By
WILLIAM ELLIOT GRIFFIS
1921
A PREFACE-LETTER TO MY GRANDFATHER
DEAR CAPTAIN JOHN GRIFFIS:
Although I never saw you, since you died in 1804, I am glad you wereone of those Welshmen who opposed the policy of King George III andthat you, after coming to America in 1783, were among the first seacaptains to carry the American flag around the world. That you knewmany of the Free Quakers and other patriots of the Revolution and thatthey buried you among them, near Benjamin Franklin, is a matter ofpride to your descendants. That you were born in Wales and spokeWelsh, as did also those three great prophets of spiritual liberty,Roger Williams, William Penn, and Thomas Jefferson, is still furtherground for pride in one's ancestry. Now, in the perspective of historywe see that our Washington and his compeers and Wilkes, Barre, Burkeand the friends of America in Parliament were fighting the same battleof Freedom. Though our debt to Wales for many things is great, wecount not least those inheritances from the world of imagination, forwhich the Cymric Land was famous, even before the days of eitherAnglo-Saxon or Norman.
W. E. G.
Saint David's and the day of the Daffodil, March 1, 1921.
CONTENTS
I. WELSH RABBIT AND HUNTED HARES
II. THE MIGHTY MONSTER AFANG
III. THE TWO CAT WITCHES
IV. HOW THE CYMRY LAND BECAME INHABITED
V. THE BOY THAT WAS NAMED TROUBLE
VI. THE GOLDEN HARP
VII. THE GREAT RED DRAGON OF WALES
VIII. THE TOUCH OF CLAY
IX. THE TOUCH OF IRON
X. THE MAIDEN OF THE GREEN FOREST
XI. THE TREASURE STONE OF THE FAIRIES
XII. GIANT TOM AND GIANT BLUBB
XIII. A BOY THAT VISITED FAIRYLAND
XIV. THE WELSHERY AND THE NORMANS
XV. THE WELSH FAIRIES HOLD A MEETING
XVI. KING ARTHUR'S CAVE
XVII. THE LADY OF THE LAKE
XVIII. THE KING'S FOOT HOLDER
XIX. POWELL, PRINCE OF DYFED
XX. POWELL AND HIS BRIDE
XXI. WHY THE BACK DOOR WAS FRONT
XXII. THE RED BANDITS OF MONTGOMERY
XXIII. THE FAIRY CONGRESS
XXIV. THE SWORD OF AVALON
Long, long ago, there was a good saint named David, who taught theearly Cymric or Welsh people better manners and many good things toeat and ways of enjoying themselves.
Now the Welsh folks in speaking of their good teacher pronounced hisname Tafid and affectionately Taffy, and this came to be the usualname for a person born in Wales. In our nurseries we all learned that"Taffy was a Welshman," but it was their enemies who made a bad rhymeabout Taffy.
Wherever there were