George Borrow - The Man and His Books by Edward Thomas
page 271 of 365 (74%)
page 271 of 365 (74%)
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wife was at Bognor. In the next year his wife died, after being
afflicted for some time by troubles connected with her property, by dropsy, valvular disease of the heart, and "hysteria." Borrow was melancholy and irritable, but apparently did not go for another walk in Scotland as was suggested for a cure; nor ever again did he get far afield on foot. CHAPTER XXIX--"WILD WALES" In 1862, between Borrow's two visits to Ireland, his "Wild Wales" was published. It had been heralded by an advertisement in 1857, by the publication of the "Sleeping Bard" in 1860, and by an article on "The Welsh and their Literature" in the "Quarterly" for January, 1861. This article quotes "an unpublished work called 'Wild Wales'" and "Mr. Borrow's unpublished work, 'Celtic Bards, Chiefs and Kings.'" It opened with a vivid story of the coming of Hu Gadarn and his Cymry to Britain: "Hu and his people took possession of the best parts of the island, either driving the few Gaels to other districts or admitting them to their confederacy. As the country was in a very wild state, much overgrown with forests in which bears and wolves wandered, and abounding with deep stagnant pools, which were the haunts of the avanc or crocodile, Hu forthwith set about clearing it of some of its horrors, and making it more fit to be the abiding place of civilised beings. He made his people cut down woods and forests, and destroy, as far as was possible, wild beasts and crocodiles. He himself went to a gloomy pool, |
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