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+<title>The Itinerary of Archbishop Baldwin through Wales, by Giraldus Cambrensis</title>
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+
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Itinerary of Archbishop Baldwin through
+Wales, by Giraldus Cambrensis
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
+other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
+the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
+www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
+to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Itinerary of Archbishop Baldwin through Wales
+
+
+Author: Giraldus Cambrensis
+
+
+
+Release Date: February 9, 2015 [eBook #1148]
+[This file was first posted on December 14, 1997]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ITINERARY OF ARCHIBISHOP
+BALDWIN THROUGH WALES***
+</pre>
+<p>Transcribed from the 1912 J. M. Dent and Sons edition by David
+Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org</p>
+<h1><span class="smcap">The Itinerary of Archbishop Baldwin
+through Wales</span><br />
+by<br />
+Giraldus Cambrensis</h1>
+<h2><a name="pagevii"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+vii</span>INTRODUCTION</h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">Gerald the Welshman</span>&mdash;Giraldus
+Cambrensis&mdash;was born, probably in 1147, at Manorbier Castle
+in the county of Pembroke.&nbsp; His father was a Norman noble,
+William de Barri, who took his name from the little island of
+Barry off the coast of Glamorgan.&nbsp; His mother, Angharad, was
+the daughter of Gerald de Windsor <a name="citation0a"></a><a
+href="#footnote0a" class="citation">[0a]</a> by his wife, the
+famous Princess Nesta, the &ldquo;Helen of Wales,&rdquo; and the
+daughter of Rhys ap Tewdwr Mawr, the last independent Prince of
+South Wales.</p>
+<p>Gerald was therefore born to romance and adventure.&nbsp; He
+was reared in the traditions of the House of Dinevor.&nbsp; He
+heard the brilliant and pitiful stories of Rhys ap Tewdwr, who,
+after having lost and won South Wales, died on the stricken field
+fighting against the Normans, an old man of over fourscore years;
+and of his gallant son, Prince Rhys, who, after wrenching his
+patrimony from the invaders, died of a broken heart a few months
+after his wife, the Princess Gwenllian, had fallen in a skirmish
+at Kidwelly.&nbsp; No doubt he heard, though he makes but sparing
+allusion to them, of the loves and adventures of his grandmother,
+the Princess Nesta, the daughter and sister of a prince, the wife
+of an adventurer, the concubine of a king, and the paramour of
+every daring lover&mdash;a Welshwoman whose passions embroiled
+all Wales, and England too, in war, and the mother of
+heroes&mdash;Fitz-Geralds, Fitz-Stephens, and Fitz-Henries, and
+others&mdash;who, regardless of their mother&rsquo;s eccentricity
+in the choice of their fathers, <a name="pageviii"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. viii</span>united like brothers in the most
+adventurous undertaking of that age, the Conquest of Ireland.</p>
+<p>Though his mother was half Saxon and his father probably fully
+Norman, Gerald, with a true instinct, described himself as a
+&ldquo;Welshman.&rdquo;&nbsp; His frank vanity, so na&iuml;ve as
+to be void of offence, his easy acceptance of everything which
+Providence had bestowed on him, his incorrigible belief that all
+the world took as much interest in himself and all that appealed
+to him as he did himself, the readiness with which he adapted
+himself to all sorts of men and of circumstances, his credulity
+in matters of faith and his shrewd common sense in things of the
+world, his wit and lively fancy, his eloquence of tongue and pen,
+his acute rather than accurate observation, his scholarship
+elegant rather than profound, are all characteristic of a certain
+lovable type of South Walian.&nbsp; He was not blind to the
+defects of his countrymen any more than to others of his
+contemporaries, but the Welsh he chastised as one who loved
+them.&nbsp; His praise followed ever close upon the heels of his
+criticism.&nbsp; There was none of the rancour in his references
+to Wales which defaces his account of contemporary Ireland.&nbsp;
+He was acquainted with Welsh, though he does not seem to have
+preached it, and another archdeacon acted as the interpreter of
+Archbishop Baldwin&rsquo;s Crusade sermon in Anglesea.&nbsp; But
+he could appreciate the charm of the <i>Cynghanedd</i>, the
+alliterative assonance which is still the most distinctive
+feature of Welsh poetry.&nbsp; He cannot conceal his sympathy
+with the imperishable determination of his countrymen to keep
+alive the language which is their <i>differentia</i> among the
+nations of the world.&nbsp; It is manifest in the story which he
+relates at the end of his &ldquo;Description of
+Wales.&rdquo;&nbsp; Henry II. asked an old Welshman of Pencader
+in Carmarthenshire if the Welsh could resist his might.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;This nation, O King,&rdquo; was the reply, &ldquo;may
+often be weakened and in great part destroyed by the power of
+yourself and of <a name="pageix"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+ix</span>others, but many a time, as it deserves, it will rise
+triumphant.&nbsp; But never will it be destroyed by the wrath of
+man, unless the wrath of God be added.&nbsp; Nor do I think that
+any other nation than this of Wales, or any other tongue,
+whatever may hereafter come to pass, shall on the day of the
+great reckoning before the Most High Judge, answer for this
+corner of the earth.&rdquo;&nbsp; Prone to discuss with his
+&ldquo;Britannic frankness&rdquo; the faults of his countrymen,
+he cannot bear that any one else should do so.&nbsp; In the
+&ldquo;Description of Wales&rdquo; he breaks off in the middle of
+a most unflattering passage concerning the character of the Welsh
+people to lecture Gildas for having abused his own
+countrymen.&nbsp; In the preface to his &ldquo;Instruction of
+Princes,&rdquo; he makes a bitter reference to the prejudice of
+the English Court against everything Welsh&mdash;&ldquo;Can any
+good thing come from Wales?&rdquo;&nbsp; His fierce Welshmanship
+is perhaps responsible for the unsympathetic treatment which he
+has usually received at the hands of English historians.&nbsp;
+Even to one of the writers of Dr. Traill&rsquo;s &ldquo;Social
+England,&rdquo; Gerald was little more than &ldquo;a strong and
+passionate Welshman.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sometimes it was his pleasure to pose as a citizen of the
+world.&nbsp; He loved Paris, the centre of learning, where he
+studied as a youth, and where he lectured in his early
+manhood.&nbsp; He paid four long visits to Rome.&nbsp; He was
+Court chaplain to Henry II.&nbsp; He accompanied the king on his
+expeditions to France, and Prince John to Ireland.&nbsp; He
+retired, when old age grew upon him, to the scholarly seclusion
+of Lincoln, far from his native land.&nbsp; He was the friend and
+companion of princes and kings, of scholars and prelates
+everywhere in England, in France, and in Italy.&nbsp; And yet
+there was no place in the world so dear to him as
+Manorbier.&nbsp; Who can read his vivid description of the old
+castle by the sea&mdash;its ramparts blown upon by the winds that
+swept over the Irish Sea, its fishponds, its garden, and its
+lofty nut trees&mdash;without feeling that here, after all, <a
+name="pagex"></a><span class="pagenum">p. x</span>was the home of
+Gerald de Barri?&nbsp; &ldquo;As Demetia,&rdquo; he said in his
+&ldquo;Itinerary,&rdquo; &ldquo;with its seven cantreds is the
+fairest of all the lands of Wales, as Pembroke is the fairest
+part of Demetia, and this spot the fairest of Pembroke, it
+follows that Manorbier is the sweetest spot in
+Wales.&rdquo;&nbsp; He has left us a charming account of his
+boyhood, playing with his brothers on the sands, they building
+castles and he cathedrals, he earning the title of &ldquo;boy
+bishop&rdquo; by preaching while they engaged in boyish
+sport.&nbsp; On his last recorded visit to Wales, a broken man,
+hunted like a criminal by the king, and deserted by the ingrate
+canons of St. David&rsquo;s, he retired for a brief respite from
+strife to the sweet peace of Manorbier.&nbsp; It is not known
+where he died, but it is permissible to hope that he breathed his
+last in the old home which he never forgot or ceased to love.</p>
+<p>He mentions that the Welsh loved high descent and carried
+their pedigree about with them.&nbsp; In this respect also Gerald
+was Welsh to the core.&nbsp; He is never more pleased than when
+he alludes to his relationship with the Princes of Wales, or the
+Geraldines, or Cadwallon ap Madoc of Powis.&nbsp; He hints, not
+obscurely, that the real reason why he was passed over for the
+Bishopric of St. David&rsquo;s in 1186 was that Henry II. feared
+his <i>natio et cognatio</i>, his nation and his family.&nbsp; He
+becomes almost dithyrambic in extolling the deeds of his kinsmen
+in Ireland.&nbsp; &ldquo;Who are they who penetrated into the
+fastnesses of the enemy?&nbsp; The Geraldines.&nbsp; Who are they
+who hold the country in submission?&nbsp; The Geraldines.&nbsp;
+Who are they whom the foemen dread?&nbsp; The Geraldines.&nbsp;
+Who are they whom envy would disparage?&nbsp; The
+Geraldines.&nbsp; Yet fight on, my gallant kinsmen,</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Felices facti si quid mea carmina
+possuit.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Gerald was satisfied, not only with his birthplace and
+lineage, but with everything that was his.&nbsp; He makes
+complacent references to his good looks, which he had <a
+name="pagexi"></a><span class="pagenum">p. xi</span>inherited
+from Princess Nesta.&nbsp; &ldquo;Is it possible so fair a youth
+can die?&rdquo; asked Bishop, afterwards Archbishop, Baldwin,
+when he saw him in his student days. <a name="citation0b"></a><a
+href="#footnote0b" class="citation">[0b]</a>&nbsp; Even in his
+letters to Pope Innocent he could not refrain from repeating a
+compliment paid to him on his good looks by Matilda of St.
