Celtic Folklore Welsh and ManxTOWARDS the close of the seventies I began to collect Welsh folklore. I did so partly because others had set the example elsewhere, and partly in order to see whether Wales could boast of any story-tellers of the kind that delight the readers of Campbell'sPopular Tales of the West Highlands. I soon found what I was not wholly unprepared for, that as a rule I could not get a single story of any length from the mouths of any of my fellow countrymen, but a considerable number of bits of stories. |
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... the fairies with the waterworld. Then comes the turn of the other kind of origin to
be ... the remaining five chapters. Among the subsidiary questions raised may be
instanced those of magic and the origin of druidism; not to mention a neglected.
A friend of mine is employing his spare time at present in an inquiry into the origin
of the lakes of this district, and he tells me that Llyn Cwm Llwch is of glacial origin,
its dam being composed, as he thinks, of glacial débris through which the ...
At any rate, I have never heard it suggested that they were of aquatic origin, but,
taking the cawell into consideration, and the popular account of the Smychiaid, I
should be inclined to think that the cawell originally referred to some such a ...
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