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Title: The Cambrian Sketch-Book - Tales, Scenes, and Legends of Wild Wales
Author: Davies, R. Rice
Language: English
As this book started as an ASCII text book there are no pictures available.


*** Start of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "The Cambrian Sketch-Book - Tales, Scenes, and Legends of Wild Wales" ***


                            [Picture: Snowdon]



                                   THE
                          CAMBRIAN SKETCH-BOOK.


                            _TALES_, _SCENES_,
                       _AND LEGENDS OF WILD WALES_.

                                * * * * *

                                    BY
                             R. RICE DAVIES.

        _Author of_ “_The Handy Book on Tax Laws_,” “_Havelock_,”
           “_Essay on Recreation Grounds for Swansea_,” _etc._

                                * * * * *

                                 London:
                         SIMPKIN, MARSHALL & CO.

                                 Swansea:
                   THE CAMBRIAN WELSH AND ENGLISH BOOK
                            PUBLISHING COMPANY



To the Right Honourable
THE LADY LLANOVER.


MADAM,

Among the illustrious men and women of Cambria it would be difficult to
select one to whom this book could be so appropriately inscribed as your
ladyship.  You are, and ever have been, the warm and sincere friend of my
country; you are profoundly versed in her historic, poetic, literary, and
legendary annals; you are a liberal and munificent contributor to almost
every great movement designed to promote the social and intellectual, the
moral and religious, welfare of the people of our ancient Principality;
and you have attained a high and imperishable fame as a graceful and
eloquent writer.  In these pages your ladyship will find depicted scenes
connected with the past history of the land; tales of years that are
gone, which roll before us with their dark or splendid deeds, and
specimens of the wild but graceful legends which have shed a poetic charm
upon almost every nook and corner of Wales.  I cherish the hope that
their perusal will afford your ladyship delight and pleasure, while their
contents, possibly, may help to increase your ladyship’s interest in and
attachment to the land you so much love.

                                                              I am, Madam,
                                                        Very respectfully,
                                         Your ladyship’s obedient Servant,
                                                           R. RICE DAVIES.



PREFACE.


The history of the Cambrian race is interesting not only to the
antiquarian, but also to all real lovers of traditional and legendary
lore.  It is a race which had its origin in the mythical age, in the far
back and remote past, in that period of the world’s history when
intellectual and moral darkness covered the earth, and when gross
darkness, like a black pall, enveloped the minds of the people.  The
country which this race originally occupied is simply a matter of
conjecture—an unascertained fact; while the period when the Cambrian
people first left their own native soil, the land of their love and their
fondest affection, and wandered over hill and plain, over mountain and
dismal swamp, through woods and primeval forests, wading through mighty
fordable rivers, and crossing stormy seas, until they reached the pebbled
strand of this our sea-girt isle, is still a matter of uncertainty—one of
the mysteries of this mysterious world.  That they occupied this island,
and were in undisturbed possession of it many hundred years before the
appearance in our world of Him who is the true Light of humanity, there
exists abundance of evidence; and it is not unlikely, but on the contrary
highly probable, that sections of this ancient people were _then_
engaged, as _now_, in developing the mineral wealth of the country.

Coming down to a later date, a less remote period, we have actual
descriptive accounts of the Welsh people, of their manners and customs,
their habits and mode of life, their religious rites and form of worship;
and considering the then state of the world, we are astonished at the
comparative high state of civilization to which this ancient race had at
that time attained.  But to trace the history of their civilization down
through the ages is foreign to my present purpose, however tempting the
theme.  The object I had in view in preparing this work for the press,
was not to place before the reader a consecutive narrative, but to select
topics with a view to illustrate some of the traits of character of this
ancient, singular, and extremely interesting people—a people who, in
spite of oppression, injustice, and isolation, have nobly clung to the
old faith; who have ever as citizens been loyal, patriotic, and virtuous;
and who, moreover, in the face of very serious disadvantages, have
obtained a position of intellectual and moral manhood, which cannot fail
to inspire us with admiration and wonder.  Let me say here, that if this
work deepens the Welshman’s love of country, and induces the English
reader to regard us in a more favourable light than that adopted by a
class of Saxon critics, I shall consider I have not laboured in vain.

As regards the tales and sketches of this volume, they are not ideal
pictures of Cambrian life and character, but are for the most part
founded on fact.  For example, the ascent of Snowdon was undertaken
alone, some ten years ago, and by the most difficult, tedious, and
hazardous route.  I often wonder at my want of prudence in ascending from
Capel Curig, that glorious old Alpine height, on a cold, dank, and misty
autumnal morning, without a guide or a friendly hand to point the way.
Alone I accomplished the journey, without experiencing much difficulty,
or meeting a single mishap.  The story of Dunraven Castle is founded on a
historical fact.  It is one of the most painful of the many painful
incidents of those terrible times.  Parson Jones is not an ideal but a
real character painted from life.  His fame as a charmer, a conjuror, and
magician, was celebrated far and wide.  I well remember farmers’ wives
and others visiting him in order to secure his assistance in driving away
evil spirits from their dwellings.  A wonderful man was Parson Jones!  An
able divine, a true preacher of the cross, a lovable and childlike man
was he.  When his body was consigned to the tomb, the people felt that
they had lost one of their best earthly friends.  As to the legends of
Lake Savathan and Elidorus, they have been handed down in written
history.  The tale of Cadwgan is a real picture of Cambrian life.  The
story of Saint Winifred is founded on an old Welsh legend.  A marvellous
work has recently been written by one of England’s greatest novelists; it
is not impossible that the idea of the “Coming Race” had its origin in
the tale of Elidorus.

In this work I have avoided the literary paths trodden by previous
Cambrian authors: writers who, in their own sphere of literature, have
left behind them imperishable names.  I believe that the mine of wealth I
have endeavoured to explore is new, while virgin is the soil.  Deeply
interesting are the legends which have been handed down from a people,
who, alas! alas! no longer tread the sacred ground of wild Wales.  In the
selection of topics, I have only discovered for the theme of my pen a few
precious gems, having culled here and there a few fair and fragrant
flowers, thus leaving for future literary labours, many others of tints
equally beautiful and sweets equally delicious.  Almost every dell and
hamlet, every sylvan glade and mountain side of wild Wales abounds with
legends and tales, stories of real life which are too interesting to be
lost, and too important in the lessons they afford to remain hid in the
bosom of members of our ancient race.

It is possible that exception will be taken to the ideal
pictures—creations of the author’s fancy—of the fairies and fairy land,
which form rather a prominent feature of this work.  For introducing to
the reader the people of the fairy kingdom beneath the bay of Swansea, I
have no apology to make.  In the thoughts they breathe and in the
opinions they express they are very human, while the land in which they
dwell bears witness to the presence of the energizing power and infinite
benevolence of the Supreme.  From our childhood we have been accustomed
to listen to the wonderful tales relating to Lilliputian races, in which
the narrators described their sayings and doings, their gambols and
frolics, their pranks and merry-making, their sweet music and dulcet
notes; and in our wanderings, we have often gazed on the green rings
wherein they danced on mead and meadow.  And are we not ready to confess
that those fairy stories possessed a special charm—an interest which even
reality itself hardly awakens?  I am aware that belief in the existence
of those aërial forms, those ghostly, impalpable, and ambiguous beings,
has been regarded as an evidence of mental blindness, and the absence of
high culture and civilization.  This charge cannot be maintained.  The
peoples of all European nations believe in the existence of those
wonderful people, and, personally, I should regret to see their faith
undermined.  Fairies are associated with the spiritual and super-human;
with virtue and purity; thus they help us to look upward to the
spirit-world, where flesh and blood, where materialism and its unhallowed
fruits have not, and can never have, even a temporary lodgment.

Should this work meet with the approval of my fellow-countrymen, I shall
in the early part of next spring issue a second volume of the Cambrian
Sketch-Book.  I shall include in that volume: Sir Rice ap Thomas, a
historical romance, already written; and The Lost Son Found, a tale of
the Lowland Hundred.  A beautiful country was Cantref-y-Gwaelod, where
now roll the waters of the Atlantic—a magnificent plain with fortified
cities, and co-extensive with Cardigan Bay.  Several other legends and
tales of North and South Wales will also appear in the intended volume.

It now only remains for me to express my hearty thanks to Charles Bath,
Esq., of Fynone, for his kindness in placing at my service a very old
view of Swansea, a faithful transcript of which has been made by the
artist for the present volume.  I make this public acknowledgment to our
townsman for the reason that he is always ready to aid all efforts having
in view the publication and circulation of works relating to dear old
Cambria.

                                                           R. RICE DAVIES.

   SWANSEA, _July_, 1875.



CONTENTS.

                                                                  PAGE
ASCENT OF SNOWDON                                                    3
A STORY OF DUNRAVEN CASTLE IN THE OLDEN TIMES                       21
PARSON JONES                                                        79
CADWGAN WYNN                                                       121
TRADITIONS OF LLYN SAVATHAN                                        227
TREFFYNON; OR, LEGENDS OF SAINT WINIFRED                           243
THE VISIT OF ELIDORUS TO THE FAIRY KINGDOM BENEATH THE BAY         269
CEFN-Y-BEDD                                                        319



ASCENT OF SNOWDON.


    “How high and swift flits the thin rack along,
    Skirted with rainbow dyes; now deep below—
    While the fierce sun strikes the illumined top,
    Slow sails the gloomy storm, and all beneath,
    By vaporous exhalation hid, is lost
    In darkness: save at once where drifted mists,
    Cut by strong gusts of eddying winds, expose
    The transitory scene.
    Now swift on either side the gathered clouds,
    As by a sudden touch of magic, wide
    Recede, and the fair face of heaven and earth
    Appears.  Amid the vast horizon’s stretch,
    In restless gaze the eye of wonder darts
    O’er the expanse,—mountains on mountains piled,
    And winding bays and promontories huge,
    And lakes and wandering rivers from their source
    Traced to the distant ocean.”

                                                           BINGLEY’S TOUR.

It was a bright and glorious August morning, in the year 18—, when,
having a few weeks’ freedom from the busy toils of official labour, I
resolved to have an “out,” as they call it in the north of England, where
I then resided—a brief tour of pleasure.  Never in these northern
latitudes had I witnessed a more lovely morning.  The sun shone brightly,
and with a dazzling splendour only surpassed by the gorgeous brilliancy
of an Eastern clime.  When we looked upwards, not a cloud could be seen
in the concave hemisphere above.  Far, far away, the most distant objects
could be plainly and distinctly seen.  In the forest not a spray moved,
nor was there a sweet kiss of the leaves on that breezeless morn.
Neither on river nor lake could there be discerned a single ripple.
Everywhere, except in the adjacent grove, did quietude and stillness
reign.  There, however, the birds sent forth their merry and joyous
notes, and the tone of their voices, and the songs they sung, told of
joys, and proclaimed the existence of happy feelings, which but few among
the sons of men are permitted to realize.  Oh, how calm and how still was
the scene around!  Indeed, all nature, except the winged songsters of the
grove, appeared to repose quietly and peacefully on the bosom of its God.

A grand morning this, said I, for starting on an “out;” but the pressing
question was, whither should I go.  During my brief preparation, I
fancied I heard the voice of the eagle, and the voice said, “Come to me.
Come and behold the high mountain whereon I dwell, and the great rocks in
which I build my nest.  Come and see, from my high elevation and Alpine
heights, the magnificent lochs whose waters spread far and wide in the
broad and expansive valleys.  Oh, come, and behold the land of the brave
and heroic Wallace.”

A moment before deciding whether or not I should accept the invitation of
the king of birds, there was wafted on the gentle breeze that had just
sprung up, the voice of a little bird which inhabits the far west; and
the little bird said, “Come and visit the land in which I dwell.  In this
land you will behold some of the greatest wonders of the world.  Were you
to visit the North or the South, the East or the West, the sunny
fountains of Africa, the coral strands of India, or the icy regions of
the frigid zone, yet in no part of the wide world could you discover
objects so grand and majestic as our Giant’s Causeway; while Killarney is
unrivalled for sublime and beautiful scenery.”  Well, little bird, said
I, I love your nation; your people have warm hearts and generous
sympathies.  Just, however, as I was about saying “aye” to the invitation
of the little bird of the Green Isle, there came from the south—o’er
moorland valley, o’er mighty rivers and hills, o’er cities, towns, and
villages, the charming and enchanting voice of the lark, and its tones
were so winning and so sweet, that I was almost moved to shed tears of
joy.  But what was the purport of her song?  The burden of her song was
Cambria! the beautiful and the blest; the land of Poetry and the Ideal.
“Come,” carolled the lark, “and behold some of the beauties of Wild
Wales.  In no land are glades so verdant, are rocks so rugged and bold,
are cwms and dells so exquisitely beautiful and lovely as are to be seen
here.  Nowhere but here can you behold hill after hill, and mountain
after mountain, rise above each other, presenting a picture so awfully
wild, so grand, and so majestically sublime.  Besides,” said the lark,
“this is your own land.  It is the place of your birth.  It is the home
of your father’s sepulchre.  Oh! come here, for here are generous hearts,
ready to bid you welcome.  In the border land is many an old friend who
will rejoice and kill the fatted calf when he sees you approach his
dwelling.”  I could no longer resist the irresistible voice, and replied
to her, Oh, sweet songster of the moorland, thither will I go, and
to-morrow I will listen to your heavenly strains among your own hills.

I need not describe the journey from the North to Conway, as it is
familiar to most travellers.  Nor shall I refer to the beautiful Menai,
or the magnificent ruins and historic renown of the good old town of
Carnarvon.  Nor shall I refer, with a view to depict the scene, to many
other deeply-interesting spots, some of which I could not but gaze upon
with feelings of profound reverence, the rather as they told the tales of
other times, which rolled before me with their deeds.  As I looked upon
and contemplated these scenes, I was deeply affected, while my vision was
dimmed by the tears that welled up from my heart.  Moreover, as I still
gazed upon the historic fields of blood and battle, I thought I saw the
shadow of my country’s martyrs and heroes passing before my eyes—the
shadows of the great and heroic men who, strong in the righteousness of
their cause, fought for the liberty of our brave, courageous, and
lion-hearted ancestors, and for the independence and the freedom of the
land of my love and my sympathies.  Since the days of that long and
sanguinary struggle, time and the disposition of men and nations have
immeasurably changed for the better.  Happily for us, we have now a ruler
who loves her subjects, whose sway is the very opposite of that despotic
tyrant’s rule, who loved to imbrue his hands in the blood of contemporary
princes.  Edward, however, has gone to his _place_.  Oh that his memory
and his deeds of blood had perished with him!  As I looked upon the scene
around Conway, and viewed it in relation to and in connection with the
dark deeds of Edward, the following lines of the poet Gray came to my
remembrance:—

    “Hark how each giant oak and desert cave
      Sighs to the torrent’s awful voice beneath!
    O’er thee, O King, their hundred arms they wave,
      Revenge on thee in hoarser murmurs breathe,
    Vocal no more.”

From Conway I proceeded to Llanrwst, thence to Bettws-y-Coed, which is
situated in a lovely verdant cwm, and is the most charming and the most
exquisitely beautiful spot I have ever beheld.  I have seen many an
enchanting scene, but Bettws-y-Coed is incomparably finer, and surpasses,
both in magnificent boldness and soft and quiet grandeur, any other
landscape upon which I have been permitted to gaze.  As night was rapidly
approaching, and as I had arranged to ascend Snowdon the following
morning, I had to tear myself away from so enchanting a scene.  From
there I proceeded to the Swallow Falls, thence to Capel Curig, a village
which affords some of the most picturesque landscapes which can be met
with in Wales.  Of this prospect it might be truly said:—

    “Here hills and vales, the woodland and the plain,
    Here earth and water seem to strive again;
    Not, chaos-like, together crushed and bruised,
    But, as the world, harmoniously confused.”

However, I lingered not to contemplate the scene, but proceeded on my
journey towards Penygwryd, which I reached just as the great king of day
disappeared behind the Cambrian Alps.

The next morning, after partaking of an early breakfast of ham and eggs
and coffee, I proceeded to the hotel lawn to see whether the day was
favourable for an ascent of Yr Wyddfa, the “uwch y mynydd uchaf” of
England and Wales.  Since the previous day I regretted to find that the
weather had undergone a complete change; the summit of Eryri was now
enveloped in dark clouds, the morning was cold, and the air was dank and
chilly.  The moaning of the wind in the great mountain gullies and cwms
rendered the scene both awful and sublime.  Meeting mine host on the
lawn, I inquired if I might venture to ascend Snowdon without the service
of a guide.  He strongly dissuaded me from attempting an ascent alone, as
it would necessarily be attended with great risk.  However, after
debating the matter some time, I resolved to carry out my original design
of going unattended.  When I reached the summit I was delighted beyond
measure at having accomplished the ascent, by the longest and most
difficult route, without the aid of a guide.  Having wished Mr. Owen a
hearty farewell, I commenced the ascent of Snowdon.  Proceeding up the
road towards the Pass of Llanberis so far as Pen-y-Pass, I branched off
to the left, and soon came to Llyn Teyrn, thence taking the trackless
mountain above Cwm Dyli, direct towards Llyn Glaslyn; and thence by a
circuitous and difficult route, which a kind mountain miner showed me, to
the highest point of the Mother of Hills.

Although I found this route laborious, I was amply recompensed by
beholding “scenes of extraordinary wildness and grandeur, over which
solitude seemed to brood with undisturbed silence, scarcely ever broken
by the wing of bird or the voice of melody.”  In every direction
prospects the most magnificent opened to view, and every crag and rock
which I surmounted was furnished with objects of picturesque effect or
deep and absorbing interest.  From many a crag I looked down upon the
cwms and deep dells beneath, and I fancied I could pick out here and
there the very dingles to which our heroic ancestors were compelled to
resort for protection, when pursued by numberless hosts of the enemy
after they had sustained defeat.  In these cwms they were, however, safe.
Even proud and haughty Edward dared not follow the Britons to their
mountain fastnesses.  To them Snowdon had ever proved a kind and guardian
angel: hence the reason why they fled thither in the hour of their
defeat.  No wonder, therefore, that they loved the old mountain deeply
and passionately; and no wonder, too, that they composed songs to her
honour and renown.

When I attained the summit of the mountain, the sight presented to my
view was awfully and majestically wild and grand.  The whole circuit of
the Snowdonian range was enveloped in a thick and dark mist, which was so
dense that I fancied I could cut it with the finest edged tool.  The
howling of the winds in the cwms and dingles which run down the mountain
on every side was really appalling.  Indeed, the prospect was horrible to
contemplate.  It gave an idea, says a writer on the subject, of numbers
of abysses concealed by a thick smoke furiously circulating around us.
Now and then, however, a strong gust of wind created an opening in the
mist, which, for a moment, gave me a magnificent prospect of sea and
lake, of deep chasms, and high and lofty mountains, of almost fathomless
dingles and ravines; while towns and hamlets appeared in the distance
like small specks on the surface of the earth.  But the prospect was only
momentary.  The clouds of mist which were rent asunder by the strong
current of wind would, in the twinkling of an eye, again form and unite,
and thus present a compact and complete whole, leaving me involved in a
darkness that might be felt.  In a minute it would again separate into a
thousand parts, and fly in wild eddies up the gullies and dingles, thus
affording me another opportunity of seeing the Isle of Mona, the mountain
of Plynlimmon, Hell’s Mouth, the Iraeth Bach, and that magnificent bay
which once formed the rich and fertile plain of Cantref-y-Gwaelod, with
its sixteen fortified cities and towns, whose inhabitants met with a
watery grave through the drunkenness of Seithenyn, who is styled in the
“Triads” as one of the three notorious drunkards of the isle of Britain.
Contemplating the scene so strange, yet so grand, the following lines of
the poet Rogers struck me as extremely applicable to my then situation:—

                                              “The morning air
    Plays on my cheek, how gently, flinging round
    A silvery gleam; and now the purple mists
    Rise like a curtain; now the sun looks out,
    Filling, o’erflowing with his glorious light,
    This noble amphitheatre of hills.”

After spending nearly two hours on the summit in gazing upon the wild,
yet the grand and majestic scene presented to my view, I felt, as I had
to walk to Pont Aberglaslyn, and back to Penygwryd, a distance of nearly
twenty miles, that I dare not delay my departure longer; hence I made
instant preparation to descend.  I, however, left this Alpine top, and
bade farewell to old Snowdon, with feelings of deep sorrow and poignant
grief.  On leaving this most prominent historic spot in the past history
of my country, I could not but enter into the deep feeling of reverence
with which my forefathers regarded this mountain and its adjacent hills,
valleys, and plains.  Thought I to myself, was it a wonder that they
almost worshipped Yr Wyddfa?  Indeed they had every reason for paying
honour and homage to it.  To them it had ever been a never-failing
friend—a sure and safe retreat when they suffered and sustained defeat in
battle.  To them it afforded a rich and never-failing refuge, in which
they lodged the young and the feeble and the non-combatants when they
went forth to fight the common foe—the implacable enemies of their dear
fatherland—foes and enemies, too, who were strangers to generosity, but
who loved conquest for the sake of conquest, and who were alike
indifferent to the sacrifice of human blood as they were to English
treasures.  When they followed our brave and heroic countrymen into the
mountain fastnesses of Snowdon, they generally suffered terrible
slaughter, and repented having left those fortresses and plains where
they so much loved to dwell.  Considering the many and the terrible
disasters which befell their marches in its fastnesses, no wonder they
preferred residing at some distance removed from so impregnable a refuge.
To the Welsh warriors it had been a natural guardian angel: hence the
reason why they loved it so deeply, so ardently, and with the whole
passion of the soul.

After I had descended some distance towards Beddgelert, I turned in order
to take a parting farewell-look of this the mother of Cambrian mountains;
and in viewing its high and lofty summit, now almost wholly enveloped in
mist, I was forcibly struck with the wild, dreary, and boundless scene.
From the point on which I stood this ancient hill appeared to be
untrodden by human foot, and tenanted only by wandering sheep and goats,
except the hoarse-croaking ravens.  It was, indeed, sublime to stand, as
I stood then, on that spot, and commune with solitude around—to gaze upon
Snowdon and her manifold adjacent hills, slumbering calmly beneath me.
With me there was no form, no human being, no living thing; but I
rejoiced that there, amid this stupendous scene, I could commune freely
and uninterruptedly with nature and nature’s God, and with the spirits of
my brave and heroic forefathers, whose bones lie buried in that wild and
dreary scene; and, as I finally parted from the scene, I sang the
following well-known lines, and so my voice re-echoed through the dales
and caverns:—

    “Rest, ye brave dead, ’midst the hills of your sires.
    Oh, who would not slumber when Freedom expires?
    Lonely and voiceless your halls must remain,
    The children of song may not breathe in the chain.”



A STORY OF DUNRAVEN CASTLE IN THE OLDEN TIMES;
OR,
GOD’S JUDGMENT AGAINST WRECKERS.


THE PROEM.


On the southern coast of the county of Glamorgan, and situate at the back
of a high rocky promontory commanding a magnificent view of the Bristol
Channel, and just opposite the little sea-bathing village of
Southerndown, which appears desolate amid its desolation, stands the
modern Castle of Dunraven, which was built by the late Mr. Thomas
Wyndham.  This castle is erected on the site of a very ancient structure,
which, in the olden times, was called Dindryfan.  The old castle is in
some respects the most interesting in the Principality.  It was there one
of Cambria’s greatest warriors and one of her purest patriots lived and
reigned.  Dunraven was the centre of those wonderful military movements
which gained for their author wide-spread fame and imperishable renown.
It was there that the great commander and war-tactician delivered those
eloquent harangues, which not only inspired confidence in so great and
skilful a leader, but also nerved the patriot’s arm, enabling his trusty
followers to go forth to meet the foe fearlessly, courageously, and with
a resolute resolve to conquer or to die for their country’s welfare and
the independence of their fatherland.  Caractacus, or as he is generally
called by Cambrian writers, Caraddwg, was a great man and an illustrious
warrior, celebrated no less for his heroism than for his many other
virtues.  Hence, when one visits Dunraven, the scenes of his childhood
and riper years, one seems to imbibe his spirit, to be inspired with the
highest admiration for his genius, and to feel the profoundest reverence
for the man who, though vanquished in his encounter with the
well-disciplined forces of Octavius yet was not ashamed—rather in it did
he glory—after many years of exile from the land of his birth, of his
love, and of his deepest and fondest affection, to return to the very
scenes of his childhood and princely rule, in order to proclaim the good
news of the gospel, the truths and glories of which he had learned and
realized during his residence in the far-famed city of Rome.

Subsequent to the death of Caraddwg, Dunraven continued to be the seat of
the Reguli of Glamorgan until the Norman Conquest.  When Robert
Fitz-Hamon divided the country he and his armies had conquered, he
assigned this castle and manor to William de Londres, who, in consequence
of their worthless value, gave them to his butler, afterwards Sir Arnold
Butler.  When the male issue of the Butler family became extinct, the
castle and manor fell to Walter Vaughan, who was a descendant of the
female branch of the Butlers.  It is to this person our story relates.
Oh that his crimes had never been recorded by the pen of the historian!
Oh that his life and its deeds of horror and loathing, which, when we
contemplate, makes one’s blood run cold, had remained unwritten!  As,
however, these have been handed down to this distant age, I will
endeavour to depict the scene, though I can form but a very dim and hazy
conception of the barbarities and cruelties practised by that evil man in
those distant times.



CHAPTER I.
_THE LOVERS_.


It was a lovely autumn evening, when a young man and young woman might
have been seen walking hand in hand along the carriage drive which led
from the village of St. Bride’s to Dunraven Castle.  The young man was in
his usual buoyant and cheerful mood, happy and joyous, but his companion
was pensive and sad.  From childhood John ap William and Myfanwy
Gwenllian had been companions.  In childhood they had pledged themselves
to be true to each other.  In childhood they had walked together, day
after day, either on the rocky headland below the village of
Southerndown, or on the sands of Dunraven Bay, picking off the rocks
flowers of various tints and hues, or gathering in the little haven or
bay beautiful stones or pebbles, or seaweeds and shells.  Besides, during
those childish excursions they were often seen gazing on the ocean
surges, or on the bright blue waves, now almost quiet and still, now
dashing up in awful and appalling fury against the high and stupendous
rocks surrounding the bay.  Often, too, might they have been seen
watching the ships as they sailed up and down the channel.  John
especially, loved the sea and its pebbly shore.  He was never so happy as
when, with his beloved Myfanwy, he was watching the tidal eddies, or
viewing the frail barques as they rode so majestically o’er the briny
waves, carrying in their laps, as it were, the merchandise and the wealth
of the world—the products of the earth’s richest blessings from shore to
shore and from clime to clime.  John contemplated this scene as a
Christian philosopher.  He looked upon commerce between nation and nation
and between peoples and peoples as one of the greatest agents in
advancing the world’s civilization, as it necessarily carried to distant
lands those products of industry which so much contribute towards the
comfort and the material happiness and the general welfare of the race.
But while he looked upon commercial enterprise as a channel through which
material blessings might be conveyed, he moreover regarded it as tending
directly to unite nation with nation, to realize and cement in the bonds
of a holy brotherhood different races and separate nations and kingdoms;
thus rendering war almost impossible.  Happy would it be if the statesmen
of the world would act up to these high principles!

Besides, though John had never been from home—Bridgend being the furthest
extent within the range of his geographical knowledge—nevertheless, from
his reflection on the beneficial results flowing from commercial
enterprise, and his strong passion for a roving life, and being,
moreover, desirous to follow his father’s profession, who was commander
of a merchant vessel, he had resolved, in his early years, to go to sea
when he grew old enough, if a favourable opportunity offered itself.
Myfanwy, however, used all her powers of argument and suasion with a view
to prevent him from following so hazardous a calling; but without
success.  Upon a seafaring life he was resolved.  To visit distant lands,
and to behold strange peoples and countries, was the all-prevailing and
the constant desire of his heart’s deepest emotion.  Hence on attaining
his thirteenth year, he was apprenticed to his father.  When, however,
the day arrived for leaving home, and for bidding adieu to his beloved
mother and his darling Myfanwy, the grief he felt on parting with those
he so deeply and tenderly loved, almost broke his heart.  At last he tore
himself from their embraces and fond caresses, and on the following day
he joined his father’s ship at Bristol, which was even then a city of
considerable commercial importance.

As young ap William was a joyous and spirited boy, always full of fun and
joviality, and was never so well pleased as when he collected around him
a number of the sailors, and told them tales of other times, especially
tales connected with the lives of the great warriors and heroes of his
country he, in consequence, became a great favourite with his father’s
crew, who loved him for his own and his father’s sake.  During this time
he did not, however, neglect his studies; nor was he lacking in acquiring
a thorough knowledge of his profession.  He studied navigation, paid
great attention to charts; while in a short time he gained such an
intimate acquaintance with the management of the vessel, that before two
years elapsed the chief mate pronounced him to be the best and ablest
sailor on board.

Before he attained his eighteenth year he could steer and manage a vessel
with any captain in the mercantile marine; and as the first mate then
retired from the service, John was appointed, by the owners of the ship,
as his successor, with a promise that on the first vacancy he should have
the command of one of their largest vessels.  During those years John had
saved several hundred pounds.  This sum his father invested in the
purchase of a small freehold estate in his native parish, to which John
intended to retire after he had saved enough to secure a sufficient
competency for himself and his beloved Myfanwy.  To that day he looked
forward with feelings of longing anticipation.  On that day he had often
said he would forget the past, would recall to his mind neither sorrow
nor human woes; but would for once live a day wholly devoted to pleasure
and to joy, looking on from then to a still more bright and happy future.
Alas! alas! how different often are results from our expectations.
Weeping cometh in the morning as well as at night.  When we are most bent
on pleasure, when we fancy we are about to realize, according to our
anticipations, its fullest fruition, a dark cloud, charged with mournful
tidings, bursts on our head.  The day on which he led Myfanwy to the
altar was the day on which he himself became an orphan.  Indeed, he had
not left the churchyard before being apprised of the sad intelligence
that a father whom he loved so much was now a mangled corpse.  He went
home to weep and to grieve, though he did not sorrow as one who had no
hope.



CHAPTER II.
_A NOBLE RESOLVE NOBLY CARRIED OUT_.


It was morning.  Walter Vaughan and his heir were partaking of an early
meal before going to the chase.  Just previous to their departure,
“faithful Evan,” as he was called by the neighbours, entered the hall,
and handed his master a letter, which he received with a trembling hand.
Mr. Vaughan hastily broke the seal, and commenced perusing its contents,
but before he had concluded its perusal, he became as pale as death, he
shook like an aspen leaf, and his hand trembled violently.  The young
lord, seeing his father’s distress and mental agony, became seriously
alarmed, and, in a paroxysm of anguish and grief, exclaimed in weeping
tones:—

“Oh, father, my dear and fond parent! what is the matter?  Are you ill?”

“My boy,” replied the lord, “I am a ruined man!”

“Ruined, did you say?”

“Yes, completely and, I fear, irretrievably ruined.”

“How, and by what means has so great a calamity befallen you?”

“This I will explain in a few words.  Some time ago I placed my affairs
in the hands of an attorney, whom I then believed to be an honest man.
He has, however, proved himself to be a faithless friend and an arrant
rogue.  This is his letter, in which he informs me that the lawsuit has
been decided in favour of my opponent, who is my bitterest foe.  This
vagabond lawyer further tells me, that the costs are so enormous that I
shall be compelled to sell my estates in order to meet the liability.  He
even doubts whether the castle and manor of Dunraven will realize
sufficient, over and above the present encumbrance, to meet the debt.”

“But you need not, dear father, dispose of the estate to satisfy the
claims of these lawyers.  There is the twenty thousand pounds my uncle
left me in the bank.  I will send an authority to the manager to pay you
that sum.  Surely, that will be sufficient to meet all claims.”

“My dear and noble-hearted boy, it almost breaks my heart to be obliged
to tell you that your money, even to the last shilling, has already been
spent.”

“Surely, you have not raised the whole of that sum?”

“Yes, every penny has gone; and now, dear Walter, your patrimony in a few
weeks will, I fear, become the possession of others.”

“This is sad news, my father,” replied Walter junior.  “It is, indeed, a
terrible disaster.  But don’t grieve.  What’s done can’t be undone.  I am
resolved yet to redeem it, if time be granted me.  I am now penniless;
but I will make my own fortune.  I will yet gain for myself a name and a
rank which shall be equal to, if it does not surpass, that of my
illustrious ancestors.  Now being bereft of all, the poorest of the poor,
and dependent upon my own powers and will, I will repair the ruin.”

“By what means will you accomplish this, Walter?” inquired the father.

“Oh, father, by means which are honourable; and by pursuits which lead to
fortune.  By work, by labour, by industry, by indomitable plodding, and
by engaging in the calling of men who have thereby accumulated untold
wealth, and are possessed of unbounded riches.”

“I do not, my son, understand you.  To what pursuit do you refer?”

“To be plain, then, this is my resolve: to engage at once in commercial
undertakings, thus following in the footsteps of my late lamented uncle.”

“But, considering the position we occupy in society as the lords of
Dunraven, for you to enter upon such an undertaking would be a
degradation.”

“But, father, is it not a greater degradation to be poor—to see our lands
in the possession of others, to be provided with bread by the toil and
labour of others—in short, to see men work, while we refuse to lift up a
hand to help them, when we are dependent upon their industry?”

“It is hard to do this, my noble boy; but to me it is still more painful
to part with you.”

“You, dear father, have ever been kind and indulgent to me.  Believe me,
for I speak from my heart of hearts, that to leave you, though it be but
for a season, is to me a matter of deep sorrow.  It is, however, a stern
necessity that compels my departure.  I shall, nevertheless, leave you,
though with sadness, yet with a buoyant hope, destined, I doubt not to be
realised, to return to the home of my fathers laden with gold.  The
prospect of that day will cheer me in my labour, will nerve my arm, and
help me to surmount any difficulties which may pass athwart my path.”

“God grant you success, my son, for which I will pray fervently during
your forced absence.  But whither will you go?”

“I think, dear father, that I can secure immediate employment—an
employment, too, which will in no way be degrading to me as your heir.
Yesterday I received a letter from my old friend and companion, Mr.
Jones, of Marseilles, who is one of the greatest merchants of that famous
city, in which he has asked me to look out for a gentleman to act as
confidential clerk.  He further says, that if the right man secures the
appointment, and proves to be one who can be trusted, with business
habits, tact, and energy, he holds out the prospect of an advantageous
partnership.  As he is in immediate want of a young man possessing those
qualities, which I fancy I possess, I will write him offering my
services, which, considering my altered circumstances, I think he will
only feel too proud to accept.”

Young Walter was indeed just the kind of youth Mr. Jones wanted.  He had
received the best education which the Oxford of those times afforded.  He
had the bump of order largely developed.  He was persevering,
painstaking, energetic, and an indomitable plodder; whatever his hand
found to do, he did it with all his might.  Anything he undertook he
would not give up until he had thoroughly mastered it.  Moreover, he was
thoroughly conscientious.  In this virtue he followed his mother’s rather
than his father’s family.  Indeed, the old lord was regarded, and was
justly considered, as an unprincipled, grasping, and unscrupulous man;
and it was his greedy love of gold, and his insatiable thirst for larger
possessions, which he sought to secure by unjust means and foul play,
that had, in consequence of non-success, brought about his ruin.  He had
set up a claim to the heirship of another gentleman’s estate, though its
owner’s ancestors were in its possession and enjoyment when Vaughan’s
forefathers were menials.  The court, happily, decided the suit in favour
of the rightful owner, and to mark their sense of the wrong the lord of
Dunraven intended doing, ordered him to pay the costs of ten years’
litigation.  It was this final decision of which his lawyer had apprised
him in the letter previously alluded to.  His son, on the other hand, was
an upright and an honourable man, who would rather suffer wrong than do
an unjust act.  Mr. Jones was well aware of these noble qualities with
which young Walter was endowed; hence, on the receipt of the letter
offering his services, he wrote him a note full of kindly feeling and
sympathy, and further pressing his old friend and correspondent to join
him in London the following week, as he should be over in England for a
few days on important matters connected with his business.  On the
receipt of this communication from Mr. Jones, young Walter commenced
preparing for leaving home.  At last the day arrived for his departure,
and bidding his father an affectionate adieu, he went forth into the
broad world, either to be carried on the tide which leads to fortune, or
to sink beneath its devouring crests.

On Walter’s arrival in London, his old friend and earliest companion was
waiting at his hotel ready to receive him.  His reception was most
cordial on the part of Mr. Jones.  After spending a few days in town,
they took ship for Marseilles.  On arriving at their destination, the
heir of Dunraven was at once installed in office; and before a week had
elapsed, his employer saw that he had secured a valuable acquisition to
his establishment.