+Valery, the wife of his neighbour at Brecon, William de
+Braose.&nbsp; He praises his own unparalleled generosity in
+entertaining the poor, the doctors, and the townsfolk of Oxford
+to banquets on three successive days when he read his
+&ldquo;Topography of Ireland&rdquo; before that university.&nbsp;
+As for his learning he records that when his tutors at Paris
+wished to point out a model scholar they mentioned Giraldus
+Cambrensis.&nbsp; He is confident that though his works, being
+all written in Latin, have not attained any great contemporary
+popularity, they will make his name and fame secure for
+ever.&nbsp; The most precious gift he could give to Pope Innocent
+III., when he was anxious to win his favour, was six volumes of
+his own works; and when good old Archbishop Baldwin came to
+preach the Crusade in Wales, Gerald could think of no better
+present to help beguile the tedium of the journey than his own
+&ldquo;Topography of Ireland.&rdquo;&nbsp; He is equally pleased
+with his own eloquence.&nbsp; When the archbishop had preached,
+with no effect, for an hour, and exclaimed what a hardhearted
+people it was, Gerald moved them almost instantly to tears.&nbsp;
+He records also that John Spang, the Lord Rhys&rsquo;s fool, said
+to his master at Cardigan, after Gerald had been preaching the
+Crusade, &ldquo;You owe a great debt, O Rhys, to your kinsman,
+the archdeacon, who has taken a hundred or so of your men to
+serve the Lord; for if he had only spoken in Welsh, you would not
+have had a soul left.&rdquo;&nbsp; His works are full of
+appreciations of Gerald&rsquo;s reforming zeal, his
+administrative energy, his unostentatious and scholarly life.</p>
+<p>Professor Freeman in his &ldquo;Norman Conquest&rdquo;
+described <a name="pagexii"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+xii</span>Gerald as &ldquo;the father of comparative
+philology,&rdquo; and in the preface to his edition of the last
+volume of Gerald&rsquo;s works in the Rolls Series, he calls him
+&ldquo;one of the most learned men of a learned age,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;the universal scholar.&rdquo;&nbsp; His range of subjects
+is indeed marvellous even for an age when to be a
+&ldquo;universal scholar&rdquo; was not so hopeless of attainment
+as it has since become.&nbsp; Professor Brewer, his earliest
+editor in the Rolls Series, is struck by the same
+characteristic.&nbsp; &ldquo;Geography, history, ethics,
+divinity, canon law, biography, natural history, epistolary
+correspondence, and poetry employed his pen by turns, and in all
+these departments of literature he has left memorials of his
+ability.&rdquo;&nbsp; Without being Ciceronian, his Latin was far
+better than that of his contemporaries.&nbsp; He was steeped in
+the classics, and he had, as Professor Freeman remarks,
+&ldquo;mastered more languages than most men of his time, and had
+looked at them with an approach to a scientific view which still
+fewer men of his time shared with him.&rdquo;&nbsp; He quotes
+Welsh, English, Irish, French, German, Hebrew, Latin, and Greek,
+and with four or five of these languages at least he had an
+intimate, scholarly acquaintance.&nbsp; His judgment of men and
+things may not always have been sound, but he was a shrewd
+observer of contemporary events.&nbsp; &ldquo;The cleverest
+critic of the life of his time&rdquo; is the verdict of Mr.
+Reginald Poole. <a name="citation0c"></a><a href="#footnote0c"
+class="citation">[0c]</a>&nbsp; He changed his opinions often: he
+was never ashamed of being inconsistent.&nbsp; In early life he
+was, perhaps naturally, an admirer of the Angevin dynasty; he
+lived to draw the most terrible picture extant of their lives and
+characters.&nbsp; During his lifetime he never ceased to inveigh
+against Archbishop Hubert Walter; after his death he repented and
+recanted.&nbsp; His invective was sometimes coarse, and his abuse
+was always virulent.&nbsp; He was not over-scrupulous in his
+methods of controversy; but no one can rise from a reading of his
+works without <a name="pagexiii"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+xiii</span>a feeling of liking for the vivacious, cultured,
+impulsive, humorous, irrepressible Welshman.&nbsp; Certainly no
+Welshman can regard the man who wrote so lovingly of his native
+land, and who championed her cause so valiantly, except with real
+gratitude and affection.</p>
+<p>But though it is as a writer of books that Gerald has become
+famous, he was a man of action, who would have left, had Fate
+been kinder, an enduring mark on the history of his own time, and
+would certainly have changed the whole current of Welsh religious
+life.&nbsp; As a descendant of the Welsh princes, he took himself
+seriously as a Welsh patriot.&nbsp; Destined almost from his
+cradle, both by the bent of his mind and the inclination of his
+father, to don &ldquo;the habit of religion,&rdquo; he could not
+join Prince Rhys or Prince Llewelyn in their struggle for the
+political independence of Wales.&nbsp; His ambition was to become
+Bishop of St. David&rsquo;s, and then to restore the Welsh Church
+to her old position of independence of the metropolitan authority
+of Canterbury.&nbsp; He detested the practice of promoting
+Normans to Welsh sees, and of excluding Welshmen from high
+positions in their own country.&nbsp; &ldquo;Because I am a
+Welshman, am I to be debarred from all preferment in
+Wales?&rdquo; he indignantly writes to the Pope.&nbsp;
+Circumstances at first seemed to favour his ambition.&nbsp; His
+uncle, David Fitz-Gerald, sat in the seat of St.
+David&rsquo;s.&nbsp; When the young scholar returned from Paris
+in 1172, he found the path of promotion easy.&nbsp; After the
+manner of that age&mdash;which Gerald lived to denounce&mdash;he
+soon became a pluralist.&nbsp; He held the livings of Llanwnda,
+Tenby, and Angle, and afterwards the prebend of Mathry, in
+Pembrokeshire, and the living of Chesterton in Oxfordshire.&nbsp;
+He was also prebendary of Hereford, canon of St. David&rsquo;s,
+and in 1175, when only twenty-eight years of age, he became
+Archdeacon of Brecon.&nbsp; In the following year Bishop David
+died, and Gerald, together with the other archdeacons of the
+diocese, was nominated by the chapter for the king&rsquo;s
+choice.&nbsp; <a name="pagexiv"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+xiv</span>But the chapter had been premature, urged, no doubt, by
+the impetuous young Archdeacon of Brecon.&nbsp; They had not
+waited for the king&rsquo;s consent to the nomination.&nbsp; The
+king saw that his settled policy in Wales would be overturned if
+Gerald became Bishop of St. David&rsquo;s.&nbsp; Gerald&rsquo;s
+cousin, the Lord Rhys, had been appointed the king&rsquo;s
+justiciar in South Wales.&nbsp; The power of the Lord Marches was
+to be kept in check by a quasi-alliance between the Welsh prince
+and his over-lord.&nbsp; The election of Gerald to the greatest
+see in Wales would upset the balance of power.&nbsp; David
+Fitz-Gerald, good easy man (<i>vir su&acirc; sorte contentus</i>
+is Gerald&rsquo;s description of him), the king could tolerate,
+but he could not contemplate without uneasiness the combination
+of spiritual and political power in South Wales in the hands of
+two able, ambitious, and energetic kinsmen, such as he knew
+Gerald and the Lord Rhys to be.&nbsp; Gerald had made no secret
+of his admiration for the martyred St. Thomas &agrave;
+Becket.&nbsp; He fashioned himself upon him as Becket did on
+Anselm.&nbsp; The part which Becket played in England he would
+like to play in Wales.&nbsp; But the sovereign who had destroyed
+Becket was not to be frightened by the canons of St.
