John Evans
He consented, and one fine day, a long while afterwards, she suddenly peeped out of the water near him, and shouted: Swn I/an, cwyddy rwyda' a thyn tua'r Ian, ' John Evans, take up thy nets and make f
He consented, and one fine day, a long while afterwards, she suddenly peeped out of the water near him, and shouted: Swn I/an, cwyddy rwyda' a thyn tua'r Ian, ' John Evans, take up thy nets and make f (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx, Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter III: Fairy Ways and Words)
The last person supposed to have had charge of the well was a certain John Evans, but some of the most amusing stories of the shrewdness of the caretaker refer to a woman who had charge of the well be (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx, Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter VI: The Folklore of the Wells)
The articles in question were afterwards published, I am told, as a shilling book, which I have not seen, and they dealt with the superstition, with the history of John Evans, and with his confessions (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx, Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter VI: The Folklore of the Wells)
Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx
- attestation: He consented, and one fine day, a long while afterwards, she suddenly peeped out of the water near him, and shouted: Swn I/an, cwyddy rwyda' a thyn tua'r Ian, ' John Evans, take up thy nets and make f (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter III: Fairy Ways and Words)
"He consented, and one fine day, a long while afterwards, she suddenly peeped out of the water near him, and shouted: Swn I/an, cwyddy rwyda' a thyn tua'r Ian, ' John Evans, take up thy nets and make for the shore.'"
- attestation: The last person supposed to have had charge of the well was a certain John Evans, but some of the most amusing stories of the shrewdness of the caretaker refer to a woman who had charge of the well be (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter VI: The Folklore of the Wells)
"The last person supposed to have had charge of the well was a certain John Evans, but some of the most amusing stories of the shrewdness of the caretaker refer to a woman who had charge of the well before Evans' time."
- attestation: The articles in question were afterwards published, I am told, as a shilling book, which I have not seen, and they dealt with the superstition, with the history of John Evans, and with his confessions (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter VI: The Folklore of the Wells)
"The articles in question were afterwards published, I am told, as a shilling book, which I have not seen, and they dealt with the superstition, with the history of John Evans, and with his confessions and conversion."