After Mr. Vaughan had been in the establishment about six months, Mr.
Jones came to the office one morning earlier than usual.  Though none of
the hands had arrived, he found to his surprise and joy his new clerk at
the desk.  “I am glad,” addressing Walter, “you are here, for I want to
consult you on a matter of great importance.  I have been debating with
my junior partner,” continued Mr. Jones, “as to the wisdom or unwisdom of
sending to the London market a new kind of silk, which a manufacturer has
just introduced.  He strongly opposes its purchase, while I, on the other
hand, am convinced it is just the thing that will take.  You are a good
judge of quality and beauty, so give me your candid opinion as to whether
it is wise or not to make a large or any purchase of this class of
goods.”

“I presume you will not require an immediate answer,” replied Walter.
“If you will kindly give me an hour to think over it, I will then offer
my opinion.”

During that hour the young clerk was busily engaged in carefully
examining the material with the aid of a powerful magnifying glass, and
was struck with both the fineness of the texture and the beauty of its
design.  On the return of his principal, he said that, in his opinion,
the silk was just the kind of goods which would command a ready sale in
the London market, and strongly recommended that the whole stock should
be bought up, and immediately shipped.  Mr. Jones acted on the opinion,
which turned out to be the most fortunate speculation in which he had
ever engaged.  The sum actually realized was £20,000, of this sum he
presented the young clerk with £5000, and in addition offered—an offer
which was gladly and gratefully accepted—a partnership in the business.
After this, the house of Jones & Company rose higher and higher in the
commercial world, and the annual profits of the business were so great,
that at the expiration of the seven years of partnership the young lord
of Dunraven had at his command a sufficient sum to pay off the
incumbrance of the estate.  To that effect he wrote his father, and on
the receipt of the money, he called his creditors together and paid them
their demands.  The lord of Dunraven thus became once more a free and
independent man; but, alas! he did not give up his calling, but, with new
life and renewed energy pursued the mission of the Evil One: being
constantly at the post of mischief, and with eager eyes and a longing
heart, looking out on the stormy wavy channel for treasures which, by
foul play, he was resolved to bring into his meshes.  Prosper thou, lord
of Dunraven, but in thy prosperity remember that the sword of justice is
hovering over thy head, and in the midst of thy prosperity it will strike
thee down.  The day of vengeance tarries; but it will come, and when it
arrives, oh, how terrible will be thy doom!



CHAPTER III.
_THE ALLIANCE OF THE LORD OF DUNRAVEN WITH MAC THE DEVIL_, _AND SOME
OFITS RESULTS_.


It was about three years subsequent to the departure of the son and heir
of Dunraven, that the old lord resolved to take into his service MacLean,
_alias_ Mac the Devil.  He knew that this man was a desperate character
and a thorough daredevil, who neither feared God nor regarded man; in
short, that for money and Scotch whisky, he would do the devil’s work
according to his satanic majesty’s own special plan.  There was no crime
of which Mac was not guilty, but, by reason of the stealthy way in which
he carried out his doings of iniquity, he always succeeded in avoiding
detection.  Though blood was on his hands, though he had robbed the
fatherless, and murdered, for the sake of pelf, the innocent, yet he
walked the earth with head erect as a guiltless person, little dreaming
of the terrible doom awaiting him.  However, his cup of iniquity was not
yet full, though daily it was nearing the brim.  He was in the act of
planning some new crime when he received a message from the lord of
Dunraven to attend him at the castle.  Mac, with trembling hands and a
sinking heart, at once attended to the commands of Mr. Vaughan, though,
on his way there, he had many misgivings as to the prudence of the step
he was taking.  He, however, soon convinced himself that were he to
disobey the summons he must quit for ever the neighbourhood, as he dare
not confront the lord of Dunraven if guilty of disobedience to his
lordship’s commands.  To the castle, therefore, he repaired, and on his
arrival he was ushered by the faithful Evan into the library, where Mr.
Vaughan was awaiting him.  On Mac’s entering he was requested to take a
seat, when Mr. Vaughan, with a degree of sternness he seldom manifested,
reproached him for leading a life so fraught with danger.

“I do not, my lord,” said Mac, touching his head, “understand your
meaning.”

“Oh, you don’t, don’t you?  If then I say you are deeply steeped in
crime, that you are a murderer, a thief, a rogue, and a villain, should I
not speak the truth, and would you not understand my charge?”

“Saying so, and proving its truth, are, I ken, two very different things,
my lord.  You can’t prove that I am otherwise than an innocent man.”

“Don’t you be too sure of that, Mac.  Indeed, I already possess evidence,
which, if necessary, can at any moment be produced, completely
substantiating my charge; and, Mac, I have a great mind to produce that
evidence to the authorities.”

“You dare not do that, my lord,” replied Mac.

“You scoundrel! dare you threaten me in my own castle?  If you say
another word, and use that language to me, I’ll send for the bum-bailiff
at once, and, as a magistrate, order you into his custody.”

“I say again, my lord, that you daren’t carry out your threat.”

“Why daren’t I, I should be glad to know?”

“Because if you were to do so I’d peach.”

“You would do what, Mac?”

“I’d peach; that is, I’d tell all about your lordship’s doings.”

“Be d—d, you would?”

“Yes.”

“But who would believe you, you scoundrel?”

“Me they may not, my lord of Dunraven; but they’d believe the evidence of
others.”

“But can you or your friends, you vagabond, bear any evil testimony
against me?  I live in my own castle, and never mix with the world.  It
is well known to all around, that my life and my time is devoted to
study, to the practice of virtue, and to acts of piety.  Me they know as
a model citizen and a Christian man and a gentleman.  Therefore, my
character would be proof against insinuations, or charges patched up by
you or your hellish crew.  You and your criminal companions might say,
and even swear—you are capable of anything bad—you saw me in the act of
committing a crime, but neither your word nor your oath would have any
weight with those who know you, were the life of a dog only involved.”

“Dinna you be too sure of that, my lord,” rejoined Mac; “I ken, and
Squire Jones knows too, the sad fate of the ship _Bristol_, of the
_Elizabeth_ of Swansea, and of the _City of Paris_.  He and I know also
by whose hands the false light was hung out on Dunraven Head, and by
whose hands the captains and the crews were murdered—who afterwards
seized the wrecks, who sent them to market to be sold, and who received
the money.  If I may be so bold, I could tell further that, within this
castle, and in a cell beneath this room, there is a poor unfortunate man,
who was put into an iron cage, and locked there by you,—the lord of
Dunraven castle,—and that he is daily fed by crumbs from your table.  If
this man were free, he could tell a tale at which humanity would shudder.
You, my lord, think I sleep with my eyes shut, that I tremble at sight of
the sea, that I’m afraid of the darkness and the tempests; and you knew
not that when those vessels went down, and when all the hands on board
perished, except this poor man in the cage, I was near you, my lord,—even
close by your side, though unperceived.  Knowing these facts, I now dare
you, my lord, to molest me or breathe a word injurious to my character.
If you do so, I’ll peach, and I’ll take care that the lord of Dunraven
shall be my fellow-prisoner.  You have called me a scoundrel.  Doesn’t
that foul term apply equally to you, my lord?  But your sin will yet find
you out.”

For these terrible revelations Mr. Vaughan was wholly unprepared.  During
their recital he shook as a man having the palsy.  He uttered, too, the
most awful imprecations, and cursed and swore like a man possessed of the
devil.  These, however, had no influence over the mind of the hard-headed
and hard-hearted Scotchman, who continued his tale heedless of the
foaming rage of Mr. Vaughan.  _He_ never dreamt that his crimes were
known to mortal, beyond the circle of his demoniac companions.  He had so
cautiously arranged his plans, and had carried them out so stealthily,
that he fancied the knowledge of his rascality was confined to those
desperadoes whom he had specially hired to carry out his nefarious
designs.  Now, however, his deeds were known not only to Mac, but to his
great enemy, Squire Jones; thus the man whom he sought to rob of his
rightful possessions was also cognizant of those deeds.  Mr. Vaughan’s
first thought, when Mac had finished his tale, was to take away, there
and then, either his life or his liberty.  But a moment’s reflection
compelled him to hesitate in adopting so dangerous a course, as it was
known in the village of Southerndown that Mac had been summoned to the
castle.  Considering the matter more seriously, he came to the conclusion
that there was only one course open to him: namely, to take Mac into his
service, and make him captain of the crew.  By pursuing this course, he
would completely shut the mouths of Mac’s friends, and by securing the
services of so skilful and so daring a wrecker, richer and more abundant
harvests might yet be reaped.  Drawing himself to his full height, he
said to his defiant visitor,—

“I do not, Mac, admit your charges, and I say further that they are
incapable of proof; but as I sustained so heavy a loss by law, and as
drowning men will not stand on ceremony, but will accept the assistance
of their bitterest foe when they feel themselves sinking beneath the
devouring waves, I am therefore prepared to take you into my employ, and
if you prove faithful to my interests and obedient to my orders, you may
rise to wealth and to honour.”

“But in what way, my lord, do you intend me to serve you?”

“You know, Mac, your special calling, and not wholly unknown to me,—don’t
be alarmed,—is the success which has followed your labours.  Being under
my protection, by being in my service, you may well look forward to still
greater results.  I need not say you are well aware that your present
position is fraught with danger, and that one word from me would put a
stop to your career.  If your words be true, _our_ interests clash.
Besides, Mac, the stealthy and criminal vagabond, prowling about in
search of prey, is in a very different position to Mac, the servant of
the lord of Dunraven.  With that sentiment you agree, do you not?”

“I must admit, my lord, you have put the case very clearly, and your
reasons in favour of my accepting your offer are strong.  I can’t
withstand them, so I’ll say Aye to your proposal.”

“You have acted like a man of sense, Mac, as I always took you to be.
To-night, work will have to be done; so go home and tell Molly, your
wife, of your engagement, and don’t fail to meet me at the Watch Tower at
four o’clock.”

No sooner had Mac left the castle to pay a visit to his wife, with a view
to apprise her of his engagement, than Mr. Vaughan also took his
departure, and immediately afterwards joined the watcher at the Tower,
which was situate on the highest point of the promontory.  On entering
the observatory, he inquired for the result of the day’s observations,
which, on being put into his hand, made him remark that matters did not
look very bright.

“When things are at the worst,” replied the watcher, “they generally
mend.  I think we shall have some work to do before to-morrow morning.”

“Your reason for that opinion, my faithful Duncan.”

“You see yonder flag hoisted on St. Donat’s Watch Tower?  That flag has
never yet deceived me.  Depend upon it, it is the harbinger of good news.
The wind, too, blows hard from the south, and, if I’m not mistaken, there
will be a fearful gale before midnight, and the ships coming down channel
must necessarily be driven towards our coast.”

“Your information, my Duncan, is cheering: I, too, am bearer of good news
to you.  I have just engaged Mac the Devil, and shall appoint him to the
office of captain of the beach and boatmen.”

“I’m so glad you’ve taken my cousin into your service.  Mac is a smart
man, he is well up in the trade, he is fearless, and, what is still more
important, will not stick at trifles in obtaining his end.”

“You approve then, Duncan, of my arrangement?”

“Most certainly, sir.  In our line of business Mac has no equal.  He has
the strength of a giant, while he is a stranger to fear, and fortunately
has no conscience.  I never heard of his failure in accomplishing his
object by fair means or foul.  When he fails to thrash a dozen sailors
with his fists, and to pitch them into the sea, he resorts to the pistol,
which, in his hand, never misses in its aim.  In our calling, my lord, I
yield to none but Mac.  He is my superior in everything, except in this
observatory.  Oh, were he here to-night!  We shall want a man of his
metal.”

“This time your wish will be gratified.  I expect Mac here every moment.
Look, he’s coming down the road from Southerndown, in our direction.  *
*  *  Call up the men from the beach, Duncan; I wish them to be present
when Mac arrives, so as to inform them of the appointment.”

The men were duly summoned by the head watcher.  On arriving at the
tower, they stood in a row, in front of the entrance, to await their
master’s commands.  Presently he appeared, accompanied by Duncan and Mac,
and, addressing his men, spoke of their fidelity to his interest, called
their attention to the many splendid victories achieved over the enemy,
of the rich laurels already reaped from wrecks, and, further, that there
was the strongest ground for hoping that their past gains were but as a
drop of the bucket to those they might expect to realize hereafter.  “But
your success,” said Mr. Vaughan, “will depend wholly upon yourselves.
You must be united, there must be harmony in your ranks, hearty
co-operation; while all must cheerfully bow to the order of the
commander-in-chief.  To that office I have selected a man after your own
heart.  You who are in favour of having Mac for your captain, hold up
your hands.”

To this request every hand was held up, whereupon Mac took his post at
the head of the wreckers.  They were then regaled with a liberal supply
of whisky, and when each one had taken his fill they repaired again to
the beach.  No sooner, however, had they departed than there were seen
coming down the channel two fine vessels.  The wind now blew a frightful
gale, raising up the waters into waves like mountains, on whose crests
the ships were carried at their mercy.  Everything appeared favourable to
the wreckers.  In the west the sun had declined.  The shades of night
were falling fast.  Every minute the darkness thickened.  The tempest
increased in fury, while the roar of the ocean and the winds howling in
the rocks and caverns around Dunraven Head, were most appalling.
Notwithstanding the tempest, neither Mr. Vaughan nor Duncan moved from
the spot of observation.  As the vessels neared the point, the fatal
light was placed in the tower.  The captains of both ships now fully
realised their danger: that there was no hope of saving either their
ships or their own lives.  The crews, too, were well aware of being on
the enemy’s ground, and, informing their commanders of their
apprehension, at once unanimously resolved, if they must perish by
treachery so base and devilish, that others should also perish at their
hands.  On their ships being driven into the bay they heroically prepared
themselves for the combat.  Each one armed himself with a cutlass, and
when the vessels were dashed against the rocks of Dunraven Head, they, as
one man, leaped into the boiling surge, and swam for the shore.  But in
this heroic attempt to save their lives, several received severe
injuries, while others sank to rise no more.  However, the greater
portion of them arrived safely on the beach, but no sooner had they
landed than they saw, creeping along the shore, under the shelter of the
rocks, a strong body of men well armed.  The sailors, however, were in no
way alarmed at the appearance of the enemy.  Before quitting their
vessels they were well aware that the lord of Dunraven was on the alert.
Of this the light on the Watch Tower was a sufficient proof.  Hence, when
they saw the wreckers approaching they placed themselves on the
defensive, and patiently awaited the attack.  They had not long to wait,
for the Dunraven men immediately came up and called upon the sailors to
surrender.  To that call, however, they paid no heed, but drawing out
their daggers, fell with terrible force upon the wreckers, who, however,
stood their ground manfully.  The battle was a desperate one, while the
slaughter was most appalling to witness.  Many a brave man on both sides
fell, mortally wounded.  For a time the sailors had the best of the fray.
Their arms were nerved, too, by the consideration that, if beaten, death
would be the lot of each.  Just, however, when they thought their victory
was sure, there came up to the rescue of the wreckers their captain, who,
with his own hand, killed six of the sailors.  The work of butchery now
commenced in earnest.  One after another of the sailors fell, never to
rise again.  Indeed not one single man of their number survived to tell
the tale.  When the work of slaughter was completed, the captain ordered
all the bodies to be carried to the adjoining cavern, where they were
buried in a large chasm in the rock.  After interring the dead, Mac and
the survivors returned to the beach, and watched there for the morning
dawn.  During the night both vessels were broken to atoms by the fury of
the waves, and as daylight appeared, the shore, for half a mile, was
literally covered with articles of great value, which on being sold,
realised a large sum.

The deeds of that terrible night spread far and wide.  The owners of the
vessels and merchants pressed the Government to send down a special
commission of inquiry.  For several weeks these commissioners carried on
their investigations; but, while collecting a large amount of evidence,
yet in consequence of the absence of one witness, whose evidence was
essential to bring the charge home to the lord of Dunraven, they failed
in substantiating the case against Mr. Vaughan.  A week subsequent to the
departure of the commissioners, that witness was found; but he could tell
no tale, being a mangled corpse.  The body had been washed ashore near
Porthcawl.  The remains were those of Captain ap William, the father of
John.  The news of this discovery was at once carried to his widow, who
was busily engaged in preparing her son’s wedding dinner when the
messenger arrived.  After breaking the fatal news to Mrs. ap William, the
messenger continued his journey to the little village of St. Bride’s,
and, going up to the church, he met at the porch the newly-married pair.
To Captain John, as he was generally called, the messenger told his sad
tale.  Both John and his wife were deeply affected on being apprised of
their bereavement.  They returned to their home to weep and to mourn; so
John’s bridal day, which he hoped would be a day of unclouded joy, proved
to be one of sadness, of sorrow, and of death.  He thus fully realized,
by personal experience, the truth of the inspired saying, that we know
not what a day may bring forth.



CHAPTER IV.
_THE TERRIBLE DOOM_.


During the progress of the inquiry into the circumstances connected with
the wreck, every effort was made by the authorities to discover the
whereabouts of those who were believed to be engaged in the affair; but
those inquiries were, unfortunately, unattended with success.  The usual
haunts of the wreckers were repeatedly searched, their dwellings were
watched, and even guarded night and day.  The villages and the
neighbouring hamlets were visited on several consecutive days, yet they
failed to find a single individual able to afford any intelligence or
information as to the hiding-place of the desperadoes.  The non-success
of these inquiries was considered as most singular, no less than
inexplicable.  On the morning following the sad occurrence, several of
the wreckers, including Mac the Devil, had been seen on the beach below
Dunraven Castle, but it appeared that no sooner had they completed the
packing and loading of the treasures collected, than they all disappeared
in a most sudden manner from view, and that disappearance was effected in
a most unaccountable way.  Whither they went, or how they left the beach,
no one could tell.  They were distinctly seen, and in a moment afterwards
they were lost to view, as if the earth had opened and swallowed them up.

Owing to their non-discovery, speculation was rife as to their probable
hiding-place.  Some thought it most likely that they were hidden in the
cellars under Dunraven Castle; others contended that Mr. Vaughan was too
shrewd a man to place them there, especially as he himself was suspected
of participating in the battle, and that that suspicion might lead to an
inquiry which might be followed up by a personal search.  Others
concluded that they had quitted the neighbourhood, and were hiding in the
woods about Margam, or up the Ogmore Valley.  There was one old gentleman
who treated all these opinions with contempt.  Every village and parish
has its wise man, to whom, in an emergency, an appeal is made, and the
old gentleman alluded to was the then wise man of Southerndown, as Hopkin
Llewelyn is in our day.  He gave it as his opinion, that the wreckers
were neither in the woods of Ogmore Valley nor Margam, nor would they be
found in the Dunraven cellars, but were still in the neighbourhood, and
within the sound of their voices; in short, that they were hid in some
subterraneous cavern in the bay, which had hitherto remained
undiscovered, and hence was known only to the wreckers.  He further
predicted that as soon as the storm should blow over, by the departure of
the commissioners, and the usual quietude of the locality assume its
general aspect, the wreckers would again return to their old haunts,
having Mac at their head; and would be then found wandering from point to
point, having no special occupation, nor ostensible means of livelihood.
The prediction of the village seer was verified to the letter.  No sooner
had the commissioners left than the wreckers did return, and they
appeared at their place of rendezvous, the Cups, as if nothing had
happened.  Here they spent the morning of each day in drinking beer and
whisky; and here they spent their money with as much prodigality as if
they were the owners of gold mines.  The landlord of the Cups received
their money without even asking whether they came to it by honest or
lawless means.  When asked how he could be so lost to every sense of
right as to accept money from men who certainly had earned it by being
engaged in a nefarious calling, he replied that he was perfectly
indifferent, and that it was no concern of his how they came by their
silver and gold, so long as they paid him for what they drank.  In this
reply we recognise the true philosophy of the trade.  Landlords, as a
rule, care but little for the sorrows, the poverty, and the wants of
their drinking clients and their families.  They want to sell drink, and
hence never for a moment reflect whether or not their customers can
afford to spend a shilling, or as to the manner by means of which it was
earned.  He, of the Cups, was, in money matters, true to his calling; but
we cannot commend the wisdom, or rather unwisdom, of the wreckers in
spending their money at the old house, when the children of some of them
wanted bread.

On the morning following one of these carouses, Mac paid a visit to the
tower to see his cousin Duncan.  Though they had met several times since
the day on which they came from their hiding-places, yet they had not
been fortunate enough to secure an uninterrupted and unobserved
conversation.  To this both had anxiously looked forward.  Fortunately,
when Mac entered, ho found his cousin in the observatory alone.  Placing
his books and instruments on the table, Duncan turned his chair to the
fire, and requested his visitor to be seated on the opposite side of the
fire.  As the kettle was boiling on the hob, the host prepared two pints
of excellent whisky toddy, one of which he handed Mac, who, on sipping
the mixture remarked that it was “capital stuff,” and moreover inquired
of Duncan where he obtained it.

“It came, Mac, from the old country; imported direct from the distiller.
This is just the beverage for a stormy night, is it not, Mac?”

“On _that night_ I’d have given a pound for a pint of toddy like this.”

“By the bye, Mac,” said Duncan, “you did the thing very neatly that
night.”

“I’m obliged to you, cousin, for your good opinion.  What did Mr. Vaughan
say about our doings?  He saw the whole scene.”

“My lord said to me, that unless you had been present, all would have
been lost, as the sailors up to the time you came up had the best of the
battle.”

“Mr. Vaughan was right there, Duncan.  Had I not come up at the moment I
did, every wrecker would have been a dead man.”

“So my lord, who was on the rock above you, said.”

“Oh, Duncan, it was a sad sight!  I hope, cousin, I shall never be
compelled to witness a similar scene.

“It is a sickening and a degrading calling, this of ours, in which
victory has no honour, and triumph no glory.  While it is a merry life
and profitable to those engaged in it, it is surrounded with scenes which
are shocking to behold.”

“As our master has such a large estate, Duncan, why does he carry on so
hazardous and so dangerous a calling?”

“The secret is this, he loves gold, and his heart is set on attaining
riches; and to secure them he’ll take away any man’s life if it stands
between him and the prize he covets.”

“I should think he shook in his shoes when those men were down here.  Was
he not alarmed, Duncan?”

“Our master was, Mac, certainly alarmed; but, take my word, he’ll go on
just in the same way.  He is just like the little animal which, when once
it tastes the blood of its victim, never gives up pursuit until it has
secured the prey.  The lord of Dunraven will, in my opinion, continue
wrecking until some great calamity befalls his house or his family.”

The subsequent doings of Mr. Vaughan fully established the opinion of
Duncan.  Although he had been in imminent danger of having his crime
discovered, yet, when those who conducted the inquiry had left the
vicinity, the lord of Dunraven, with renewed energy and more resolute
determination, carried on his nefarious calling.  In each succeeding
winter, vessels were wrecked in Dunraven Bay which had been decoyed
thither by the false lights he had caused to be placed in the tower.
From these wrecks he realized large sums.  Had he been permitted to
pursue his satanic designs for a few years longer, he would have become
the richest man in the vale of Glamorgan.

In consequence of the great losses ship-owners had sustained by reason of
these wrecks, and the terror which the scenes of Dunraven had inspired,
both owners and masters of vessels trading up and down the Bristol
Channel were alarmed, and were in constant apprehensions lest they should
experience the same disaster which had unhappily befallen so many of
their brethren.  Captain ap William, however, was not deterred from
pursuing his seafaring calling by these disasters, though his wife,
previously to his starting on every voyage, warned him of the danger of
following so hazardous a pursuit.  Yet, in spite of those warnings, and
the urgent solicitations of his wife to remain at home, he continued
going to sea.

It was after one of these wrecks, when more than ordinary violence had
been used by the men of Dunraven, that the captain and his wife were
walking from St. Bride’s along the carriage way to Dunraven.  This was
their favourite walk, and it was, moreover, associated with many a happy
scene in days of yore.  After pursuing their walk for some time in
silence, Mrs. ap William began to weep.

“Why those tears, Myfanwy?” asked her husband.

“I weep, John,” she replied, “in thought of the prospect of our
separation.  Oh, you will not leave me again, will you?”

“Indeed, wife, I must.”

“But where is the necessity for you to risk your life again?  We have
enough to keep us in independence and comfort.”

“I have promised my employers to go on this one voyage.”

“Can’t they get another captain to take charge of the ship?”

“Doubtless they could, but they won’t trust every man with my vessel.”

“Oh, I wish you would stay at home!  Indeed, indeed, I fear, if you leave
me, I shall never see you again.  Last night I dreamt, and in my dream I
fancied I saw your body being taken from the sea, your hair clotted, and
your face covered with blood.  Oh, I do fear, if you again leave me, I
shall never see you alive!”

“Do not be alarmed for my safety, Myfanwy.  Life is as safe on the ocean
as on the land.  The same Providence watches over the seaman as the
landsman.  He being at the helm, He controlling and guiding the destiny
of us all, will be my friend, even should danger threaten me.  So cheer
up, thou treasure of my heart, and since you are so urgent that I should
give up my calling, I now promise that on my return from this one voyage
I will remain at home.”

“I can urge you no further, John.  During your absence I’ll pray for your
safe return.”

The following morning Captain John ap William took his departure.  He
joined his ship at Bristol, and from that port he sailed for the city of
Lisbon with a cargo of West of England goods.  From thence he sailed to
London, thence to Hamburg, and after several voyages between the two
last-mentioned cities, chartered his ship to the Mediterranean, and took
a valuable cargo at Marseilles for Bristol.

During her husband’s absence, Myfanwy felt constant anxiety on his
behalf, an anxiety intensified owing to the sad havoc among shipping at
Dunraven Bay.  As it was now winter, her feeling of apprehension
increased in intensity, as she daily expected his return.  October had
come and gone, but he had not returned, nor had she received, for several
weeks, a letter from him.  November had come in more than usually stormy.
All over the country trees had been uprooted, houses were blown down, and
on the rocks above Dunraven Bay, and below Southerndown, the winds were
so terrible that persons were in the imminent risk of being blown over if
they went within even fifty yards of the precipice.  On Friday morning
the hurricane increased in its fury.  As the evening approached, the
storm became fearful, while the tumultuous waves increased in violence,
foaming, then wildly raving, then receding in circling eddies for awhile,
into their gloomy bosom; then, again, returning with renewed force and
augmented fury.  Upon their tumultuous and angry surges a large vessel,
heavily laden, was being driven towards the bay of Dunraven by the fierce
tempest.  If that fine ship, which bore on her bosom the rich merchandise
of continental skill and industry, be dashed against the desperate
assemblage of rocks, crags, and shoals surrounding the bay—imagination
with its utmost stretch could form but a very imperfect idea of so
direful and so appalling a spectacle.  As the villagers gazed upon the
tumultuous billows, they saw the ship, which had battled many a stormy
breeze, uplifted on the briny surge, then plunging headlong down the
repelling rock.  In that terrible collision, a hole nearly three feet
square, was made in the bottom, through which the sea rushed in with
terrible force, on which she began to sink.  When this was discovered,
the crew, in wild despair, called to the men on the beach to come and
help them.  They, however, moved not, but waited the issue with the most
stolid indifference.  Amid that cry of despairing anguish the sea rolled
in with increased violence and fury, the waves dashing over the
fast-sinking ship, and carrying along with them the unfortunate crew.
Presently there was seen clinging to a frail board a young man, comely in
form and handsomely dressed.  Having fastened himself to this, the
wreckers heard him beseeching them, in most piteous cries to come and
help him.  However, to that cry no attention was paid.  Seeing this, he,
with a voice which moved even the hard hearts of the wreckers, called
out, “Oh, my father, my father! if you love your son, who has been a
dutiful and a faithful son to you—if there be in your bosom any affection
for him who has only lived to promote your welfare and interest; who, in
your declining years, has laboured and striven, and thereby has succeeded
in redeeming the manor of Dunraven from its heavy incumbrance—send the
men to save me from a watery grave!”  That cry the lord of Dunraven
heard.  It pierced his very soul.  His countenance was marked with
anguish, blended with despair.  All he could say was, “It is my own son
Walter, and I have caused his death!”  He then fell down in a fit.  When
the wreckers heard their master’s exclamation they, as one man, took to
the sea.  Towards the drowning man they pressed forward with great
energy, and at last succeeded in touching the frail board.  At that
moment there was a terrible sea, which, in receding, carried away the
young lord of Dunraven and the whole of the wreckers, except Mac the
Devil, who succeeded in gaining the shore.  The Lord of Dunraven, when he
recovered from the swoon, learned all that had happened, even of his
son’s death.  From that night Mr. Vaughan was never seen at Dunraven
Castle.  He went forth, bowed down with age and with sin, a wandering
ghost, seeking rest but finding none.  No one ever heard that he was
sorry on account of the crimes he had committed against heaven and earth.
In a few years afterwards news came to Wales that in an encounter with a
highwayman, in the North of England, the once great lord of Dunraven was
slain, and his body was thrown over the rocks into the sea.  In his
pockets were found papers which led to his identification.  As his money
had been taken by the robber, he was buried at the expense of the parish
in which his body was found.  Such was the life and such the end of a man
who sought riches by robbery, and gold by the sacrifice of human life.
Indeed, he lived a miserable life, and died a miserable death.

As regards the other persons of this history but little remains to be
told.  Mac, on that night, disappeared from the scene.  But every nook
and corner of the coast was watched and carefully guarded night and day.
The people of the neighbourhood expressed their confidence that Mac was
still in the locality, in his old hiding-place.  After watching for a
fortnight, during which there were no signs of his appearance, they were
almost persuaded to give up the affair.  However, they resolved still to
continue guarding the coast for another week.  The day before that week
expired, one of the watchers saw in the sea, coming out from between two
rocks, a man diving.  Evidently he had come from some subterranean
cavern, with an outlet under the water.  This man was Mac the Devil.  He
was there and then taken, and lodged in gaol.  At the following assizes
he was found guilty of murder and was condemned to die.  Before his death
he confessed all, and left behind him a record of his exploits, and a
detailed account of his connection with the lord of Dunraven.  Before
that record was read, Mr. Vaughan had breathed his last.

But what became of Captain John?  It was his vessel that went down, and
it was young Vaughan’s cargo with which she was laden.  On the morning
subsequent to the wreck he was found on the seashore in Dunraven Bay,
with his body much bruised, and his face covered with blood.  He was,
however, still alive, and thanks to the careful nursing of his wife and
medical skill, he soon recovered, and gave up going to sea.  Ever
afterwards he lived at home.  He became an excellent farmer, and saved
money.  He lived to a good old age, and left behind a numerous family,
who were as distinguished for their virtue as they were for their
industry.  In this world he moreover lived as he wished to die, leaving
behind him a pattern of religiousness which his children, and their
children after them, followed.  Thus, while the end of the good captain
was happy and peaceful, that of the lord of Dunraven was full of anguish,
while he met with a doom which it is terrible to contemplate.



PARSON JONES,
AND HIS CONQUESTS OVER THE ARCH-FIEND OF PANDEMONIUM.


[The following strange stories of Cambrian life contain not an _ideal_
but a _real_ picture of society in days of yore.  For obvious reasons,
some of the names of the _dramatis personæ_ are not given, but the family
of Jones being so large, _the man_ will not be recognised by the
retention of the name he actually bore.  Further, it is believed that the
whole of his relations are dead.  He had two nieces that survived him,
who on his death were by no means _young ladies_.  They then quitted
Wales, never more to return.  One more word only need be added, namely,
that Mr. Jones’s fame as a preacher was universal, and the belief that he
had power over Satan was firmly entertained by all, though he himself
repudiated the possession of such power.  Mr. Jones lived to nearly a
hundred years of age, and died about thirty years ago.]

                                * * * * *

Hail! all hail! to thee, thou illustrious dead!  Though thy spirit has
long since left the regions of earth, and has passed into the _Gwlad
well_, yet thy memory is fresh and green, and thy deeds of charity, thy
unassuming piety, thy faithful preaching of the Cross, thy example of
saintly resignation, as well as thy holy sanctitude, still live in the
hearts and memories of those who were privileged to listen, sabbath after
sabbath, to the glorious truths which fell from thy lips, and who,
moreover, were permitted to gaze upon and witness the holy ripening of
thy nature for a bright and a glorious immortality.  Of thee might it be
truly said, that thy enemies were few, and thy friends and well-wishers
legion.  The reason of this was obvious.  While others laboured for
earthly honour and a perishable renown, the aspiration and desire of thy
soul was to do the work of Him in whose armour thou wast clothed, and to
be recognised, and honoured, and acknowledged of thy Father at the
Judgment of the Great Day.  Thy departure to that better land was to thee
a happy departure.  On thy spirit leaving its tabernacle of clay, it took
its flight, amid the songs of angelic choirs, to that world wherein the
Lamb shall ever lead it to perennial springs and fountains of
blessedness, and where every tear shall be wiped away by the Redeemer.
But though the change to thee was a welcome one, oh, how _un_welcome was
it to thy sorrowing children on earth, who were left behind in the
wilderness!  Though many, many years have passed away since the day of
thy departure to join the choirs above, during which I have mixed much
with the busy world,—have seen the upheaving of peoples, revolution
following revolution, and have witnessed parts of Europe deluged with the
blood of some of its best and most patriotic sons,—yet I well remember,
as if it were but as yesterday, the sorrowful tidings of thy death, when
all joined in saying, “That a prince and a great man had that day fallen
in Israel.”  Nevertheless, amid our pensive sorrow and grief, which
almost rent many a stout heart; all were yet cheered and solaced with the
thought, that though the dark cloud of the future obscured our vision,
preventing our beholding the face of the dear departed, nevertheless he
was reposing joyfully in the eternal sunshine, and reclining on the bosom
of his Lord.

Now, though Parson Jones was a good and holy man, yet young and old, rich
and poor, the youth in his teens as well as those over whose heads
seventy summers had passed, not only admitted, but actually declared,
that he was a strange mortal.  His life and character were to them an
enigma.  While the outward—the rational man—was clear and plain, yet the
inner life—the hidden and mysterious workings of the intellectual and
spiritual man—was above their comprehension and beyond their ken.  Though
they owned that their beloved pastor held communion with Heaven, yet many
affirmed, and positively believed, that he had constant intercourse with
the Evil One.  Though they devoutly entertained the opinion that he held
uninterrupted converse with Him who was the desire of all nations, yet
they clung to the opinion that he had fellowship with him who reigns over
the abode of woe.  While they believed that their dear friend possessed
that faith by which mountains are removed, and by means of which the
rolling and angry billows are hushed into calm repose on the bosom of the
vast and mighty deep, nevertheless, the tale went from cottage to
cottage, and from hamlet to hamlet, and was told and retold, with deep
seriousness, in high and in low places, that Parson Jones could raise and
lay the devil.  And if legions of ministering angels hovered round his
path, imparting to him comfort, solace, and joy, it was almost
universally believed that he had consultations with the grim spirits of
the nethermost regions.  Hence they concluded that he was not only
all-powerful with Heaven, but that Satan himself, with all his servants
and allies, would fly at his bidding.  In consequence of this belief,
Parson Jones had, at his parsonage, a constant succession of visitors.
If the busy housewife was unsuccessful in her churning, Parson Jones must
be at once consulted, as he only, in the vicinity, had power to break the
spell, and drive to their place those evil spirits which interfered with
the beneficial operations of mankind.  If the farmer found his cattle
ailing, of course the good parson’s advice was at once sought, which in
all case was readily obtained, the belief being that he only in that
neighbourhood could counteract and overcome the evil influence of the
witches, who, by their malevolence and wicked arts, sought to bring
destruction and ruin upon him and his household.  Again, if a house in
the locality were haunted, the sleepers being awakened from their
slumbers of the night by unearthly cries, by groans and terrible noises,
we need hardly say the good vicar was sent for; and after one of his
visits, the simple-hearted people of the troubled dwelling believed, and
positively affirmed, that he had put his imperial Satanic majesty in his
snuff-box!  And from that night their home was never disturbed by the
presence of a spiritual visitor, and they congratulated themselves on
having permanently got rid of the disturber of their peace and repose,
feeling certain that the possessor of the snuff-box would see to it that
the lid would be kept securely fastened.  These acts of Parson Jones were
not done in a corner; hence the news of his victory over the Evil One
spread far and wide; but while a few gave no credence to the tales that
were told, yet the people—the masses, both rich and poor, the wise and
the unlearned—believed in the stories which were told of the good vicar’s
doings.