+David&rsquo;s and the Archdeacon of Brecon.&nbsp; He summoned the
+chapter to Westminster, and compelled them in his presence to
+elect Peter de Leia, the Prior of Wenlock, who erected for
+himself an imperishable monument in the noble cathedral which
+looks as if it had sprung up from the rocks which guard the city
+of Dewi Sant from the inrush of the western sea.</p>
+<p>It is needless to recount the many activities in which Gerald
+engaged during the next twenty-two years.&nbsp; They have been
+recounted with humorous and affectionate appreciation by Dr.
+Henry Owen in his monograph on &ldquo;Gerald the Welshman,&rdquo;
+a little masterpiece of biography which deserves to be better
+known. <a name="citation0d"></a><a href="#footnote0d"
+class="citation">[0d]</a>&nbsp; In <a name="pagexv"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. xv</span>1183 Gerald was employed by the
+astute king to settle terms between him and the rebellious Lord
+Rhys.&nbsp; Nominally as a reward for his successful diplomacy,
+but probably in order to keep so dangerous a character away from
+the turbulent land of Wales, Gerald was in the following year
+made a Court chaplain.&nbsp; In 1185 he was commissioned by the
+king to accompany Prince John, then a lad of eighteen, who had
+lately been created &ldquo;Lord of Ireland,&rdquo; to the city of
+Dublin.&nbsp; There he abode for two years, collecting materials
+for his two first books, the &ldquo;Topography&rdquo; and the
+&ldquo;Conquest of Ireland.&rdquo;&nbsp; In 1188 he accompanied
+Archbishop Baldwin through Wales to preach the Third
+Crusade&mdash;not the first or the last inconsistency of which
+the champion of the independence of the Welsh Church was
+guilty.&nbsp; His &ldquo;Itinerary through Wales&rdquo; is the
+record of the expedition.&nbsp; King Richard offered him the
+Bishopric of Bangor, and John, in his brother&rsquo;s absence,
+offered him that of Llandaff.&nbsp; But his heart was set on St.
+David&rsquo;s.&nbsp; In 1198 his great chance came to him.&nbsp;
+At last, after twenty-two years of misrule, Peter de Leia was
+dead, and Gerald seemed certain of attaining his heart&rsquo;s
+desire.&nbsp; Once again the chapter nominated Gerald; once more
+the royal authority was exerted, this time by Archbishop Hubert,
+the justiciar in the king&rsquo;s absence, to defeat the
+ambitious Welshman.&nbsp; The chapter decided to send a
+deputation to King Richard in Normandy.&nbsp; The deputation
+arrived at Chinon to find Coeur-de-Lion dead; but John was
+anxious to make friends everywhere, in order to secure himself on
+his uncertain throne.&nbsp; He received the deputation
+graciously, he spoke in praise of Gerald, and he agreed to accept
+the nomination.&nbsp; But after his return to England John
+changed his mind.&nbsp; He found that no danger threatened him in
+his island kingdom, and he saw the wisdom of the
+justiciar&rsquo;s policy.&nbsp; Gerald hurried to see him, but
+John point blank refused publicly to ratify his consent to the
+nomination which he had already given <a name="pagexvi"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. xvi</span>in private.&nbsp; Then commenced the
+historic fight for St. David&rsquo;s which, in view of the still
+active &ldquo;Church question&rdquo; in Wales, is even now
+invested with a living interest and significance.&nbsp; Gerald
+contended that the Welsh Church was independent of Canterbury,
+and that it was only recently, since the Norman Conquest, that
+she had been deprived of her freedom.&nbsp; His opponents relied
+on political, rather than historical, considerations to defeat
+this bold claim.&nbsp; King Henry, when a deputation from the
+chapter in 1175 appeared before the great council in London and
+had urged the metropolitan claims of St. David&rsquo;s upon the
+Cardinal Legate, exclaimed that he had no intention of giving
+this head to rebellion in Wales.&nbsp; Archbishop Hubert, more of
+a statesman than an ecclesiastic, based his opposition on similar
+grounds.&nbsp; He explained his reasons bluntly to the
+Pope.&nbsp; &ldquo;Unless the barbarity of this fierce and
+lawless people can be restrained by ecclesiastical censures
+through the see of Canterbury, to which province they are subject
+by law, they will be for ever rising in arms against the king, to
+the disquiet of the whole realm of England.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Gerald&rsquo;s answer to this was complete, except from the point
+of view of political expediency.&nbsp; &ldquo;What can be more
+unjust than that this people of ancient faith, because they
+answer force by force in defence of their lives, their lands, and
+their liberties, should be forthwith separated from the body
+corporate of Christendom, and delivered over to Satan?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The story of the long fight between Gerald on the one hand and
+the whole forces of secular and ecclesiastical authority on the
+other cannot be told here.&nbsp; Three times did he visit Rome to
+prosecute his appeal&mdash;alone against the world.&nbsp; He had
+to journey through districts disturbed by wars, infested with the
+king&rsquo;s men or the king&rsquo;s enemies, all of whom
+regarded Gerald with hostility.&nbsp; He was taken and thrown
+into prison as King John&rsquo;s subject in one town, he was
+detained by <a name="pagexvii"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+xvii</span>importunate creditors in another, and at Rome he was
+betrayed by a countryman whom he had befriended.&nbsp; He himself
+has told us</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of
+the most disastrous chances<br />
+Of moving accidents by flood and field,</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>which made a journey from St. David&rsquo;s to Rome a more
+perilous adventure in those unquiet days than an expedition
+&ldquo;through darkest Africa&rdquo; is in ours.&nbsp; At last
+the very Chapter of St. David&rsquo;s, for whose ancient rights
+he was contending, basely deserted him.&nbsp; &ldquo;The laity of
+Wales stood by me,&rdquo; so he wrote in later days, &ldquo;but
+of the clergy whose battle I was fighting scarce
+one.&rdquo;&nbsp; Pope Innocent III. was far too wary a
+politician to favour the claims of a small and distracted nation,
+already half-subjugated, against the king of a rich and powerful
+country.&nbsp; He flattered our poor Gerald, he delighted in his
+company, he accepted, and perhaps even read, his books.&nbsp; But
+in the end, after five years&rsquo; incessant fighting, the
+decision went against him, and the English king&rsquo;s nominee
+has ever since sat on the throne of St. David&rsquo;s.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Many and great wars,&rdquo; said Gwenwynwyn, the Prince of
+Powis, &ldquo;have we Welshmen waged with England, but none so
+great and fierce as his who fought the king and the archbishop,
+and withstood the might of the whole clergy and people of
+England, for the honour of Wales.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Short was the memory and scant the gratitude of his
+countrymen.&nbsp; When in 1214 another vacancy occurred at a time
+when King John was at variance with his barons and his prelates,
+the Chapter of St. David&rsquo;s nominated, not Gerald, their old
+champion, but Iorwerth, the Abbot of Talley, from whose reforming
+zeal they had nothing to fear.&nbsp; This last prick of
+Fortune&rsquo;s sword pierced Gerald to the quick.&nbsp; He had
+for years been gradually withdrawing from an active life.&nbsp;
+He had resigned his archdeaconry and his prebend stall, he had
+made a fourth pilgrimage, this time for his soul&rsquo;s <a
+name="pagexviii"></a><span class="pagenum">p. xviii</span>sake,
+to Rome, he had retired to a quiet pursuit of letters probably at
+Lincoln, and henceforward, till his death about the year 1223, he
+devoted himself to revising and embellishing his old works, and
+completing his literary labours.&nbsp; By his fight for St.
