ILyn Corwrion
At times one of the fairies was in the habit, as I was told by more than one of my informants, of coming out of ILyn Corwrion with her spinning-wheel {troett bach) on fine summer days and betaking her
At times one of the fairies was in the habit, as I was told by more than one of my informants, of coming out of ILyn Corwrion with her spinning-wheel {troett bach) on fine summer days and betaking her (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx, Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter I: Undine's Kymric Sisters)
Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx
- attestation: At times one of the fairies was in the habit, as I was told by more than one of my informants, of coming out of ILyn Corwrion with her spinning-wheel {troett bach) on fine summer days and betaking her (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter I: Undine's Kymric Sisters)
"At times one of the fairies was in the habit, as I was told by more than one of my informants, of coming out of ILyn Corwrion with her spinning-wheel {troett bach) on fine summer days and betaking herself, to spinning."
- relationship: One of these families was nicknamed ' Simychiaid ' or 'Smychiaid'; and my informant, who is not yet quite forty, says that he heard his mother repeat scores of times that the old people used to say, t (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter I: Undine's Kymric Sisters)
"One of these families was nicknamed ' Simychiaid ' or 'Smychiaid'; and my informant, who is not yet quite forty, says that he heard his mother repeat scores of times that the old people used to say, that the Smychiaid, who were very numerous in the neighbourhood, were descended from fairies, and that they came from ILyn Corwrion."