As my father’s residence was adjacent to the vicarage, as he and the
worthy parson were sworn friends, and as the latter had a strong personal
liking to me, as also a deep interest in my future welfare and prospects,
I having on several occasions acquainted him with my strong aversion to
my father’s pursuits, and that I intended to seek my fortune in the wide,
wide world—these and other matters brought me into frequent contact with
our common friend, at whose house I was a constant and ever welcome
visitor.  There was, however, another reason why I was so often found at
his hospitable dwelling, which, in passing, I will just mention.  From my
earliest school days I had imbibed a strong thirst for knowledge, while
the sciences of astronomy, algebra, Euclid, and trigonometry, had for me
peculiar, and I might add, fascinating charms.  In pursuing those
studies, however, I often met with difficulties, which, unaided, and
without the assistance of a teacher, I failed to overcome.  The good
parson being well informed of my pursuits, and being anxious to render me
all the assistance in his power, arranged that I was to spend every
Monday evening at his residence, where, in his study, he would quietly
explain the problems and calculations I had failed to solve.  As a
teacher he was so successful that, after going quietly over my
calculations, and explaining where I had gone wrong, he invariably
managed to make the whole matter as clear to my perception as that two
and two make four.

Mr. Jones was deeply read in the science of astronomy, and on his
perceiving that I was weekly making considerable progress in a science he
so deeply loved,—a science, too, which he regarded as more sublime than
any other, inasmuch as it proclaimed the power, the wisdom, and the
greatness of Him who binds the sweet influences of the Pleiades and
loosens the bands of Orion, who can bring forth Mazzaroth in his season
and guides Arcturus with his sons,—it was no wonder, considering the
identity of our common feeling and inclination, that I became a nightly
visitor at the parsonage.  During those visits I learned much respecting
other branches of knowledge with which, previously, I was but little
acquainted.  Thus, wide fields of human knowledge appeared to open before
me, the possession of which was the deep aspiration of my soul.

But I must own that my visits to the parsonage afforded me an interest
beyond that of scientific and literary pursuits.  Night after night there
were other visitors at the good man’s house, who came there to tell tales
about apparitions, ghosts, the doings of the witches, and the various
forms in which his imperial majesty of Pandemonium had appeared to them.
To these marvellous stories I always listened with deep interest, as from
my youngest days I had been taught by my nurse to believe in the
existence of ghosts.  The people of the neighbourhood believed that the
parson had power over the evil spirits when they troubled men, hence the
reason of his assistance having been so frequently sought.  Many a tale I
have heard in the vicar’s little study; but for the present I shall only
record the following strange stories.

                                * * * * *

It was a stormy night in the month of January, when I was with Mr. Jones
in his study.  After sitting there some time, over a problem in the Sixth
Book of Euclid, the door gently opened, and in walked Mrs. Lloyd, the
wife of a neighbouring farmer, who, at the request of Mr. Jones, took a
seat by the fire.  When she entered the room I observed that she was
deeply agitated, the cause of which we soon learnt.  As soon as she had
warmed herself and dried her garments, my friend and benefactor, in the
kindest possible way, asked the reason of her having come out on so
stormy and so boisterous a night.

“I’m kum to see yoo, Mr. Jones,” she said, “and to tell yoo the sad
calamity which has happened at our house.”

“I hope Mr. Lloyd is not ill?”

“Oh no, parson; leastwise he was well in body when I left whome, but
sorely troubled in mind.”

“What is the matter, my good friend?” inquired Mr. Jones.

“Oh, sir! it’s too dreadful.  I kunna tell yoo.  I s’pose I must, for I’m
kum here on purpose.”

“Unless you tell me the cause of your trouble, ma’am, I cannot give you
advice.”

“You know, parson, Moll McGee, of Cwmdu, dunna yoo?”

“Yes, ma’am; I know that person very well.”

“Yoo know, dunna yoo, Mr. Jones, that she’s a witch.”

“She is so reported, Mrs. Lloyd; but you must not believe all you hear.”

“But, yoo do know very well she’s a real witch, so dunna yoo deny it.”

“I have no personal knowledge of the fact, ma’am,” replied the good
parson; “I have always found her a harmless and inoffensive woman, though
some persons say she has put her mark on certain families.”

“I should think she has, indeed; so dunna yoo think she ought to be
hanged and quartered, and her body and bones, and her heart and liver,
burned by the common hangman, for causing so much trouble and loss to
poor and innocent folks?”

“Surely she has not paid you a visit, has she?”

“She ha, though; and, what is worse, she has spoiled a beautiful churning
of milk, and killed our pony, which Lloyd was offered thirty pounds for
at last May fair.”

“I am sorry to hear this of Mrs. McGee,” observed Mr. Jones; “but, my
dear madam, when and how did this happen?”

“When my daughter Mary was churning on Wednesday morning, who should kum
up to the dairy door but Moll the witch.  She sez, sez she, ‘Will you
give me some buttermilk, Mrs. Lloyd?’

“‘No,’ sez I; ‘I’ve no buttermilk to spare.’

“‘But yoo must,’ sez she, ‘give me some.’

“‘I have sed the word, Mrs. McGee, that I’ve none to spare; and if I had,
you shudna have any.’

“‘Why?’ sez she.

“‘Why,’ sez I; ‘because yoo are a bad woman.’

“‘You had better give me som,’ sez she agen; ‘for if you won’t it ’ul be
the worse for yoo.’

“‘What will yoo do, Mary?’ sez I.

“‘I’ll mark yore cattle,’ sez she, ‘and I’ll _leave_ the mark there too,
for your hard-heartedness.’

“‘Then,’ replied I, ‘I won’t give yoo milk.  Yoo’ll witch my things, will
yoo?  Do thy worst Moll,’ sez I, ‘for I dunna fear thee.’

“‘Then,’ sez she, ‘may yur milk never turn into butter, may yur cows
cease to give yoo milk, and may yoo find some of yur beasts in the black
quarry before another week’s gone, and may the curse of Mary of the Black
Dingle ever follow yoo and yours.’

“The old hag, when she finished her curse, turned upon her heel, and in a
moment afterwards my daughter and me saw her going through the gate in
the form of a large black monkey.  After she left, we continued to churn
away with all our might and main, but the butter wouldna come, and since
that day the cows have refused to give us any milk.”

“But what about the pony, Mrs. Lloyd?”

“Oh, I had almost forgotten to tell yoo about that.  Well, last night, as
Lloyd was coming whome from the fields, he saw a black monkey on the back
of the pony.  The brute was urging the poor creature forward by sticking
her devilish claws in the pony’s side.  And will yoo believe it—God ha’
mercy upon us! for we live in strange times,—the monkey drove the pony
straight for the quarry.  Lloyd saw her fall over the rock, and running
up to the edge of the quarry, saw the poor creature dashed to atoms at
the bottom, and Moll standing by grinning.  But p’raps yoo wunna believe
the truth of my story, but it is as true as I’m a Christian woman.”

“Indeed, Mrs. Lloyd,” replied Mr. Jones with great firmness, “I don’t
believe that Mary McGee, or any mortal, possesses the power which you
evidently believe she does possess.  Heaven has not delegated to sinful
mortal, nor even to any of His creatures, power to inflict injury
affecting life or limb upon any of the creatures He has made, and by
whose power and goodness they are sustained.”

“Yoo are a learned man, and I’m no scholard, tho’ I kun read my Bible,
thank God! and that book tells me that evil spirits did enter into man
and beast; and parson, yoo cunna make me believe that the arch-fiend has
not entered into the heart of that woman.”

“Oh! don’t, I beseech you, my friend, give too much credence to idle
tales and silly talk; and pray don’t believe that she is the real cause
of, and the instrument by which, this affliction has come upon you.  If
you were to sift thoroughly the evidence respecting Mary’s malpractices,
you would discover, in the end, that the whole is based upon hearsay, and
on the inventions of persons who might have fancied it possible for such
things to exist.”

“Mr. Jones, Mr. Jones,” replied Mrs. Lloyd, “these tales are not idle
invention; I wish they was.  But as true as God made Llandegley Rocks,
and I s’pose He made them, my cows wanna give no milk, and the cream
wunna turn to butter, churn as much as we will; and it’s a fact ’bout the
old hag and our pony, as Lloyd witnessed the whole matter.  I believe,
and Lloyd believes, and my daughter believes it too, that our calamities
are the result of the evil influences of this witch, who has been
practising upon our creatures her infernal and malignant arts.  I have
now told you my tale, parson, and I want your advice.”

“What do you wish me to do, Mrs. Lloyd?”

“Oh, sir! there is only one thing yoo can do.”

“What is that, my friend?”

“What is that, yoo ask?  Ye know very well.  Why, break the spell, to be
sure.  Until that’s done we shall neither have butter nor milk, and then
how shall we be able to pay our rent?”

“Indeed, ma’am, I don’t see how I can assist you.  Oh, I do wish you
would not place any faith in this woman’s power.”

“I cunna help it, Mr. Jones.  But I do believe this, that yoo can master
her, and yoo only.  I know yoo have power over these evil spirits and
witches, but especially over Moll McGee.”

“Why do you think so, ma’am?”

“Oh,” replied Mrs. Lloyd, “she’s afeared of yoo.  Indeed, she said she
was afeared of yoo; and no wonder, for we know very well that yoo can
master her master—the great fiend himself.”

“Pray, Mrs. Lloyd,” remarked the vicar, “don’t for a moment entertain the
belief that such power belongeth to man, nor that I, one of the most
sinful of God’s creatures, have authority over the ruler of darkness.
However, as your cattle are afflicted, I will step up in the morning, and
examine them.”

“I’m so thankful to yoo, Misther Jones, for your kindness.  I shall now
go whome with a lighter heart than I came, for I know you will break the
witch’s spell.”

I thought Mr. Jones would give her a lecture about her faith in his
power.  However, for this she waited not; for on securing his promise she
rose from her chair, and took her departure, wishing us both a hearty
good-night.

In about a quarter of an hour after Mrs. Lloyd had left, who should walk
into the study but Mrs. McGee, who took possession of Mrs. Lloyd’s seat
without any invitation from the vicar.  When she had made herself
comfortable before the blazing fire of wood on the hearth, Mr. Jones
addressed her:—

“Why are you out so late to-night, Molly?”

“I’ve come to speak with you on business.”

“But it is rather late for business now.  Why did you not come earlier?”

“I couldn’t do so.”

“Why?”

“Because Mrs. Lloyd had not visited you till to-night.”

“But what had her visit to do with you?”

“Everything; ’cause she come to tell you a tale ’bout me.”

“I fear, Molly, she has a very just cause of complaint, against you
especially, if reports be true.”

“Bad luck to her, and all she has, Mr. Jones!”

“Withdraw that word this moment, Molly; or,” his piercing eye being fixed
on the woman, which appeared to enter her soul, “I must use my power—that
is, I must request you to leave my house this instant.”

“But don’t you think she was a hard-hearted woman not to give a poor body
a dhrop of buttermilk?”

“I can’t say that, Molly; but if she be hard-hearted, there is no reason
why any one should wish her ill.  I must, therefore, insist on your
withdrawing your wish.”

“If I do so, Mister Jones, it wonnot be for her, but for your sake, who
has always been kind to me.”

“You have spoken like a sensible woman, Molly.  I have one more request
to make, Mrs. McGee; that is, promise me you won’t go near Mrs. Lloyd
again.”

“Dear-a-me, you are a strange mon, parson.  Between you an’ me and the
post, I’ve no wish to go near the likes of her, as she has no pity on a
poor starving woman.”

“As you have now promised me not to go near Mrs. Lloyd, just go into the
kitchen and get some supper, and make haste home, for it is getting
late.”

When Mrs. McGee left us, I also left to depart.  On the ensuing afternoon
I was informed, that before daylight next morning, Mr. Jones, before the
family were up, had paid a visit to Mrs. Lloyd’s cow-house, and had given
to each beast a small ball made up of herbs.  When these were swallowed
the cattle appeared scarcely able to contain themselves for delight.  Mr.
Jones saw by their appearance that his medicine (?) had proved
successful; so calling up the family, he informed them that the spell was
broken.  The cows no longer refused to give milk, and Mrs. Lloyd even
declared that it was superior in quality to what she previously had.
Subsequently, she experienced no difficulty in her churning operations.
The fame of Mr. Jones spread, in consequence, far and wide, and,
unfortunately for his own peace and comfort, applications to him for
assistance, when the witches had afflicted man or beast, became
incessant.



PARSON JONES’S TALE OF NAT THE SMITH AND THE THREE WISHES.


It was a dreary night in the month of December when there sat in the
chimney-corner of the Jolly Fiddler—which, as you know, is the chief
public-house in the little village of Nantglyn—Nat the smith.  Nat, as
you are aware, is a real good fellow, and a hard-working man, but,
unfortunately, he is terribly fond of his beer.  I have been told that he
has spent a little fortune at the Jolly Fiddler, and I can well believe
it, for he pays nightly visits to the house, which he never leaves until
he has had two quarts of ale; and I fear that latterly he has not
confined himself to that quantity.  However, I am anticipating this part
of my story, and must first narrate, as succinctly as possible, the
incidents of Nat’s life during the past seven years.  Besides, I am
anxious to finish telling you the story to-night, though I am not sure I
can complete it, as there is a gap in the history of my friend Nat which
has not yet been made up.  With the above remarks by way of introduction,
we will now go back to the dreary night of December already alluded to.

After Nat had sat for some time in the chimney-corner at the Jolly
Fiddler, he called out to the landlord,—

“Another quart, Bill; and mind it’s from the barrel in the corner.”

“All right, Nat,” replied the landlord; “you shall ha’ a quart of the
best.”

“Here’s the sixpence, Bill,” said Nat, when the ale was placed before him
on the table; “and, upon my soul, I’ve not another copper left.”

“Never mind about the money, Nat; I’ll trust you for as much as you like
to drink.”

“Thee knows, Will, I never allow scoring for beer.  Ready money or no
ale, is my motto.”

“And a good motto it is, Nat.  Oh, I wish all my customers was like you;
for if they was, I should have no fear of being marched off to Lunnun
(London) to be whitewashed.”  (A provincialism implying the passing the
Bankruptcy Court.)

“There is no danger of me going up there, Will,” rejoined Nat.  “’Cause
why, no one will trust me.”

“Dunna thee say that, Nat; for thee knows very well that I’ll trust
thee.”

“Trust or no trust, Will, here goes,” and putting the jug of foaming ale
to his mouth he drank a good draught; and then smacking his lips, said,
“Upon my word, this is the real ‘cwrw da.’  A quart of this is worth a
gallon of the last brewing.”

“So it ought to be, Nat; for I put four bushels of best malt to this
barrel in the corner.”

“There’s no mistake, Bill, about its strength; and between us, as old
friends, my only fear is that I shall not be able to get my fair
allowance of it.”

“Oh! of that you need not be afraid, Nat; ’cause why, I only give this
beer to my constant and my very best customers, and—”

“Of which I am one, I s’pose you was going to say.”

“And if I had said so, Nat, I should ha’ spoken the literal truth.”

During the above conversation a gentleman, unperceived by the landlord
and his best customer, entered the kitchen of the Jolly Fiddler.  He was
clad in a suit of black, over which he wore a long cloak of invisible
green, the bottom of which trailed on the ground.  He had on his head a
felt wideawake, which was so inclined in front that his eyes were not
perceptible, while the rest of his face was shut from view by an immense
quantity of long, smooth, glossy hair, which descended over and below his
shoulders.  He had entered the kitchen of the Jolly Fiddler silently, and
taking up a position between the door and chimney-corner in which the
smith was sitting, and at the landlord’s back, his presence was
unperceived by both.  On that spot he had stood during the conversation
between Nat and Bill, to which he had listened with great attention.
When the landlord turned away from his friend Nat, to attend to the
duties of his house, he was astonished to find the presence of the
stranger, whose strange appearance struck him with awe, and his tongue
clove to the roof of his mouth.  However he summoned up his courage, and
taking a slanting direction, he escaped through a side door into the
little back parlour of the inn.

Nat was not a spectator of this scene.  When Will left him, he took his
quart of ale in his hand, and composing himself in the chimney corner, he
sat there, intently watching the glowing wood-fire before him.  There he
sat, now and then sipping his ale, as professed wine-drinkers sip their
port, remarking to himself, after each succeeding draught, “This is
capital stuff! it warms the cockles of one’s heart as it goes down; but,
poor me! when, oh when, shall I have sixpence in my pocket to buy another
quart?  Oh, it’s a sad thing to be poor in this rich land of plenty!
It’s not right for me and my class to starve for good ale, when our
wealthy neighbours have their cellars full, and plenty of gold to buy
more.  If I was rich, the poor man should never want for a pint or a jug
of the real ‘cwrw da.’  Ah, me! I sha’ never be rich.  I’m born to be
poor, and to labour as them sparks fly up the chimney.  It’s sad, very
sad, and heart-breaking, to have an empty pocket when one’s soul is
thirsty.”

Nat sat thus musing and talking to himself for nearly half an hour.  At
last he finished his ale, and then, taking his stick in his hand, rose to
go home.  There was no one in the kitchen now.  Nat thought this very
strange, as Bill was generally about; but he fancied, as he rose to
depart, that he saw the shadow of a human form on the wall.  Of this he
took no particular notice at the time; but, on listening to Will’s story
the following day, Nat felt that the supposed shadow was a terrible
reality.

Nat left the inn with a heavy heart.  It is true he had had his quart of
good ale, but he thought that, as work was slack, he would have
considerable difficulty “in raising the wind” for several days, and this
affliction had a depressing influence on his spirits.  At last he reached
the little wicket gate leading from the highway to his cottage; but on
his opening it, he was awe-struck on seeing coming from his house along
the garden-path, a gentleman clad in deep mourning.  As there was
something in the appearance of the gentleman Nat did not like, he
attempted to avoid him by leaving the path free; but when Nat turned out
of the path the figure turned too, and came up, meeting the smith face to
face, and addressed him thus:—

“You are rather late to-night, Mr. Smith.”

“If I be late, sir,” retorted Nat, “I do not see it’s any business of
yours.”

“Don’t be angry with me, friend, I meant no harm, for my object in
meeting you here is to afford you help and counsel.”

“I need, sir, no man’s help,” replied Nat; “and when I require advice
I’ll seek it at the house of a friend.”

“But, friend Vulcan, I can give you the help which no _man_ can.”

“Give it then, sir, to those who seek; as for me I desire it not.”

“You are poor, friend, and penniless.”

“But is poverty, sir, a crime?”

“Oh no, friend, poverty is not a crime; but you must own, Mr. Smith, that
an empty pocket is very inconvenient for a thirsty soul.”

“How do you know, sir, that my pocket’s empty?”

“My knowledge of the fact, friend, is derived from your own confession.”

“But, sir, I never confessed to you, ’cause why, I never saw you before.”

“You speak truly on that point, friend Vulcan; nevertheless, I must tell
you I heard your confession to-night at the Jolly Fiddler.”

“I did not see you there, sir.”

“Perhaps not.  I was there, notwithstanding; and I heard you declaring to
Will, the landlord, that you then parted with the last sixpence.”

“If I’ve spent all, sir, I can work and earn more.”

“Oh, sir, you can work: but I know you do not like work; and if you will
comply with my wishes, you shall have all you require without working
another hour.”

“What is your wish, sir, and the nature of your service?”

“I will tell you, Mr. Vulcan, in a few words.  But, first, let me say
that I take a deep interest in you, and am supremely anxious to promote
your welfare.  Now, if you will consent to become my son, at the
expiration of seven years from this hour, I will grant you any three
things you might desire, whatever they may be.”

“You’ll do what, sir?”

“I’ll grant you any three things—riches, wealth, possessions, or anything
else.”

“And for these benefits, what do you require from me?”

“All I require, Mr. Nat, is that, at the expiration of seven years, you
will acknowledge me as your master.”

“Indeed, sir,—that is, I don’t know what to say to your proposal.  Now
I’m a free man, and I’d rather be my own master than be the slave of
another.”

“But, friend, when you have plenty of money you will be your own master,
and besides, with a full pocket you can drink as much as you like of
Will’s best beer.  I shall guarantee in the bond your pockets shall be
always full.”

“To-morrow night, if you will meet me, I will give you an answer.”

“To-morrow, friend, it will be too late.  Your decision must be now or
never.  If you desire a merry and a jolly life, having a full pocket and
plenty of good ale, sign this bond, which read for yourself.”

Nat took the document from the hand of the stranger, which he carefully
read twice over.  When completing its second perusal, he remarked that it
appeared all right, though not wholly satisfactory as it contained no
sentence _securing the blessings_ for which he had to wish _during the
seven years_.

“Will it be satisfactory to you then, friend, if words to that effect are
added?”

“Yes, sir,” replied Nat.

The stranger then wrote upon the bond the words Nat desired should be
added, and presenting it to the smith, he at once signed the document,
when, on its being done, the stranger vanished out of his sight, leaving
Nat there in darkness and alone.  However, he ultimately found the door
of his cottage, and, on entering, went at once to bed.

It was noon on the succeeding morning before Nat awoke.  He had, like all
beer and spirit drinkers, slept himself sober.  When he was aroused from
his slumbers, he began to think over the previous night’s scene, and,
step by step, he was at last able to trace the whole of his doings from
the time he left home until his return, and then he fully realized his
present position.  The sad fact that he had sold himself body and soul to
the arch-fiend was now a terrible reality.  “I have been a fool, and no
mistake,” said he to himself; “but what’s done can’t be helped.  Here is
the bond, the conditions of which I’m bound to carry out.”  He then got
up, and dressed himself, and going downstairs, he found his dinner, which
consisted of potatoes and milk, on the table.  After partaking of a
portion of the dinner his too-indulgent wife had prepared for him,
addressing his faithful Betsy he unconsciously exclaimed:

“I wish, old girl, we had fried bacon with the potatoes.”

No sooner had the words escaped his lips than there appeared before him
on the little round table a plateful of savoury bacon, on which he was so
enraged with his own want of prudence, that he wished it and its contents
under the grate, when it was removed thither by some invisible hand.
Nat, on witnessing this, foamed with passion, and danced and cursed and
swore like one possessed with the evil one.  He carried on his ravings
for some time to the astonishment of his wife, as she could not divine
the cause of his strange conduct; and amid one of his fits of rage he
exclaimed, “Oh, that I had a jug of Will’s best beer, for my mouth and my
tongue are on fire!”  In a moment the foaming ale was placed on the
table, and Nat swallowed it at a single draught.  When he placed the
empty jug on the table, he said, addressing his wife:

“O Betsy! what a fool I’ve been.  I was promised riches, possessions, and
honours, if I’d do a particular thing, but my only reward is a jug of
ale.”

From that day Nat was an altered man.  He ceased his visits to the Jolly
Fiddler.  Occasionally he was to be found in his shop, but more
frequently he might be seen walking up and down the mountain-side alone,
with an air of pensive sadness on his brow.  As years rolled on he became
more dejected and depressed in spirits, the cause of which was known to
no mortal.  He did not even tell his wife the terrible secret of his
unhappiness.  Years and years passed on with this heavy load on his
heart.  At last it came to the very day but one when he had to fulfil the
condition of the bond.  Why or wherefore I do not know, but the thought
struck him about me, and thinking, perhaps, that I could afford him some
little aid, he started off yesterday morning, and he spent several hours
with me here last night.  He told me the whole of his tale, and when he
had completed its recital, I said to him very kindly, but firmly,—

“You have done, my friend, a very wicked thing.”

“O sir, I know I have; but my heart is so depressed, pray do not,
therefore, upbraid me now, but try and afford me some assistance.”

“I really can’t see my way to help you, especially as your enemy is so
subtle.”

“But, my dear pastor, I think you can break the net in which he has
caught me.”

“There is only one way of defeating him, Nat; that way is, by prayer and
supplication for Divine help and guidance when the hour of your doom
comes.”

“O sir, I have poured out my whole soul to my Redeemer, but I’ve received
no answer to my prayer.”

“Relief, Nat, may yet come.  Oh, don’t cease in your petitions to the
throne of mercy.”

“I’m terribly afraid, sir, that my sins are so black, there is no hope
for me.”

“While there is life, friend, there is hope; and even yet, at the
eleventh hour, a way of escape may be opened to you.”

“Heaven be praised if there be, sir; but this bond is too explicit in
terms, and he who holds the counterpart is too exacting, for me to hope
for an escape.”

“You have the bond, then, Nat?”

“Yes, sir! here it is.”

“Have you received the benefits of its conditions?”

“The only benefit I received was one jug of beer.  As for the bacon, that
was devoured by the flames.”

“There is a line, which appears as an afterthought, added to the bond,
namely, guaranteeing the security of the blessings wished for during a
period of seven years.  Do you now say, Nat, that you have not
participated in the benefits of the wishes during the seven years?”

“I declare, sir, in the most solemn manner, that the only benefit I had
was the jug of ale already referred to.”

“Now, Nat, I think I can help you out of your difficulty, and I will pray
Heaven to succour and assist you in the terrible encounter awaiting you.
But to insure success you must observe to the letter my directions.  Will
you promise me?”

“Most solemnly I promise to obey you to the letter.”

“You must fulfil your engagement with the enemy, and if he insists on
your carrying out the condition of the bond, then tell him to his face
that you will not do so, unless he will first carry out _his_ conditions
about the seven years.  If he refuses, then demand another wish, and as
you have received no benefit from the previous ones, he will, I think,
concede the point.  If so, then let your wish be that something terrible
might happen to him.”

Now, said the parson to me, I can proceed no further with my tale.  Every
moment I am anxiously waiting news, or the return of Nat.  If he comes
you shall hear the rest of the story from his own lips,—whereupon Nat
entered, and throwing up his hat to the top of the room, cried out, “He
is conquered! he is conquered!  Hurrah for Parson Jones!  Hurrah for the
good Vicar of Llan! before whom both witches and devils flee.”  At last
Nat became calm and composed, when he proceeded to complete the tale,
which I tell in his own words:—

“I met the old chap at the appointed time and place, when he produced the
bond, and asked me if I was ready to accompany him.

“I said, said I, ‘Not yet, my lord.’

“‘Why?’ said he.

“‘Because,’ said I, ‘you have not fulfilled the conditions of the bond.’

“‘In what have I failed?’ asked he.

“‘In this,’ said I, ‘I was, by the bond, to enjoy the blessings for seven
years, and I’ve had only one jug of beer.’

“‘But that was your fault,’ said he.

“‘Whether it be my fault or not,’ said I, ‘I will not come with you
unless you fulfil your conditions.’

“‘I will not wait for you another seven years,’ said he; ‘but I will
permit your having one more wish.’

“‘You’ll do what?’ said I.

“‘I will grant you the privilege of one more wish.’

“‘You really will?’ said I.

“‘Yes; but, mind, my only reason for granting it,’ said he, ‘is that you
appear to feel that I have taken an advantage of you.’

“‘Well, then,’ said I, ‘I wish you on the back of your fiery dragon; and,
then, that the dragon carry you straight to Llynfan, and that you both be
drowned in that lake, and never appear to disturb me more.’

“When I had finished my wish there was a terrible clap of thunder, which
shook the earth beneath me to its very foundation, and it was followed by
a vivid flash of lightning which lit up the whole mountain; and, looking
across the valley, I then saw both the dragon and its rider disappear in
that fathomless llyn.  When I saw this I dropped down upon the cold
ground, and then poured forth my heart’s thanksgivings to Him who had
wrought me, through you, my dear pastor, so great, so glorious a
victory.”

                       [Picture: Pont Aberglaslyn]



CADWGAN WYNN;
OR THE
LOST INHERITANCE REGAINED.


    Fled are the fairy views of hill and dale;
    Sublimely throned on the steep mountain brow.
    Stern nature frowns: her desolating rage
    Driving the whirlwind, or swoln flood, or blast
    Of fiery air imprisoned, from their base
    Has wildly hurled the uplifted rocks around
    The gloomy pass, where Aberglaslyn’s arch
    Yawns o’er the torrent.  The disjointed crags
    O’er the steep precipice in fragments vast
    Impending, to the astonished mind recall
    The fabled horrors by demoniac force
    Of Lapland wizards wrought; who, borne upon
    The whirlwind’s wing, what time the vexèd sea
    Dashed ’gainst Norwegia’s cliffs, to solid mass
    Turned the swoln billows, and the o’erhanging waves
    Fixed e’er they fell.



CHAPTER I.
_SHADE AND LIGHT—SORROW—BUT HOPE IN SORROW_.


In the enchanting vale below Pont Aberglaslyn there stood, many many
years ago, a small villa, which at the time of which we write was covered
over with ivy.  Surrounding this beautiful rural retreat were gardens and
pleasure grounds, which were designed and laid out with great artistic
taste and skill in the arrangement of walks, shrubs, rose-trees, flowers,
and evergreens.

At the time our story commences, the villa was occupied by a gentleman
whose family had seen better days; but, through the prodigality of
ancestors and the vast sums they had squandered in horse-racing,
cock-fighting, and gambling, the rent-roll of their estate which
approached £12,000 a year, now scarcely reached a hundredth part of that
sum after the interest had been paid.  Indeed, when the then owner came
into possession of his patrimony on the death of his father, his net
income barely reached £6 a week.  On discovering his pecuniary position,
he felt he could no longer afford to occupy the family mansion, and like
a wise man he prudently resolved to leave it, and remove to the villa we
have already described.  During the residence of the family at the old
Hall, Mrs. Wynn—that being the name of the family—left her household
affairs to her servants, who unfortunately paid but little regard to
domestic economy.  However, when she took up her residence in her new
abode she wisely undertook the chief management of her household; while
Mr. Wynn devoted his time to the cultivation of the garden and
superintending the education of his son and daughter.  Both proved apt
learners; what they learned they remembered.  Whatever book they read,
they retained its contents in their singularly retentive memories.  In
pursuing their studies, fortunately they had this great advantage in
their favour,—namely, that their parent was a ripe scholar and an eminent
man of letters, while as a teacher he possessed abilities of the highest
order.  Having such an instructor, no wonder his beloved pupils made such
rapid progress.  After teaching them thoroughly the rudiments, Mr. Wynn
led on his children step by step to higher grounds; but in all his
lessons he sought to instil into their young minds a strong and
passionate desire, a longing thirst, for knowledge, the possession of
which had afforded him some of the happiest and the most pleasurable
hours of his life.  Thus occupied, year after year came and rolled by,
and each revolving year brought increased happiness to the little family
of the villa.  Truly did they live in each other’s love.

When their son Cadwgan had attained his fifteenth year, his sister
Gwenfan being two years younger, their father was on one Saturday called
away to the ancient town of Carnarvon, in order to transact some special
business with the family solicitor.  When he left home in the morning he
promised to return the same evening, but though his wife and children
waited his return until midnight, he came not.  At last, sick and weary
at heart, they retired to rest; but during the remainder of the night
they were not roused by his well-known knock at the hall-door.  Early on
the ensuing Sabbath morning, a special messenger arrived at the villa
from Carnarvon, with the sorrowful intelligence that Squire Wynn had been
seized with a virulent attack of small-pox, a disease which was then
fearfully raging in the town and neighbourhood, and the messenger urged
Mrs. Wynn to hasten to the bedside of her husband, if she desired to see
him alive.  With an aching heart she kissed and bade adieu to her son and
daughter, and hastened to the bedside of the almost lifeless form of him
who had ever been the light of her eyes and the joy of her heart.  She
saw at the first glance that the hour of his departure had come.  She
threw herself on the bed by his side, when he tenderly embraced her,
saying, “Heaven bless you, my angel!” and then pointing his finger
upwards, “Meet me there, and bring our dear ones with you.”  He then
heaved a deep sigh, and his spirit took its flight to the _gwlad well_
(the better land).  Before that day’s sun had descended into the western
sea, Mrs. Wynn was attacked with the same fatal malady; and before the
dawn of the following morning, her gentle and loving spirit had fled its
earthly tabernacle for the land of eternal and ethereal joy.  Thus were
their children bereft of both father and mother in a single day, and
before they were made acquainted with the terrible loss they had
sustained, the forms they loved so well had been placed in the same tomb.

To the children the Monday and Tuesday following were days of anxious
thought.  No tidings had reached them of the sad event that had happened.
It was late on Tuesday evening that a kind friend arrived from the
solicitor bringing the sad intelligence of their parents’ decease.  They
were overwhelmed with sorrow on account of their loss.  Days and days
elapsed before they could realize their position.  At last they were
painfully impressed with the fact that they were alone in the world.  No
loving word now, in welcome and joyous voice, greeted them on entering
their home.  The arm-chair in which their father sat evening after
evening, when he was used to tell them tales of years that had gone, and
the couch on which their mother reclined before retiring to her bedroom,
were both unoccupied.  The sudden death of both, taken in connection with
the responsibilities of the present and their anxieties pertaining to the
future, nearly broke their young and tender hearts.  But they sorrowed
not as those who had no hope.  From childhood they had been taught to
love the dear Name which is above every name, and confident of His
favour, and with full reliance on the promise that He would be a father
to the fatherless, their gentle spirits became calm and peaceful.
Moreover, they looked forward to a bright immortality, when they would
join those whom their souls loved.  Thus, as day after day came and
departed, they became more resigned to their lot.  Their griefs were
assuaged by night voices from the world above.  Often, in the evening
twilight, they heard whispers from the spirits of the dear departed ones.
And the spirits said, after a few more years of toil, of labour, of
sorrow, of anxiety and trouble, you will come up hither, and then you
shall mingle your voices with ours, in praising Him, who has washed us
from our sins in His own blood.  That day there will be a joyous reunion
in this spirit world where parting is no more.



CHAPTER II.
_AN INHERITANCE LOST_, _BUT A FRIEND FOUND_.


“Is not this a lovely April morning?” remarked Cadwgan to his sister, as
they walked hand-in-hand across the lawn.

“It is, indeed, a most lovely morning, brother.  And is not the scene
around most enchanting?”

“You, Gwenfan, have always been a great admirer of the spring.”

“And you, dear Cadwgan, have been its enthusiastic admirer.”

“I have loved it, my dear sister, because it is the season of the year
when nature puts on its most joyous apparel.  The trees and flowers, the
hedgerows and forests, the cornfields and meads, all all are decked in
their green robes.  When spring comes, after the deathlike appearance of
winter with its cold and chilling air, nature springs into new life; the
trees send forth their green leaves, the rose its blossom, the meadows
put on their usual dress, and Nature appears to say to all, Come, come,
and behold my triumphant resurrection from the death of winter.”

“And does not the animal creation, my brother, participate in the glories
of spring?”

“Sister, oh, do listen to the joyous melody of the skylark, and see, see
how he mounts higher and higher, and sings as he ascends!  From yon
thorny bush don’t you hear the blackbird’s sweet notes? while the mellow
bullfinch answers those notes from yonder sylvan grove.”

“It is love, my dearest brother, that creates this music; all this waste
of melody is the heavenly voice of sweetest love.”

“Don’t say, my dear sister, that this melody is wasted.  Music is never
wasted when there are people listening to its soothing and joyous
strains.”

“But people, Cadwgan, do not always give ear to the charming voices of
these winged songsters.  And are there not hundreds, and perhaps
thousands, who fail to appreciate, who are never moved by, their
enchanting notes?”

“That there are persons, my wise sister, who listen unmoved to the melody
of birds, I would be the last to deny; but is there not an equally large
number of persons who see no beauty in verdant glades, in the bubbling
crystal fountain, in the rippling streamlet, and in the flowers as they
open their petals to draw in the morning dewdrop?”

“As you have referred to flowers, come, dear Cadwgan, and look at my
smiling blushing roses.  Oh, they look so lovely!  Exquisitely beautiful
are they, and their perfume fills the morning air with the most delicious
fragrance.”

“They are, my dear Gwenfan, most beautiful; but pray tell me the secret
of your success in training them to so great a perfection.”

“That I can explain in a few words.  I have nursed them well.  I have
paid them as much attention as I have paid to my birds, and I love them
almost as much,—don’t I, pretty, smiling, blushing roses?”

“It will be hard for you to part with this lovely dwelling, won’t it,
Gwenfan; especially as it is endeared to us by so many happy and hallowed
associations?”

“But we shan’t leave here, brother; shall we?”

“I am afraid we shall be obliged to do so, sister.”

“I am so sorry to hear you say so.”

“I am sorry too, to break the news to you.  The thought of leaving our
dear home almost breaks my heart.”

“I had hoped, Cadwgan, never to say adieu to the abode of our beloved
parents, though the void created by our sad bereavement can never be
filled up.  But, if we must leave, whither shall we go?”

“At present, my darling sister, I know not where we shall have to pitch
our tent; but our heavenly Father, in His good providence, will, if we
trust Him, provide for us a shelter.”

“I do love and trust Him, my dear brother; but, oh, at this moment, the
future appears to me dark and beamless.  I fail to see even a fringe of
the cloud with a silver lining.”

“But if we look to the light, our future may still be bright and joyous;
as will be the appearance of yonder vale when the dark cloud you see up
there passes away.  In a few minutes this sylvan dell will be lighted up
by the golden beams of the morning sun.”

“Look, brother, look!  The cloud is rapidly moving on its journey.  The
rays of the king of day will soon fall upon and penetrate both woodland
and brake, warming and cheering the dwellers in mossy beds and grassy
mounds, imparting hope and joy to all.”

