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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... and most of the houses and fields about have names which have suggested
various notions to the people there: such are the farms called 'Coed Howel,'
whence the belief in the neighbourhood that Howel Dda, King of Wales, lived
here.
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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