[Wild Wales by George Borrow]@TWC D-Link bookWild Wales CHAPTER XIII 9/10
"Can you tell us where Iolo Goch lies interred ?" said I. "No," said she; "indeed I never heard of such a person." "He was the bard of Owen Glendower," said I, "and assisted his cause wonderfully by the fiery odes, in which he incited the Welsh to rise against the English." "Indeed!" said she; "well, I am sorry to say that I never heard of him." "Are you Welsh ?" said I. "I am," she replied. "Did you ever hear of Thomas Edwards ?" "Oh, yes," said she; "I have frequently heard of him." "How odd," said I, "that the name of a great poet should be unknown in the very place where he is buried, whilst that of one certainly not his superior, should be well known in that same place, though he is not buried there." "Perhaps," said she, "the reason is that the poet, whom you mentioned, wrote in the old measures and language which few people now understand, whilst Thomas Edwards wrote in common verse and in the language of the present day." "I daresay it is so," said I. From the church she led us to other parts of the ruin--at first she had spoken to us rather cross and loftily, but she now became kind and communicative.
She said that she resided near the ruins, which she was permitted to show, that she lived alone, and wished to be alone; there was something singular about her, and I believe that she had a history of her own.
After showing us the ruins she conducted us to a cottage in which she lived; it stood behind the ruins by a fish-pond, in a beautiful and romantic place enough; she said that in the winter she went away, but to what place she did not say.
She asked us whether we came walking, and on our telling her that we did, she said that she would point out to us a near way home.
She then pointed to a path up a hill, telling us we must follow it.
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