“So may it be with us, dear Gwenfan.  When we least expect aid from on
high, that aid comes, and at once the darkness and gloom are chased
away.”

But here his sister called her brother’s attention to a lady driving a
pony carriage.  “I declare,” she said, “the lady is coming to the villa.
See! see! her servant has opened the entrance gate at the bottom of the
lawn.  Oh, who can she be?  Do you expect any one to visit us, brother?”

“I expect no one, but hope that she may be a messenger of good, not of
evil; a harbinger of comfort, and not the bearer of bad tidings and thus
increase our affliction and sorrow.  Our cup of grief is already full and
overflowing.”

As the carriage approached nearer to the villa, the children saw that its
occupant was clad in deep mourning, and that she resembled some one whom
they well knew, but whom they could not at the moment recollect.
Presently, the carriage was driven up to the door, and the lady inquired
of the orphans if the house was called Bryn Villa, and if they were the
children of Mr. and Mrs. Wynn.

“I am, madam, their son,” replied Cadwgan, “and this is my sister
Gwenfan.”

“May I presume to ask the name of the lady who takes care of you?”

“We have no one taking care of us, madam,” replied Gwenfan.  “I look
after my brother, and he looks after me.”

“But have you no one with you,—no grown up person in charge of the house,
and in charge of its management?”

“We have only a maid-servant in the house, ma’am,” answered the brother;
“and she has been with us since we were little ones.”

“You are then, my dears, left alone in the world.  Unless I have been
misinformed, you have lost both parents.”

“Both are dead, ma’am,” answered Gwenfan, weeping; “and neither my
brother nor I am aware of having a single relative living.”

“Had not your papa a sister?” inquired the lady.

“We never heard dear papa speak of a sister, or any relative,” answered
Cadwgan.

“Dear me, sir, that is certainly very strange; because I happen to know
of his having a sister, whom he loved very dearly.”

“Of her, ma’am,” replied the youth, “papa never spoke.  I remember
hearing him say, he had no one left in the world to care for, except dear
mamma and us.”

“For the present we will say no more on the subject.  But having driven
many a long mile, my dears, since the morning, and still having a long
journey before me, I must claim your hospitality for food for my servant
and pony.”

“You are heartily welcome, ma’am, to partake of the best our house can
afford,” replied the children.  “Your servant will perhaps drive the pony
into the yard, and he will find there our man servant who will attend to
his wants.”

The lady then descended from her phaeton, and was conducted by the
children into the house.  During the time refreshments were being
prepared she made a minute inspection of the parlour.  When she had
thoroughly surveyed it, and was about to take a rest on the sofa, she saw
what appeared to be a picture, but the likeness was shut from view by a
curtain of green baize which hung over and covered both the picture and
frame.  The lady’s curiosity was aroused, but just then she heard the
footsteps of the servant and the children in the passage; but before they
entered the room, she had succeeded in drawing aside the baize, and had a
glimpse of the likeness beneath.  When the children entered they
perceived that the lady appeared slightly agitated, though, necessarily,
they were wholly ignorant of its cause.

During the time she was engaged in partaking of the refreshments which
had been provided her, she talked and chatted away on all manner of
topics, but studiously avoided making any allusion to herself.  She asked
the children many questions about people in the neighbourhood,
particularly about Mrs. Jones, of the Glen; her sons and daughters, if
they were all married, and did they reside in the locality.  She
specially asked if young Squire Jones were still a bachelor.

The children gave their visitor an account of the several families she
inquired for, and informed her that Mr. Jones was still single, that he
resided at the Glen, and had succeeded to his uncle’s property, which
brought in some £12,000 a year.

                                * * * * *

“And you never heard, my dears, your papa mentioning relatives either
living or dead.”

“Indeed, we don’t recollect our papa making any allusion to relatives,
except,” said Cadwgan, “on one occasion, when he said to mamma, ‘I am
afraid she is dead; for were she alive she would certainly write to us.’”

“I know, my dears, to whom he referred, and think I can satisfy you that
she is not dead, but still lives.”

“Any information, ma’am,” replied the youth, “with which you can furnish
us will place us under deep obligations to you.”

“Have you, my dears, ever seen the picture under the green baize?”

“No, ma’am.”

“Then you don’t know whose likeness it is?”

“Indeed, ma’am,” replied the brother and sister, “we don’t.”

“Tell me, my dears,”—removing the covering,—“tell me if you have ever
seen any one like that portrait.”

For a moment the children hesitated; and after looking first at the
portrait and then at the lady, said, “The picture, ma’am, is very like
you; or you resemble the portrait.”

“You are quite right, my loves.  Your dear papa was my brother, and you,
my dears, are my nephew and niece.  Come to my arms, and be assured that,
as far as I can, I will make up for the loss you have sustained.  I will
love you deeply, fondly, ardently; and for my brother’s sake, and that of
your kind, gentle, and loving mother, who was as dear to me as my dear
sister Gwenfan, who was the light and joy of our homes, and for your own
sakes, I will be your guide, your friend, your counsellor and stay.”

In a moment the children were locked in the tender and loving embrace of
their aunt.  They all wept, though their sorrows were mixed with joy.  To
some extent the discovery thus made relieved the sadness and gloom of the
hour.  In the hour of gloom, when aid was least expected, a comforter had
been found.  But upon this scene we must not dwell.  Their aunt was a
woman of action, and rest with her was impossible until she had
thoroughly mastered the children’s affairs.  Hence, as soon as she and
her pony had had refreshment and an hour’s rest, she, with her niece and
nephew, started off for Carnarvon to see the family solicitor, and from
that gentleman learnt that the old family estate of the Wynns was
mortgaged to its full value, and that the mortgagee had now given notice
to foreclose unless the sum borrowed was repaid within a month.  “To do
this,” said the solicitor, “is, I fear, impossible, because the amount
borrowed—£80,000—is so large that in these times there are but few
capitalists who have it at their command.”  He then gave it as his
deliberate opinion that the best thing was for the mortgagee to sell, and
if he realized a sum beyond the encumbrance, it might be invested for the
joint use of the children.

This advice was acted upon by the aunt and orphans.  A few weeks after
this conversation, Wynn Castle and its domain and estate were sold by
auction, the fortunate purchaser being a London merchant of great wealth,
who during the first three years of its possession expended on
improvements £20,000.

When the affairs of Wynn Castle were all arranged, Cadwgan resolved to
seek his fortune in the wide wide world.  His aunt and sister did their
best to dissuade him from leaving home, but he turned a deaf ear to their
arguments and entreaties.  At last they reluctantly acquiesced, and it
was finally arranged that his aunt and sister were to remain at the Villa
(this house and grounds forming no part of the Wynn Castle estate), the
former promising to supply as far as she was able the void which death
had created.



CHAPTER III.
_THE WIDE WORLD_.


It was a beautiful summer morning when Cadwgan departed from the home of
his love, the place endeared to him by so many happy associations.  The
parting scene between him and his sister was most painful.  From
childhood they had not been separate from each other a single day.
Gwenfan’s love for her brother was deep, ardent, and tender.  Every want
of his she anticipated, while she paid the minutest attention to his
feelings, even in small and trivial matters.  To part with her only
brother was indeed a sore trial; but she now felt she could no longer
resist his wishes, though the thought almost broke her heart.  Then
Cadwgan’s grief was equally intense.  He however felt that duty called
him away; and somehow there came into his soul a conviction that a day
might come when fortune would smile upon him, and on that day his sister
would bless him for having forsaken the joys of home with its smiles and
sunshine, in obedience to what he regarded as a solemn duty.  At last he
tore himself away from his sister’s and aunt’s tender and affectionate
caresses, leaving the home of his childhood; and before the sun was up,
grand old Snowdon, with its circumjacent hills and mountain-tops, had
disappeared from his view.  However, he lingered not on his journey, but
when the last old friend of his youth had disappeared he put on new
speed, resolving to arrive at the metropolis of England and the world
before the end of the following week.

We shall not attempt to describe the journey and the incidents which
occurred by the way.  Suffice it to say, that in due course he reached
the great city, and during the first few days after his arrival he
wandered from street to street, traversing its parks, alleys, and great
thoroughfares; and during those days’ wanderings he saw much of the busy
scenes of city life, especially those places where merchant princes most
do congregate.

After being in London about a week, faint, weary and worn, hungry and
footsore, he sat down one evening in one of the recesses of London
Bridge, and wept.  Though thousands passed by not a soul took any notice
of the sorrowing and weeping boy.  As the shades of night began to fall
faster and faster on the scene, the bridge became less crowded, and as
the evening advanced, became almost deserted.  The poor youth now thought
seriously on his lonely and forlorn condition.  To procure a bed was
almost impossible, as he knew not where to go; and even if he did know,
he could ill afford to spare two shillings—the sum his landlord had
charged him the previous evening—because his little purse was nearly
empty.  When the few shillings which remained were gone, he saw no
prospect before him but hunger and starvation, which he now considered
would be his inevitable fate.  He now repented of his somewhat rash act
of leaving home before consulting with some one as to the best course he
should pursue.  But his repentance was too late.  He placed himself in
the hand of his heavenly Father, and prayed to Him for help and guidance.
That prayer brought peace to his troubled spirit.

It was a beautiful and balmy summer night, and he asked himself the
question, why could he not make himself quite comfortable there for a
single night?  Having resolved to sleep there for one night at least, he
at once commenced to arrange his pillow, which consisted of his carpet
bag.  Having placed the bag on the ledge between the parapet and the
footpath, he lay down to sleep.  Just as he was about to close his eyes a
gentleman came up, and stepping on the ledge close to the youth’s bag,
looked over the parapet on the ebbing tide below.  Having remained in
that position a few minutes, he turned round for the purpose of
descending to the regular path in order to continue his journey, but in
his descent he saw the youth apparently asleep.  He gazed on his
countenance for a few moments, and said,—

“What are you doing there, my child, this time of night?”

“I hope, sir,” replied Cadwgan, “that my sleeping here for a night will
not be wrong.  I’m not in the way of any one, sir, and I won’t do any
mischief.”

“But have you no other place to go to, my child?  You can procure a bed
somewhere, can’t you?”

“I might possibly do so, sir, but I can’t well spare the money to pay for
a night’s lodgings.”

“But have you no friends or relations in town, my boy, to whom you could
apply for assistance?”

“I’ve no friends in London, sir.”

“I presume you have relations in the country who are in a position to aid
you.”

“I’ve a sister, sir, but she is nearly three hundred miles from here.”

“Where did you come from, my child?”

“From Wales, sir.”

“Is Wales your home—I mean your native country?”

“Yes, sir.”

“North or South Wales?”

“The North, sir.”

“Where in North Wales does your sister live?”

“She lives at Bryn Villa, near Pont Aberglaslyn.”

“Surely, your name, my child, is not Wynn, is it?”

“That is my name, sir.”

“Then you are the son of Squire Wynn, of Wynn Castle?”

“Mr. Wynn was my father.”

“And how is that dear good man?”

“My father and mother, sir, are both dead.  I have no one left to care
for me but my sister, except my aunt.”

“I am truly sorry to hear tidings so sad.  What is your aunt’s name?”

“Her name is Gwenfan Wynn, which is the name of my sister.”

“But are you not in error in calling her Wynn?  I heard she got married
some years ago.”

“My aunt was never married.”

“Are you sure of that, my child?”

“Quite sure, sir.”

“You greatly surprise me.  I was given to understand she married a Scotch
gentleman, many, many years ago.”

“She did leave home with the intention of being married to a Mr. McDonel,
but finding, fortunately before it was too late, that the representations
he made of himself about his property, estate, and high connections, were
all false, she broke off the match, and not wishing to return home then,
when she would probably be subjected to perhaps unkind observations, took
a situation in a nobleman’s family then about to visit Italy, with whom
she has lived until within the last few weeks.  The family only recently
returned to England, and on the evening after their arrival, my aunt saw
in the _Times_ the announcement of my parents’ death.  She immediately
left London, and came to us in Wales.  She is now with my dear sister
acting as her guardian and friend.”

“I thank you, my child, for your information.  You must now accompany me
to my residence.  You shall not want for a home and a friend as long as
Owen Jones lives.”

“But, sir, I do not wish, nor can I consent, to live on charity.  I’ve
come up to London to work for my bread, and if Heaven smiles on my
efforts I shall attain an honourable independency.”

“As to your future plans, my child, more anon.  For the present my home
must and shall be yours.  When you have recovered from the fatigue of
your journey, I will endeavour to obtain for you a situation in some
respectable mercantile house.  You must in the meantime be my guest.  I
hope happy days are in store for you.”

The youth then rose from his couch (Mr. Jones had, during the above
conversation, been sitting on the ledge of the parapet by his side), but
when he attempted to move he almost fell down from exhaustion.  His newly
found friend, who had intended to have walked home, hailed a coach, which
soon arrived at his house, which was a semi-detached villa, in Brixton.

On their arrival, Mr. Jones introduced the youth to his wife and only
daughter.  The former on being informed who he was, welcomed him with
affectionate cordiality.  Mrs. Jones had known his father and mother
years ago, she being a native of a village but a few miles from Wynn
Castle.

In his new home Cadwgan spent an exceedingly pleasant evening.  He had to
answer a thousand questions about people and families who resided in the
vicinity of his far distant home among the mountains.  At last he was
permitted to retire to his room, and having had no sound sleep for
several nights, and being weary and tired, was soon asleep.  He awoke in
the morning feeling he was almost a new man.

At breakfast, Mr. Jones asked the youth what kind of employment would
best meet his wishes.

“I am indifferent, sir, as to the kind of situation; my object and most
anxious desire is to earn my living by hard work.”

“I am extremely sorry, my young friend, that I have no vacancy for a
young gentleman of your talents and education in my establishment.
However, in the course of a few days I hope to succeed in procuring you a
situation in one of the great city houses.  In the meantime you are my
guest.  My wife and daughter shall take you out during the day, in order
to show you the lions of this great city; but in the evenings they must
not monopolize your whole attention, as I have much to say to you and
many inquiries to make about dear old friends in old Cambria, which has
been to us a good and kind mother.”  Then turning to his wife he
said,—“Be sure to take particular care of our young visitor, and don’t
fail to bring him back without injury to health or limb.”

“You need be under no apprehension on that point, Owen,” answered Mrs.
Jones.  “No harm shall befall him when under my charge.  I shall guard
him from harm as if he were one of my own children.”

“I have no doubt you will, wife.  I must now leave you.  I hope you will
spend a very pleasant day.”

Mr. Jones then left, and proceeded to his house of business; but during
his walk he thought, not of mercantile transaction or of his dear old
native land, oh, no: his thoughts were wholly occupied with the adventure
of the previous evening.

Soon after the departure of Mr. Jones, his wife and daughter and young
Wynn started off for the purpose of seeing some of the wonders of London,
but the day closed before they saw one hundredth part of its glories.
Day after day they continued to drive about from one part of the
metropolis to another, and during these excursions Cadwgan had acquired a
pretty accurate knowledge of the geography of London.

When at dinner on the following Sunday, Mr. Jones informed his young
visitor of his having at last succeeded in procuring for him a situation
as clerk in the old established house of Messrs. Davies, Roberts &
Company, the celebrated tea merchants, and that he was to commence his
duties on the following Monday.  This information was exceedingly
cheering to the youth, as the certainty of employment was now assured.
Not wishing to be under obligation to his friends longer than he could
possibly help, he expressed a wish to procure lodgings in some
respectable family at once, and asked Mr. Jones if he knew of any place
in the neighbourhood likely to suit him.

“We’ll talk on that matter, my boy, another time,” replied Mr. Jones.
“For the present, at least, you must remain with us.  If you do leave us
in the way you propose, remember, be your stay in London long or short,
you must consider our house your home.  Before you can possibly make any
arrangements you must first see if the situation will suit you; whether
your employers like you, and you like them.  If you give them
satisfaction, and your position is likely to be permanent, why then we
will, if you wish, permit you to leave us; and I’ve no doubt but that
Mrs. Jones and my daughter will find you comfortable apartments.”

“Well, sir, I’m in your hands.  You have overpowered me with kindness
which I shall never be able to repay.  When hungry, weary, and helpless,
when friendless and without a ray of hope, you came to me as an angel of
mercy, you took me into your house, and during my residence under your
hospitable roof, Mrs. Jones and you have treated me as if I were your
child.  To you I shall always feel grateful; and come what may, your
image will ever repose in my heart of hearts.”

“Tut, tut! my boy, our kindness is nothing.  If we have succeeded in
making you happy, and in giving you a start in life, is not that a
sufficient reward?  But our little attention requites in a very small
degree the obligations which I am under to your noble father’s family.  I
am still their debtor to an amount I shall never be able to repay.”



CHAPTER IV.
_THE VICTORY OF INNOCENCE_.


The establishment of Messrs. Davies, Roberts & Company, was situated in
one of those narrow streets, and was one of those dark and dingy-looking
buildings, which were far from being uncommon in old London.  The
premises, however, were large and commodious, and were specially adapted
for their important trade.  When Cadwgan saw it for the first time,
namely, on the morning succeeding the conversation between Mr. Jones and
himself recorded in the previous chapter, he was painfully struck with
the contrast it presented with his own light and airy home, surrounded as
that home was by rich fields of pasture land and trees of every kind and
hue.  However, he was by no means disheartened, and was far from disposed
to give up the contest in life’s battle without a struggle, so he entered
the building with his friend Mr. Jones cheerfully, and presently was
asked into the presence of Mr. Roberts, the head of the firm.

“And this is the young gentleman you spoke to me about, friend Jones?”

“Yes.  Mr. Cadwgan Wynn.  I hope for the sake of our common country and
our friendship, that you will not be unmindful of his interest.”

“His progress here, friend Jones, will depend wholly upon himself.  If he
prove himself quick, painstaking, and honest, he shall not want a
friend.”

“His honesty and rectitude I will guarantee; and methinks as he comes
from a shrewd stock, he will, with a few years’ experience, prove a
valuable hand,—one whom it will be difficult for you to do without.”

“I am aware, Jones, that I can fully rely on your recommendation.  Now,
Mr. Wynn, when will you be ready to go into harness?”

“I am prepared, sir, to commence my duties at once.  If convenient for
you to make arrangements, I’ll remain here to-day.”

“By all means remain.  Come, follow me, and I will introduce you to Mr.
McLiver, our chief cashier, in whose department you will be engaged for
the present.”

Mr. McLiver was a Scotchman, who had been in the service of the firm many
years.  From almost the lowest place, he had risen step by step until he
attained the most important post in the house.  In him the firm had
unbounded confidence, and as he apparently managed his department with
skill and economy Mr. Roberts permitted him to select nearly the whole of
the clerks attached thereto.  In less than two years from the date of his
appointment to his present post he had managed, by hook or by crook, to
get rid of nearly the whole of the old hands, and their places he
supplied with Scotchmen of his own kith and kin.  From the first day of
entering the office, Mr. McLiver regarded Cadwgan as an intruder, an
interloper; hence he looked upon the youth with aversion, and availed
himself of every opportunity to vex and annoy him.  But this was not all.
Any little mistake Mr. Wynn might make in his books or accounts, was
carried to Mr. Roberts.  But to these complaints he turned a deaf ear,
while at the same time he strictly enjoined upon Mr. McLiver to take all
possible care to have Cadwgan thoroughly instructed in all business
matters; above all, that he should be made a good accountant.  Though the
Scotchman faithfully promised to carry out to the letter his employer’s
instructions, yet he intentionally refrained from doing so; while he
continued to annoy the youth by making personal allusions to his country,
and on more than one occasion he called him a Welsh blockhead.  Of his
conduct Cadwgan never made any complaint, nor did he make the slightest
allusion to it, even to Mr. Jones.  He worked on, was constantly
labouring at his books and accounts, and in spite of the cashier he soon
became a first-rate accountant.  Before he had been in the establishment
five years, he was the best man in the house as regarded profound
knowledge of intricate details.

On the afternoon of the fifth anniversary of his official life, Mr.
Roberts called Cadwgan into his private office, and expressed to him the
high opinion he had formed of his ability and character; and to his great
surprise informed him that being about to rearrange the work of the
office, he had resolved to divide the office work into sections, and that
it was his (Mr. Roberts’) intention and wish that he should take the
position of chief accountant in the establishment, and that there would
be a number of clerks under him; that for the future Mr. McLiver would
simply receive moneys due to the firm, and pay all demands against it,
but all accounts must pass through the hands of the accountants, which
should bear the chief’s signature as being correct.

Cadwgan’s eyes filled with tears on being apprized of his promotion to so
important a post, and he thanked Mr. Roberts from his heart of hearts for
his confidence and kindness.

The morning on which Mr. Wynn was to commence his new duties, Mr. McLiver
repaired to Mr. Roberts’ private office, where he found that gentleman
occupying his usual seat, engaged in reading the money article of that
morning’s _Times_.  Addressing that gentleman in a somewhat peremptory
manner, he said he had just stepped in to ask if it was really true that
the young Welshman was to be placed in such an important and responsible
position in the establishment.

“It is quite true, Mr. McLiver.  The appointment has already been made,
and in the opinion of my son and myself Mr. Wynn has richly earned the
post assigned him.  We are of opinion that, of all the clerks, he is by
far the best qualified to discharge the duties of the office.”

“But consider, sir, my many years of faithful service in your house.  I
think that service merits some consideration from you.”

“But what is your wish, Mr. McLiver?”

“My wish, sir, is, that you confer this appointment upon my cousin.  He
has been longer in your employ than Wynn, and I am sure he possesses
ability far superior to that of this young man.”

“That is quite impossible, Mr. McLiver.  Mr. Wynn’s appointment has
already been made, and he has been duly informed of my resolve.  In fact
he has accepted our offer.”

“In that case, sir, I fear I must send in my resignation.  I could not
think of having my books and accounts overhauled by this intruder.”

“You may leave, sir, if you wish; and I will give you a cheque for your
quarter’s salary.”

“Am I right then in concluding you have lost confidence in me?  Are you
desirous that the connection between us be severed?”

“By no means, sir.  If you leave, it will be your own act and deed.”

“Then you wish me to remain in your service?”

“Of course I do, Mr. McLiver.  But you will bear in mind that all my
arrangements and plans must be carried out to the letter.  There must be
no divided authority here, so long as I’m master.  I desire you to
confine yourself, wholly, to the duties of your department, which require
your undivided attention; and I will be answerable for the proper
discharge of the duties of the new accountant’s office.”

“I bow to your decision, Mr. Roberts, and hope you will not have any
cause to regret the arrangements you have made.”

“Of that, sir, time will tell.  You, Mr. McLiver, will not have to make
up my loss.”

McLiver, finding it was useless to press the matter further, wished his
chief good morning, and returned to his own office in a very bad humour.

On entering, he uttered the most awful imprecations against Welshmen in
general, and Mr. Wynn in particular.  He swore that he would be revenged.
He turned to his cousin, and thus addressed him:—

“It is owing to you, you d—d scoundrel, that I owe my present disgrace.”

“To me, sir!  What the d—l do you mean?”

“I mean, Donald, that if you had been steady and honest and plodding,
this calamity would not have befallen our clan.”

“A fellow must have a spree, McLiver, now and then.  That is human
nature.”

“D—n human nature!  Donald, you talk like a fool.”

“I’m sorry for you, cousin.  I’m truly sorry for you.”

“It is a d—d bad job for me, that you have indulged in dissipation to the
extent you have.”

“But old Roberts has paid the piper, Mac, though he little suspects it.
He is little aware where the money comes from to keep up your grand
establishment.  If he knew all wouldn’t there be a jolly blow up!”

“You son of paupers, you parish ’prentice, if you talk to me in that way
I’ll knock your b—y head off your shoulders, by G—d I’ll do it, though
you be my father’s brother’s son.”

“Come, come, cousin; it won’t do for thee and me to quarrel and fall out
now.  We’ve sailed too long in the same boat—I mean, we’ve dipped our
fingers too deeply in the same till to peach upon each other, or to
quarrel.  Methinks our present duty is to guard against being found out.”

“Your advice is good, Donald; but that our delinquencies will come to the
knowledge of old Roberts, d—n him, is a matter of certainty.  That young
Welsh nincompoop imp has his eyes everywhere; his ears are always open.
I should not be at all surprised even if our present talk reached him.
For us it was an evil day when he came here.  If I were sure of not being
found out, I’d soon put an end to his presence.”

“Bad as I am, cousin, I’d not commit murder.  That we must not do.  Our
best plan is to concoct some scheme to dethrone this upstart.  Old
Roberts has willed he should reign over us; be it our mission to bring
him to the dust.”

“A good suggestion, Donald.  By gam! we must take care, though, to lay
the snare well so as to be certain of our bird.”

                                * * * * *

During several months succeeding the above conversation the business of
the house of Davies, Roberts & Company went on in its usual quiet way,
but in those months the young Welshman and his staff had succeeded in
overhauling the books of the firm for several years.  At the accounts
they had worked night and day.  When the investigation had been completed
his clerks knew nothing about the result, nor indeed of the object which
they had in view in making so strict an investigation.  So far Mr. Wynn
had discovered defalcations amounting to nearly £20,000, though the
bottom of the peculation had not yet been reached.  The books showed that
McLiver had carried on his swindling in a regularly systematic manner,
and had escaped detection for the reason that all his subordinates, which
made up nearly the whole staff, were creatures of his own—principally his
own kith and kin.  When Cadwgan had completed his labours, he had
ascertained, beyond the shadow of a doubt, that the amount abstracted was
£24,500.  During the months he had been engaged in auditing the books,
Cadwgan had made certain inquiries of houses with which his employers had
had business transactions, so he was in a position to prove by written
evidence the particulars and the exact sum of each fraudulent
transaction.  These inquiries had been carried on privately; neither to
Mr. Roberts, nor to any member of his staff, had he let fall a word
calculated to awaken suspicion.  It was late on a Saturday night when
Cadwgan finished his labours.  When descending from his office down to
the large entrance hall, with his papers in his hand, he was surprised to
find Mr. McLiver and his cousin Donald there.  They did not stop to
speak, but passed on into their own office.  As they heard Mr. Wynn,
before he descended, shut his office door and lock it, they naturally
concluded he was the last person in the buildings.  Presently, McLiver
and Donald left the house together, the porter closing the door on their
descending into the street.

That evening was anxiously spent by Mr. Wynn.  He retired to rest late,
but slept not.  That the facts he possessed would be most damaging to his
arch-enemy there could be no doubt; that he might possibly be the means
of saving his employers from being ruined, was in his judgment equally
certain.

On the following Sunday morning Cadwgan paid a visit to his friend Mr.
Owen Jones, to whom he revealed the state of affairs of the firm.  Mr.
Jones was a man of the world, and, moreover, was a wise and sagacious man
of business.  After talking over the matter, it was arranged that Mr.
Jones should accompany his young friend to the establishment of Messrs.
Davies, Roberts & Company the next morning, when the whole facts should
be placed before Mr. Roberts.

On their arrival at the establishment on Monday morning, Mr. Jones and
Cadwgan at once went to Mr. Roberts’ private office, when that gentleman
looked at Mr. Wynn with a hard and scowling brow.  As Mr. Jones had
always experienced the greatest kindness from Mr. Roberts (they had been
more like brothers than friends), he was surprised and astonished in
observing his altered look, and boldly asked the cause of his seeming
displeasure.

“Cause, sir!” exclaimed Mr. Roberts.  “Did you say cause!  There is
methinks enough of cause!  To be robbed of £3000 by this young man, whom
you introduced to me, for whom I have done so much, whose interest and
welfare I have done so much to promote—’tis enough to make me curse the
day on which I was weak and foolish enough to comply with your pressing
request to take him into my service.  Cause, indeed!  To be robbed thus
is a sufficient cause for my anger.”

“Did you say, sir,” remarked Cadwgan, “that I had robbed you of £3000?”

“Certainly, I said so.  And you don’t deny it.”

“I emphatically deny your charge, sir, and demand the name of my
accuser.”

“I accuse you, sir.  Is not that enough?”

“But, Mr. Roberts, you are a just man, and I presume you will not condemn
me before placing in my possession the evidence upon which your judgment
rests.”

“My informant, sir, is my confidential clerk, Mr. McLiver.  He is
prepared to swear to the fact of your being the robber, and his cousin
Donald will corroborate his statement.”

McLiver was then summoned by Mr. Roberts; and in reply to his inquiries
stated, that on the previous Saturday evening he and his cousin had
secreted themselves in the house, that during the time they were in their
hiding-place Mr. Wynn came down from his own room and went into the
cashier’s office, and by means of false keys opened the safe and rifled
the drawers of their contents, which he put into a bag, then retired.  He
continued to say, that he and his cousin waited there some time, that Mr.
Wynn went back to his own office, and afterwards came down stairs with
the bag in his hand, which was so heavy that he was almost weighed down.
He left the office taking the bag of gold with him.  Donald corroborated
his cousin’s statement.

Mr. Jones, as was natural, appeared much excited during the Scotchman’s
narrative.  He almost believed in his young friend’s guilt, because the
evidence was so direct and circumstantial.  Mr. Wynn stood calm and
collected; he never moved during the few minutes which the delivery of
the evidence against him occupied, though his dark piercing eye, intently
fixed upon McLiver, made that man quail beneath its penetrating glance.
When they had finished their story, Mr. Wynn asked his employer’s
permission to call evidence in his favour,—a request which was readily
acceded to, because he really loved the youth.  He then called into the
office, one by one, six of his confidential clerks, the gentlemen who had
been specially engaged with him in investigating the old accounts, who,
in reply to his question, said that Mr. Wynn never left the office until
his final departure, which was very late, and that they watched him going
out though unperceived.  The care-taker gave evidence that Mr. Wynn did
not return after his departure.  When they had completed the evidence,
Mr. McLiver asked, “And what were you doing at the office that time of
night?”

“We were engaged in making copies of important documents for Mr. Wynn.”

“What became of those?” asked Mr. Roberts.

“They were all put, sir, into Mr. Wynn’s bag.”

“Who put them into the bag?”

“We did, sir,” replied Mr. Williams.

“Was the bag locked, Mr. Williams?”

“Yes, sir, it was locked; and the key has been in my possession since.”

“Before we examine the contents of the bag I wish to know if you are
quite sure that Mr. Wynn did not leave the office during any portion of
the evening, that is, before his final departure; and that you and your
fellow-clerks saw him out.”

They replied, that they were prepared to make oath on the point.

“Why did you watch his departure?” asked Mr. Roberts.

“I had overheard a conversation,” said Mr. Williams, the clerk of Mr.
Wynn’s department, “between Mr. McLiver and his cousin Donald, in which
certain threatening words were used towards Mr. Wynn.  We watched his
departure, thinking it quite possible that they might be lurking about
the buildings in order to effect his ruin.”

When McLiver and Donald heard the above evidence they became agitated,
and their faces became as white as snow.  Mr. Roberts scarcely knew what
to do.  After considering a few minutes, he turned to McLiver, saying, “I
fear your tale is untrue; for these six gentlemen, whom I have always
found truthful and honourable, have in the most direct manner flatly
contradicted you in every particular.  I hope you and your cousin have
not conspired to injure this young man.”

“You have hit the right nail on the head this time,” said Mr. Jones, “and
no mistake.  But is this £3000 the whole of your loss, friend Roberts?”

“The whole as far as I know.”

“Happy man! what a blessed thing it is to be rich, and unable to reckon
up the whole of one’s profits.”

“I suppose, Jones,” remarked Mr. Roberts pettishly, “you wouldn’t like to
lose £3000.”

“I am afraid, my friend, you will find your loss not £3000, but nine
times three, if the £3000 has really disappeared.”

“What do you really mean, Jones?  You appear to know more of my affairs
than I know myself.”

“In a few words, I mean to say, Roberts, that that immaculate gentleman,
the accuser of my young friend here, who is also the best friend you ever
had, has robbed you to the tune of some £25,000, in addition to this
£3000; for I presume he has taken that sum too; and Mr. Wynn has evidence
in his bag,—it is still locked,—which will completely substantiate the
fact.  When you know the whole, you’ll bless the day, friend Roberts, on
which my child was introduced into your establishment.”

“For the present we will suspend our judgment.  Jones, Mr. Wynn, all of
you, go to Mr. Wynn’s office.  We will compare Mr. Wynn’s papers with our
ledgers and day books.”  The bag was unlocked, and paper after paper was
produced, and document after document submitted for inspection and
comparison.  Cadwgan detailed step by step his proceedings in order to
ascertain the exact sum total of the money abstracted by Mr. McLiver and
Donald.  After he had gone through these, he produced the documents and
vouchers he had collected from firms with which Messrs. Davies, Roberts &
Company had had transactions, and on being compared with the ledger, it
was found that in many cases the actual sum paid to merchants for goods
did not amount to a moiety of the sum inserted in the ledger.  The
evidence of McLiver’s guilt was overwhelming.  When Mr. Roberts saw this,
he took Mr. Wynn into his arms, embraced him as if he was his own child,
and with tears in his eyes besought his pardon for having for a moment
entertained suspicions of his honesty and rectitude.

“The matter to me is now made plain.  The real culprit is the man whom I
regarded as upright, pure, and honest.  He has shamefully abused my
confidence.  To him I entrusted my money; and what, sir,” turning to
McLiver, “have you to say in your defence?”

“I will neither acknowledge nor deny my guilt, sir, in the presence of
that Welsh puppy, who is a wolf in sheep’s clothing, a caitiff cut-throat
miscreant, a cunning, intriguing, and deceitful urchin from the Welsh
mountains.  When he meets me and Donald in the street, I promise him he
shall be well paid for his treachery and circumvention.”

“That is,” said Mr. Roberts, “on condition you leave me a free man.  For
the present, sir, you must consider yourself and your cousin—I believe
him to be equally guilty with yourself—in the hands of the authorities.
The officers of justice are now in an adjoining room.  They are there
awaiting my orders.  There is no occasion to detain them, as your guilt
is but too clearly made out.”

The door was then opened, and McLiver and Donald were placed in their
charge, and were marched off to prison.

On the room being cleared of the presence of all excepting Mr. Jones and
Cadwgan, Mr. Roberts asked the latter how he had succeeded in making such
important discoveries, and the reason which had moved him in entering
upon an investigation which had cost him and his staff so much time and
labour.

“For a long time, sir, I have firmly believed in his dishonesty.  In the
first place, and this fact first awakened my suspicion, I, by means which
it is unnecessary for me to detail, ascertained that he was keeping a
grand house, and had livery servants and carriages, and gave grand
parties, which I knew he could not do with £400 a year.  His cousin,
Donald, is a fast young man who spent his earnings in dissipation, and
for years has been the constant companion of young men who are believed
to live by swindling their respective employers.  On making these
discoveries, Mr. Sykes, who is an honest Yorkshireman, and my friend Mr.
Williams, resolved to take special notice of their movements, and wisely
kept records of what they saw and heard, which could at any time be
produced in the event of anything turning up.  We discovered first, that
tea had been bought by your house of a very inferior quality, which was
paid for at double the actual invoice price, and in some cases the charge
was sixty per cent above the actual cost.”

“But, Mr. Wynn, how did he manage this?”

“Oh, easily enough, sir.”

“But how?”

“We found by inquiry, that McLiver had two relatives as cashiers in the
houses with which you did business; and as all moneys passed through
their hands, they could commit frauds to almost any extent without fear
of being detected.  They had confederates, so by acting together had but
little difficulty in carrying out their system of plunder, especially as
the books and accounts were under their control.  When you made your new
arrangements, they, that is, Mr. McLiver and Donald, were apprehensive
that disclosures would be made, and you will remember, sir, that McLiver
almost protested against your scheme.”

“I well remember, Mr. Wynn, that he was terribly angry, but little did I
then think that its cause originated in fear.”

“After the appointment had been made, and we had entered upon our duties,
Mr. Sykes ascertained—in short he overheard a conversation between the
two in which certain threats were made towards me, and in that
conversation McLiver and Donald upbraided each other about their
peculation.  We had thus sufficient evidence to warrant us in concluding
that they had robbed you.  Having discovered this, we then planned the
investigation, which has occupied our evenings ever since.  It was late
on Saturday night when we arrived at the final result.  The rest you
know.”

“Yes, yes, Cadwgan, I know the rest.  In the presence of my dear and
valued friend Jones, I offer you my humblest apology for having suspected
you of dishonesty; I shall never be able to repay you for the services
you have rendered me.”

“I’m repaid already by your confidence and esteem.”

“And hereafter, Mr. Wynn, I will seek to do so in a more substantial way.
But tell me, what can you possibly know about the quality of tea?  You
remarked just now it was inferior; how did you ascertain this?”

“I know the quality of teas by the smell.” {178}

“By the smell!”

“Yes, sir; by the smell.”

“Is that really so?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Here are two samples: please give me your judgment upon them.”

Mr. Wynn took the samples, and having smelt them, returned them to his
employer, saying, this is worth so much, the other sample is not worth
buying.

