WILD WALES

ITS PEOPLE, LANGUAGE
AND SCENERY

BY GEORGE BORROW

“Their Lord they shall praise,
Their language they shall keep,
Their land they shall lose,
Except Wild Wales.”

Taliesin:Destiny of the Britons

 

LONDON
JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET
1907

First Edition

 

1862

Second Edition

 

1865

Third Edition

 

1888

Fourth Edition

 

1896

Fifth (Definitive) Edition

6/-

March, 1901

Reprinted

Thin Paper

July, 1905

Reprinted

6/-

Sept., 1907

Reprinted

2/6 net.

Sept., 1907

NOTE

This edition of Wild Wales has been carefully collatedwith the first edition, in order to ensure that the spelling ofproper names shall be precisely as Borrow left it, and therunning headings on the right-hand pages as nearly as possiblethose which Borrow himself wrote.

January 1901.

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

All the Plates in this volumes are from drawings by Mr.A. S. Hartrick [0]

Above Capel Curig on the road to Bangor(Photogravure)

Frontispiece

Llangollen and Dinas Bran

to face page 32

The Wilds of Snowdown

200

In Anglessey. Redwharf Bay (Treath Coch), and theCountry of Gronwy Owen

212

The Wondrous Valley of Gelert

312

Cascade on the Moor between Festiniog and Balla

328

Balla Lake in the Fifties, showing the Aran Mountain andCader Idris. (Drawn from an old print)

346

Chirk (Castell y Waen)

366

Twilight after a Storm. Dinas Mawddwy

494

Eastern Street, Machynlleth, showing part of OwenGlendower’s Parliament House

512

The Devil’s Bridg

...

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