comes it that thou art walking on the sea?" asked Barre .
"'Tis no sea, but a plain covered with clover," said Scothine, and, with that, he plucked a clover blossom and threw it to Saint Barre in the boat.
"But thou, how comes it that thy boat floats on a plain?"
Thereupon Barre dipped his hand into the water, drew out a salmon and threw it to Scothine; and that was all the answer he made.
Maud Joynt, The Golden Legends of the Gael, (Dublin, n.d.), Part II, 80.
LEGEND OF SAINT SCOTHINE
SCOTHINE, who dwelt at Tech Scothine, in Leinster, was a saint of great piety and of wondrous power; for he could make the journey from Ireland to Rome in one day and return the next; moreover, he could walk dryshod on the sea. One day while he was walking on the sea he met Saint Barre of Cork, who was in a boat.
" How comes it that thou art walking on the sea?" asked Barre .
"'Tis no sea, but a plain covered with clover," said Scothine, and, with that, he plucked a clover blossom and threw it to Saint Barre in the boat.
"But thou, how comes it that thy boat floats on a plain?"
Thereupon Barre dipped his hand into the water, drew out a salmon and threw it to Scothine; and that was all the answer he made.
Maud Joynt, The Golden Legends of the Gael, (Dublin, n.d.), Part II, 80.