Wild Wales: Its People, Language and Scenery by George Henry Borrow
page 189 of 922 (20%)
page 189 of 922 (20%)
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all kinds of trees, from the highest pinnacle down to the torrent's
brink. Cut on the top surface of the wall, which was of slate, and therefore easily impressible by the knife, were several names, doubtless those of tourists, who had gazed from the look-out on the prospect, amongst which I observed in remarkably bold letters that of T . . . . "Eager for immortality, Mr T.," said I; "but you are no H. M., no Huw Morris." Leaving the looking place I proceeded, and, after one or two turnings, came to another, which afforded a view if possible yet more grand, beautiful and wild, the most prominent objects of which were a kind of devil's bridge flung over the deep glen and its foaming water, and a strange-looking hill beyond it, below which, with a wood on either side, stood a white farm-house - sending from a tall chimney a thin misty reek up to the sky. I crossed the bridge, which, however diabolically fantastical it looked at a distance, seemed when one was upon it, capable of bearing any weight, and soon found myself by the farm-house past which the way led. An aged woman sat on a stool by the door. "A fine evening," said I in English. "Dim Saesneg;" said the aged woman. "Oh, the blessing of being able to speak Welsh," said I; and then repeated in that language what I had said to her in the other tongue. |
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