“Well, Mr. Wynn, I am satisfied, and more than satisfied, with your
conduct during the years you have been in our house.  For your goodness,
and the deep interest you have taken in all matters connected with my
affairs, from the bottom of my heart I thank you.  You are necessarily
agitated by reason of the scene through which you have just passed.  You
must be fatigued too by reason of the extra work you have, for my sake,
imposed upon yourself.  I cannot now say in what way I shall reward you,
but if you and friend Jones will come and dine at my house (bring Mrs.
Jones and your daughter with you), I will then tell you the course I
shall adopt, and the arrangements I propose to make with reference to
your position and prospects.  Your disinterested service calls for an
ample reward.”

“I require no reward, Mr. Roberts,” said Cadwgan.  “I have simply done my
duty.”

“Well, well, Mr. Wynn, you may think so.  You must not, however, condemn
me for holding the contrary opinion.”

“I should esteem it a favour, sir, if you would give Mr. Sykes and Mr.
Williams a holiday.  They are not well, and I fear the pressure upon them
during the past few weeks has overtaxed their strength.”

“By all means let them go.  Please give them this, and tell them it is a
small token of my high appreciation of their conduct.”

Mr. Wynn was delighted at being made the channel of Mr. Roberts’s
communication.  When the papers were opened, it was found that they were
two £10 Bank of England notes.  On receiving the gift, the Yorkshireman
held it up, and said,—“I little expected this.”  Mr. Williams, too, was
equally surprised.  They then wished each other good morning, and it need
hardly be said that Mr. Wynn’s assistants thoroughly enjoyed their day’s
trip to Windsor.



CHAPTER V.
_THE RIGHT MAN COMING AT THE RIGHT TIME_.


“Is it not strange, dear aunt,” said Gwenfan, “that Cadwgan has been so
long silent?  We have not heard from him for more than a month.  He might
just have sent a line to say he was well, and when we may expect him?”

“Cadwgan, my dear child, has now a great deal to do.  Since his
promotion, doubtless his time is fully occupied.”

“I should like to see a likeness of the young lady to whom he refers in
his letters.  If the description he gives be anything approaching the
truth, she must be queen both in personal appearance and purity of mind.”

“Do you refer to Miss Jones, my child?”

“Yes, aunt bach; I refer certainly to her.  I think my naughty brother is
in love with her.”

“It will be an excellent match, Gwenfan, for Miss Jones is an only child
of very rich parents.”

“I was not aware, aunt, that Mr. Jones was a person of great wealth,
though I thought he was well to do.”

“It is said, that her papa will give her £50,000 on the morning of her
marriage, with the certainty of farther expectations.”

“Well, I should like to see Cadwgan settled, if he had a kind, good, and
loving wife.  For myself, aunty, I intend to remain single, and be like
you, an old maid.”

“Oh, you do, do you?  You will alter your opinion, I’ll be bound when the
right man comes.”

“But will the right man come, aunty?  Never, never, say I.”

“Oh, the right man will certainly come, Gwenfan.  I declare there he is.
Look! look! be quick!  Why, he is coming here.  If you wish to escape his
net, fly, my niece, at once to your room.”

“Fly?  I will not do that, aunty,” said Gwenfan, laughing.  “Though
perhaps we had better retire and prepare ourselves to receive him.”

“Well thought of, my child; and tell the servant, if he seeks us, to show
him into the drawing-room, where we will presently join him.”

When the servant opened the door, the young gentleman inquired if Miss
Wynn were within, as he wished to see her on a matter of some importance.
Receiving a reply in the affirmative, the servant conducted the stranger
to the drawing-room, on entering which he took a seat in the great
bay-window, from which he gazed on the glorious prospect around.  So
enchanted was he with the sight, the exquisite beauty of the scene, that
he did not notice the entrance of the ladies, who had been a few minutes
in the room before he became aware of their presence.  At last Miss Aunt
Wynn approached the chair on which he was seated, when the ruffle of her
dress awoke him from his reverie.  He then rose, apologised for his
abrupt visit, but excused himself by saying that circumstances had
occurred which had compelled him to alter his original arrangement, hence
he found himself there two days earlier than he had expected.

“But ladies, in my having to apologise, I forget to introduce myself.  My
name is Rhys Roberts, and I presume,” pointing to the young lady standing
by her aunt’s chair, “that she is your niece, Miss Gwenfan Wynn.”

“Yes, sir; this young lady is my niece.”

“I thought so.  She is the very image of her brother.”

“And do you know my brother?” asked Gwenfan.

“Know him!  He is my father’s chief hand, and my most intimate friend.”

“When did you see or hear from my brother, sir?”

“When I left London, we arranged to meet here.  I have been expecting a
letter from him daily, but no letter has reached me.  I cannot think what
has become of him.  It is quite possible he may be detained on important
business.  He had a very important matter in hand when I left.”

“We have not heard from him,” said the aunt, “for a month, and his sister
and I are getting very anxious about him.”

“You need not, ladies, be in any alarm.  During the last month, he has
been working night and day, and has had scarcely a moment to spare.  He
has now completed his labours, so on Monday, or on Tuesday next at the
farthest, you may expect him.”

“In that case, we shall have the pleasure of your company until his
arrival,” remarked the aunt.  “My nephew’s friend will ever receive here
a hearty welcome.”

“I’m extremely obliged to you, madam, for your kind offer of hospitality,
and as I wish, and am most anxious, to pay a visit to the most remarkable
places in your neighbourhood, I embrace your kind offer, if you and Miss
Gwenfan will promise to act as my cicerones, as doubtless you are
thoroughly acquainted with every nook and corner of the country where the
beauteous spots are to be found.”

“We shall, sir,” said the ladies, “be delighted to show you the most
romantic spots to be found in wild Wales.  For grandeur and bold scenery
our neighbourhood has no equal.  But, Mr. Roberts, you must judge for
yourself.  When you have traversed our mountains and valleys, our high
hills and sylvan glades, you will say that the beauties of the
surrounding scene are beyond the descriptive powers of the most eloquent
pen of this age.”

During the few days of their tour, they visited Bettws-y-Coed, Capel
Curig, the Swallow Falls, Pont Aberglaslyn, Llyngwynant, Tan y Bwlch,
Maentwrog, Ffestiniog, Rhayadr Ddû, Tremadoc, Harlech, and Aberdovy,
returning late on Saturday night from the latter town.  Both the ladies
and Mr. Roberts had thoroughly enjoyed their outing; the latter
especially, having now for the first time beheld the scenes, was charmed
with the grand sights which he had beheld.

During this excursion there had sprung up, unconsciously to himself, a
feeling of more than respect for Miss Gwenfan, whilst she and her aunt
concluded that Mr. Roberts was one of the most kind-hearted, generous,
and amiable young gentlemen with whom they had ever come in contact.  It
must, too, be owned that Mr. Roberts had awakened in her young heart
emotions of a kind, and in a degree, to which that heart had been
previously a stranger.

When Mr. Roberts retired to his dressing-room he wrote in his diary the
following sentence: “Happy, thrice happy, will be the man who secures
such a prize as Miss Gwenfan!  In her heart is lodged the deepest
reverence for truth, for virtue, and religion.  She is, too, as beautiful
as she is good.  Her attachment to and admiration of her native country
and its people is as deep and as enthusiastic as was that of the glorious
old patriots of olden times.  Then the days I have passed in her society
have been the happiest I ever spent.  I can hardly realize the happiness
I have enjoyed.  They are like a dream, though in the foreground of the
vision there stands the good and beautiful maiden, with her curly locks,
her auburn hair, her dark eye, and a countenance as clear as the crystal
streamlet.  In spite of myself I love her.  I now retire to rest.  May
her dreams be as pleasant as I hope mine will be!”

At breakfast, on the following Sabbath morning, Mr. Roberts asked the
ladies if they would accompany him to the Methodist Church, at Tan y
Bwlch, as he was particularly desirous of hearing the Rev. Thomas
Charles, of Bala, who at that time was considered one of the most eminent
clergymen in Wales.

“It is fortunate, Mr. Roberts, you put the question to us,” replied the
ladies.

“And why?”

“Oh, you have simply anticipated us in your request.”

“Then you had arranged to go?”

“Yes, conditionally on your accompanying us to hear that great and good
man.”

“I am delighted, madam, in the prospect of seeing and hearing one so
distinguished for learning and piety, one who has made so many sacrifices
for the spiritual welfare of his countrymen.”

On their arrival at the church they found it crammed to suffocation,
scarcely a single inch remained unoccupied.  However, as the Misses Wynn
and Mr. Roberts came in a carriage, and Bryn Villa being always open to
receive clergymen of this and all other denominations, the deacons
managed to find them seats.  Mr. Charles’ discourse was above the
average; some of the passages were most eloquent, and many members of the
congregation were bathed in tears.

On their way home Mr. Roberts referred to a passage in Mr. Charles’
sermon, which he considered most beautiful.  “You remember he said,
‘implicitly to follow the counsel of the best and wisest of men, is to
depend on an arm of flesh.  They only are right and safe who make God’s
glory their end, God’s word their rule, God’s spirit the guide of their
actions, and God’s providence the guide of their affairs.  They may not
be led by the nearest, but they will be by the best road; as it will
certainly appear when they come to their journey’s end.’  If the
Christian Church, and if all religious people were to act according to
Mr. Charles’ sublime idea, the race would be happier than it is.  The
standard he set before us is a high one.  I’ve found it difficult to live
up to it.”

“I have no doubt you have, Mr. Roberts,” remarked the aunt.  “We must,
however, do our best, then Heaven will surely smile upon us, though we
but imperfectly perform our religious duty.”

“It is that thought, madam, which cheers me in my hour of gloom and
sadness.  I often think that I should have given up striving to live to
God were it not for the glorious promises He has given His Church and
people.  In my endeavour to attain to the highest form of spiritual life,
your nephew, Miss Wynn, your dear brother, Miss Gwenfan, has helped me by
his wise counsel, while his deep religiousness and high Christian
character have been incentives to me to aspire to reach the highest
good.”

The reference to her brother brought tears to Gwenfan’s eyes.  Ever since
he had left home, she had prayed every night and morning that he might be
kept from evil, kept unspotted from the world, kept safely in the
pavilion of the unseen and eternal.

Mr. Roberts, seeing the young lady in tears, asked if he could in any way
alleviate her sorrow; but she at once replied,—

“I weep not, sir, because my heart is sad.  I am almost overcome with joy
by reason of your reference to dear Cadwgan.  Oh, I do rejoice with
unspeakable satisfaction, that he has not forgotten the holy lessons our
dear parents taught us.  Though they are gone, I feel their spirits often
visit us, and I think they watch over us with the same care and
solicitude as when they were present in the flesh.”

“Happy, my dear Miss Wynn, must be the brother whose beloved sister,
living here amongst the Welsh mountains, prays daily for his welfare.  I
can bear testimony to his practical piety, his eminent godliness, his
deep devotional spirit.  He has taught me to love and adore the Name
which is above every name.  There is, too, a fragrance about Cadwgan’s
acts and life.  Truly has he been the guide of my inexperience, my
counsellor, my friend.  During the past three years, scarcely a day has
passed without our having conversation on the highest things.  Since we
parted the other day, I have missed him much.  Oh, I wish he had come!
But there _is_ your brother.  Look!  He is waiting our return.”

In a moment afterward Cadwgan and his sister were locked in each other’s
arms.

During the following week Miss Gwenfan Wynn and Mr. Roberts were almost
constantly together; and it must be owned that there grew up between
those two young and innocent hearts a feeling more warm, more ardent, and
more fervent than usually exists between friends and acquaintances; a
feeling which if permitted to ripen and develop, would result in the
union of heart with heart, soul with soul,—a feeling the intensity of
which would survive even the tomb.

After the happy days thus spent together, Miss Wynn one evening remarked
to her niece, “Has not the right man come, my child?  I suppose I shall
hear no more of your living the life of an old maid?”

“Oh, aunt, you are too cruel.  I like Mr. Roberts much, but only as
Cadwgan’s friend.”

“Well, well; we shall see what we shall see.  You will be Mrs. Roberts
one of these days.  There, don’t blush my child.  There is no harm in
your loving so noble a youth.”



CHAPTER VI.
_VIRTUE REWARDED_.


On leaving the warehouse one evening, soon after his return from Wales,
Mr. Roberts remarked, “You must dine with us to-morrow, Mr. Wynn, and my
old friend Jones will accompany you.  He has already arranged to form one
of our party, and I am glad for my own sake and yours that we shall have
the pleasure of his society.  He is one of the best men I know in this
huge city.”

As soon as the ladies had retired, Mr. Roberts pushed the bottle to Mr.
Jones, with the observation, “This is your favourite wine, and please to
make yourself as free with it as you’re welcome.  I think Mr. Wynn and
you, my son, prefer sherry.  I’ll try port, which is my favourite drink.”

After a general conversation on the general topics of the day, Mr.
Roberts turned to Mr. Jones, and said that he thanked him most gratefully
for having pleaded so eloquently the claims of his young friend, Wynn.
“You will doubtless remember, Jones, that I was most unwilling to receive
him into the establishment, in the first place on his own account;
secondly, I did not consider mine a proper place for a young gentleman of
his social position.  You, however, urged his claims, and considering our
personal friendship, and my previous connection with the Wynn family, I
at last reluctantly yielded to your wishes, though in doing so I was
perfectly aware that I should create in the mind of McLiver hostile
feelings to myself and Cadwgan there.  I little expected that my
cashier’s objection would spring from conviction of wrongdoing.  I
believed in his integrity, and had confidence in his honesty; and as he
apparently served me faithfully I was prepared to yield to some extent to
his wishes, though he was well aware of my unbending disposition when
once I had resolved to carry a particular point.  McLiver having
discovered my resolve to be Mr. Wynn’s friend, I must own that he did not
oppose my wishes to the extent I at first anticipated.

“Now from the first day on which Mr. Wynn entered upon his duties, I am
bound to say that I found him plodding, persevering, and honest; his
first and chief concern being to promote my interest.  In this, he set us
all an example we should do well to copy.

“To the proceedings of the other day—a day which to me will be ever
memorable, I will not allude further than to express a hope that I have
Cadwgan’s complete pardon for having for once suspected his dishonesty.
And this is a fitting occasion for me to thank you, Jones, for the deep
interest you have shown in my affairs in connection with our young
friend.  Had Cadwgan not done what he did, the scoundrel’s rascality
would in all probability have effected my ruin.  But how came you, Mr.
Wynn, to suspect his dishonesty?”

“My tale, sir, is soon told,” remarked Cadwgan.  “From time to time
little things cropped up in connection with business transactions and in
the accounts, the appearance of which I did not at all like.  To my mind
there was satisfactory and conclusive evidence that the man was not
dealing honourably by you, and that you were a victim of his dishonesty.
You must bear in mind this, I had but a suspicion.  I could not prove
that what I suspected was actual and real.

“Being in a state of doubt, I really did not know what to do.  I could
not suggest my suspicion to you because the person was in your
confidence.  After thinking over the matter some days and nights I
resolved to sound my fellow-clerks, Messrs. Sykes and Williams, for I
knew I could depend on them.  Strange to say they had long suspected his
guilt, but were afraid to give expression to their opinion, because Mr.
McLiver appeared all-powerful.

“After a conference we agreed to get up evidence.  We ascertained he was
living at the rate of £2000 or £3000 a year, though he had no income but
his salary.  We found, too, that he paid for all goods when ordered.  On
making further inquiry we discovered that his cousin Donald, though he
had a smaller salary than I had, spent several pounds weekly in
dissipation.

“Then the constant visits of relatives who are employed in similar
establishments in the city, and the worthless stuff sent from the houses
where they were engaged, these things awakened in my mind the strongest
suspicion that the parties were conspiring together to rob you and their
employers.

“As the books were all in McLiver’s hands and under his control, we could
do nothing; but when you appointed me to the post of accountant, Mr.
Sykes, Mr. Williams, and myself resolved to ascertain if our suspicion
was well founded.  During the past three months we have given the whole
of our spare time during the day to the past five years’ accounts, while
we seldom left the office until late at night.  The result of our labours
you know.  I fancy one of the clerks in my department must have told
McLiver what we were doing, and doubtless his guilt awoke in his mind a
sense of the dangerous position in which he had placed himself.  Then in
order if possible to crush me before the work was done, he and his cousin
Donald concocted the charge against me—themselves being the robbers.  I
do not for a moment think they wished my punishment.  What they did
desire was to secure my expulsion from your establishment, that thus
their malpractices might possibly remain undetected.”

“But where are his relations employed, Mr. Wynn?” asked Mr. Roberts.

“Mr. McNab, his uncle, is cashier to the Chinese Tea Company, and his
brother is with Morant & Hogsflesh.”

“Do you really believe these parties were confederates?”

“No doubt of it, sir.”

“In that case what would you advise?”

“In justice to yourself and the high reputation of your house, it is your
duty to furnish them with the whole of our discovered facts.  It is
important they should be informed of their servants’ dishonesty.”

“By gad, Mr. Wynn, I’ll advise their punishment; and if their employers
won’t do it, I will.”

“I am afraid that your advice will be too late.”

“How so, Cadwgan?”

“Both have already fled to the Continent.  It appears that they, like
McLiver, helped themselves to their employers’ money before they went.”

“But how did they find out McLiver was in prison, Mr. Wynn?”

“Some one of your servants or clerks must have carried the news to them.”

“We’ll get the scoundrels back, cost what it will.  To-morrow the
officers of justice shall fly in pursuit.  We’ll find them somewhere.”

“No doubt, sir, they deserve severe punishment, though I am sorry for
McNab, because he has a large family, and in punishing him you will
punish his innocent wife and children.”

“They, Mr. Wynn, shall not come to want.  While resolving to punish the
guilty, I’ll see to the interests of the guiltless.”

“Give me your hand, friend Roberts,” said Mr. Jones.  “You are a noble
fellow; your heart is in the right place; and I’ll join you in so holy a
work.”

“I must now turn,” said Mr. Roberts, “to a more pleasant theme.  It has
been by you, Mr. Wynn, I have been saved from ruin.  You have business
talents of a high order.  I would trust you with untold gold.  You have
proved your fidelity and tact under circumstances the most trying.  In
our relationship I plainly see the finger of Heaven.  I now plainly see
that it is my interest no less than your own that our relationship should
be closer than it has hitherto been.  The business, as you are aware, is
wholly my own.  Thank Heaven, I possess all the wealth I desire.
However, I love work, and at present I’m not quite prepared to throw off
the harness.  I shall do so, however, in a few years.  In view of that
day I think it well to prepare for it.  I have therefore resolved to take
into partnership my son Rhys and you, and we’ll take equal profits.  The
money in the business I shall regard as a set-off against your ability
and talent, and when I go out I will leave in your joint hands the
capital necessary for successfully carrying on the concern.  Are you
prepared, Mr. Wynn, to accept my offer?”

“With deep gratitude and thanks I do indeed accept your offer, Mr.
Roberts.  I shall never be able to repay you for your goodness and
kindness.  To me you have been always kind, always generous, ever noble
and disinterested.  To Mr. Jones and you I owe my present position and
the prospects before me.  My gratitude, sir, I shall carry with me to the
grave.”

“I rejoice,” remarked Mr. Jones, who had hitherto been an almost silent
listener, “to see this day, and I shall pray Heaven that the sun of
prosperity may ever continue to shine on your concern, and that never an
incident may occur calculated to disturb the kindly feeling and mutual
confidence between you, friend Roberts, and your new partners.”

“To that, Jones, I say amen.  Still I think there is not much danger on
that score.  We all know each other; that’s an important point.  Unless
my suspicions are wrong, which I think is not likely, that roving son of
mine has managed to fall in love; and I warn you, Mr. Wynn, especially if
you desire your sister to become your little housekeeper, to take care of
her.  If you don’t do so, his siege on her heart’s citadel will prove, I
fear, successful.  Well, I forgive him for making love without his
father’s permission; and you, Mr. Wynn, must pardon him too.”

                                * * * * *

“Now, Mr. Wynn, in view of our new arrangements, what alterations would
you propose in the conduct of the business, bearing this in mind, that
you will have to undertake the purchase of all goods?”

“In that case, Mr. Roberts, I recommend your appointing Mr. Williams to
the office I now fill.  He is a relative of yours, and is a thoroughly
competent man.  Then Mr. Sykes would succeed McLiver.  His honesty and
integrity are beyond question.  Had it not been for their able
assistance, I should never have succeeded in unravelling the mysteries of
your affairs.”

“Your proposal, Mr. Wynn, does infinite credit to your sagacity.  Let the
arrangements be carried out at once.  The deed of partnership has already
been prepared, and now awaits your signature.  My son signed it before he
left on his recent tour.”

Under the new management, the company of Roberts, Wynn & Roberts, grew
mightily.  From one end of the kingdom to the other their teas were in
great repute.  They had for their patrons royal princes and the nobles of
the land.  The demand grew year after year, and the increased sale
brought large additional profits.  During the fifth year of the
partnership, these profits amounted to £45,000, though Mr. Wynn did not
take above £750, one half of which he sent his aunt and sister for their
use.  Cadwgan had during those five years put by £55,000.



CHAPTER VII.
_THE LOST INHERITANCE REGAINED_.


The day previous to the return of Mr. Wynn and young Roberts to town,
they went out alone for a stroll.  They took the road leading to Pont
Aberglaslyn, and as both gentlemen were excellent pedestrians, they soon
arrived at that exquisitely beautiful glen.  When on the bridge, they
gazed in silence for some minutes on the dark mad water beneath.  After
some minutes’ silence, Mr. Wynn asked his friend if he had previously
visited the glen.

“Yes; I have been here once, Cadwgan.”

“Don’t you think it’s a charming spot?”

“In my judgment, Cadwgan, this is the grandest scene in all Wales.”

“Then you prefer it to Bettws-y-Coed?”

“I do.  This place has a charm for me which that sylvan vale has not.”

“So it has for me, my friend.  The meandering river flowing down this
valley, the high hills on either side of the glen, the stupendous and
overhanging rocks, with a thousand different colours, foliage, trees,
shrubs, and mosses, with grand old Snowdon in the distance: these, and
early recollections and associations, have rendered this place dearer to
me than all other scenes in my dear native land.  I am glad that our
views of this delectable valley are identical, though I cannot convey to
you the depth of my emotion in contemplating the scene.”

“Cadwgan,” replied Mr. Roberts, “the spot on which I now stand is as dear
to me as my life.  You have been my adviser, my counsellor, my friend—ay,
more than a brother to me.  Oh, advise me how to act!  I confessed here
to your sister my love, and offered her my hand and heart.  I asked her
to become mine; but oh, Cadwgan, she rejected my offer!”

“Did she, that is, my sister, give any reason for declining your offer?”

“Indeed she did not.”

“Did she tell you she was engaged already?”

“Nay; she told me she was free.”

“Did you ask her for an immediate answer?”

“Yes.”

“What was her reply?”

“That she could not be mine.”

“Then she gave you no other reason?”

“No, no, Cadwgan; but was not that enough?  Since then I’ve been the most
miserable of men.  Oh, you must dissuade her from acting towards me so
cruelly.”

“I am glad, Roberts, my sister acted as she did, though I deeply regret
the pain her refusal has occasioned you.  I blame you for confessing your
love, though I do not blame you for feeling admiration for my dear
sister.”

“I take it, Cadwgan, you are not favourable to my suit.”

“So far from being unfavourable, my dear Roberts, I will confess to you
that I know of no one whom I should so like to have for a brother as
yourself.”

“Then you are willing for me to renew my suit hereafter?”

“Most willing.”

“But you have expressed your approval of your sister’s rejection of my
suit?”

“Yes.”

“You are incomprehensible to me.  Pray explain yourself, my dear
Cadwgan.”

“I’ll do so in a few words.  Before I can permit my dear sister to
entertain your proposal, your father must be fully informed of your
intention.  His views of such an alliance might be very different from
yours.  He might wish you to marry the daughter of a wealthy city
merchant, therefore he would regard your proposal as foolish and
imprudent.”

“Cadwgan, you do my dear father great injustice.  He has an abundance of
wealth.  He would be the last man to make my marriage a matter of money
speculation.  I know better than you can his feelings, and am sure that,
in a matter so momentous, his first consideration would be my happiness.”

“I have no doubt but such are your father’s feelings; still, as I am but
a clerk in his establishment, I can’t permit you to address my sister
until his consent is given fully and freely.”

“Well, knowing your high character and scruples, I must tell you that I
have taken steps in order to anticipate your objection.”

“I hope you have not written Mr. Roberts?”

“Indeed I have, Cadwgan.”

“I’m very sorry; you really should have waited.”

“Nay, nay, I couldn’t wait.”

“Has your father replied?”

“Yes; his answer came this morning.”

“I suppose he has ordered your immediate return home?”

“Oh no.  I’m to stay another week if I like.”

“Well, has he given you his consent for you to propose to my dear
sister?”

“Yes; I have his hearty approval.”

“Then my sister was not aware of this when you offered her your hand?”

“Certainly not.  My father’s letter came this morning.”

“Have you informed her of your father’s feeling in the matter?”

“No. I delayed doing so until I spoke to you.”

“I’m glad you have kept the information from Gwenfan.  But she must not
be kept in ignorance longer than can be helped; and since you have opened
your mind freely to me, I may as well tell you that at the proper time
and after I have consulted your father, she is prepared to accept your
hand.  As her brother and guardian, I will then, my dear Roberts, give
her to you.  I know you will watch over her with the deepest affection
and solicitude.  In this matter I have only one request to make, which I
am sure will be readily granted.  Will you promise?”

“To me, dear friend, you will is law.”

“My request is a simple one, namely, that your marriage be deferred for a
time?”

“You are too cruel to defer the day of my being made perfectly happy.”

“But for your and her sake I think there should be reasonable delay.  It
is true your father is a rich man, but for the present you are simply a
son of a city prince.  Possibly he might give you £1000 a year, but I
should like to see you in business yourself before you settle down.  Then
my dear sister is young: only little over eighteen years.  Three or four
years is not long to wait.”

“For the present I will not argue the point with you, you will learn that
I am not in the position you fancy I am.  I cannot explain myself further
now, but when we return to town, you, dear Cadwgan, will know all.
Others will reveal facts to you which I am bound to keep secret.”

“Well, well, we’ll talk on this matter again.  We must now return to the
Villa, and make our arrangements for our immediate return to London.
Early to-morrow morning we must leave, otherwise we shall arrive at the
warehouse on the day our leave expires.”

During the evening, Mr. Roberts and Gwenfan had a long conversation.
When he returned to the library to join Cadwgan, he whispered, “It is all
settled; I’m now happy.”

In the following August, Miss Wynn and her aunt paid a long visit to
London.  During their stay, they were frequent visitors at Mr. Roberts’
urban mansion.  The more he saw of the gentle, quiet, and lovely Gwenfan,
the more he liked her; and when the time came when those loving hearts
were to be made one, he took his son’s and future daughter’s hands in
his, saying, “Be true to each other; and you, my son, guard this
beautiful Cambrian plant, for I am persuaded she is worth her weight in
gold.  You, Rhys, have made a wise choice, I would rather have Gwenfan
for my daughter than a princess of the royal blood.  May Heaven bless
your union!”

We now pass over a brief period of history.  Mr. Roberts had now ceased
to be a partner in the firm.  From the date of Mr. Wynn joining the firm
until Mr. Roberts’ retirement, the house had prospered year after year.
The partners became wealthy men, were of high repute in the city, and Mr.
Wynn, who was considered the soul of the business, was looked up to as a
man almost unequalled for business talents, while his word was regarded
as law by all with whom he had any mercantile transactions.

Of Mr. Roberts’ intended retirement, Mr. Wynn knew nothing until the very
morning it was carried out.  When they met in the former’s private
office, he asked,—

“How many years, Mr. Wynn, has our partnership lasted?”

“Five years, sir.”

“How long have you been with me?”

“Ten years to-day, sir, I entered your service.”

“Oh, how rapidly the time passes!  Well I have to thank my heavenly
Father for having directed your footsteps here.  You have proved yourself
a faithful friend, since the date of our partnership.  By your tact,
judgment, business habits, industry, and integrity, you have raised our
house to the highest commercial position.  You are almost as dear to me,
Cadwgan, as if you were my own child.”

“From you,” replied Mr. Wynn, “I have received the greatest kindness and
consideration.  To me you have been a second father.  No parent could
have shown a deeper interest in a son than you have shown in me.”

“As you are now a rich man, Cadwgan, why don’t you seek a wife.  I’m sure
you would be a better and happier man?”

“I have, Mr. Roberts, anticipated your wish.”

“I’m glad to hear it, Cadwgan, though you surprise me.  I was not aware
of your having fixed your heart on any young lady.  I hope she is worthy
of you.”

“From you, sir, I keep nothing.  The lady is Miss Jones; she has accepted
my offer, and her parents have given their consent to our union.”

“I’m glad to hear this, for your sake and hers.  Jones is a capital
fellow, and his daughter is a noble girl.  She has in her own right a
splendid fortune, and her father must be a rich man.  She will make you
an excellent wife.  Her fortune is in the funds, and if necessary you
could turn it to immediate account.  I hope you will get back the old
place.

“Now, Mr. Wynn, as you have told me your secret, I see no reason why I
should withhold from you mine.  I, too, am about to contract a marriage;
I do not find it good to be alone; I am going to be wedded to my first
love.  Strange to say, her name is Wynn.  Do you know any lady in your
parts of North Wales of that name?”

“Indeed, sir, I don’t at present recollect any lady of the name of Wynn.”

“Try, Cadwgan, and remember.  My impression is you must remember; she is
acquainted with you.”

“Surely, Mr. Roberts, you don’t refer to my aunt?”

“I do though.  Are you willing to give her to me?”

“Most willing, sir, as far as I am concerned.”

“Then you are pleased at the prospect of a closer connection between us?
You have placed me in possession of your feeling.  Now please give me the
reason of its existence?”

“That I will do, sir, in a few words.  Though she is my aunt, and the
only relative I have in the world, except my dear sister, I must say that
she is one of the kindest and best of women.  I am sure she will make you
happy.  But, sir, I did not know you had ever seen my aunt until she came
to visit me in London?”

“Miss Wynn was my earliest love.  I proposed to her, but her brother,
your dear father, objected to our union.  I left for London immediately
afterwards, got married, settled down in business, but from the day of my
departure until her visit to you we never met.  Mr. Jones was fully aware
of the circumstance of my being rejected.  It was, indeed, the fact of my
proposal of which Jones took advantage to plead so persistently for you
when he wished you to come here.  Little did I know then what a noble boy
you were, what a treasure I was to have in you.  But let that pass: I
have one favour to ask you.  Will you grant it?”

“Yes, sir, to the extent of every penny I possess.”

“Will you consent to be married on the same day as myself?  And we will
arrange that Rhys and your sister shall also be united on the occasion.
Next, will you sign that parchment, without asking any question, or
examining its contents? you can make yourself acquainted with the
particulars hereafter.”

“Heartily I say yes, to your questions.”

“My dear boy, I thank you from my heart of hearts for your goodness and
confidence.  The document contains a dissolution of partnership so far as
I am concerned.  You, and your future brother are now the owners of
everything here.”

“Mr. Roberts,” replied Cadwgan, with tears in his eyes, “how can I ever
repay you for so noble and so generous an act?”

“My dear boy, you have already repaid me with your grateful tear, by your
ten years of faithful services, and by the splendid gift of your aunt.
There is the ledger, which you can scan at leisure.  You will find the
facts fully set forth.  Here is a mortgage deed for £50,000,—a sum which
simply represents your share of the profits of the business during the
period of our partnership.  The other mortgagee is your intended
father-in-law, who has invested his daughter’s fortune in the same
property as her trustee and guardian.  The two sums amount to £115,000,
which are secured on your paternal estate, Wynn Castle.  On the day of
your marriage, the estate, which has been greatly improved since your
poor father’s death, will be conveyed to you as sole owner, by cancelling
those deeds.  How this matter has been arranged it is not necessary for
you to know.  I rejoice beyond measure in your being about to take
possession of your lost inheritance, and to regain it by means so
honourable to yourself.  My prayer shall be that Heaven will bless you
with health and prosperity, and that you may long live to enjoy it.  I
have now done my day’s work, so for the present must wish you good
morning.  We shall soon meet again.”

But few additional words are necessary to complete this history.  In a
few months after the above interview, Mr. Roberts, Mr. Roberts junior,
and Cadwgan were married to the ladies of their choice.

During a portion of each summer, Mr. and Mrs. Cadwgan Wynn, and Mr. and
Mrs. Roberts, senior and junior spent several weeks at Wynn Castle, where
Mr. and Mrs. Owen Jones had taken up their permanent abode.  The various
tenants on the estate rejoiced in possessing such an excellent landlord,
but their joy was unbounded on the morning the news reached them of the
birth of a son and heir.  On the return to the castle after this event,
his tenantry presented him with an address, to which he replied as
follows:—

“Friends and neighbours,—After many years of exile from the land of my
birth and the home of my father’s sepulchre, I feel it my first duty to
return my gratitude to Him who guides and directs the destiny of us all,
for having in His good and merciful providence again directed my
footsteps to the land of my love and my warmest affection.  Twelve years
to day I went out in the wide world, poor and almost penniless.  I
resolved, with Heaven’s help, to succeed, that is if success could be
achieved by honesty, integrity, and plodding.  After wandering about
London for several days, I found myself one summer evening on London
Bridge, faint, anxious, and sick, with but a few shillings in my pocket.
Just as I was about to settle down to sleep on the cold stone, a good
Welsh Samaritan who was passing by had compassion on the forlorn one, and
took me to his home.  Strange to say, his noble daughter fell in love
with me, poor and friendless though I was.  That lady is my wife and the
mother of my son.  I might tell you that her love for dear old Cambria is
as deep and as intense as is her love for her offspring.  Moreover, her
heart is full of sympathy for the sons and daughters of human suffering
wherever found, and she will consider it not only a pleasure but a duty
to visit and administer consolation and solace to the distressed in this
beautiful valley.  But, says my friend on my right, you must not remain
idle; you have work to do.  My dear friend, the Rev. Thomas Charles, who
is an honour to our country, is doing much for the intellectual, moral,
and religious welfare of the people.  You ought to support his efforts by
every means in your power.  Him I will aid with my purse and influence.
I hope in this effort we shall be united, conformists and nonconformists,
joining hand in hand and heart with heart, so that our people may become
an intelligent and religious people.  To bring about such a glorious
consummation is the chief desire of my soul.  I have only one more word
to add, that is to thank you for your beautiful address.  Be assured that
I and my wife will endeavour to earn your good opinion.  We will try to
promote your commercial welfare, and with it your highest interest.”

                                * * * * *

McLiver in due time was brought before the bar of justice, and his guilt
having been clearly established, was banished the kingdom.  After
undergoing ten years of punishment in Van Diemen’s Land, he obtained his
release, and settled down in one of the Australian colonies as a small
farmer.  His uncle and cousin were finally apprehended, and being found
guilty were transported.  Donald was allowed to go free, as his guilt
could not be legally established.  Some years afterwards Mr. Wynn learned
that he was engaged in the fish trade in one of the Orkney Islands.



TRADITIONS OF LLYN SAVATHAN;
OR LLANGORSE, OR TALYLLYN LAKE.


CHAPTER I.
_TRADITIONS OF GIRALDUS_.


                “Not a tree,
    A llyn, a leaf, a blossom, but contains
    A folio volume.  We may read, and read,
    And read again, and still find something new.”

Respecting Llyn Savathan, which also bears the several names of Lake
Brecheinoc, Brecinaumere, Llangorse, and Talyllyn Pool, Giraldus relates
that in the reign of Henry I., Gruffydd, son of Rhys ap Theodor, held
under the king one comot, namely, the fourth part of the cantref of Caoc,
in the cantref Mawr.  When Gruffydd, on his return from the king’s court,
passed near this lake, which at this cold season of the year was covered
with wild fowl of various sorts, being accompanied by Milo, Earl of
Hereford and Lord of Brecon, and Payn FitzJohn, Lord of Ewyas, who at
that time were secretaries and privy counsellors to the King, Earl Milo,
wishing to draw from Gruffydd some discourse concerning his innate
nobility, rather jocularly than seriously thus addressed him: “It is an
ancient saying in Wales, that if the natural prince of the country,
coming to this lake, shall order the birds to sing, they will immediately
obey him.”  To which Gruffydd replied, “Do you, therefore, who now hold
the dominion of this land, first give the command.”  But he and Payn,
having in vain commanded, and Gruffydd perceiving that it was necessary
for him to do so in his turn, dismounted from his horse, and falling on
his knees towards the east, as if he had been about to engage in battle,
prostrate on the ground, with his eyes and hands uplifted to heaven,
poured forth devout prayers to the Lord; and at length rising up, and
signing his face and forehead with the figure of the cross, thus openly
spake, “Almighty God, and Lord Jesus Christ, who knowest all things,
declare here, this day, Thy power.  If Thou hast caused me to descend
lineally from the natural princes of Cambria, I command these birds, in
Thy name, to declare it.”  And immediately, beating the waters with their
wings, the birds began to cry aloud and proclaim him.  The spectators
were astonished and confounded; and Earl Milo, with FitzJohn, hastily
returned to court, and related this singular occurrence to Henry, who is
said to have replied, “By the death of Christ, it is not a matter of so
much wonder; for although by our great authority we commit acts of
violence and wrong against these people, yet they are known to be the
rightful inheritors of this land.”



