He is the "Good God" not because of moral purity, but because he is capable of all things—a cosmic father whose giant club can slay nine men with one end and restore them to life with the other. The Dagda represents the eternal truth of abundance; his bottomless cauldron ensures that no one leaves his table hungry. He embodies the earthy, potent vitality of the land itself, balancing the gravity of a king with the crude humor of a peasant. In him, we see the archetype of the Provider, reminding us that true power is inseparable from the responsibility to sustain life.

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