+David&rsquo;s he had endeared himself to the laity of his country
+for all time.&nbsp; The saying of Llewelyn the Great was
+prophetic.&nbsp; &ldquo;So long as Wales shall stand by the
+writings of the chroniclers and by the songs of the bards shall
+his noble deed be praised throughout all time.&rdquo;&nbsp; The
+prophecy has not yet been verified.&nbsp; Welsh chroniclers have
+made but scanty references to Gerald; no bard has ever yet sung
+an <i>Awdl</i> or a <i>Pryddest</i> in honour of him who fought
+for the &ldquo;honour of Wales.&rdquo;&nbsp; His countrymen have
+forgotten Gerald the Welshman.&nbsp; It has been left to Sir
+Richard Colt Hoare, Foster, Professor Brewer, Dimmock, and
+Professor Freeman to edit his works.&nbsp; Only two of his
+countrymen have attempted to rescue one of the greatest of
+Welshmen from an undeserved oblivion.&nbsp; In 1585, when the
+Renaissance of Letters had begun to rouse the dormant powers of
+the Cymry, Dr. David Powel edited in Latin a garbled version of
+the &ldquo;Itinerary&rdquo; and &ldquo;Description of
+Wales,&rdquo; and gave a short and inaccurate account of
+Gerald&rsquo;s life.&nbsp; In 1889 Dr. Henry Owen published,
+&ldquo;at his own proper charges,&rdquo; the first adequate
+account by a Welshman of the life and labours of Giraldus
+Cambrensis.&nbsp; When his monument is erected in the cathedral
+which was built by his hated rival, the epitaph which he composed
+for himself may well be inscribed upon it&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>Cambria Giraldus genuit, sic Cambria mentem<br />
+Erudiit, cineres cui lapis iste tegit.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>And by that time perhaps some competent scholar will have
+translated some at least of Gerald&rsquo;s works into the
+language best understood by the people of Wales.</p>
+<p>It would be impossible to exaggerate the enormous services
+which three great Welshmen of the twelfth <a
+name="pagexix"></a><span class="pagenum">p. xix</span>century
+rendered to England and to the world&mdash;such services as we
+may securely hope will be emulated by Welshmen of the next
+generation, now that we have lived to witness what Mr. Theodore
+Watts-Dunton has called &ldquo;the great recrudescence of Cymric
+energy.&rdquo; <a name="citation0e"></a><a href="#footnote0e"
+class="citation">[0e]</a>&nbsp; The romantic literature of
+England owes its origin to Geoffrey of Monmouth; <a
+name="citation0f"></a><a href="#footnote0f"
+class="citation">[0f]</a> Sir Galahad, the stainless knight, the
+mirror of Christian chivalry, as well as the nobler portions of
+the Arthurian romance, were the creation of Walter Map, the
+friend and &ldquo;gossip&rdquo; of Gerald; <a
+name="citation0g"></a><a href="#footnote0g"
+class="citation">[0g]</a> and John Richard Green has truly called
+Gerald himself &ldquo;the father of popular literature.&rdquo; <a
+name="citation0h"></a><a href="#footnote0h"
+class="citation">[0h]</a>&nbsp; He began to write when he was
+only twenty; he continued to write till he was past the allotted
+span of life.&nbsp; He is the most &ldquo;modern&rdquo; as well
+as the most voluminous of all the medi&aelig;val writers.&nbsp;
+Of all English writers, Miss Kate Norgate <a
+name="citation0i"></a><a href="#footnote0i"
+class="citation">[0i]</a> has perhaps most justly estimated the
+real place of Gerald in English letters.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Gerald&rsquo;s wide range of subjects,&rdquo; she says,
+&ldquo;is only less remarkable than the ease and freedom with
+which he treats them.&nbsp; Whatever he touches&mdash;history,
+arch&aelig;ology, geography, natural science, politics, the
+social life and thought of the day, the physical peculiarities of
+Ireland and the manners and customs of its people, the
+picturesque scenery and traditions of his own native land, the
+scandals of the court and the cloister, the petty struggle for
+the primacy of Wales, and the great tragedy of the fall of the
+Angevin Empire&mdash;is all alike dealt with in the bold,
+dashing, offhand <a name="pagexx"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+xx</span>style of a modern newspaper or magazine article.&nbsp;
+His first important work, the &lsquo;Topography of
+Ireland,&rsquo; is, with due allowance for the difference between
+the tastes of the twelfth century and those of the nineteenth,
+just such a series of sketches as a special correspondent in our
+own day might send from some newly-colonised island in the
+Pacific to satisfy or whet the curiosity of his readers at
+home.&rdquo;&nbsp; The description aptly applies to all that
+Gerald wrote.&nbsp; If not a historian, he was at least a great
+<a name="pagexxi"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+xxi</span>journalist.&nbsp; His descriptions of Ireland have been
+subjected to much hostile criticism from the day they were
+written to our own times.&nbsp; They were assailed at the time,
+as Gerald himself tells us, for their unconventionality, for
+their departure from established custom, for the freedom and
+colloquialism of their style, for the audacity of their stories,
+and for the writer&rsquo;s daring in venturing to treat the
+manners and customs of a barbarous country as worthy the
+attention of the learned and the labours of the historian.&nbsp;
+Irish scholars, from the days of Dr. John Lynch, who published
+his &ldquo;Cambrensis Eversus&rdquo; in 1622, have unanimously
+denounced the work of the sensational journalist, born out of due
+time.&nbsp; His Irish books are confessedly partisan; the
+&ldquo;Conquest of Ireland&rdquo; was expressly designed as an
+eulogy of &ldquo;the men of St. David&rsquo;s,&rdquo; the
+writer&rsquo;s own kinsmen.&nbsp; But in spite of partisanship
+and prejudice, they must be regarded as a serious and valuable
+addition to our knowledge of the state of Ireland at the latter
+end of the twelfth century.&nbsp; Indeed, Professor Brewer does
+not hesitate to say that &ldquo;to his industry we are
+exclusively indebted for all that is known of the state of
+Ireland during the whole of the Middle Ages,&rdquo; and as to the
+&ldquo;Topography,&rdquo; Gerald &ldquo;must take rank with the
+first who descried the value and in some respects the limits of
+descriptive geography.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When he came to deal with the affairs of state on a larger
+stage, his methods were still that of the modern
+journalist.&nbsp; He was always an impressionist, a writer of
+personal sketches.&nbsp; His character sketches of the
+Plantagenet princes&mdash;of King Henry with his large round head
+and fat round belly, his fierce eyes, his tigerish temper, his
+learning, his licentiousness, his duplicity, and of Eleanor of
+Aquitaine, his vixenish and revengeful wife, the murderess of
+&ldquo;Fair Rosamond&rdquo; (who must have been known to Gerald,
+being the daughter of Walter of Clifford-on-the-Wye), and of the
+fierce brood that they reared&mdash;are of extraordinary
+interest.&nbsp; His impressions of the men and events of his
+time, his fund of anecdotes and <i>bon mots</i>, his references
+to trivial matters, which more dignified writers would never
+deign to mention, his sprightly and sometimes malicious gossip,
+invest his period with a reality which the greatest of
+fiction-writers has failed to rival.&nbsp; Gerald lived in the
+days of chivalry, days which have been crowned with a halo of
+deathless romance by the author of &ldquo;Ivanhoe&rdquo; and the
+&ldquo;Talisman.&rdquo;&nbsp; He knew and was intimate with all
+the great actors of the time.&nbsp; He had lived in the Paris of
+St. Louis and Philip Augustus, and was never tired of exalting
+the House of Capet over the tyrannical and bloodthirsty House of
+Anjou.&nbsp; He had no love of England, for her Plantagenet kings
+or her Saxon serfs.&nbsp; During the French invasion in the time
+of King John his sympathies were openly with the Dauphin as
+against the &ldquo;brood of vipers,&rdquo; who were equally alien
+to English soil.&nbsp; For the Saxon, indeed, he felt the twofold
+hatred of Welshman and Norman.&nbsp; One of his opponents is
+denounced to the Pope as an &ldquo;untriwe Sax,&rdquo; and the
+Saxons are described as the slaves of the Normans, the mere
+hewers of wood and drawers of water for their conquerors.&nbsp;
+He met Innocent III., the greatest of Popes, in familiar
+converse, he jested and gossiped with him in slippered ease, he
+made him laugh at his endless stories of the glory of Wales, the
+iniquities of the Angevins, and the bad Latin of Archbishop
+Walter.&nbsp; He <a name="pagexxii"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+xxii</span>knew Richard C&oelig;ur-de-Lion, the flower of
+chivalry, and saw him as he was and &ldquo;not through a glass
+darkly.&rdquo;&nbsp; He knew John, the cleverest and basest of
+his house.&nbsp; He knew and loved Stephen Langton, the precursor
+of a long line of statesmen who have made English liberty
+broad&mdash;based upon the people&rsquo;s will.&nbsp; He was a
+friend of St. Hugh of Lincoln, the sweetest and purest spirit in
+the Anglican Church of the Middle Ages, the one man who could
+disarm the wrath of the fierce king with a smile; and he was the
+friend and patron of Robert Grosstete, afterwards the great
+Bishop of Lincoln.&nbsp; He lived much in company with Ranulph de
+Glanville, the first English jurist, and he has
+&ldquo;Boswellised&rdquo; some of his conversations with
+him.&nbsp; He was intimate with Archbishop Baldwin, the saintly
+prelate who laid down his life in the Third Crusade on the
+burning plains of Palestine, heart-broken at the unbridled
+wickedness of the soldiers of the Cross.&nbsp; He was the near
+kinsman and confidant of the Cambro-Normans, who, landing in
+Leinster in 1165, effected what may be described as the first
+conquest of Ireland.&nbsp; There was scarcely a man of note in
+his day whom he had not seen and conversed with, or of whom he
+does not relate some piquant story.&nbsp; He had travelled much,
+and had observed closely.&nbsp; Probably the most valuable of all
+his works, from the strictly historical point of view, are the
+&ldquo;Itinerary&rdquo; and &ldquo;Description of Wales,&rdquo;
+which are reprinted in the present volume. <a
+name="citation0j"></a><a href="#footnote0j"
+class="citation">[0j]</a>&nbsp; Here he is impartial in his
+evidence, and judicial in his decisions.&nbsp; If he errs at all,
+it is not through racial prejudice.&nbsp; &ldquo;I am
+sprung,&rdquo; he once told the Pope in a letter, &ldquo;from the
