Cwmttan
(6) ' Another of these shepherds was one day urging his dog at the sheep in Cwmttan, when he heard a kind of low noise in the cleft of a rock
(6) ' Another of these shepherds was one day urging his dog at the sheep in Cwmttan, when he heard a kind of low noise in the cleft of a rock (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx, Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter II: The Fairies' Revenge)
As he was crossing the river that comes down from Cwmttan, where its flood was sweeping all before it in a terrible current, he somehow let go the walking-stick from his hand; and when one went next m (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx, Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter II: The Fairies' Revenge)
Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx
- attestation: (6) ' Another of these shepherds was one day urging his dog at the sheep in Cwmttan, when he heard a kind of low noise in the cleft of a rock (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter II: The Fairies' Revenge)
"(6) ' Another of these shepherds was one day urging his dog at the sheep in Cwmttan, when he heard a kind of low noise in the cleft of a rock."
- attestation: As he was crossing the river that comes down from Cwmttan, where its flood was sweeping all before it in a terrible current, he somehow let go the walking-stick from his hand; and when one went next m (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter II: The Fairies' Revenge)
"As he was crossing the river that comes down from Cwmttan, where its flood was sweeping all before it in a terrible current, he somehow let go the walking-stick from his hand; and when one went next morning up the Cwm, it was found that nearly all the sheep had been swept away by the flood, and that the farmer's wealth had gone almost as it came — with the walking-stick.'"