Deunant
The smith told me another short tale, about a farmer who lived not long ago at Deunant, close to Aberdaron
The smith told me another short tale, about a farmer who lived not long ago at Deunant, close to Aberdaron (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx, Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter III: Fairy Ways and Words)
A similar instance of the virtue of standing on the feet of another person has been mentioned in reference to the farmer of Deunant, at p (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx, Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter V: The Fenodyree and his Friends)
Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx
- attestation: The smith told me another short tale, about a farmer who lived not long ago at Deunant, close to Aberdaron (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter III: Fairy Ways and Words)
"The smith told me another short tale, about a farmer who lived not long ago at Deunant, close to Aberdaron."
- attestation: A similar instance of the virtue of standing on the feet of another person has been mentioned in reference to the farmer of Deunant, at p (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter V: The Fenodyree and his Friends)
"A similar instance of the virtue of standing on the feet of another person has been mentioned in reference to the farmer of Deunant, at p. 230 above; the foot, however, on which he had to stand in order to get a glimpse of the fairy world, was a fairy's own foot."