+princes of Wales and from the barons of the Marches, and when I
+see injustice in either race, I hate it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The text is that of Sir Richard Colt Hoare, who published an
+English translation, chiefly from the texts of Camden and
+Wharton, in 1806.&nbsp; The valuable historical notes have been
+curtailed, as being too elaborate for <a
+name="pagexxiii"></a><span class="pagenum">p. xxiii</span>such a
+volume as this, and a few notes have been added by the present
+editor.&nbsp; These will be found within brackets.&nbsp;
+Hoare&rsquo;s translation, and also translations (edited by Mr.
+Foster) of the Irish books have been published in Bohn&rsquo;s
+Antiquarian Library.</p>
+<p>The first of the seven volumes of the Latin text of Gerald,
+published in the Rolls Series, appeared in 1861.&nbsp; The first
+four volumes were edited by Professor Brewer; the next two by Mr.
+Dimmock; and the seventh by Professor Freeman.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">W. LLEWELYN WILLIAMS.</p>
+<p><i>January</i> 1908.</p>
+
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p>The following is a list of the more important of the works of
+Gerald:&mdash;</p>
+<p class="gutindent">Topographia Hibernica, Expugnatio Hibernica,
+Itinerarium Kambri&aelig;, Descriptio Kambri&aelig;, Gemma
+Ecclesiastica, Libellus Invectionum, De Rebus a se Gestis,
+Dialogus de jure et statu Menevensis Ecclesi&aelig;, De
+Instructione Principum, De Legendis Sanctorum, Symbolum
+Electorum.</p>
+<h2><a name="page3"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 3</span>FIRST
+PREFACE<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">TO STEPHEN LANGTON, ARCHBISHOP OF
+CANTERBURY</span></h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">As</span> the times are affected by the
+changes of circumstances, so are the minds of men influenced by
+different manners and customs.&nbsp; The satirist [Persius]
+exclaims,</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Mille hominum species et mentis discolor
+usus;<br />
+Velle suum cuique est, nec voto vivitur uno.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nature is ever various in her name;<br />
+Each has a different will, and few the same.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The comic poet also says, &ldquo;<i>Quot capita tot
+sententi&aelig;</i>, <i>suus cuique mos est</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+&ldquo;As many men, so many minds, each has his way.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Young soldiers exult in war, and pleaders delight in the gown;
+others aspire after riches, and think them the supreme
+good.&nbsp; Some approve Galen, some Justinian.&nbsp; Those who
+are desirous of honours follow the court, and from their
+ambitious pursuits meet with more mortification than
+satisfaction.&nbsp; Some, indeed, but very few, take pleasure in
+the liberal arts, amongst whom we cannot but admire logicians,
+who, when they have made only a trifling progress, are as much
+enchanted with the images of Dialectics, as if they were
+listening to the songs of the Syrens.</p>
+<p>But among so many species of men, where are to be found divine
+poets?&nbsp; Where the noble assertors of morals?&nbsp; Where the
+masters of the Latin tongue?&nbsp; Who in the present times
+displays lettered eloquence, either in history or poetry?&nbsp;
+Who, I say, in our own age, either builds a system of ethics, or
+consigns illustrious <a name="page4"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+4</span>actions to immortality?&nbsp; Literary fame, which used
+to be placed in the highest rank, is now, because of the
+depravity of the times, tending to ruin and degraded to the
+lowest, so that persons attached to study are at present not only
+not imitated nor venerated, but even detested.&nbsp; &ldquo;Happy
+indeed would be the arts,&rdquo; observes Fabius, &ldquo;if
+artists alone judged of the arts;&rdquo; but, as Sydonius says,
+&ldquo;it is a fixed principle in the human mind, that they who
+are ignorant of the arts despise the artist.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But to revert to our subject.&nbsp; Which, I ask, have
+rendered more service to the world, the arms of Marius or the
+verses of Virgil?&nbsp; The sword of Marius has rusted, while the
+fame of him who wrote the &AElig;neid is immortal; and although
+in his time letters were honoured by lettered persons, yet from
+his own pen we find,</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;&mdash;
+&mdash; tantum<br />
+Carmina nostra valent tela inter Martia, quantum<br />
+Chaonias dicunt, aquila veniente, columbas.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Who would hesitate in deciding which are more profitable, the
+works of St. Jerom, or the riches of Cr&oelig;sus? but where now
+shine the gold and silver of Cr&oelig;sus? whilst the world is
+instructed by the example and enlightened by the learning of the
+poor c&oelig;nobite.&nbsp; Yet even he, through envy, suffered
+stripes and contumely at Rome, although his character was so
+illustrious; and at length being driven beyond the seas, found a
+refuge for his studies in the solitude of Bethlehem.&nbsp; Thus
+it appears, that gold and arms may support us in this life, but
+avail nothing after death; and that letters through envy profit
+nothing in this world, but, like a testament, acquire an immortal
+value from the seal of death.</p>
+<p>According to the poet,</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Pascitur in vivis livor, post fata
+quiescit;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Cum suus ex merito quemque tuetur
+honor.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>And also</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Denique si quis adhuc pr&aelig;tendit
+nubila, livor<br />
+Occidet, et meriti post me referentur honores.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><a name="page5"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 5</span>Those who
+by artifice endeavour to acquire or preserve the reputation of
+abilities or ingenuity, while they abound in the words of others,
+have little cause to boast of their own inventions.&nbsp; For the
+composers of that polished language, in which such various cases
+as occur in the great body of law are treated with such an
+appropriate elegance of style, must ever stand forward in the
+first ranks of praise.&nbsp; I should indeed have said, that the
+authors of refined language, not the hearers only, the inventors,
+not the reciters, are most worthy of commendation.&nbsp; You will
+find, however, that the practices of the court and of the schools
+are extremely similar; as well in the subtleties they employ to
+lead you forward, as in the steadiness with which they generally
+maintain their own positions.&nbsp; Yet it is certain that the
+knowledge of logic (the <i>acumen</i>, if I may so express it, of
+all other sciences as well as arts) is very useful, when
+restricted within proper bounds; whilst the court (<i>i.e.</i>
+courtly language), excepting to sycophants or ambitious men, is
+by no means necessary.&nbsp; For if you are successful at court,
+ambition never wholly quits its hold till satiated, and allures
+and draws you still closer; but if your labour is thrown away,
+you still continue the pursuit, and, together with your
+substance, lose your time, the greatest and most irretrievable of
+all losses.&nbsp; There is likewise some resemblance between the
+court and the game of dice, as the poet observes:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Sic ne perdiderit non cessat perdere
+lusor,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Dum revocat cupidas alea blanda
+manus;&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>which, by substituting the word <i>curia</i> for <i>alea</i>,
+may be applied to the court.&nbsp; This further proof of their
+resemblance may be added; that as the chances of the dice and
+court are not productive of any real delight, so they are equally
+distributed to the worthy and the unworthy.</p>
+<p>Since, therefore, among so many species of men, each follows
+his own inclination, and each is actuated by different desires, a
+regard for posterity has induced me <a name="page6"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 6</span>to choose the study of composition;
+and, as this life is temporary and mutable, it is grateful to
+live in the memory of future ages, and to be immortalized by
+fame; for to toil after that which produces envy in life, but
+glory after death, is a sure indication of an elevated
+mind.&nbsp; Poets and authors indeed aspire after immortality,
+but do not reject any present advantages that may offer.</p>
+<p>I formerly completed with vain and fruitless labour the
+Topography of Ireland for its companion, the king Henry the
+Second, and Vaticinal History, for Richard of Poitiou, his son,
+and, I wish I were not compelled to add, his successor in vice;
+princes little skilled in letters, and much engaged in
+business.&nbsp; To you, illustrious Stephen, archbishop of
+Canterbury, equally commendable for your learning and religion, I
+now dedicate the account of our meritorious journey through the
+rugged provinces of Cambria, written in a scholastic style, and
+divided into two parts.&nbsp; For as virtue loves itself, and
+detests what is contrary to it, so I hope you will consider
+whatever I may have written in commendation of your late
+venerable and eminent predecessor, with no less affection than if
+it related to yourself.&nbsp; To you also, when completed, I
+destine my treatise on the Instruction of a Prince, if, amidst
+your religious and worldly occupations, you can find leisure for
+the perusal of it.&nbsp; For I purpose to submit these and other
+fruits of my diligence to be tasted by you at your discretion,
+each in its proper order; hoping that, if my larger undertakings
+do not excite your interest, my smaller works may at least merit
+your approbation, conciliate your favour, and call forth my
+gratitude towards you; who, unmindful of worldly affections, do
+not partially distribute your bounties to your family and
+friends, but to letters and merit; you, who, in the midst of such
+great and unceasing contests between the crown and the
+priesthood, stand forth almost singly the firm and faithful
+friend of the British church; you, who, almost the only one duly
+elected, fulfil the scriptural designation of the episcopal