CHAPTER II.
_THE LAST WARNING_.


Long previous to the time to which the tradition of Giraldus relates, the
place occupied by Llyn Savathan formed a beautiful and picturesque
valley, through which the waters of the Llewenny meandered and flowed
gently along in their progress towards the Wye.  On the left bank of the
Llynfi, and within half a mile of its channel, there stood the church of
Llangasty, which was dedicated to Saint Gasty, an eminent British saint
who flourished in the fifth century, and was murdered on the Van
Mountain, in the parish of Merthyr Cynog.  On the other side of the
Llynfi, and nearly opposite the church, there stood a magnificent palace,
belonging to and occupied by a tyrannical prince, who neither feared God
nor regarded man, who scorned religion, and loathed everything which was
pure and good and beautiful; a prince who, by the magnitude of his
extortions and the relentlessness with which he pursued his unfortunate
vassals, became the object of hate and intense aversion to all who had
dealings or came in contact with him.  Moreover, as he grew older, his
extortions became more burdensome, while his tyranny increased in its
fury, notwithstanding the warnings he received from those who desired the
perpetuation of his reign.  To all those warnings he turned a deaf ear,
while he punished with the utmost rigour those who sought to thwart him
in his infamous practices.

It was a cold December morning, when Father Olyver, of Llangasty,
repaired to the palace in order to condole with the prince on the death
of a son.  On entering the reception-room, and finding the prince alone,
he thus addressed him—

“My heart grieves and is sad, my prince, at the loss you have sustained.
Another prop of your house has been taken away, and oh, reflect, I pray,
on your present mode of life; consider your ways and be wise.”

“Cease thy babbling, Father Olyver,” replied the prince.  “ D— it, man,
all must die.  The death of another son, thou senseless priest, only
diminishes my responsibility as a father, and now I shall have more to
leave to the survivors.”

“Pray, don’t speak thus, my lord, of your child.  The fruit of your loins
should ever be regarded with affection.”

“I loved the boy when living, Father Olyver.  But now, man, he has ceased
to live; the spirit, the soul, has gone; a clod of earth only remains.”

“Be it so, my lord.  Yet I must own that I look on his untimely end as a
terrible warning to you.  The event tells you to set your house in order,
for in such an hour as ye think not the Son of man cometh.”

“All right, Father Olyver.  I suppose, when He comes, I must go like the
rest, in spite of the saints and mother Church.”

“But are you prepared, my prince, when the voice calls?”

“Of course I am, father.  Let his majesty come whenever he pleases, I’ll
accompany him.”

“Are you ready, my dear prince, to appear, without fear, before your God
when He calls you hence?”

“There are beautiful maidens, too, father, before whom I must and delight
to appear, after my evening’s carousals!  Ah! ah! ah!  I’ll be bound that
even you, Father Olyver, with your sanctimonious jib, are not indifferent
to the smiles of a pretty wench, and you won’t turn away when you happen
to have a glimpse of a fine ankle.  Human nature is human nature all the
world over.  I warrant priests of mother Church don’t always keep it in
subjection.  Oh!  Oh!”

“This is not the time, nor is it a fitting occasion, my lord, to indulge
in such language,” replied the priest.  “For one day, at least,
especially in the presence of the dead, I beseech you to cease speaking
thus.”

“Why should I, man, refrain from telling the truth even now?  Bedad, I’ve
hit the right nail on the head this time at any rate.”

“For the present, however, I shall regard your charge of me and my orders
in silence.  I have come here to perform the last rites of the Church
over the dead.  The day to me is one of unusual solemnity.  I loved your
son as if he had been my own child.  He was a good and pious youth,
notwithstanding the evil influences by which he was surrounded.  But he
is gone, and the place that knew him shall know him no more.  And now, my
lord, what hour have you fixed for carrying his remains to that silent
bourne from whence no traveller ever comes back?”

“We propose to bury at five; and after the funeral I have, Father Olyver,
a grand banquet in my palace, and we anticipate a merry meeting.”

“And cannot you, my lord, give up folly and pleasure for a single day?
Can’t you devote one evening to pursuits which harmonize with the
solemnity of the day?  You have received from time to time, and year
after year, the most terrible warnings, yet you heed them not.  You hear
the sound of the trumpet, to which you have paid no attention.  If you
continue to live as you have lived, my dear prince—if you resolve, come
what will, to steel your heart, and defy the Almighty,—the day is not far
distant when the wrath of an angry God will descend upon you and yours,
and on that day—rather on that dark and dismal night—the sword of His
justice will descend, and the innocent and the guilty shall perish
together.  I now leave you, my prince, but in a few hours we shall meet
again at the grave of departed virtue, and something tells me that when
we then part it will be a parting for ever.”

At the time appointed the funeral cortège arrived at Llangasty.  The
young prince was buried with extraordinary pomp.  When the service was
concluded, Father Olyver went up and pressed the hand of the prince, and
bidding him good-bye, whispered in his ear, “Remember, my lord, the
warning voice: it has spoken once, twice, ay, thrice; the next time it
will speak in thunder and lightning, when the earth shall move and reel
like a drunken man.  So now, farewell.  I fear we shall never meet
again.”

The good priest then turned away from prince and people.  He re-entered
the church for evening song, while the prince and the mourners returned
to the palace to make merry and be glad.  Before they arrived home, the
day had disappeared, and the night had come.  Darkness had settled down
upon the earth.  When they entered the palace, they little dreamt of
being on the very brink of a precipice over which they would be hurled by
the fiat of the Eternal.



CHAPTER III.
_THE FATAL BANQUET_; _OR_, _VENGEANCE AT HAND_.


The palace of the Prince of Llynfi was characterized by drunkenness and
vice, dissipation and sensuality, intemperance and debauchery.  Virtue
had no lodgment there.  Righteousness had no habitation there.  Justice,
religion, and truth were wholly absent from the palace of the prince.  He
and his family gave themselves up to pleasure, to riotous living, and to
revellings; and from day to day, week to week, and month to month, they
lived as if there was no God—no hereafter—no judgment to come!  Moreover,
they had so sunk in sin and iniquity, that they were quite insensible to
those feelings which are common and general, and indeed universal, in the
lowest state of humanity.  Flower after flower of the family circle had
withered and died, or had been plucked from the tree of life by the will
of the Almighty, yet from the heart of the survivors there never escaped
a sigh; never a tear was shed; their hearts had become a flinty rock, and
were as insensible of impression as the Parian marble.  Thus they lived:
thus, too, they died; for at last they were cut down as cumberers of the
ground.

Before the untimely death of the son, the prince had arranged for a grand
banquet to take place on the very day his mortal remains were consigned
to the tomb.  During the progress of preparation for the funeral,
preparations were also being made for the expected banquet.  On their
return from the church, many of the guests had already arrived and many
more soon followed.  By nine o’clock the palace was filled with a
splendid array of the licentious male and female inhabitants of the
villages in the surrounding country.  According to old traditions, two
renowned minstrels from a distance had been summoned to cheer them in
their revels; and riot and disorder, such as had never before been
witnessed even in that palace, resounded among the hills.  The party had
been many hours assembled: it was midnight.  In the midst of their
revellings there was suddenly heard a crash of thunder, which shook the
palace to its foundation; and this was immediately followed by louder and
louder peals, which boomed through the valley as the noise of a thousand
pieces of artillery.  The prince and his riotous companions were
awe-struck, and presently they heard a voice saying in deep, solemn
tones, “Vengeance is at hand!”  In a moment the two minstrels arose, and
beholding in the air a mysterious hand beckoning to them, they fled after
it as it retreated.  The hand moved faster and faster, and as it moved
they increased their speed.  After they had gone a considerable distance
the earth heaved violently, and appeared to totter on its foundations.
For a moment they turned round to see the distance they had come.  They
saw the ground divide in twain, and up through this large chasm they
beheld the waters rushing forth like the ocean when convulsed, and
mingling with the roaring sound of the waters were the dying shrieks of
the revellers.  Pausing for another moment in their flight, the minstrels
observed, with great terror, a wide expanse of boiling and agitated
waters where the palace and village had stood, engulfing the palace and
its wicked and impious inmates far below its bosom.  Since then, Llyn
Savathan has ever been regarded as an unhallowed spot; the great
wickedness of the prince and his followers having drawn upon them the
just judgment of the Eternal.



TREFFYNNON;
OR,
LEGENDS OF SAINT WINIFRED.


    “The lifeless tears she shed into a fountain turn,
    And, that for her alone the water should not mourn,
    The pure vermilion blood that issued from her veins
    Unto this very day the pearly gravel stains,
    As erst the white and red were mixèd in her cheek.
    And that one part of her might be the other like,
    Her hair was turned to moss, whose sweetness doth declare,
    In liveliness of youth the natural sweets she bare.”

                                                          MICHAEL DRAYTON.

When but a mere youth, I had a strong and extreme longing to visit
Holywell, or Treffynnon, which according to my youthful fancy was the
most wonderful place under the sun.  This desire had its origin in the
following circumstances.

About three miles from my paternal abode there was situate a small
village, which had risen into fame and notoriety by reason of its annual
May fair.  At this fair an immense number of people congregated.  Young
men and maidens were there.  Farmers’ sons and daughters flocked in great
numbers; and this being the annual hiring fair, hundreds of men and women
servants went to find either new masters or fresh mistresses.  Then from
the neighbouring towns and villages, people came for the purpose of
providing fun, amusement, and entertainment for the holiday seekers.
Shows innumerable were there; Mr. Cheap Jack vending his wares, with
which he combined interesting stories and flashes of wit, had thousands
of willing and enchanted listeners, and a goodly number of ready
purchasers.  On the roadside from one end of the village to the other was
a continuous row of stalls, laden with every conceivable variety of
articles.  All these marvellous things filled my boyish fancy with
amazement and wonder.

But what struck me most, was a person who had a stall situate near the
bridge, on which were placed in rows several thousands of small wooden
boxes, which in circumference were about the size of a crown piece, and
three quarters of an inch deep.  These boxes he arranged with great
deliberation and care, and when he completed his work, not a single box
could be seen out of its proper place.

This person was fantastically dressed.  He wore a three-cornered hat, the
brim of which was tipped with gold.  He had pink velvet breeches, with a
waistcoat of similar material; red stockings, and shoes with silver
buckles.  His frock coat, made of good West of England broadcloth, had,
in consequence of many years’ wear, become a dark blood colour.  In his
hat were placed two rows of feathers, arranged in the form of the Prince
of Wales’ plume.  He was certainly a most singular looking figure, and
from the hour when he commenced to expatiate on the virtues of his wares
until the dusk of the evening, attracted an immense audience.

When his preparations were finished, he took in his left hand one of the
little boxes, from which he removed the lid, or cover, and commenced to
address the crowd in the following fashion.  “This box, ladies and
gentlemen,” he said, “contains wonderful ointment.  It will cure the
itch, the stitch, and nettle-rash.  It is a sure remedy for all diseases
of the skin.  It will, when applied, remove warts from the fingers, corns
from the toes, and bunions from the feet.  It is an effectual cure for
cuts, bruises, and for every kind of wounds.  Time, ladies and gentlemen,
would fail me to speak of its wonderful properties, and the history of
cases it has cured would fill a dozen large volumes.  Every man should
therefore possess half a dozen boxes of this valuable salve.  They should
be placed in the nobleman’s palace, in every farm house, in every poor
man’s cottage.  The use of this wonderful ointment will save you many a
long doctor’s bill, and, between you and me, doctors are doing their best
to stop its sale, because one box of this salve is worth a hundred visits
of the physician.  People have paid lots of money to doctors without
getting any benefit; they then came to me, and by using one box only,
were made perfectly whole.  This ointment is the grandest discovery of
the age.  It was found out, not by man’s skill, oh, no; but an angel came
from distant worlds and directed my sainted mother how to make it.  The
secret is with me, and it must remain with me; for were it known, its
efficacy would disappear.

“You, ladies and gentlemen, would doubtless like to know the several
constituent parts of this justly renowned ointment, but as I have already
said, I dare not reveal the secret.  The spirit of one who when on this
earth was as pure as she was comely and beautiful, told the secret to my
sainted mother.  I refer to Saint Winifred, who was murdered twelve
hundred years ago.  From the spot on which she was beheaded, her head
rolled down the declivity, and did not stop until it reached the altar of
the church, and immediately there sprang up a spring of water, which in
volume is unequalled in the world.  The wonderful salve is not called
after the saint, this her spirit forbade, but Eli Treffynnon, or Holywell
salve.  As I make it myself, I can offer to sell it at twopence per box,
though doctors charge sixpence for a far inferior article.  Twopence per
box being the price, for which I charge no more nor will I take less.
Who will buy? who will buy?  Now is your time, for I shall not visit
these parts for twelve months.”

The people then rushed to the vendor of Eli Treffynnon, and in less than
an hour he had disposed of more than a thousand boxes of the ointment.

“A wonderful man that, is he not?” said I to my companion.

“Yes, truly.”

_Myself_.  Can you tell me where Treffynnon is?

“Not exactly,” replied my companion; “but it is in the north.”

_Myself_.  In the north of England or Scotland, which?

“Oh, no, in neither; but in North Wales.”

_Myself_.  Is it a town or a village?

“A town, I believe; but it is not a large place.”

_Myself_.  Have you ever heard of the remarkable well before?

“Oh, yes.  I’ve seen an account of it in an old book.”

_Myself_.  If I knew the way, I would go and see this wonderful fountain.

“Don’t talk nonsense.  Go two hundred miles to see a spring!”

_Myself_.  Why not?

“Why?  Because you can see plenty of fountains nearer home.”

_Myself_.  But this is a well.

“Yes; a well to be sure.  But don’t the waters of all rivers come from
wells?”

_Myself_.  Of course they do.  But it requires a hundred wells to make up
the Severn, the Wye, and the Ithon, but here is a large river from one
well, one spring.  I’ll certainly go one of these days and see it.

Many, many years, however, came, and passed away, before the design I
then formed was carried out.

                                * * * * *

My first visit to Holywell, or Treffynnon, took place just about the
close of the Crimean War.  I arrived in the town late one evening in mid
winter, but as the night was extremely dark, while the rain descended in
torrents, I refrained from leaving my hotel, the name of which I do not
at present remember.  It was then the principal inn of the town, with a
first rate bill of fare.

Being a private gentleman, and therefore debarred from joining the
commercials, breakfast was prepared for me in a snug little parlour which
was generally used by the landlady as her private sitting-room.  Before I
had taken my seat at the breakfast, the waitress came into the room, all
smiles, and asked me if I had any objection to a gentleman joining me at
the morning meal.

“Who is the gentleman?” I asked the waitress.

“Oh, Squire Eli, of Ffynnon Hall.”

_Myself_.  What kind of a person is he?  Is he old or young, has he a
hump on his back, and does he wear spectacles? is he a nice,
good-tempered fellow, or sour as crab beer?  Tell me, gentle maid, the
kind of companion I am to be honoured with.

“Oh, sir, how you do talk.  Squire is a nice, well-spoken gentleman; and
I am sure you’ll like him.”

_Myself_.  Show the gentleman up; but tell your mistress that she will be
a loser by his introduction, because I generally eat twice as much in
company as when alone.

Presently Mr. Eli made his appearance, and I expressed to him how greatly
pleased I was at his honouring me with his presence.

He replied to my remarks in a very neat speech, and said he was delighted
in the opportunity of making my acquaintance, having heard of me from a
common friend.

Before rising from the table I said, “What a beautiful name you have
selected for your seat!”

“Then do you know Welsh?”

_Myself_.  I know a little; I wish I knew more.  It is the grandest
language under the sun.

“For expressiveness and eloquence and poetry, you are right.”

_Myself_.  I presume you selected the name because you have a crystal
fountain by the Hall?

“Oh, dear, no.  There is a fountain it is true, but its existence in no
way determined me to select the name; and, between us, I don’t think
there is a similar designation for a house in North or South Wales.”

_Myself_.  Have you visited the south, Mr. Eli?

“Visited the South!  Why, there is not a town or village in the six
counties I’ve not been in.  I know the country well.”

“Have you ever been at Bridgend, in the county of R.?”

“At Bridgend!  Of course I have; many and many a time.”

_Myself_.  If I’m not mistaken, I have seen you there.

“Probably you have; that is, if you ever attended its annual May fair.”

_Myself_.  Then you are the man, the veritable vendor of Eli Treffynnon?

“Of course I am.  I thought the waitress had duly informed you of that.”

_Myself_.  No, no; but never mind.  I’m delighted to see you.  Your
speech on your ointment awoke in my bosom an intense longing to see this
place; and I’ve come almost specially to see for myself its wonders.  I
hope, therefore, Mr. Eli, you have no special engagement this morning.

“And suppose I have not?”

_Myself_.  In that case I trust you will be my cicerone.  I am extremely
anxious to know the history and traditions of the wonderful well.

“I’ll accompany you with pleasure, and tell its wondrous history.  When
shall we start?”

_Myself_.  Now, if you please.

Just as we reached the lower part of the principal street, we saw a man
with measured steps approaching us.  The man had a leathern strap
fastened round his neck, at the other end of which was suspended a large
bell, a cushion being buckled to the right knee.  Every time the
cushioned knee came forward the bell jingled, and it being of
considerable size its tones could be heard a long distance from the scene
of the man’s perambulations.  When he came up to the place where we were
standing, I asked Mr. Eli the question,—

“Is that man mad?”

“By no means: he is in his right mind.”

_Myself_.  No sane man, I should think, would be guilty of such folly.

“The man,” replied Mr. Eli, “is doing a Christian duty.”

_Myself_.  I fail to see any act of devotion in carrying a bell about the
town.  Please, Mr. Eli, explain yourself.

“You, a stranger, very naturally conclude the man is demented.  When you
know the object of his mission you will come to a different opinion.”

_Myself_.  Pray, Mr. Eli, enlighten me.

“We have a church here, my dear sir.”

_Myself_.  Yes.

“That church is situate in a hole at the head of a deep dell.”

_Myself_.  But what has that to do with this man?

“This,” replied Mr. Eli; “we cannot, up the town, hear the church chimes,
though we are not two hundred yards from them.”

_Myself_.  But the man does not carry your church bells on his knee.

“Oh, dear me, no; but this man walks round the town just before divine
service, and the ringing of his bell warns the people that it is time for
them to go to church.”

_Myself_.  A singular invention, certainly.  Pity they built the church
in such an outlandish place.

_Mr. Eli_.  Oh, don’t say so.  The church was built there by direction.
It is close to the well of St. Winifred, the healing waters of which, as
you are aware, are celebrated far and near.

_Myself_.  Then the tales you and others tell about the efficacy of the
waters of the fountain are really true?

“Yes, of course, they are perfectly true.  When all is said and written
about the waters, we can truly say that the half is not told.”

_Myself_.  I should like to possess a true and authentic history of the
place.

“Doubtless,” replied Mr. Eli, “you would.  Its history has yet to be
written.”

_Myself_.  There is, then, evidence, Mr. Eli, that people who have bathed
in its waters have been made whole?

“Yes; plenty of evidence,” replied Mr. Eli; “and if you will now
accompany me to the well, I’ll show you some of the many witnesses.”

When we entered the building, my friend conducted me to a spot where we
had a good view of the interior.  He pointed with his finger to the roof,
at the same time remarking, “Up there, look up there, for there is the
evidence, the witnesses, to which I referred.”

_Myself_.  Do you mean those barrows, hand carts, crutches, and staves,
and other things too numerous to mention, fastened to the ceiling?

“Of course I do.  Are they not irresistible witnesses to the healing
power of these waters?”

_Myself_.  I really fail to see your point, Mr. Eli.  Pray explain
yourself more fully.

“People come here,” said my friend, “from all parts of the world.  Some
come on wheel-barrows, some on crutches, some by the aid of
walking-sticks; they bathe in these healing waters, like they did when
our Lord was upon earth, and are cleansed.  They leave here new men and
women, and having no further need of either crutch or barrow, leave them
behind as witnesses to the power of this wonderful fountain.”

_Myself_.  You have greatly excited my curiosity, Mr. Eli.  Pray furnish
me with some information respecting the history of this place.

“You are heartily welcome to the facts and traditions I have been
fortunate enough to succeed in collecting, which can be briefly told.
They are as follows:—

“Once upon a time, that is, about twelve hundred and twenty-five years
ago, this Treffynnon was a royal city, and then the king’s palace was
within its precincts.  The then reigning sovereign was Allen the First,
and his dominion extended over the whole of the hundred of Coleshill,
from the royal mines of which he derived a princely income.  The king had
a son of the name of Cradocus, a name which has led old writers to
conclude that his mother was a daughter of some Roman, who, preferring
this country to his own, and having espoused a British lady, settled down
here.

“At the time of which I speak, there resided in Holywell a potent lord of
the Trewith, who married Lady Wento, an only sister of Saint Beuno,
descendants of an ancient and illustrious Montgomeryshire family.  The
only issue of this marriage was a daughter, a beautiful and lovely
maiden, who was as pure as she was beautiful, whose name was Winifred.

“When she had grown up to be a young lady, her uncle, Saint Beuno, who
resided at Clynnog, in Carnarvonshire, came on one occasion to this royal
town to pay a friendly visit to his family.  During his stay he obtained
a grant of land from Lord Trewith, his brother-in-law, upon which he
erected a church.  Now the altar of that church was close by yon bubbling
fountain.”

_Myself_.  Have you historical proofs of this, Mr. Eli? I asked.

“You will see by-and-by the evidence upon which I rely.”

_Myself_.  Pray proceed; your narrative is deeply interesting.

“After the erection of the church,” Mr. Eli continued, “Saint Beuno took
under his charge his niece Winifred, who vowed to remain a virgin, and to
devote her life to works of charity, mercy, and religion.

“On a lovely Sunday evening, on the 22nd of June, the Lady Winifred left
her parents’ castle for the purpose of taking a walk in the cool of the
day.  When she attained the summit of the hill her progress was stayed by
Prince Cradocus, who, being struck with her extreme beauty, at once made
a proposal of marriage.

“‘Prince,’ replied Lady Winifred, ‘I can form no earthly ties.  I have
already vowed my life and wealth to the work of my Saviour.’

“‘But, noble and beautiful lady, I have sworn you shall be mine, and
nothing shall prevent the fulfilment of my oath.’

“‘Your offer, illustrious prince, comes too late; my vow is irrevocable.’

“‘Pray, Lady Winifred, don’t say that.  Your hand I am resolved to
possess, and you shall share with me the throne of my ancestors.’

“‘For earthly thrones, prince, I care not; my treasures are not here but
above.’

“‘If you persist, noble lady, in your refusal, I am resolved to effect my
object by force.’

“‘You dare not do that, prince.  You must not further molest me.  Stand
by, for I would proceed on my way.’

“Cradocus was vexed at being thus robbed of his prey, and getting into a
fearful passion, took his sword from its sheath, and there and then,—oh,
horror of horrors! cut off the head of the virgin.  For his guilty act,
vengeance from on high soon overtook him.  On the spot where he committed
the crime, he fell down a dead man, and the earth opening, swallowed his
impious corpse. {260}  There is, however, a tradition, that Cradocus’s
master, the devil, carried off his body to the dismal regions of despair.

“Now about the well.  I’ve told you, that it was on the hillside above
here where Cradocus committed the foul deed.  It appears that when the
head was severed from the body it commenced to roll down the steep hill
by which we descended, and stopped when it reached the altar, before
which a number of devout people were kneeling.  The very moment the head
stopped there came up this fountain, the waters of which possess the same
miraculous power as did those waters of the pool of Bethesda referred to
in the Gospel of St. John.

“It appears Saint Beuno was the officiating priest at the altar when this
sad event took place.  Recognising the head as that of his beloved niece,
he took it up, and ran with it to where the mangled body lay, to which he
rejoined it.  To the astonishment of all present, the head at once united
itself to the body, the place of separation being only marked by a white
ring or line, which extended round the neck.  From that hour she was
called Saint Winifred, and was always after regarded as a holy person, a
special vessel chosen by Christ to do His work.  After this event she
lived fifteen years, and gained universal fame by her deeds of love and
charity.  Well, though more than twelve hundred years have come and gone
since then, this fountain is as powerful to-day as it was then in healing
and in curing diseases.  Hundreds, aye, thousands, have blessed the day
on which they bathed in this Iachâd Ffynnon—healing fountain.  Now, my
story is done.”

_Myself_.  And a most interesting tale it is, Mr. Eli, for which I thank
you very much.  There is one more circumstance I wish to be informed of
in order to have a complete history of the sainted lady.

“To what do you refer?” asked Mr. Eli.

_Myself_.  I presume the lady died here.

“Oh yes; she died in her father’s mansion.”

_Myself_.  In that case, I presume, her sepulchre is in your churchyard?

“Not so, my friend,” replied Mr. Eli.

_Myself_.  Then she was not buried here?

“No, she was not interred here, and for this reason.  Her uncle, Saint
Beuno, died on the 21st of April, 660, and his remains were interred in
the Abbey Church of Bardsey Island.  On his death, Saint Winifred retired
to Gwytheriu, and placed herself under the protection of St. Elerius, who
at that time was living in devotional seclusion in that sequestered
mountain village.  At that time there was there a convent of nuns under
the superintendence of Theonia.  Saint Winifred assumed the veil, and on
the death of Theonia became the abbess.  On her death, the remains were
removed from Treffynnon to Gwytheriu, and interred near the graves of St.
Cybi and St. Sannan.  After a lapse of five hundred years from the date
of her death, the bones of St. Winifred were removed with great pomp to
the church of St. Peter and St. Paul, Shrewsbury.  The wooden chest in
which the remains were preserved is still kept.  The translation of the
saint’s remains took place in the reign of King Stephen.”

_Myself_.  It’s a pity that no monument to her memory has been erected
here.  Don’t you think so, Mr. Eli?

“I cannot share your opinion, my friend.  This well and its wonderful
cures are monuments which will live when Parian marble shall crumble into
dust.  But there is another monument.  Observe,” said Mr. Eli, “the sweet
scented moss which grows there by the well-side, the _Jungermannia
esplenoides_ of Linnæus.  On each anniversary of the decollation of Saint
Winifred, this moss, and the stones of the fountain, assume the colour of
blood.  This annual change in the tint of the moss is an immortal
monument of the dear departed saint, as if it said:—

    “For thee, blest maid, my tears, my endless pain,
    Shall in immortal monuments remain.
    The image of thy death each year renew,
    And prove my grief, to distant ages, true.”

After making a general inspection of the well, and examining the
grotesque figures of animals and other works of sculpture, my friend and
I paid a brief visit to the chapel over the well.  During our stay there,
he placed in my hand a copy of the following letter, addressed by the
queen of James II., to Sir Roger Mostyn.

    “SIR ROGER MOSTYN,—

    “It having pleased the king, by his royal grant, to bestow upon me
    the ancient chapel adjoining St. Winifred’s Well, these are to desire
    you to give present possession, in my name, of the said chapel, to
    Mr. Thomas Roberts, who will deliver this letter into your hands.  It
    being also my intention to have the place decently repaired, and put
    to a good use, I further desire that you will afford him your favour
    and protection, that he may not be disturbed in the performance
    thereof.  You may rest assured that what you do herein, according to
    my desire, shall be very kindly remembered by

                                                        “Your good friend,
                                                             “MARY REGINA.

    “WHITEHALL,
          _May_ 8_th_, 1687.”

On leaving the chapel, I cordially thanked my friend for the information
he had imparted respecting the Winifred legend; and told him, that some
day I would try to make his name and his Eli Treffynnon as immortal as
the saint whose history he had so eloquently told.  But before my tale
sees the light, my entertainer has gone to that bourne from whence no
traveller returns; yet it may be,—who knows?—that his spirit still visits
our world, and communes with dear ones and friends left behind.

              [Picture: View of Swansea in September, 1748]



THE VISIT OF ELIDORUS TO THE FAIRY KINGDOM BENEATH THE BAY.


A short time before our visit to Swansea, wrote Giraldus Cambrensis, a
circumstance worthy of note occurred in these parts, which Elidorus, a
priest, most strenuously affirmed had befallen him.  When a youth of
twelve years, and learning his letters, since, as Solomon says, “The root
of learning is bitter, although the fruit is sweet,” in order to avoid
the discipline and frequent stripes inflicted on him by his preceptor, he
ran away, and concealed himself under the hollow bank of a river.  After
fasting in that situation for two days, two little men of pigmy stature
appeared to him, saying, “If you will come with us, we will lead you into
a country full of delights and sports.”  Assenting and rising up, he
followed his guides through a path, at first subterraneous and dark, into
a most beautiful country, adorned with rivers and meadows, woods and
plains, but obscure, and not illuminated with the full light of the sun.
All the days were cloudy, and the nights extremely dark, on account of
the absence of the moon and stars.  The boy was brought before the king,
and introduced to him in the presence of the court; who, having examined
him for a long time, delivered him to his son, who was then a boy.  The
men were of the smallest stature, but very well proportioned in their
make; they were all of a fair complexion, with luxuriant hair falling
over their shoulders like that of women.  They had horses and greyhounds
adapted to their size.  They neither ate flesh nor fish, but lived on
milk diet, made up into messes with saffron.  They never took an oath,
for they detested nothing so much as lies.  As often as they returned
from our upper hemisphere, they reprobated our ambition, infidelities,
and inconstancies.  They had no form of public worship, being strict
lovers and reverers, as it seemed, of truth.

The boy frequently returned to our hemisphere, sometimes by the way he
had first gone, sometimes by another; at first in company with other
persons, and afterwards alone; and made himself known only to his mother,
declaring to her the manners, nature, and state of that people.  Being
desired by her to bring a present of gold, with which that region
abounded, he stole, when at play with the king’s son, the golden ball
with which he used to divert himself, and brought it to his mother in
great haste; and when he reached the door of his father’s house, but not
unpursued, and was entering it in a great hurry, his foot stumbled on the
threshold, and falling down into the room where his mother was sitting,
the two pigmies seized the ball, which had dropped from his hand, and
departed, showing the boy every mark of contempt and derision.  On
recovering from the fall, confounded with shame, and execrating the evil
counsel of his mother, he returned by the usual track to the
subterraneous road, but found no appearance of any passage, though he
searched for it on the banks of the river (Tawe) for nearly the space of
a year.  But since those calamities which reason cannot mitigate are
often alleviated by time, and length of time alone blunts the edge of our
afflictions, and puts an end to many evils, the youth having been brought
back by his friends and mother, and restored to his right way of
thinking, and to his learning, in process of time attained the rank of
priesthood.  Whenever David II., Bishop of St. David’s, talked to him in
his advanced state of life concerning this event, he could never relate
the particulars without shedding tears.  He had made himself acquainted
with the language of that nation, the words of which, in his younger
days, he used to recite, which, as the bishop had often informed me, were
very conformable to the Greek idiom.  When they asked for water, they
said, “Ydor ydorum,” which meant, bring water; for “ydor,” in their
language, signifies water, and dwr also, in the British language,
signifies water.  When they wanted salt they said, “Halgein ydorum,”
bring salt.  Salt is called halen in British.

[So far the narrative of Giraldus Cambrensis.  We are happy to be able to
lay before our readers some further details, hitherto unpublished, of the
early life of Elidorus, and of his visits to the fairy kingdom beneath
the bay.]

On the brow of Town Hill, and commanding a magnificent view of Swansea
Bay, the channel, and their circumjacent coast, with the Devonian range
of mountains in the distance; there stood, at the time of which we write,
a small thatched cottage, with mud or clay walls, which was then occupied
by Shôn Gwyllt, his wife Mary, and their son John, an only child.

Shôn, as had been his father and his grandfather before him, was a
fisherman, which, in those times, was a highly remunerative business.
Fish of all kinds were then abundant, and they commanded a ready market.
In the bay were shoals of conger, cod, mullet, sole, whiting, and
flat-fish; while, in the season, the fishermen were often fortunate
enough to secure in their nets sea trout and salmon, which, for delicacy
of flavour, were unequalled in the British seas and rivers, the Tawe
excepted.  In the Tawe salmon were as plentiful as the daisy on the
verdant mead in early summer.  The waters of that river then, and for
several hundred years after, were as clear as the crystal dewdrops.  Now
it was on that delightful, that glossy and pellucid river that Shôn
Gwyllt plied his trade, and the sylvan groves on its banks resounded with
the sound of his rich tenor voice.  Shôn loved a good song, and the echo
of his voice in the near and distant groves had for him a peculiar charm.

We have already observed that Shôn plied his calling on the Tawe.  He had
a horror of the sea.  Upon its waters he never ventured.  Nothing could
induce him to join his brother fishermen in the bay.  Though they often
tempted him by predicting that they would certainly have a splendid haul
of fish, yet the prospect of a rich reward for his labour had no
influence on his mind.  To their solicitation he used to reply, “The Tawe
has been a good and generous parent to me, so I shall not forsake the
kind and rich old mother.”  And Shôn did not forsake her.  Day after day,
during the season, he might be seen with his coracle on his back, wending
his way down Mount Pleasant and across the fields to the Tawe (there were
no houses there then), and thence he fished up the river as far as
Morriston, which at that time consisted of a few clod-built huts.  It was
but seldom that he ventured above that village, though occasionally, and
once in a way, he fished up to Ynistawe, but never went so high up the
stream as Penllwch.  His aversion to Penllwch appears to have arisen from
the circumstance that his cousin met with an untimely end there, and Shôn
dreaded to fish the deep pools under Glais, where the young man, whom he
loved as a brother, was drowned.

Although Shôn was passionately fond of his trade, yet, strange to say, he
was strongly opposed to his son following in his footsteps.  He reasoned
thus: It is an occupation in which there is a great risk of life.  The
fisherman has to contend with bad seasons, and occasionally fish is a
drug in the market.  The business is not respectable; those engaged in it
are men of the lowest class, ignorant, drunken, and improvident, living
from hand to mouth, never saving a penny against a rainy day.  Instead of
allowing young John to accompany him, he resolved to send him to school;
and to school accordingly his son was duly sent.  John, however, hated
school, and intensely disliked his preceptor, a dislike he gloried in
exhibiting whenever an opportunity offered itself.  The teacher resented
the boy’s conduct by the free use of the cane.  In the severity of
punishment he had no mercy, and to escape chastisement young Gwyllt often
absented himself from school.  The hours thus spent were among the
happiest of his boyhood.  After his father had gone, John would walk down
to the Tawe, and leaping into a stranded coracle, he, with his paddle,
would spend hour after hour in skimming over the waters.  When he got
tired, he would row to the bank, and fastening his little boat to the
stake, lie down to rest.  The remainder of the youth’s story we shall
tell in his own words, which are as follows:—

I lay me down on the banks of Tawe’s crystal waters, and slept.  In my
sleep, behold I had a dream.  In my dream or vision I saw a man
approaching who was exceeding small in stature.  He was clad in rich
apparel, and the fastenings of his garments—which were as white as the
winter’s snow—were of pure gold, rubies, and other precious gems.  When
he came up to the place where I lay, he addressed me in the softest and
sweetest voice I had ever heard, and the voice said, “Oh, youth with
ruddy cheeks and curly locks, why sleepest thou, seeing it is only the
third hour after the sun of thy world has passed his meridian?”

“I sleep,” I replied, “to forget the past, to drown the very thought of
existence.”

“With youth,” said the voice, “there is nothing to regret.  The days of
youth are days of innocence and pleasure.  Every breeze fans the flame of
delight.”

“But my sorrow, sweet voice, does not spring from the heart’s passion or
paternal unkindness, but from stripes inflicted upon my body by a
tyrannical and cruel teacher, a man who has no mercy nor kindness of
heart.”

“Methinks you neglect your lesson,” said the voice, “and your preceptor
uses the rod in order to teach you to be wise and learned.”

“If that be so, I’d rather be ignorant with whole bones, than learned
with the lash so frequently used on my back.”

“There is a saying in your country, is there not?” said the voice,
“‘spare the rod; spoil the child.’”

“Yes, yes; there is such a proverb, though I believe in it not.”

“What do you then believe in, my child?” asked the voice.

“I believe in gentleness and kindness.  The victory that overcometh the
world is love.  Love will soften the hardest heart, subdue the most
stubborn will, and melt the hardest natures like wax is melted in the
fire.”

