Gwyn ab Nud
No wonder our bold but superstitious progenitors, awestruck by the solitude of the spot— the dark sepial tint of its waters, unrelieved by the flitting apparition of a single fish, and seldom visited
No wonder our bold but superstitious progenitors, awestruck by the solitude of the spot— the dark sepial tint of its waters, unrelieved by the flitting apparition of a single fish, and seldom visited (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx, Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter II: The Fairies' Revenge)
Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx
- attestation: No wonder our bold but superstitious progenitors, awestruck by the solitude of the spot— the dark sepial tint of its waters, unrelieved by the flitting apparition of a single fish, and seldom visited (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter II: The Fairies' Revenge)
"No wonder our bold but superstitious progenitors, awestruck by the solitude of the spot— the dark sepial tint of its waters, unrelieved by the flitting apparition of a single fish, and seldom visited by the tenants of the air — should have established it as a canon in their creed of terror that the lake formed one of the many communications between this outward world of ours and the inner or lower one of Annwn — the unknown world ' — the dominion of Gwyn ap Nud, the mythic king of the fabled realm, peopled by those children of mystery."
On trail: Genealogies