+character.&nbsp; It is not, however, <a name="page7"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 7</span>by bearing a cap, by placing a
+cushion, by shielding off the rain, or by wiping the dust, even
+if there should be none, in the midst of a herd of flatterers,
+that I attempt to conciliate your favour, but by my
+writings.&nbsp; To you, therefore, rare, noble, and illustrious
+man, on whom nature and art have showered down whatever becomes
+your supereminent situation, I dedicate my works; but if I fail
+in this mode of conciliating your favour, and if your prayers and
+avocations should not allow you sufficient time to read them, I
+shall consider the honour of letters as vanished, and in hope of
+its revival I shall inscribe my writings to posterity.</p>
+<h2><a name="page8"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 8</span>SECOND
+PREFACE<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">TO THE SAME PRELATE</span></h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">Since</span> those things, which are known
+to have been done through a laudable devotion, are not unworthily
+extolled with due praises; and since the mind, when relaxed,
+loses its energy, and the torpor of sloth enervates the
+understanding, as iron acquires rust for want of use, and
+stagnant waters become foul; lest my pen should be injured by the
+rust of idleness, I have thought good to commit to writing the
+devout visitation which Baldwin, archbishop of Canterbury, made
+throughout Wales; and to hand down, as it were in a mirror,
+through you, O illustrious Stephen, to posterity, the difficult
+places through which we passed, the names of springs and
+torrents, the witty sayings, the toils and incidents of the
+journey, the memorable events of ancient and modern times, and
+the natural history and description of the country; lest my study
+should perish through idleness, or the praise of these things be
+lost by silence.</p>
+<h2><a name="page9"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+9</span>CONTENTS</h2>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="3"><p style="text-align: center">BOOK I</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">CHAPTER</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p>&nbsp;</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">PAGE</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">I.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Journey through Hereford and Radnor</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page11">11</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">II.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Journey through Hay and Brecheinia</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page18">18</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">III.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Ewyas and Llanthoni</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page34">34</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">IV.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>The Journey by Coed Grono and Abergevenni</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page44">44</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">V.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Of the Progress by the Castle of Usk and the Town of
+Caerleon</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page50">50</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">VI.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Newport and Caerdyf</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page56">56</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">VII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>The See of Landaf and Monastery of Margan, and the
+Remarkable Things in those Parts</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page61">61</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">VIII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Passage of the Rivers Avon and Neth&mdash;and of Abertawe
+and Goer</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page65">65</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">IX.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Passage over the Rivers Lochor and Wendraeth; and of
+Cydweli</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page71">71</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">X.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Tywy River&mdash;Caermardyn&mdash;Monastery of
+Albelande</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page73">73</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XI.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Of Haverford and Ros</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page76">76</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Of Penbroch</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page82">82</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XIII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Of the Progress by Camros and Niwegal</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page91">91</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="3"><p style="text-align: center">BOOK II</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">I.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Of the See of Saint David&rsquo;s</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page95">95</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">II.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Of the Journey by Cemmeis&mdash;the Monastery of St.
+Dogmael</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page102">102</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">III.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Of the River Teivi&mdash;Cardigan, and Emelyn</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page105">105</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">IV.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Of the Journey by Pont Stephen, the Abbey of Stratflur,
+Landewi Brevi, and Lhanpadarn Vawr</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page109">109</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><a name="page10"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 10</span>V.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Of the River Devi, and the Land of the Sons of Conan</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page113">113</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">VI.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Passage of traeth mawr and traeth bachan, and of nevyn,
+carnarvon, and bangor</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page115">115</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">VII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>The island of mona</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page118">118</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">VIII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Passage of the river conwy in a boat, and of dinas
+emrys</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page125">125</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">IX.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Of the mountains of eryri</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page127">127</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">X.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Of the passage by deganwy and ruthlan, and the see of
+lanelwy, and of coleshulle</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page128">128</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XI.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Of the passage of the river dee, and of chester</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page131">131</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Of the journey by the white monastery, oswaldestree,
+powys, and shrewsbury</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page133">133</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XIII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>Of the journey by wenloch, brumfeld, the castle of ludlow,
+and leominster, to hereford</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page137">137</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XIV.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>A description of baldwin, archbishop of canterbury</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page139">139</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<h2><a name="page11"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 11</span>THE
+ITINERARY THROUGH WALES<br />
+BOOK I</h2>
+<h3>CHAPTER I<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">JOURNEY THROUGH HEREFORD AND
+RADNOR</span></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">In</span> the year 1188 from the
+incarnation of our Lord, Urban the Third <a
+name="citation11"></a><a href="#footnote11"
+class="citation">[11]</a> being the head of the apostolic see;
+Frederick, emperor of Germany and king of the Romans; Isaac,
+emperor of Constantinople; Philip, the son of Louis, reigning in
+France; Henry the Second in England; William in Sicily; Bela in
+Hungary; and Guy in Palestine: in that very year, when Saladin,
+prince of the Egyptians and Damascenes, by a signal victory
+gained possession of the kingdom of Jerusalem; Baldwin,
+archbishop <a name="page12"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+12</span>of Canterbury, a venerable man, distinguished for his
+learning and sanctity, journeying from England for the service of
+the holy cross, entered Wales near the borders of
+Herefordshire.</p>
+<p>The archbishop proceeded to Radnor, <a
+name="citation12a"></a><a href="#footnote12a"
+class="citation">[12a]</a> on Ash Wednesday (<i>Caput
+Jejunii</i>), accompanied by Ranulph de Glanville, privy
+counsellor and justiciary of the whole kingdom, and there met
+Rhys, <a name="citation12b"></a><a href="#footnote12b"
+class="citation">[12b]</a> son of Gruffydd, prince of South
+Wales, and many other noble personages of those parts; where a
+sermon being preached by the archbishop, upon the subject of the
+Crusades, and explained to the Welsh by an interpreter, the
+author of this Itinerary, impelled by the urgent importunity and
+promises of the king, and the persuasions of the archbishop and
+the justiciary, arose the first, and falling down at the feet of
+the holy man, devoutly took the sign of the cross.&nbsp; His
+example was instantly followed by Peter, bishop of St.
