Cearbhall ÃÂg àDálaigh (; fl. 1630), sometimes spelt in English as Carroll Oge O'Daly, was a 17th-century Irish language poet and harpist, who composed the song "".
Cearbhall (Carroll) was a common name amongst people of the àDálaigh (O'Daly, Daly) surname, and more than one poet of that surname bore the name. The Cearbhall ÃÂg who composed "Eileanóir a Rún" was from Pallas, near Gorey in County Wexford. The Eileanóir of the poem was the daughter of Sir Morgan Kavanagh of Clonmullen in County Wexford. In folklore, Cearbhall is presented as a womaniser and trickster similar to the Gobán Saor.
Irish folklore recounts how Eileanóir Chaomhánach (Eleanor Kavanagh) eloped with Cearbhall (Carroll) the day she was about to marry another man. Cearbhall arrived at the wedding to play music at the wedding feast, and fell in love with the bride. He composed the song Eileanoir a Rún to woo the bride.
Another song, in the style of the crosántacht, Seachrán Chearbhaill, is ascribed to Cearbhall ÃÂg. Both, a poem by the Dominican priest PádraigÃÂn Haicéad. addressed to Cearbhall, and Cearbhall's poem in response, survive in a 17th-century manuscript. The story Mac na MÃÂchomhairle (The Son of Poor Council) has been ascribed to him in folklore, but current scholarship casts doubt on this ascription.
A version of Seachrán Chearbhaill by Joe ÃÂinniu Seosamh àhÃÂanaàis available on a CD with the book Joe ÃÂinniu: Nár fhágha mé Bás ChoÃÂche by Liam Mac Con Iomaire (Cló Iarchonnachta 2007); and a later recording of an earlier version of the song on Peadar àCeannabháin's CD, Mo Chuid den tSaol (Cló-Iarchonnachta). There are many commercially available recordings of Eleanór a Rún.
Both songs are recognised as part of the traditional Irish language repertoire of unaccompanied ballads known as 'sean-nós song'.
Cearbhall ÃÂg àDálaigh appears as an historical character in Darach àScolaÃÂ's Irish language novel An Cléireach, as a soldier in the Royalist army in 1650 and in the Spanish Netherlands as late as 1662.