Rees
Rees added the following notes, which we reproduce also at full length:
Rees added the following notes, which we reproduce also at full length: (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx, Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter I: Undine's Kymric Sisters)
Rees', in that the farmer used to go near the lake to see some lambs he had bought at a fair, and that whenever he did so three beautiful damsels appeared to him from the lake (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx, Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter I: Undine's Kymric Sisters)
Rees' Welsh Saints, pp (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx, Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter III: Fairy Ways and Words)
Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx
- attestation: Rees added the following notes, which we reproduce also at full length: (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter I: Undine's Kymric Sisters)
"Rees added the following notes, which we reproduce also at full length: —"
- attestation: Rees', in that the farmer used to go near the lake to see some lambs he had bought at a fair, and that whenever he did so three beautiful damsels appeared to him from the lake (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter I: Undine's Kymric Sisters)
"Rees', in that the farmer used to go near the lake to see some lambs he had bought at a fair, and that whenever he did so three beautiful damsels appeared to him from the lake."
- attestation: Rees' Welsh Saints, pp (Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx > Volume I > Chapter III: Fairy Ways and Words)
"Rees' Welsh Saints, pp. 305-6, Gwryd is given as the name of a friar who lived about the end of the twelfth century, and has been commemorated on November i; and the author adds a note referring to the Cambrian Register for 1800, vol. iii. p. 221, where it is said that Gwryd relieved the bard Einion ab Gwalchmai of some oppression, probably mental, which had afflicted him for seven years."