+David&rsquo;s, <a name="citation12c"></a><a href="#footnote12c"
+class="citation">[12c]</a> a monk of the abbey of Cluny, and then
+by Eineon, son of Eineon Clyd, <a name="citation12d"></a><a
+href="#footnote12d" class="citation">[12d]</a> prince of Elvenia,
+and many other persons.&nbsp; Eineon rising up, said to Rhys,
+whose daughter he had married, &ldquo;My father and lord! with
+your permission I hasten to revenge the injury offered to the
+great father of all.&rdquo;&nbsp; Rhys himself was so fully
+determined upon the holy <a name="page13"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 13</span>peregrination, as soon as the
+archbishop should enter his territories on his return, that for
+nearly fifteen days he was employed with great solicitude in
+making the necessary preparations for so distant a journey; till
+his wife, and, according to the common vicious licence of the
+country, his relation in the fourth degree, Guendolena,
+(Gwenllian), daughter of Madoc, prince of Powys, by female
+artifices diverted him wholly from his noble purpose; since, as
+Solomon says, &ldquo;A man&rsquo;s heart deviseth his way, but
+the Lord directeth his steps.&rdquo;&nbsp; As Rhys before his
+departure was conversing with his friends concerning the things
+he had heard, a distinguished young man of his family, by name
+Gruffydd, and who afterwards took the cross, is said thus to have
+answered: &ldquo;What man of spirit can refuse to undertake this
+journey, since, amongst all imaginable inconveniences, nothing
+worse can happen to any one than to return.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On the arrival of Rhys in his own territory, certain canons of
+Saint David&rsquo;s, through a zeal for their church, having
+previously secured the interest of some of the prince&rsquo;s
+courtiers, waited on Rhys, and endeavoured by every possible
+suggestion to induce him not to permit the archbishop to proceed
+into the interior parts of Wales, and particularly to the
+metropolitan see of Saint David&rsquo;s (a thing hitherto unheard
+of), at the same time asserting that if he should continue his
+intended journey, the church would in future experience great
+prejudice, and with difficulty would recover its ancient dignity
+and honour.&nbsp; Although these pleas were most strenuously
+urged, the natural kindness and civility of the prince would not
+suffer them to prevail, lest by prohibiting the
+archbishop&rsquo;s progress, he might appear to wound his
+feelings.</p>
+<p>Early on the following morning, after the celebration of mass,
+and the return of Ranulph de Glanville to England, we came to
+Cruker Castle, <a name="citation13"></a><a href="#footnote13"
+class="citation">[13]</a> two miles distant from <a
+name="page14"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 14</span>Radnor, where
+a strong and valiant youth named Hector, conversing with the
+archbishop about taking the cross, said, &ldquo;If I had the
+means of getting provisions for one day, and of keeping fast on
+the next, I would comply with your advice;&rdquo; on the
+following day, however, he took the cross.&nbsp; The same
+evening, Malgo, son of Cadwallon, prince of Melenia, after a
+short but efficacious exhortation from the archbishop, and not
+without the tears and lamentations of his friends, was marked
+with the sign of the cross.</p>
+<p>But here it is proper to mention what happened during the
+reign of king Henry the First to the lord of the castle of
+Radnor, in the adjoining territory of Builth, <a
+name="citation14a"></a><a href="#footnote14a"
+class="citation">[14a]</a> who had entered the church of Saint
+Avan (which is called in the British language Llan Avan), <a
+name="citation14b"></a><a href="#footnote14b"
+class="citation">[14b]</a> and, without sufficient caution or
+reverence, had passed the night there with his hounds.&nbsp;
+Arising early in the morning, according to the custom of hunters,
+he found his hounds mad, and himself struck blind.&nbsp; After a
+long, dark, and tedious existence, he was conveyed to Jerusalem,
+happily taking care that his inward sight should not in a similar
+manner be extinguished; and there being accoutred, and led to the
+field of battle on horseback, he made a spirited attack upon the
+enemies of the faith, and, being mortally wounded, closed his
+life with honour.</p>
+<p>Another circumstance which happened in these our days, in the
+province of Warthrenion, <a name="citation14c"></a><a
+href="#footnote14c" class="citation">[14c]</a> distant from <a
+name="page15"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 15</span>hence only a
+few furlongs, is not unworthy of notice.&nbsp; Eineon, lord of
+that district, and son-in-law to prince Rhys, who was much
+addicted to the chase, having on a certain day forced the wild
+beasts from their coverts, one of his attendants killed a hind
+with an arrow, as she was springing forth from the wood, which,
+contrary to the nature of her sex, was found to bear horns of
+twelve years&rsquo; growth, and was much fatter than a stag, in
+the haunches as well as in every other part.&nbsp; On account of
+the singularity of this circumstance, the head and horns of this
+strange animal were destined as a present to king Henry the
+Second.&nbsp; This event is the more remarkable, as the man who
+shot the hind suddenly lost the use of his right eye, and being
+at the same time seized with a paralytic complaint, remained in a
+weak and impotent state until the time of his death.</p>
+<p>In this same province of Warthrenion, and in the church of
+Saint Germanus, <a name="citation15a"></a><a href="#footnote15a"
+class="citation">[15a]</a> there is a staff of Saint Cyric, <a
+name="citation15b"></a><a href="#footnote15b"
+class="citation">[15b]</a> covered on all sides with gold and
+silver, and resembling in its upper part the form of a cross; its
+efficacy has been proved in many cases, but particularly in the
+removal of glandular and strumous swellings; insomuch that all
+persons <a name="page16"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+16</span>afflicted with these complaints, on a devout application
+to the staff, with the oblation of one penny, are restored to
+health.&nbsp; But it happened in these our days, that a strumous
+patient on presenting one halfpenny to the staff, the humour
+subsided only in the middle; but when the oblation was completed
+by the other halfpenny, an entire cure was accomplished.&nbsp;
+Another person also coming to the staff with the promise of a
+penny, was cured; but not fulfilling his engagement on the day
+appointed, he relapsed into his former disorder; in order,
+however, to obtain pardon for his offence, he tripled the
+offering by presenting three-pence, and thus obtained a complete
+cure.</p>
+<p>At Elevein, in the church of Glascum, <a
+name="citation16a"></a><a href="#footnote16a"
+class="citation">[16a]</a> is a portable bell, endowed with great
+virtues, called Bangu, <a name="citation16b"></a><a
+href="#footnote16b" class="citation">[16b]</a> and said to have
+belonged to Saint David.&nbsp; A certain woman secretly conveyed
+this bell to her husband, who was confined in the castle of
+Raidergwy, <a name="citation16c"></a><a href="#footnote16c"
+class="citation">[16c]</a> near Warthrenion, (which Rhys, son of
+Gruffydd, had lately built) for the purpose of his
+deliverance.&nbsp; The keepers of the castle not only refused to
+liberate him for this consideration, but seized and detained the
+bell; and in the same night, by divine vengeance, the whole town,
+except the wall on which the bell hung, was consumed by fire.</p>
+<p>The church of Luel, <a name="citation16d"></a><a
+href="#footnote16d" class="citation">[16d]</a> in the
+neighbourhood of Brecheinoc <a name="page17"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 17</span>(<i>Brechinia</i>), was burned, also
+in our time, by the enemy, and everything destroyed, except one
+small box, in which the consecrated host was deposited.</p>
+<p>It came to pass also in the province of Elvenia, which is
+separated from Hay by the river Wye, in the night in which king
+Henry I. expired, that two pools <a name="citation17"></a><a
+href="#footnote17" class="citation">[17]</a> of no small extent,
+the one natural, the other artificial, suddenly burst their
+bounds; the latter, by its precipitate course down the
+declivities, emptied itself; but the former, with its fish and
+contents, obtained a permanent situation in a valley about two