“If you worked hard at your books, and were attentive to your lessons,
your master would probably be kind to you.  You should remember that
youth is the time to acquire knowledge, and that its possession is one of
the most pleasurable things on earth.”

“Knowledge might be all you say in its favour, sweet voice, but I care
not for it.  One day spent on the banks of this beautiful river, or
skimming on the bosom of its limpid and crystal waters in some friend’s
coracle, from which I often watch the finny tribe below in their plays
and gambols—is better to me than a thousand anywhere else.  The waters of
the Tawe are to me a source of exquisite delight, an unspeakable charm.
I could gaze upon them for ever.”

“Ah, comely youth,” said the voice, “you speak what you know, and I must
own to being charmed with your enthusiasm.  You are young, and your
vision is contracted.  You are inexperienced; your world is bounded by
the surrounding horizon.  If you will come with me, I will show you
fairer climes than these, more beautiful landscapes, grander hills and
mountains; vales infinitely more lovely, and streamlets, brooks and
rivers, which surpass in splendour and sublimity all other running waters
of the world.  Besides, in my country, everything is beautiful.  The gold
is as abundant there as are the stones on this lowland strand or on
ocean’s tidal shore.”

“You have drawn, sweet voice, a charming picture of your country, but
where is it?  Is it an ideal or a real kingdom?  If it be real, I would
visit if I knew the way.  Pray tell me the road which leads to a world so
resplendently beautiful.”

“Fair youth,” said the voice, “the road is nigh thee; it is close to
where thou sleepest.  I will conduct thee there.”

“On one condition only will I be thy companion.”

“Name your condition, and if it be in my power, it shall be granted.”

“That you solemnly promise to guide me back again to my own native
sphere, in the event of my failing to find the way.”

“Yes; I promise.  Further, you shall have perfect liberty to stay, or to
return to this upper world, at any time you desire.  I will, too, be your
companion.”

“But who art thou?  What, too, is thy name?”

“I am a prince of my kingdom; and my name is Tippin.”

“What is your highness’ position at the royal court?”

“I am chancellor of my royal master, King Penaf, the wisest and best of
monarchs.”

“Pray prince, is your king a giant like you?”

“In wisdom, yes.  But fair youth, you should judge all men, not by their
stature, but by their wise words, weighty sayings, and just decrees.  The
mind is the standard of man, for mind is the man.  But don’t let us tarry
longer.  Awake! awake! oh sleeper; arise from your couch of sand; let us
away, for my hour of departure has come.”

When I awoke, I found myself being carried through a dimly-lighted tunnel
on the wings of the wind; I say on the wings of the wind for I was not
conscious that any palpable substance touched my body.  The further we
receded from the earth, the wider and loftier became the subterranean
passage; and by means of the dim light, I discerned rocks of gold and
precious stones.  When we arrived at the end of the passage, there
appeared in the distance a scene which filled my bosom with wonder and
admiration; never had I previously beheld such a combination of beauty.
How shall I describe it!  This I cannot do, for it passes description;
far grander, infinitely grander, was the scene than anything I had ever
witnessed.

In the distance were high hills and Alpine heights, plains and meads, and
dells, which were covered with grass of emerald green.  I could see
neither sun, nor moon, nor stars; but the country was illumined by a
beautiful blue soft light which was delightful, and most agreeable to the
eye.  Between day and night, there appeared no perceptible difference;
while in those regions, summer and winter, spring and autumn, were
unknown.  Their year was distinguished by no seasons; they enjoyed a
perpetual spring.  Beautiful was their clime, exquisitely lovely was
their country, singular and mysterious were the people.

As regards the climate, it had no variation.  There was always there a
soft, gentle, and warm breeze; which produced the most delectable
sensation.  This breeze appeared to possess life-giving and
life-sustaining properties.  When it came, as it sometimes did, in
stronger currents than was generally the case, the old would repair to
the mountain tops or bwllchs, and after two or three hours’ stay would
return to the plain strong, blooming, and hale.  But more of this anon.

Immediately after our arrival in the open country, the prince conducted
me in silence to a building, the walls of which were formed of the finest
marble.  Its entrance was guarded by two little men, even less in stature
than my conductor, who made obeisance as we passed.  The prince conducted
me up a flight of stairs, and then through several rooms, containing rich
and costly furniture; at last we came to a door on which was printed in
letters of gold “The King’s Chamber.”  This chamber we entered.  Having
placed a chair beside me for my use, he then walked to the other side of
the chamber, where there was a curious instrument fastened to a silver
slab, and touched a small spring.  There was attached to the instrument a
thread or wire of the most delicate workmanship, which quivered at the
touch; presently I heard the sound of a bell, which was followed by
several ticks, and when the ticks ceased, the prince remarked that the
royal carriage from Dinas Aur would arrive there in half an hour, in
order to take us to the golden city.

“And how far is it to your city?” I asked.

“The actual distance is one hundred and twenty miles.”

“But your carriage travels more swiftly than the flight of the bird?”

“Certainly.”

“Well, is it safe to go so fast?”

“Yes, perfectly safe.”

“Your assurance contents me.  Will you, please, answer me one question,
namely: as you appear to travel about 250 miles in an hour, I want to
know in what consists your motive power?  Surely your horses can’t travel
so rapidly as that?”

“Oh no; we don’t use horses.  In these regions we make nature administer
to our every want.  We shall travel through the air, which we use to
propel us along; more I cannot say, as this singular phenomenon is beyond
my comprehension.  The thing was discovered by our wise men, who keep the
secret in their own breasts.  Look, my young friend,” said the prince,
addressing me; “the carriage is coming, do you observe its approach?”

When I looked, I saw something like a black spot in the air; it appeared
like a small bird.  Presently it became more distinct, and before I was
really aware, the royal carriage had arrived, having come nearly five
minutes earlier than we expected.  At once we stepped into the royal
saloon.  Presently I discovered the carriage moving.  When we ascended
some twenty yards above the earth, we were carried at a fearful pace
through the air; I perceived it was kept up by means of wings, which were
made of material which in appearance was silk.  These wings were of great
dimensions, but were extended or contracted in size according to the
power and force of the current.  The propelling agency was compressed
air, but how this worked, and whether it was combined with other gases or
not, I could not learn.  I found the travelling exceedingly pleasant;
when I closed my eyes I could not detect the least motion.  Objects came
and went, we appeared to pass them as rapidly as the moving clouds in a
terrible storm, or falling stars on a bright November night.  We arrived
at our destination a few minutes earlier than we anticipated.  The prince
conducted me to the royal palace, and placing me in charge of some
important state functionary, repaired to the council of his royal master;
when he left, he said he would not be long, and on returning he would
join me for the evening.  I must own, that I felt extremely sorry to have
to part, even for a short time, from one who was so kind and so
agreeable; and I felt this the more in consequence of the peculiar
position in which I was placed.  I was now the denizen of a strange
world, and surrounded by a strange race.

During the absence of Prince Tippin I began to realize my position.  I
thought what a fool I was in leaving my home and country, the anxiety my
absence would cause my parents, and the uncertainty of my ever seeing
them again.  This thought deeply moved me.  I was exceedingly uneasy in
both mind and conscience; I could neither sit nor lie still for three
consecutive minutes.  At last, after examining every article in the room,
I asked the attendant if he could give me any kind of book or writing
material, by the aid of which I hoped to forget myself.  The attendant
informed me that they did not use books, that their knowledge was orally
handed down from father to son, from the priests to the people, and thus
all the inhabitants became wise.

When the prince returned dinner was served up in the ante-room,—a fine
hall, radiantly lighted up.  Our first course was soup made of choice
herbs, which was not only extremely satisfying but exceedingly palatable.
Of this I partook heartily.  When the dishes were removed our attendant
brought in milk thickened with meal, coloured with saffron; this was
served up in basins of gold.  Afterwards we had tarts, pies, and fruit of
the most delicious flavour; the fruit resembled the pear, but was sweeter
and more juicy.

After the meal was over, I asked the prince if he would give me a glass
of wine.

“My young friend,” replied the prince, “I regret to be unable to comply
with your wish.  Wines, and all kinds of alcoholic drinks, are prohibited
from being used by the law of the State; I dare not, therefore, supply
you with this beverage, even if I had it in my possession.”

“But why, excellency, have you such a singular law?”

“For various reasons.  Would you wish to be furnished with the cause of
the existence of such an enactment?”

“You will confer upon me a personal favour by stating the reasons for the
existence of such a regulation.”

“These are the reasons.  We want the minds of our people to be clear and
bright, and their intellectual vision unclouded.  Is not that important?”

“Yes, certainly.”

“Again; in these dominions, crime, destitution, poverty, pauperism, and
wrong-doing are unknown; but if our people, like yours, imbibed
spirituous liquors, crimes would be as frequent and poverty as widely
spread as are those terrible evils in your kingdom!”

“I readily admit the force of your reasoning; I am bound to own that the
drinking customs of my country are the real causes of our more serious
national evils.”

“Then, sir, your government ought to enact stringent laws in order to
diminish the cause of those evils.”

“We are a race of free men, living in a free country, and I am afraid
that no government will for some years be strong enough to battle
successfully with this custom.”

“You pass laws to suppress vice; and drunkenness being one of the
greatest vices of your people, and the parent of all others, I can see no
reason why you should not put down this traffic by legislation.”

“Your excellency may be right in your conclusion.  The evil is a terrible
blot on our civilization; were we a strictly sober race, we should be by
far the grandest people on earth.”

“My own observations lead me to the same conclusion; but for the present
we must put an end to the argument.  It is time for you to retire.  Your
attendant awaits you.  To-morrow we shall meet again, though I am afraid
only for a few minutes, as I have to pay a visit to a distant part of the
empire.”

The next morning I breakfasted alone.  Though I saw during the morning
several of the little people passing along the lawn in front of my
window, I did not venture to speak to them, nor did any member of the
race pay me a visit.

About midday the door of my room was opened, and a little gentleman
walked into the hall, and, without saying a word, sat down in a vacant
chair opposite the one on which I was seated.  After examining my
appearance, he observed, “I presume you are the stranger who accompanied
Prince Tippin to the palace last evening?”

“I am the stranger, sir.”

“I hope the attendant has shown you every courtesy, and has not been
wanting in hospitality.”

“From the prince and attendant I have received every consideration; and
as for the fare, sir, I might have gone further and fared worse.  I like
your food much.”

“This is a very different country from yours, is it not?”

_Myself_.  Yes; widely different.

“I presume you find it strange to have light without a sun or moon or
stars?”

_Myself_.  I miss the genial light of the sun; but there is a softness, a
reflected beauty, in the light here which we do not possess in our
diurnal luminary.

“Our light is uniform, as is our climate.  In the northern regions of
your country the sun constantly shines during several months of your
year, which is followed by continuous darkness or night, when the
inhabitants have to reside in snow or ice-built houses.  Dreary must be
the life of a people so circumstanced.  You have in your climate genial
and joyous spring, when nature revives from the dead and puts on her
youthful and gay apparel, when the thorn, the citron, and the apple-tree
bud and blossom;—beautiful is your spring, the loveliest and most
charming season of your year.  Then comes your summer, with its green
meads, and fields of waving corn, and rich fruit.  No artist can paint,
no language can set forth, the grandeur of your clime during autumn.
What have you afterwards?  Cold, icy, and chilling winter, with its dank
and cold atmosphere; with your hills, mountains, and even your dales,
covered with snow.  In winter your country seems dead, clay-like, and
lifeless; sad and dreary to me is your winter scene.  In this land we
have perpetual spring.  In all the months of the year the orange, the
citron, and the apple-tree send forth their buds and blossoms and their
ripe and rich fruit; our valleys and mountains are always green, a
circumstance which to you, doubtless, appears very strange.”

_Myself_.  Is that really so?  Do your fields and trees and hillsides
present at all times the same hue?

“Yes; the colour never alters, and nature in this region is never weary
in its development, and never halts in the manifestation of her power;
she goes from strength to strength, and with increased vigour as the
years roll on.”

_Myself_.  A strange phenomenon this!  Can you account for the existence
of such perennial inherent power?

“Oh yes.  Upon our mountains, valleys, and plains there perpetually
descend from above constant showers of ethereal riches.  Our earth thus
daily receives from heaven even more riches than she gives in flower and
fruit, and grass, and vegetable matter.  Thus she daily and hourly
becomes richer and more bountiful.”

_Myself_.  But suppose the spring, the perennial fountain, of this
life-giving bounty and luxuriance, were to fail or to dry up, what would
be your position then?  From whence could you then obtain your supply?

“Of such a calamity we entertain no dread.  For thousands of years this
process has been going on, and through years unnumbered it will be
continued.  In your world there is a gradual decay; nature there is
exhausting herself.  For the present you have enough and to spare; but
how will it be, what will your people do, when the virgin soil of the
world on the other side of the Atlantic becomes exhausted?  That time
must come; what will your people do then?”

_Myself_.  Before that day arrives humanity will become etherealized,
spirit-like, and super-mundane.  As a race, sir, we are not destined to
continue the sordid, cloddy, and vulgar eating people we now are.  Oh,
no; the earthly tabernacle is to be put off, and we shall live on angels’
food.

“Your race then, sir, has the hope and prospect of dwelling in a sphere
beyond your present world?”

_Myself_.  Most assuredly.

“Who is to be the king of that world?  Who the ruler?”

_Myself_.  The king will be the great Unseen and Eternal, the
self-existent and self-created Being who rules heaven’s armies and
earth’s inhabitants.

“This is the Being, is it not, whom your nation worship and adore?”

_Myself_.  Yes; and we are to live with Him for ever, and enjoy His
fellowship.  And don’t you believe in Him too?

“Alas! no; I wish we did.  When I consider how beautiful our clime and
country are,—our friendship, associations, consciousness, friends,
relations,—I often shudder at the thought of annihilation.  Sometimes I
am terribly oppressed with the thought of ceasing to be, and the more
thoughtful of my race hold similar opinions and feelings.”

_Myself_.  What do you and your people worship?  Who is the object of
your adoration?

“We worship truth; a thing not a person; an idea, not a reality; a form,
beautiful though it be, and not a substance.  It is awful to think that
the grave is to be the end of our joys, pleasures, and delights.  In the
matter of worship, you are right and we are wrong; you are the wise ones,
we the fools.  But you have, methinks, too much of form in your manner of
worshipping your Supreme.”

_Myself_.  I agree with your last remark; but pray tell me how you have
acquired such an intimate knowledge of our affairs.

“By frequent visits to your land, and by mixing with your people.”

_Myself_.  I never saw a member of your race until I was fortunate enough
to meet Prince Tippin.

“Perhaps not; but I have traversed the whole of your country, as well as
other countries beyond the sea.”

_Myself_.  Is that really so?  You certainly astonish me.

“Twice every year, in your spring time and autumn, I visit your world on
affairs of state.”

_Myself_.  Then there dwell in other climes a kindred people, a race like
your own?

“Certainly; and I have often paid them a friendly visit.”

_Myself_.  In what parts of the country do they live?

“In several parts.  In fair Mona’s Isle there dwell the Pobli Bach.  In
East Anglia is the race of the Plantos.  In Germany, living on the banks
of the Rhine, are the Pobli Wyn.  In France, Spain, Italy, and the East
there are different tribes inhabiting a precisely similar country to
this.  And their habits, customs, mode of life and government, are all
identical with ours.”

_Myself_.  And do you live in peace with each other?  Do you never
quarrel, and go to war, and kill each other in battle?

“Oh dear no!  We live at peace.  According to our code of morals, it is
very wicked to take away or destroy life.  Of all things in our world
life is the beautifullest.  We are shocked, and pained, and grieved in
witnessing the contentions between the peoples of your world.  In our
view it is awful to use your arts, skill, and wealth, in making
instruments, and in training and paying men, to kill and destroy.  Yet
you call yourselves Christians!”

_Myself_.  In my conscience I believe we are wrong.

“You do; do you?”

_Myself_.  Assuredly I do.  I believe war is wrong; is hateful to high
heaven; is contrary to the principles of the gospel, which command us to
love one another.  From God comes life.  He sustains it.  He only has a
right to take it away.  In man we see His image.  Of one blood He has
made us all.  Although we are brothers, yet we act towards each other as
if we were the children of the evil one.  But a time will come when
strife and contention shall cease, when there shall exist universal
harmony, a harmony founded on the law of Christ, which is the law of
love.

“I am surprised at your confession.  The opinion you hold on this
question is directly contrary to that held by your teachers.  Why, your
ministers preach the doctrine that war is in harmony with your faith.  Is
not that so?”

_Myself_.  I must own that that is so.  Still I believe them to be in
error, and hope they will discover their error before it is too late.  I
am afraid that a great deal of the scepticism of the times is principally
owing to the want of harmony between the truth and the profession of it.
As a race we don’t practically live out the precepts of our faith.  Hence
the reason why men of the world scorn religious men, and you know
contempt usually ends in disbelief.

“If we have not the light you have, still we are a purer and a more
virtuous people than yours.  We are sober and temperate, but your race is
not.  We live in peace, never engage in war, but you kill each other with
the sword and the bow.  Then as our climate is so superior to yours, why
not stay with us for ever?”

_Myself_.  I could not live without seeing my father and mother; without
visiting the upper world in order to bask occasionally on the sylvan
banks of Tawe’s crystal waters; to gaze on the blue heavens, with their
twinkling stars; to wander about the green meads, and listen to the rich
melody of the winged songsters of the grove and primeval forest; but I
should like to visit you now and then.  Before I return I am anxious to
see and have converse with your king, the rather that, as the prince
informed me, he is a wise and virtuous ruler.

“I rejoice that the prince has spoken so well of his master.  I am the
king, and I thank you for speaking so freely of your country and its
people.  Whenever you choose to pay us a visit, be assured you shall be
heartily welcome.”

_Myself_.  May it please your majesty, your majesty has treated me as if
I were a prince instead of a poor fisherman’s son.  Your majesty’s
kindness and hospitality I shall ever remember with gratitude.  I accept
your invitation, and I will certainly pay another visit to your beautiful
country.

_The King_.  At all times you shall be heartily received.

_Myself_.  Thanks; a thousand thanks.  Were I not a Welshman, I would
dwell in your beautiful land.

_The King_.  You have spoken handsomely of my dominions.  But here comes
the prince; he shall conduct you to the sylvan banks of your beautiful
river, a river you so much love.

Before setting out on my homeward journey, I briefly inspected the royal
carriage.  I now discovered, what had previously escaped my notice, that
underneath, and attached to the side of the carriage, were inflated skins
filled with natural gas.  These gave a buoyancy to the machine.  Indeed,
it was only by the use of strong ropes made of grass that it was kept on
the earth.  On stepping into the carriage, these ropes were unhooked; it
then began to ascend, and on reaching an altitude of forty yards we got
into what the prince called node currents, which carried us along at the
rate of 300 miles an hour.  We soon reached the public buildings referred
to in a previous part of my story, and from thence he conducted me
through the subterranean passage until we reached fair Tawe’s shore.

I urged the prince to accompany me to my parents’ cottage, which he
declined.  He said that he had a special engagement with the fairies of
East Anglia—having arranged to spend the night with them at their annual
dance on the verdant fields below Derwent Fawr.  I subsequently learnt,
that Prince Tippin was engaged to a princess of the above tribe, of the
name of Titania; and that they frequently met on Derwent’s green fields
“to dance the nights to the whistling wind.”

On entering my home I found my parents mourning for me as one who was
dead.  At first they would not believe me to be their son, but thought it
was their son’s spirit which had come to visit them.  I soon convinced
them of being still in the flesh,—that I was no ghost, no spirit.  I had
then to give them a history of my travels, to tell them of the strange
sights I had seen, the singular people I had met, the character of the
kingdom I had visited; but on my telling them of the gold and precious
stones with which the land abounded, my mother upbraided me for coming
away without a large lump of gold.  I told her that I did not covet other
people’s property, and that I should have acted extremely wrong had I
taken away the gold of a people from whom I had received so much
kindness.

I remained at home for several weeks, and occasionally went to school.  I
found my old enemy as cruel as ever, and I came to the conclusion that on
the very first opportunity I would return to the fairy kingdom beneath
the bay.

On wandering along the strand one fine morning, I was hailed by a voice I
could never forget.  The prince informed me that having just returned
from visiting his fair Titania, he was about to return to Dinas Aur, and
urged me to return with him.  I readily yielded to his wishes, and
sending a message to my parents where I had gone, we started off, and
returned by means of the aërial carriage.

As I anticipated, my return to Dinas Aur, was hailed with extreme delight
by the few persons I had come in contact with on my previous visit.  His
majesty the king gave me a hearty welcome, and expressed a hope that I
would continue to sojourn in his dominions at least for a season.  I
expressed my gratitude to his majesty for his extreme kindness, and
informed him that as my parents were acquainted with the place of my
abode, I was the less anxious to return home than if that knowledge was
not in their possession.

The king replied, that I had shown, by sending the message I had, that I
was a dutiful son, fond of my mother and father, that I had shown I did
not want to give them a moment’s uneasiness and pain.  His majesty then
dismissed me, and placed me under the special protection of his
chancellor, Prince Tippin.  This arrangement afforded me inexpressible
satisfaction and delight, as on all occasions I had received from him
every consideration and courtesy.

In my subsequent intercourse with the prince, I found him to be a man
without prejudice, wholly free from bigotry, and in all circumstances
never showing the least indication of passion.  He loved purity and
goodness wherever he found those virtues.  He abominated cant, and
loathed low tricks which no one who wished to be regarded as honourable
would resort to in order to gain a special end.  In his own beautiful
language, which I soon learned, he would use a string of adjectives to
characterize that class of men, who are mean, selfish, unprincipled; men
who have no claim to be admitted into the society of pure and noble and
unselfish individuals.  “Look,” he said one day to me, “at your public
men, from the highest to the lowest; they are influenced by the love of
power and fame, and you find that when a particular end is to be secured
they are indifferent as to the means to be employed.  In appointing
persons to fill important posts, the claims of your best men are wholly
ignored.  You sadly want men at the head of your affairs who are just,
magnanimous, and patriotic, men who are simply ambitious to secure the
welfare and weal of the people.”

_Myself_.  I must own, your excellency, that there is too much truth in
your strictures and censures.  But we are improving, and shall ultimately
become a pure and perfect race.  Are there no persons of the class you
have described in your country?  Is your race perfectly free from
selfishness and faction?

“Certainly; we are all equal.  As citizens and subjects we occupy the
same position.  Our best men occupy all posts in the civil government of
the country.  Here again, all people readily obey the law: delinquents
are banished the kingdom.”

_Myself_.  Have you not frequent occasion to put the law in force?

“By no means.  There is only one case on record for one hundred years in
which the law has been rigorously carried out.”

_Myself_.  You must be a law-observing people.  I wish from my heart that
our race were as pure as yours.

“They would be were your rulers as wise as ours.”

_Myself_.  Then you think that our leading men are inferior to yours?

“Think!  I know they are.  The history of your country proves this.  But
we must drop the subject now.  I have an engagement with my royal master
at this hour, and I must hasten to the council chamber, for I fear his
majesty has already gone there.”

After supper, and just as I was about to retire to my chamber, I received
a visit from the Princess Mervyna and her two little sisters.  They were
attended by their maid, who, though she was smaller in stature than her
mistress, was evidently many years her senior.  The Princess Mervyna
introduced herself, and said that she had come to command me to join them
at their sports the next day.  I expressed regret to the princess at
being unable to comply with her wish, having previously arranged to
accompany the chancellor to a distant part of the kingdom.  I told her
that I should regard it as a high honour to join them at their games the
day after.  She acquiesced in this, though she was evidently a little
vexed as well as disappointed with the arrangement.  However, she gave me
a gracious bow, and on retiring, said, “Don’t forget your promise.”  I
again assured her I would not.

It was nearly noon before Prince Tippin and I started off from the city
on the following day.  We had the same carriage as the one we had used on
previous occasions, and we proceeded at an equally rapid pace.

After a flight of 140 miles, we descended to the earth on the top of a
high mountain, which in their language was called Wyddfa, or Conspicuous,
from which position we had a magnificent prospect of the country.  In the
distance we beheld seas like glass, on which apparently were myriads of
little people, some of whom were engaged in skating, others in bowling
balls along the ice, others were playing cricket, while not a few were
dancing to the music of the wind.  We observed a great number of the
little folks playing with golden balls, which they propelled along the
ice by means of a crook.

Though the players went along the ice at a fearful pace, yet I did not
observe a single person fall.

Between us and the players there was a beautiful undulating country,
which abounded with streamlets and sylvan dells, and the peculiar soft
light of the region brought out the deep green of the foliage to a degree
I had not previously beheld.  The scene was exquisitely lovely, so rich
in tint and colour as to leave an indelible impression upon the mind.
Indeed and in truth this was a fairyland, an enchanted ground, though to
my vision it was real, palpable, and actual.  I became rooted to the
spot, for never had I beheld a scene so full of beauty.  I was awakened
from my reverie by the familiar voice of the prince, who called out,
“Elidorus!  Elidorus! our time is up; we must haste over other mountains
and valleys, over streamlets and rivers, for we have a long distance yet
to go, and but a short time to travel it in.”

On taking our seat in the aërial carriage, the prince informed me that we
should not stop again until arriving at our journey’s end, and that on
passing a rocky headland we could see in the distance, we should have a
capital view of the city of the plain.  When we passed the place alluded
to, the city appeared in sight, but the houses and palaces were buried in
the rich green foliage of trees, which grew in every street.  As we were
proceeding at a fearful pace, we had only a glance at the city as we
passed over it.

On arriving at our destination, we were conducted by a little gentleman
clad in rich apparel to the Hall of Brotherhood, which we found was
crowded with the principal inhabitants of the city.  The prince was
conducted to the chair of honour—a kind of throne, and he motioned me to
occupy the vacant seat on his right hand.  Presently the prince asked the
governor of the city if peace, good-will, and concord reigned there?

“Tranquillity and brotherly love still continue,” replied the governor.

“Ever so live,” said the prince, “for peace is one of the cardinal
virtues of all good citizens.  I wish to know, sir governor, if your city
is free from sickness, disease, and fevers; and if not, why not?”

“The bloom of health, your excellency,” replied the governor, “is on the
cheeks of all.  And why?  Our people drink only the pure waters of the
crystal fountain.  They inhale the constant current of vital air, which
flows here like a tidal wave, and it imparts life, energy, power, and joy
to all.”

The governor then retired and left the hall.  When the door was closed,
the prince asked the citizens if they had any charge to make or any
complaint to bring against the governor.  They all rejoined that they had
not any complaint, but that, on the contrary, his conduct met with the
hearty approval of all.  Presently the council came to an end, and soon
afterwards we returned home.

On the following morning I was awakened by a gentle knock at my chamber
door.  Presently the door was opened, whereupon my waiting attendant
walked in.  He informed me that the Princess Mervyna had already called,
and that she and the royal party were ready to proceed to their place of
rendezvous, having arranged to have a grand day in honour of my visit.  I
felt very much annoyed at having overslept myself, and still more vexed
at keeping the little lady and her friends waiting me.  I only took a few
minutes to dress, and having taken a basin of warm milk, proceeded in
search of the royal party, who had already taken their seats in the
king’s carriage.  The princess and her little brother and sisters gave me
a cordial greeting.  I soon found that we had left the earth and were
travelling due south of my previous day’s voyage, and before I fully
realized my position we had descended on the identical sea of ice where I
had seen the games being carried on on the preceding morning.

On leaving the carriage the party broke up into sections, some joining
parties who had already arrived from other cities of the kingdom; others
joining other parties who appeared of a different race from the natives.
The princess acted as my cicerone during the day, and she laughed
heartily on seeing me now and then unable to retain my balance on the
slippery ice.  Had it not been for her presence of mind, I certainly
should have fallen on several occasions.  Towards the evening I joined in
the games, though I found myself but an indifferent player.  We wound up
the day’s fête by a dance on the ice to the music of the harp.  Never
shall I forget the scenes of that day.  The hopping and skipping, the
dancing and romping of the little people, who tried to excel each other
in mirth and fun: the scene produced an impression on my mind which the
iron hand of time will never deface or remove.  On our return to the
palace, we were all ushered into the banqueting hall, where a grand feast
awaited us.  After dinner, Mervyna related to the king, her father, the
principal incidents of the day; and the good monarch was highly amused at
her stories of my difficulties and mishaps.  When the banquet was over I
retired to my apartment, where I was soon joined by Prince Tippin.

                                * * * * *

[Here there is a break in the narrative owing to the loss of several
folios of the original manuscript.  From the contents of the remaining
portion, we infer that the missing pages contained an account of several
other visits paid to the people of the fairy kingdom, and the incidents
of the respective journeys.  We learn, too, that the Princess Mervyna
became greatly attached to our hero, but that an estrangement
subsequently took place between them.  But the remaining narrative
contains no record of the cause which led to the estrangement.  The
following is the concluding portion of the history.]

                                * * * * *

Ah, me! ah, me! what a strange race and people is that who inhabit the
fairy kingdom.  They live in a beautiful country, speak a language which
is full of poetry, they are a virtuous and truth-loving race.  Moreover,
their land abounds with treasures; gems, gold, and precious stones are
there.  Oh, what a noble and loving spirit is that of the dear princess,
loving and lovable is she.  To be with her, was like a heaven upon earth.
I loved her as I never loved human being.  To me she was more precious
than all the world.  In my various visits the tie between us became
dearer and dearer.  Had it not been for — I’ll not mention his name, I
should be longingly looking forward to another tender embrace.  But the
tie is now broken—I did not mean to take the gold.  Justly have I been
punished.  Had I not done this, had I refused to listen to the suggestive
temptations of my mother,—the door would not have been closed.  It was I
who did the deed, and I repent in dust and ashes.  What I have suffered
on account of this, no tongue can tell, nor can language set forth.  But
my deepest grief arises from the thought that I shall never again embrace
the dear M—, the object of my heart’s fondest affection.



CEFN-Y-BEDD;
OR, A
VISIT TO THE SHRINE OF LLEWELYN AB
GRUFFYDD, THE LAST CAMBRIAN KING.


    Frequent is heard the voice of woe,
    Frequent the tears of sorrow flow;
    Such sounds as erst, in Camlan heard,
    Roused to wrath old Arthur’s bard;
    Cambria’s warrior we deplore;
    Our Llewelyn is no more.
    Who like Llewelyn now remains,
    To shield from wrong his native plains?
    My soul with piercing grief is filled;
    My vital blood with horror chilled:
    Nature herself is changed, and lo!
    Now all things sympathize below.
    Hark! how the howling wind and rain,
    In loud symphony complain!
    Hark! how the consecrated oaks,
    Unconscious of the woodman’s strokes,
    With thundering crash proclaim he’s gone;
    Fall in each others’ arms and groan!
    Hark! how the sullen tempests roar!
    See! how the white waves lash the shore!
    See! how eclipsed the sun appears!
    See! how the stars fall from their spheres!
    Each awful Heaven-sent prodigy
    Ye sons of infidelity,
    Believe and tremble! Guilty land,
    Lo, thy destruction is at hand!
    Thou great Creator of the world,
    Why are not thy red lightnings hurled?
    Will not the sea, at Thy command,
    Swallow up this guilty land?
    Why are we left to mourn in vain
    The guardian of our country slain?
    No place, no refuge for us left,
    Of homes, of liberty bereft;
    Where shall we flee, to whom complain,
    Since our dear Llewelyn’s slain?

                                           _Translated from a Welsh poem_.

It was a calm and balmy evening in the month of July, 18—, when all
nature appeared hushed in still quietude and death-like repose, when not
a zephyr breeze, causing the leaves of the trees to murmur or wave, was
felt: such was the character of the lovely and sunny evening on which I
left the beautiful valley in which the little village of Llanwrtyd
nestles among the hills, for the purpose of paying a special visit to
Cefn-y-Bedd, the spot to which the finger of tradition points as the
resting-place, the sacred ground, the hallowed earth in which were
deposited—amid the universal wail and lamentation of the Cambrian people,
when widows, fathers, brothers and sisters, heroes not a few, men who
never dreaded danger, and who were always foremost in battle—strong,
fearless, and valiant warriors, wept and sorrowed, and refused to be
comforted because their Prince, their champion, and their idol was not.
It was at Cefn-y-Bedd, which is now a respectable farm homestead, where
no monument of any kind marks the spot, that the mortal remains of
Llewelyn ap Gruffydd, the last reigning sovereign of Wales, were
interred.  If no Parian marble marks the ground beneath whose sacred sod
lies the dust of the dear departed, his name still survives, his virtues
still live, his memory is still fondly cherished by hundreds and
thousands of his descendants; and though nearly six centuries have come
and gone since the fall of our great captain, prince, and patriot, he
still speaks to the people and the nation.  Yes; his name is still dear
to Cambria’s sons and daughters.  His memory is even now, after the lapse
of so many years, fresh and green.  If the poor flesh, which contained
one of the purest and manliest souls that ever dwelt in a tabernacle of
clay, has long, long ago crumbled into dust, the man, the hero, and the
patriot survive, and will live in the annals of his country, and be an
idol in the heart of his descending race until time shall be no more.

I have remarked that the above visit was a “special visit.”  A few days
previous I had passed Cefn-y-Bedd, on my way to the little border town of
Builth, but in passing by the sacred shrine of our illustrious ancestor,
I knew not that I was on hallowed ground.  A lady companion called my
attention to an admirable husbandry arrangement of the homestead, the
like of which I had not previously seen in Breconshire.  The observation
of my companion and the scene around led me into a train of thought
relating to bygone years, to the deeds of old, the revolution of
kingdoms, the decline and fall of empires, and the changes which are
daily taking place in families, in governments, and in the homes of both
rich and poor.  I said to myself, every house, every cottage, every
mountain and valley has a history peculiar to itself—a history full of
interest, replete with romantic doings and sayings far more
wonderful,—embodying events and circumstances of more profound interest
and of deeper and far more pathetic story—than is often found in the
works of fiction.  Who can tell, for I am sure I cannot, but that,
perhaps, that house, with its farm-yard and out-buildings, its garden and
flowers, possesses a history peculiar to itself? and it may be that long,
long ago heroes and mighty men of valour took shelter here from the fury
of the tempest or from the burning sun of mid-day July heat, in their
march from one battle-field to another.  But why travel to the land of
shadows?  Why draw ideal pictures of events that are past, of heroes,
warriors, and statesmen, of battles, conquests, and defeats?  The dead
cannot be called to life.  The past cannot be revived.  The work done
cannot be undone.  The past can never be recalled.  Well, if these things
are among the impossibilities of life, there is one thing at any rate
which I can do.  I can drop a tear on the grave which contains the
hallowed dust.  I can recall the memories of the dear departed; I can
paint and set forth their virtues, can photograph their manliness and
bravery, can sketch and limn their life and deeds; so that this and
succeeding generations may learn to live more wisely, be more true, more
faithful to the dearest interests of their country, especially with
reference to those measures which lie at the basis of national progress
and the comfort and weal of the people.

The situation of Cefn-y-Bedd is exquisitely beautiful, and the scenery is
richly diversified.  From it one beholds a wide expanse of country, with
varied and magnificent views, which are finely alternated with luxuriant
fertile meadows, groves of thriving timber, and flourishing plantations.
In the distance we have views of the rocky hills of Llanelwedd, at whose
base flows the poetic and majestic Wye, the beautifullest of rivers.  To
the south-east is the far-famed Eppynt Forest, and down through a
luxuriant sylvan dell runs the meandering Irvon.  From this sacred spot
one beholds at a glance scenery in which are combined the bold and soft,
the sterile and woody, bare and rocky hills and verdant glades.  It is a
scene on which the eye delights to dwell.  In the far distance the bald
rocks of Aberedw appear in view.  It was among those rocks that Llewelyn
encamped before his departure for Builth.  Little did he fancy when he
left that stronghold on the cold winter’s morning that his life was so
near its close.  That he was surrounded by enemies, he was well aware.
That the armies of King Edward were in the immediate vicinity of his camp
he was fully cognizant of.  His spies had brought him information of the
several posts occupied by the English, and of his being in imminent
danger of an attack from various quarters of the combined hosts.
Aberedw, though admirably formed by nature for resisting an attack, when
directed from the Wye banks, was yet wholly untenable in the face of the
terrible odds with which he had now to cope—a combined army moving from
various military posts.  Seeing his danger, the Cambrian prince resolved
to break up his camp, and march along the sylvan Wye to Builth.  Crossing
the bridge, he moved on in a southwesterly direction to Pont Orewyn,
where the Prince, unarmed, received the deadly spear.  He was killed on
the 10th of December, 1282.

Having introduced to the notice of my readers the hero of my story—the
man whom Heaven, in its wisdom, specially raised up to meet the demands
of the most trying emergency which had befallen a great and an heroic
people—the man who, when placed at the head of affairs, found his country
prostrate, the national treasury empty, and the people dispirited by
reason of sad reverses—I shall proceed now to sketch the career of the
man; to set forth his virtues; to paint, but with no exaggerated
colouring, his character as a prince, as a ruler, as a military
commander, and as a friend; and shall show, what history clearly proves,
that he inspired his countrymen with an amount of confidence and trust
which no previous sovereign had been able to infuse into them; that the
veneration with which his name was so universally held was traceable to
virtues in his public acts and private life; further, that had it not
been for the treason of the faithless few, Llewelyn would have
transmitted the sovereignty of Wales to his posterity.  He died, not on
the field of battle, but alone and unarmed was he when the fatal blow was
struck.  By-and-by I shall show that he had done his work, and for him to
die was gain.

On the right bank of the sylvan Wheeler,—a small crystal stream which
flows through the luxuriant and richly wooded vale of Caerwys,—there
stands the modern mansion of Maesmynen.  In a meadow near the present
hall there was, in the thirteenth century, an ancient palace, which from
time immemorial had been one of the royal residences of the Cambrian
Princes.  Beautiful was the situation of this ancient mansion.  All that
the eye loves to rest on could be seen from the elevated spot on which it
stood.  This palace was the favourite residence of the unfortunate Prince
Llewelyn.  Here he spent his boyhood.  Here he principally lived until
his country called him to occupy a more conspicuous and more prominent
position.  In the neighbouring woods of Yseiefiog, Caerwys, Trev-Edwyn,
and Bodfari, he and his trusty friends were accustomed to follow the
chase.  Indeed, he lived here among friends and dependents, for the
circumjacent cantrevs of Rhos, Dyffryn Clwyd, Rhyfoniog, and
Englefield—which cantrevs included the country between Conway and
Chester—were his own property and possessions.  About midway between the
two extreme points was the royal palace of Maesmynen.  Here he breathed
the pure air of heaven.  Here he was free from the turmoil of life’s
cares and life’s battles.  Here he felt but little anxiety in connection
with the terrible war then being carried on between his countrymen,
headed by Llewelyn the Great, and, subsequent to the death, in 1240, of
that illustrious monarch, by his son and successor, Prince Davydd;
because the Prince of Maesmynen felt that the right men were at the head
of affairs, and that Heaven would defend the cause of the just.  Though
Llewelyn, the last prince, was not anxious as to the result of the
struggle, yet that he was not an indifferent spectator of the scene, and
its consequences to the nation, is evident from the annals of those
momentous times.  Why then did he keep aloof from the struggle?  Why did
he remain inactive?  Why did he continue to live a life of ease and
pleasure, when duty called him to the front?  The reason is apparent when
we consider the then existing relation between members of the royal
house.  His father had been cruelly treated, and had been made a prisoner
by his own brother Davydd; and when liberated, through the intervention
of mutual friends, he simply exchanged the castle of Criccaeth for the
Tower of London.  In that stronghold he was securely guarded by King
Henry’s soldiers.  Some of his noble compatriots, illustrious Cambrian
chieftains, successfully effected his release from the Tower, but Prince
Gruffydd, the father of our hero, in an endeavour to accomplish his own
liberation, fell from a great height and was killed on the spot.  It
appears that that prince had made a cord with the linen of his bed and
table, and when he had descended about midway between the window and the
ground, the cord broke, and the unhappy prince was precipitated into the
Tower ditch, and was killed.  This sad event took place in the year 1244.
During the two following years, King Davydd, being wholly free from
anxiety on account of his brother’s superior claim to the throne, which
his death had annulled, pursued a vigorous policy, displaying traits of
character and versatility of genius of the highest order.  He was brave
as a lion, and was ever foremost in the struggle; thus he secured the
confidence of his friends, the admiration of his followers, the love of
his soldiers, and the dread of his enemies.  His reign, however, was but
of brief duration.  In 1216 he died at Aber Palace.  Though this prince
was hated by many during his reign, his death was generally lamented.

When the solemn obsequies connected with the funeral of the deceased
prince were over, the Cambrian barons and chieftains met in a national
congress, and unanimously elected Prince Llewelyn-ap-Gruffydd and his
brother Owen as joint sovereigns of Wales.  The decision of the barons
was hailed with the liveliest satisfaction by the Cambrian people.  The
reason of the existence of this feeling in favour of the two princes is
obvious.  Their father had been the idol of the Welsh.  The people in
both North and South Wales had felt that he had been cruelly treated by
his brother, that he had been unjustly deprived of his inheritance, that
his birthright had been taken from him by unfair means (for he was the
lawful successor to Llewelyn the Great, the heir-apparent to the throne
on his decease), and hence that the crown belonged to him by seniority.
The people now rejoiced that the sons of the boy hero who in his youth
had made King Henry’s army feel his power, were about to be placed in
possession of their lawful inheritance as rulers and sovereigns of the
Cambrian nation.  In the following pages I shall place before the reader
facts which show the wisdom of the choice which the national congress
made.

But I have no intention, indeed it is wholly foreign to my present
purpose, to write a life of Llewelyn, that is, a consecutive narrative of
his deeds and acts, and his grand military achievements.  In 1856 I
compiled a biography of my hero, but it still remains in manuscript.
Briefly stated, my present purpose is to paint a likeness of the last
prince of the Cymru in three different aspects, that is, as a military
commander and tactician, as a Cambrian patriot, and as a citizen and
friend.  Regarded in these several aspects, I shall, from reliable data,
make it perfectly clear that the prince was as just as he was generous;
that he commanded the respect, the love, the affection and the admiration
of all who came in contact with him; that moreover, by his deeds of
prowess, by the manifestation of great skill and eminent military
tactics, by the rapidity with which he moved his army from one part of
the battle-field to another, from one point of attack to another place
which he regarded as vulnerable, he gained a title to be regarded as one
of the greatest generals of those eventful times.  He successfully
resisted, and more than once conquered, the bravest army then existing in
Europe.

Immediately after the Welsh princes ascended the throne of their
ancestors, King Henry of England, at the head of a powerful army, invaded
North Wales.  For this attack the Welsh princes were wholly unprepared;
and rather than risk an engagement with such terrible odds against them,
they prudently retreated before the enemy, retiring to the mountain
districts, from which the English king failed to dislodge them.
Subsequently, but before Henry returned to England, a treaty of amity and
peace was concluded between the Cambrian and Saxon monarchs.  The
conditions of this treaty were, first, that Llewelyn was to give up
possession for ever of his patrimony, the four cantrevs; secondly, that
he was to serve in Wales, or in the Marches, with one thousand foot and
twenty-four horse,—this at his own expense; thirdly, that all the Welsh
barons were to do homage to the English monarch.  That the conditions of
this treaty were most humiliating, we must at once admit; but under the
circumstances there can be no doubt that Llewelyn acted wisely in
acceding to them, for had he defied the enemy then, the struggle would
have proved a hopeless one.  The peace which he by the treaty secured,
lasted for a period of nine years, when Llewelyn became (1254) the sole
sovereign of Wales.  From that time until his untimely end, he reigned
alone: nobly and magnanimously did he wear the crown.  His was a life
without a stain of dishonour, as pure and bright as the crystal fountain;
and he has left a name which will never die.  Magnanimous was he,
generous and noble was he, chivalrous and princely in mien and heart was
he: hence the reason why he was almost worshipped by all who came within
the sacred circle of his influence; and had he had a moiety of the power
possessed by the English monarchs, the issue of the struggle would have
been widely different.  However, an all-wise Providence willed it
otherwise, and it is our duty to bow our heads without a murmur, for He
does all things in infinite love and wisdom.

After securing such important concessions from Llewelyn, the English
king, if be had been wise, would have pursued a mild and conciliatory
policy towards the nobles and barons of the Welsh nation: unfortunately
for his reputation and statesmanship, good-will towards the conquered
formed no part of the imperial virtues.  He ruled with a rod of iron, the
olive-branch forming no part of the device upon the king’s banner.  Thus
the fruit of his policy soon became apparent.  It would be expecting more
than human nature to suppose that the Cambrian chieftains and barons
would remain peaceful and quiet on seeing their estates seized by lords
Marchers.  Moreover, the greatest oppression was practised by minions of
King Henry, and for the most trivial offences the proud barons of Wales
were subjected to cruel and extreme punishment.  As was natural, his
cruelties and his policy of confiscation produced everywhere
disaffection, and ultimately a spirit of implacable hate was engendered.
The people, to a man, were in the end ready to rise in order to throw off
the bitter yoke.  They had their leader, the brave prince Llewelyn; but
the fruit was not yet ripe.  But while he urged delay, he did not neglect
preparation for the conflict, for he knew that the day of conflict must
come.  When the hour arrived, Llewelyn took the field, and his
achievements far surpassed the most sanguine expectations of both himself
and his brave followers.  In the space of a single week he recovered from
the enemy the possessions they had acquired by war in North Wales and
Cardiganshire.  Wherever he and his little army went, the enemy was
compelled to yield, and to retire from the battlefield as defeated hosts.

Soon after these successes, Llewelyn led a large army into South Wales.
Before Dynevor Castle, near Llandilo, he encountered the English forces,
which were commanded by Rhys Vychan.  The battle was conducted with great
skill and bravery on both sides; but at last the king’s army was
thoroughly beaten and retired from the field.  Immediately after this
splendid victory, the Cambrian prince returned in triumph to the North,
where his subjects received him with universal acclamation and heart-felt
gratitude.  But his work now had only just commenced.  On his arrival at
Aber, he found awaiting him a deputation from the four cantrevs,—tenants
and chiefs residing on lands within his patrimony,—who had come to lay
before their prince and friend the terrible wrongs they had to endure
from the exactions of Geoffrey de Langley, who farmed the crown lands
under Prince Edward of England.  “Llewelyn, to avenge their injuries,
crossed the frontier, carrying fire and sword to the very gates of
Chester, from the walls of which, Edward himself is said to have been a
galled witness of the havoc.”  On this defeat Edward sought his father’s
aid, but he sought it in vain: he then applied to his uncle, the king of
the Romans, for assistance; but the forces he was thereby able to bring
to the field were found either too cowardly or too weak to attack the
Welsh.  “The Cambrian prince with his army then took a _détour_, they
entered the territory of Gruffydd ab Madog, lord of Dinas Brân, a chief
who had formed a hostile league against Llewelyn and his native land,”
upon whom he took ample revenge.  On returning, he suddenly met the
English army, which was commanded by Prince Edward in person.  A terrible
battle was fought between the Welsh and English armies; but at every
point of the line Llewelyn’s troops were victorious.  In this conflict,
Edward’s forces were badly beaten, a small remnant only escaping with
their life.  After a brief repose, Llewelyn renewed his operations
against the domains of Edward, and these he carried on without meeting
with any serious opposition; but Llewelyn did not love war: in the hour
of his most splendid triumphs he was anxious for peace.  Immediately
after his recent grand achievements, he wrote to King Henry offering, “if
a peace were concluded, and the Welsh restored to their ancient laws, to
give a sum of money to Henry, and to acknowledge his sovereignty.”
Considering his late successes, we are surprised at his thus humbling
himself to his foe.  Doubtless he made this offer because of the deep
solicitude he felt for the lives and property of his people.  This
generous offer was rejected with scorn by Henry, whereupon hostilities
were recommenced with great and increased vigour by both of the
contending parties.

In reviewing thus far the life and character of the Cambrian prince, we
have seen that his decision was always followed by prompt and energetic
action.  Whenever he resolved to do a special thing or to gain a certain
point, he at once set about its accomplishment.  To this characteristic
of the man is traceable the secret of some of his mightiest achievements.
In the present case Llewelyn gained important victories before the
English monarch could collect his forces and approach
his—Llewelyn’s—dominions.  During the lull the prince moved his army
against the Lord of Powys, whom he easily defeated.  The tidings of this
victory having been carried to Gruffydd ab Madog, that chief felt that it
would be madness on his part to resist the Cambrian prince, and he
therefore sought and obtained a treaty of peace.  Llewelyn then marched
against the Earl of Gloucester, whom he defeated in a general battle.
These successes and achievements roused the Welsh to the highest pitch of
enthusiasm.  Accordingly we find that the Cambrian barons and chiefs
entered into a solemn league to defend till death the independence and
freedom of their country.  This confederacy was formed in the year 1258.
On its being ratified the Cambrian prince commenced to march southward,
and gained easy victories over the forces that were thrown forward to
impede his progress.  In a subsequent campaign in South Wales he took the
castle of Maelienydd, in Radnorshire.  Afterwards he invaded the English
borders on the west side of Shropshire and Cheshire, where he gained
important advantages over the lords Marchers.  From thence he proceeded
to the castles of Diserdd and Diganwy, which he besieged and destroyed.
On being apprised of these fresh disasters, Prince Edward marched against
Llewelyn, who retired to, and took refuge among, the “mountain bulwarks”
of Carnarvonshire.  As Edward dared not follow the Welsh prince there, he
returned to England, “if not disgraced, at least without any particular
honour.”

I pass over, as forming no part of my design, the insurrection of De
Montford, that nobleman’s success against Sir Roger Mortimer, and his
triumph over Prince Edward, whom he kept a prisoner in Hereford Castle.
Further, I shall content myself with a passing reference to the invasion
of Glamorganshire by Llewelyn, the important treaty of Montgomery in 1267
between Henry and Llewelyn, and the death of the former five years
afterwards.

When Edward ascended the throne, be called upon Llewelyn to do homage at
his coronation.  The Welsh prince replied that he was prepared to comply
with the mandate, provided some English noblemen of distinction were sent
to the Principality as hostages for his security.  The negotiations
respecting the question of homage, and the correspondence relating to the
imprisonment of Eleanor de Montford, Llewelyn’s betrothed, were carried
on until the summer of 1277, when Edward, at the head of a numerous body
of vassals, invaded North Wales.  Llewelyn’s army being small, he dared
not risk a general battle, so he retired and took refuge among the
inaccessible defences of Snowdon—a safe asylum, a secure retreat on all
occasions when the commissariat department of the army was attended to.
Anglesey being now in the hands of the English, and there existing
disaffection among some of the South Wales chieftains, the prince found
himself so hemmed in that supplies could not be obtained.  “Urged by the
sufferings of his famishing soldiers, and without any chance of relief,”
and his betrothed still being a prisoner, Llewelyn was compelled to sue
for peace; but King Edward refused to entertain any proposal short of an
unconditional surrender.  Under the treaty which was then agreed to, it
was stipulated that Llewelyn was to do homage in London annually, to
deliver up all prisoners, to restore all forfeited lands, to resign the
feudal supremacy over his barons; and all the Welsh chieftains, excepting
the five barons of Snowdon, were to hold their lands direct from Edward.
The conditions of this treaty were strictly observed by the Welsh prince
for a period of about four years.  To his subjects those were years of
suffering.  The administration was corrupt; gross frauds were practised
on the Welsh; while oppression, tyranny, and cruelties characterized the
proceedings of the representatives of the Government.  The people
complained of the wrongs which they sustained, and mildly but firmly
asked for a redress of their grievances; but a deaf ear was turned to all
the representations which were made.  At last the yoke became
intolerable; they appealed to Prince David for assistance, and that
prince renounced his “unnatural allegiance to Edward,” and became
reconciled to his brother Llewelyn; and the two princes and a number of
powerful and influential chieftains organized a concerted movement with a
view to drive the English from their land and to re-establish the freedom
and independence of their country.  Their cause was good, and their
object just and noble; but, ah me! they lacked the power and resources
necessary to accomplish their grand and holy purpose.

Llewelyn and his brother, having matured their plan of action, at once
commenced the campaign.  They jointly invested the castle of Flint, on
the estuary of the Dee; and from thence they marched to and successfully
attacked the castle of Rhuddlan.  The Cambrian army then moved along the
coast, and were hotly pursued by Edward, who overtook the retreating
forces near Conway.  Here a general battle was fought between the
contending forces, in which the Welsh were victorious.  On his defeat the
English king retired to Hope Dale, from which he soon recommenced
operations, and re-occupied Rhuddlan without experiencing any opposition.
From Rhuddlan he “despatched a part of his army by sea to take possession
of the Isle of Anglesey,” and from thence, by means of a bridge of boats,
this section of the army crossed over the Menai and landed at Moel-y-Don,
near Bangor.  When the reflux of the tide had broken the communication
between the artificial bridge and the mainland, the Welsh army rushed
from their hiding-place, and nearly the whole number of the enemy were
either killed by the sword or perished in the waves.  To Edward this was
an unexpected disaster.  For a moment it paralysed his operations.  He
felt that he had underrated the strength and undervalued the generalship
of Llewelyn, and to make up for the losses he had sustained he raised
fresh levies throughout his dominions.

During the preparations which were being made by Edward for another
campaign the Cambrian princes were not idle.  They arranged that the
younger brother, Prince David, should be entrusted with the defence of
North Wales, while Llewelyn would march against the English forces in
South Wales.  In the county of Cardigan Llewelyn gained important
victories against the enemy; with a small body of troops he proceeded to
the vicinity of Builth, with a view to consult some chieftains of that
locality; and here, unattended and alone, this great, brave, manly,
heroic, and magnanimous prince fell by the hand of an assassin.  Thus
perished, in the year 1282, after a reign of twenty-eight years,
Llewelyn, the last native prince of the Cymry!

Having reviewed the military career of Llewelyn, I shall proceed to make
two or three observations respecting his character as a ruler and
citizen.  We have abundant evidence to prove that he was a profound lover
of his country.  He loved her hills and dales, her mountains and valleys,
her alpine heights and cwms, or dells, with all the strong passion of a
warm and generous heart.  Deeper than the love of home, of wife, of
kindred, of lands and possessions, was his affection for wild Wales and
its people.  Of all countries in the wide world, Wales was to him the
brightest and fairest, and its people the bravest and best.  For her
welfare, he sacrificed all he had, all he possessed; and at last his life
was immolated on his dear country’s shrine.  As a citizen, he was
generous and kind.  His heart was full of human sympathy, while his
spirit was one of the gentlest that ever dwelt in a tabernacle of clay.
Although he raised his country to a position of military fame which she
had not occupied in previous history, yet war, in his view, had no glory.
He loved peace.  He desired to live on terms of amity and friendship with
the English people and their rulers.  But alas! alas! those rulers were
bent on the destruction of the independence and freedom of his country.
To prevent this, he led his army against the foe, and for a time war
smiled upon him; but at last he fell, not in battle, but unarmed and
alone, stricken to the earth by an assassin.

Brief, comparatively brief, was the public life of Prince Llewelyn; but
grand, noble, and heroic were his deeds.  He lived for others, not for
himself.  For the welfare of his country he laboured, not for personal
aggrandizement.  The mainspring of his actions was the deep and intense
love of Fatherland.  The great object for which he worked and fought and
suffered, for which he became a public man, the leader and chief and
ruler of a brave, a virtuous, an heroic people, was, to secure the
independence of his country, the freedom and liberty of its people, and
the blessing of permanent peace.  To the interests of the land of his
birth, the home of his father’s sepulchre, he was ever true, ever
faithful, ever unswerving in fidelity and loyalty.  If others proved
faithless, not so this patriotic prince.  If others of his countrymen
forsook the true standard of national independence, if they joined the
ranks of the enemy with a view to aid in crushing the liberties of an
ancient people—a race who could trace their history, without a single
break in the narrative, hundreds of years before the appearance of the
Divine Teacher on earth—Llewelyn felt it all the more necessary for him
to be more fearless in the fray, to put on a bolder and a manlier front,
to toil and to work more incessantly in the cause which he felt was
founded upon justice, upon right, and equity.  For a period of thirty-six
years he carried on a successful though an unequal struggle with the
English monarchs Henry and Edward.  But few, very few, was the number of
his soldiers compared with the hosts who made up the armies that fought
under the banner of his country’s foes.  His were brave men, and they
were engaged in a struggle which was dearer and more sacred to them than
life itself.  They were true soldiers.  To fear they were strangers.
Deeper than the love of life, than the love of kindred, than the love of
estates and possessions, was their love and affection for Fatherland.  We
hardly know which to admire the more, the people or their leaders, the
soldiers or their brave chiefs, the Cambrian army or their lawful prince.
They were exposed to temptation, but they yielded not to its alluring
charms.  Bribes were freely offered to many a Cambrian chieftain, but
these offers were made in vain.  When at last treason achieved the work
which a far more powerful nation than the Welsh failed to accomplish on
the battle-field, let it be proclaimed to the world, and let the fact be
known to all ages to come, that the traitor was a border man, and not a
man in whose veins flowed Cambrian blood.  But he accomplished his work,
and Llewelyn was no more.  His death was the direst calamity that had
ever befallen the Cambrian people.  Strange as it might appear,
nevertheless it is an historical fact, that when Llewelyn’s compatriots
found that their brave prince had fallen by the hands of an assassin, the
spirit of heroism and bravery appears to have forsaken them.  Hence to
the best, and to the bravest of the brave, the struggle now appeared
hopeless, notwithstanding that Prince David still lived and was free.
Though that prince was as brave as his deceased brother he did not
command the same amount of confidence which was reposed in the slain
Llewelyn.  Thus we find, that though the struggle was continued, it
lacked the boldness, energy, and high military tactics which had
characterized the generalship of the martyred chief.  Hence it soon
became evident to the enemy that the death-knell of Cambrian freedom and
independence had sounded, and that in a few days, or at any rate in a few
months at most, this ancient Principality would cease to occupy a
separate and distinct place in the annals of the world.  That the people
in those times should have regarded the downfall of their country, the
loss of their freedom and independence, as a terrible calamity, was but
natural.  In King Edward’s promises and generosity the Welsh people had
no confidence.  To him and to his immediate predecessor they traced, and
correctly traced, most of their troubles with the English nation.  They
had desired to live in peace; war they did not invite.  They took up
arms, not for conquest, not to extend their dominion, not to annex new
counties to the Principality, but simply in defence of the rights and
liberties of their country, which they desired to transmit and hand down
to their children and their children’s children.  But Providence had, for
some grand purpose and design, willed that the weaker nation should be
united to the stronger and more powerful people.  In this age we behold
and recognise the wisdom of His purpose.  Though a distinct race, in
language, feeling, and mental and physical idiosyncrasy, yet we unitedly
admit that the benefits which come to us by reason of our union with the
Saxon, are neither few nor unimportant.  Happily, too, the ancient feuds
between the two races are forgotten.  We now live as brethren.  The
rivalry between us is no longer on the battle-field; we contend not with
sword and bayonet.  No! the contest is shifted to a more noble, a more
beautiful, and a grander scene, with a sublimer aim and object than ever
has characterized broad fields of battle; namely, the advancement of
material civilization; the triumphs of art and the conquests of science;
and the social, intellectual, moral, and religious welfare of the people.
May the standard of our contention ever be towards this high ideal! then
a glorious future awaits the union of the Cambrian and Saxon peoples.

If now and then we of the former race drop a tear when the shadows of our
country’s martyred princes pass by, it is with no feeling of bitterness
towards those into whose hands the sceptre of our land has passed.  On
the contrary, while we remember with pride and gratitude the heroic
struggle of the “last of our native princes,” we admit that it is
infinitely better for Wales that she should be united to England under
the beneficent sway of Victoria, and we have still a Prince of Wales to
whom the Cambrian people are as loyal as their fathers were to Prince
Llewelyn.

NOTE.—The historic facts embodied in the preceding sketch are taken from
“Carnhuanawc’s Hanes Cymru,” “Warrington’s History of Wales,” the
“Cambrian Plutarch,” and “Welsh Sketches.”



LIST OF SUBSCRIBERS.

                                                   No. of
                                                   Copies
The Lord Bishop of St. David’s                          1
Hon. Sir W. R. Grove, Common Pleas                      1
H. Hussey Vivian, Esq., M.P., Parkwern                  1
A. P. Vivian, Esq., M.P., Taibach                       1
Henry Richard, Esq., M.P., London                       1
                      BRECONSHIRE.
William Games, Esq., Mayor, Brecon                      1
Rev. Henry Miles, Lanwrtyd                              1
Rev. Professor Roberts, Brecon                          1
Rev. John Daniel Williams, M.A., Brecon                 1
Mr. David Williams, Oakfield, Llanwrtyd                 1
Mr. Benjamin Jones, Dolecoed, Llanwrtyd                 1
                     GLAMORGANSHIRE.
Cambrian Book Publishing Company                      300
Thomas Alexander, Esq., Monkton, Bridgend               1
Mr. T. H. Ashton, Jeweller,                             1
Charles Bath, Esq., J.P., Swansea                       3
Richard Bedlington, Esq., Aberdare                      1
William H. Bell, Esq., Glyncollen, Swansea              1
David Bevan, Esq., J.P., Neath                          2
Henry Bowen, Esq., Morriston                            3
Mr. Richard Bowen, Aberclwyd, Glyn Neath                1
Starling Benson, Esq., J.P., Fairy Hill,                1
Swansea
R. D. Burnie, Esq., Osborne Villa                       1
Edward Bath, Esq., J.P., Brynmor                        1
John Biddulph, Esq., J.P., Swansea                      1
E. N. Bellingham, Esq., Walters Road, Swansea           1
Mr. John Betts, Mansel Street, Swansea                  1
Herbert D. Cook, Esq., Glydach                          1
Mr. A. Curran, Broker                                   1
Alfred Curtis, Esq., Nantwern, Neath                    1
Nathaniel Pryse Cameron, Esq., J.P., Swansea            1
Thomas D. Daniel, Esq., J.P., Aberavon                  1
Evan David, Esq., J.P., Fairwater House,                1
Cardiff
David Davies, Esq., 4, South Terrace, Neath             2
J. Leyshon Davies, Esq., Assayer, Landore               1
T. H. Davies, Esq., Heathfield Terrace,                 1
Swansea
E. Rice Daniel, Esq., Cwmgelly, Swansea                 6
Rev. E. A. Davies, Morriston                            1
E. F. Daniel, Esq., Bath Villa, Morriston               1
Rev. G. H. Davenport, Caswell, Mumbles                  1
Samuel Davies, Esq., Green Lodge, Reynoldstone          1
Mr. David Davies, Liverpool House, Maesteg              1
Mr. Dan Davies, White Hart Inn, Swansea                 1
Henry Davies, Esq., Morriston                           1
Joseph Davies, Esq., Hofod Villa, Swansea               1
Mr. Daniel Edwards, Duffryn Tin Plate Works,            1
Morriston
John Ivor Evans, Esq., West Cross, Swansea              3
Thomas Evans, Esq., 22, Brunswick Street,               1
Swansea
Mr. Zephaniah Evans, Post-Office, Pontardawe            1
Richard Aubrey Essery, Esq., J.P., Cefn Bryn,           1
Swansea
William Edmund, Esq., J.P., Windsor Lodge,              1
Swansea
J. Deffett Francis, Esq., Artist, Swansea               1
J. Coke Fowler, Esq., J.P., The Gnoll, Neath            1
Mr. David Gwillim, Eagle’s Bush, Neath                  1
William Gilbertson, Esq., J.P., Pontardawe              1
Rev. Walter Griffiths, B.D., J.P., Dulais               1
Fach, Neath
Rev. David Griffiths, Resolven, Neath                   1
Sankey Gardner, Esq., Eagle’s Bush, Neath               1
Griffith Griffiths, Esq., Bryncelyn,                    1
Pontardawe
Thomas George Gordon, Esq., Llwynybwch,                 1
Llanrhiddian
Howel Gwyn, Esq., J.P., Duffryn, Neath                  1
Mr. T. H. Hawkins, London Road, Neath                   1
Benjamin Hill, Esq., Cwmdwr, Clydach                    1
Rev. R. T. Howell, Northampton Place, Swansea           1
Mr. Elias Hughes, Accountant, Landore                   1
Richard Hughes, Esq., J.P., Ynistawe, Swansea           1
Richard Hall, Esq., J.P., Baglan Hall, Briton           1
Ferry
Mr. Evan J. Harris, Stamp Office, Reynoldstone          1
Joseph Hall, Esq., Grosvenor House, Swansea             1
H. W. Hansard, Esq., Singleton St., Swansea             1
Mr. J. O. Sheldon Jones, Post Office, Briton            1
Ferry
Mr. John Jones, Hafod Inn, Swansea                      1
Mr. J. B. Jones, Aberdulais                             1
Mr. Rhys Jones, Adelphi Hotel, Swansea                  1
Rev. Thomas Jones, Waters Road, Swansea                 2
Mr. Wm. E. Jones, Duffryn Tin Works, Morriston          1
John Jones Jenkins, Esq., J.P., The Grange,             1
Swansea
Mr. James Jones, Goat St., Swansea                      1
Mr. Watkin James, Sketty                                1
Mr. Thomas Jones, Agent, Union Street, Swansea         10
Mr. Morgan Jones, Tymaen, Maesteg                       1
Rev. David Jones, Bishopstone, Swansea                  1
John Jones, Esq., Walters Road, Swansea                 2
Benjn. Jones, Esq., J.P., Llanelly                      1
John Trevellian Jenkin, Esq., J.P., Swansea             1
Mr. T. John Lean, 7, Windsor Road, Cardiff              1
Griffith Lewis, Esq., Alltycham, Pontardawe             1
John Lewis, Esq., Fairfield House, Swansea              1
Thomas Leyson, Esq., Pennyscynnor, Neath                1
Wm. Leyson, Esq., Queen Street, Neath                   1
Robert Lidgey, Esq., St. Helen’s Road, Swansea          1
Henry S. Ludlow, Esq., Guildhall Chambers,              1
Neath
Wm. Llewellin, Esq., J.P., Court Colman,                1
Bridgend
Rev. R. Pendrill Llewellyn, Llangonoyd,                 1
Maesteg
Fred. M. Lewis, Esq., Neath Road, Swansea               1
Mr. Wm. Martin, Ynistawe, Swansea                       1
Mr. Thos. R. Mitchell, Ivy Cottage, St. Thomas          1
Mr. Thomas Morgan, Church St., Briton Ferry             1
H. Ll. Morris, Esq., Penclawdd, Gower                   1
Mr. Richard Mugford, Hafod, Swansea                     1
Edward S. Morris, Esq., Penclawdd                       1
W. C. Morris, Esq., 43, Queen Street, Neath             1
George Byng Morris, Esq., J.P., Danygraig,              1
Bridgend
George Mowatt, Esq., M.R.C.P., Walters Road,            1
Swansea
James Sanders Merry, Esq., Richmond Villas,             1
Swansea
David Meager, Esq., St. James Terrace, Swansea          1
Mr. David Morgan, 35, Brunswick Street,                 1
Swansea
David Owen, Esq., Brookfield House, Morriston           1
Rev. James Owen, Walters Road, Swansea                  1
James T. Nettell, Esq., Rosebank, Mumbles               1
Henry Parish, Esq., The Limes, Ystalyfera               1
John Powell, Esq., Millbrook Iron Works,                1
Swansea
Thos. Powell, Esq., The Elms, Swansea                   1
Charles S. Price, Esq., Brynderwen, Neath               1
Mr. Griffith Phillips, 16, Park Street,                 1
Swansea
Mr. Rees Price, Lantwit, Neath                          2
Rev. Rees Price, Llanboidy                              1
W. Price, Esq., Glantwrch, Swansea                      1
Thos. Penrice, Esq., J.P., Kilvrough, Swansea           1
Allan Paton, Esq., Sketty, Swansea                      1
Mr. Wm. Powell, Rock Street, Maesteg                    1
Mr. John Rees, Resolven                                 1
Mr. Thomas Rees, Ynismedw, Swansea                      1
J. C. Richardson, Esq., J.P., Dderwenfawr,              1
Swansea
E. M. Richards, Esq., J.P., Brooklands,                 1
Swansea
Richd. Richards, Esq., J.P., Belle Vue,                 1
Swansea
Rev. D. Roberts, Coity, Bridgend                        1
James Rogers, Esq., J.P., Pagefield House,              1
Swansea
John Roberts, Esq., Henrietta Street, Swansea           1
John Rosser, Esq., 9, Cambrian Place, Swansea           1
W. J. Rees, Esq., De La Beache Street, Swansea          1
Mr. David Rosser, 18, Brunswick St., Swansea            1
Wm. Harry Rees, Esq., Charlesville Place,               1
Neath
David Smith, Alltwen, Pontardawe                        1
Julius Smith, Esq., Mansel Terrace, Swansea             1
W. Robinson Smith, Esq., Glanrafon, Swansea             1
James Spencer, Esq., Inland Revenue, Swansea            1
George B. Strick, Esq., West Cross, Swansea             1
William Price Struve, Esq., J.P., Neath                 1
Rowland Thomas, Esq., J.P., Neath                       1
Thos. H. Thomas, Esq., Bridge House, Neath              1
William Thomas, Esq., Lan, Morriston                    1
B. P. Thomas, Esq., The Croft, Mumbles                  1
Ilted Thomas, Esq., J.P., Glanmor, Swansea              1
Mr. Howel Watkins, Rutland Street, Swansea              1
Octavius Williams, Esq., Northampton Place,             1
Swansea
Robert Williams, Esq., West Cross, Swansea              1
Thos. Williams, Esq., Sunny Bank, Aberdulais            1
Thos. Williams, Esq., 10, Windsor Terrace,              1
Neath
Mr. Watkin Williams, Pencoed, Bridgend                  1
William Williams, Esq., Wern House, Landore             1
Owen Gething Williams, Esq., Sketty                     1
Sir Gardner Wilkinson, Reynoldstone                     1
David Williams, Esq., Training College,                 1
Swansea
Chas. Thos. Wilson, Esq., Brynnewydd, Sketty            1
Owen Williams, Esq., Cwmavon                            1
Thomas Williams, Esq., Mount Pleasant, Swansea          1
John Williams, Esq., Tyar-y-Graig, Swansea              1
                    CARMARTHENSHIRE.
Mr. David Bowen, Thomas St., Llanelly                   1
George Alex. Evans, Esq., Carmarthen                    1
Rev. Rees Evans, Llandebie                              1
Rev. John Griffiths, D.D., Llandilo                     1
John Jennings, Esq., Greenfields, Llanelly              1
John Prothero Lewis, Esq., Bryneithin,                  1
Llandilo
Rev. Prof. Morgan, Carmarthen                           1
Wm. Morris, Esq., Pontamman Cross Inn                   1
Rev. John Rhys Morgan, West End, Llanelly               1
Henry Norton, Esq., Greenhill, Carmarthen               2
Douglas A. Onslow, Esq., J.P., Pembrey                  1
Mr. David Rees, Stepney Place, Llanelly                 1
Wm. Rosser, Esq., C.E., Greenfield House,               1
Llanelly
Mr. David Rees, Shipbroker, Llanelly                    1
John Prytherch, Esq., Banker, Llandilo                  1
Thos. Barton Snead, Esq., Solicitor, Llanelly           1
John Thomas, Esq., Glamorganshire Bank,                 1
Llandilo
J. Little Thomas, Esq., Gynin House, St.                1
Clears
Wm. Thomas, Esq., Wellfield, Llanelly                   1
Mr. Henry Thomas, Mina Street, Llanelly                 1
Rev. David Williams, Vicarage, Llanelly                 1
                      NORTH WALES.
George Henry Adams, Esq., King St., Mold                1
Andrew Jones Brereton, Esq. (Andreas o Von),            2
Mold
Andrew Brereton, Esq., 11, Edmund Street,               1
Oldham St., Liverpool
John Griffiths, Esq., 28, Chapel Street,                1
Liverpool
William Jones, Esq., Tyddyn House, Mold                 1
W. O. Jones, Esq., Mona Brewery, Llanfachrith,          1
Anglesea
W. Brereton Jones, Esq., Victoria Brewery,              1
Llangyfin, Anglesea
Rev. T. R. Lloyd (yr Estyn), Llanfynydd,                1
Wrexham
Love Jones Parry, Esq., Madryn, Pwllheli,               1
North Wales
Wm. Parry, Esq., Marlow Terrace, Wrexham                1
Street, Mold
Mr. Benjamin Powell, High Street, Mold                  1
Thomas Williams, Esq., Tyddyn Waun,                     1
Llanfechel, Anglesea
John Davies, Esq., Albert Road, Fenton Stoke,           1
Stafford
Henry Hurst, Esq., 4, Norton Terrace,                   1
Llandrindod Wells
William Morgan, Esq., Middle House, Penybont            1
N. Bennett, Esq., Trefeglwys, Llanidloes                1
Thos. Morley, Esq., Bryntimon, Gold Tops,               1
Newport
Rev. Hugh Williams, M.A., J.P., Chancellor of           1
Llandaff, Bassaleg Vicarage, Newport
Thos. Reece Thomas, Esq., J.P., D.L., Lampeter          1
House, Narberth

NOTES.


{178}  This is a literal fact.

{260}  Mr. Eli, I fancy, obtained some of his facts from Pennant.





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