+miles distant.&nbsp; In Normandy, a few days before the death of
+Henry II., the fish of a certain pool near Seez, five miles from
+the castle of Exme, fought during the night so furiously with
+each other, both in the water and out of it, that the
+neighbouring people were attracted by the noise to the spot; and
+so desperate was the conflict, that scarcely a fish was found
+alive in the morning; thus, by a wonderful and unheard-of
+prognostic, foretelling the death of one by that of many.</p>
+<p>But the borders of Wales sufficiently remember and abhor the
+great and enormous excesses which, from ambitious usurpation of
+territory, have arisen amongst brothers and relations in the
+districts of Melenyth, Elvein, and Warthrenion, situated between
+the Wye and the Severn.</p>
+<h2><a name="page18"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+18</span>CHAPTER II<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">JOURNEY THROUGH HAY AND
+BRECHEINIA</span></h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">Having</span> crossed the river Wye, we
+proceeded towards Brecheinoc, and on preaching a sermon at Hay,
+<a name="citation18a"></a><a href="#footnote18a"
+class="citation">[18a]</a> we observed some amongst the
+multitude, who were to be signed with the cross (leaving their
+garments in the hands of their friends or wives, who endeavoured
+to keep them back), fly for refuge to the archbishop in the
+castle.&nbsp; Early in the morning we began our journey to
+Aberhodni, and the word of the Lord being preached at Landeu, <a
+name="citation18b"></a><a href="#footnote18b"
+class="citation">[18b]</a> we there spent the night.&nbsp; The
+castle and chief town of the province, situated where the river
+Hodni joins the river Usk, is called Aberhodni; <a
+name="citation18c"></a><a href="#footnote18c"
+class="citation">[18c]</a> and every place where one river falls
+into another is called Aber in the British tongue.&nbsp; Landeu
+signifies the church of God.&nbsp; <a name="page19"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 19</span>The archdeacon of that place
+(Giraldus) presented to the archbishop his work on the Topography
+of Ireland, which he graciously received, and either read or
+heard a part of it read attentively every day during his journey;
+and on his return to England completed the perusal of it.</p>
+<p>I have determined not to omit mentioning those occurrences
+worthy of note which happened in these parts in our days.&nbsp;
+It came to pass before that great war, in which nearly all this
+province was destroyed by the sons of Jestin, <a
+name="citation19a"></a><a href="#footnote19a"
+class="citation">[19a]</a> that the large lake, and the river
+Leveni, <a name="citation19b"></a><a href="#footnote19b"
+class="citation">[19b]</a> which flows from it into the Wye,
+opposite Glasbyry, <a name="citation19c"></a><a
+href="#footnote19c" class="citation">[19c]</a> were tinged with a
+deep green colour.&nbsp; The old people of the country were
+consulted, and answered, that a short time before the great
+desolation <a name="citation19d"></a><a href="#footnote19d"
+class="citation">[19d]</a> caused by Howel, son of Meredyth, the
+water had been coloured in a similar manner.&nbsp; About the same
+time, a chaplain, whose name was Hugo, being engaged to officiate
+at the chapel of Saint Nicholas, in the castle of Aberhodni, saw
+in a dream a venerable man standing near him, and saying,
+&ldquo;Tell thy lord William de Braose, <a
+name="citation19e"></a><a href="#footnote19e"
+class="citation">[19e]</a> who has the audacity <a
+name="page20"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 20</span>to retain the
+property granted to the chapel of Saint Nicholas for charitable
+uses, these words: &lsquo;The public treasury takes away that
+which Christ does not receive; and thou wilt then give to an
+impious soldier, what thou wilt not give to a
+priest.&rsquo;&rdquo;&nbsp; This vision having been repeated
+three times, he went to the archdeacon of the place, at Landeu,
+and related to him what had happened.&nbsp; The archdeacon
+immediately knew them to be the words of Augustine; and shewing
+him that part of his writings where they were found, explained to
+him the case to which they applied.&nbsp; He reproaches persons
+who held back tithes and other ecclesiastical dues; and what he
+there threatens, certainly in a short time befell this withholder
+of them: for in our time we have duly and undoubtedly seen, that
+princes who have usurped ecclesiastical benefices (and
+particularly king Henry the Second, who laboured under this vice
+more than others), have profusely squandered the treasures of the
+church, and given away to hired soldiers what in justice should
+have been given only to priests.</p>
+<p>Yet something is to be said in favour of the aforesaid William
+de Braose, although he greatly offended in this particular (since
+nothing human is perfect, and to have knowledge of all things,
+and in no point to err, is an attribute of God, not of man); for
+he always placed the name of the Lord before his sentences,
+saying, &ldquo;Let this be done in the name of the Lord; let that
+be done by God&rsquo;s will; if it shall please God, or if God
+grant leave; it shall be so by the grace of God.&rdquo;&nbsp; We
+learn from Saint <a name="page21"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+21</span>Paul, that everything ought thus to be committed and
+referred to the will of God.&nbsp; On taking leave of his
+brethren, he says, &ldquo;I will return to you again, if God
+permit;&rdquo; and Saint James uses this expression, &ldquo;If
+the Lord will, and we live,&rdquo; in order to show that all
+things ought to be submitted to the divine disposal.&nbsp; The
+letters also which William de Braose, as a rich and powerful man,
+was accustomed to send to different parts, were loaded, or rather
+honoured, with words expressive of the divine indulgence to a
+degree not only tiresome to his scribe, but even to his auditors;
+for as a reward to each of his scribes for concluding his letters
+with the words, &ldquo;by divine assistance,&rdquo; he gave
+annually a piece of gold, in addition to their stipend.&nbsp;
+When on a journey he saw a church or a cross, although in the
+midst of conversation either with his inferiors or superiors,
+from an excess of devotion, he immediately began to pray, and
+when he had finished his prayers, resumed his conversation.&nbsp;
+On meeting boys in the way, he invited them by a previous
+salutation to salute him, that the blessings of these innocents,
+thus extorted, might be returned to him.&nbsp; His wife, Matilda
+de Saint Valery, observed all these things: a prudent and chaste
+woman; a woman placed with propriety at the head of her house,
+equally attentive to the economical disposal of her property
+within doors, as to the augmentation of it without; both of whom,
+I hope, by their devotion obtained temporal happiness and grace,
+as well as the glory of eternity.</p>
+<p>It happened also that the hand of a boy, who was endeavouring
+to take some young pigeons from a nest, in the church of Saint
+David of Llanvaes, <a name="citation21"></a><a href="#footnote21"
+class="citation">[21]</a> adhered to the stone on which he
+leaned, through the miraculous vengeance, <a
+name="page22"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 22</span>perhaps, of
+that saint, in favour of the birds who had taken refuge in his
+church; and when the boy, attended by his friends and parents,
+had for three successive days and nights offered up his prayers
+and supplications before the holy altar of the church, his hand
+was, on the third day, liberated by the same divine power which
+had so miraculously fastened it.&nbsp; We saw this same boy at
+Newbury, in England, now advanced in years, presenting himself
+before David the Second, <a name="citation22a"></a><a
+href="#footnote22a" class="citation">[22a]</a> bishop of Saint
+David&rsquo;s, and certifying to him the truth of this relation,
+because it had happened in his diocese.&nbsp; The stone is
+preserved in the church to this day among the relics, and the
+marks of the five fingers appear impressed on the flint as though
+it were in wax.</p>
+<p>A small miracle happened at St. Edmundsbury to a poor woman,
+who often visited the shrine of the saint, under the mask of
+devotion; not with the design of giving, but of taking something
+away, namely, the silver and gold offerings, which, by a curious
+kind of theft, she licked up by kissing, and carried away in her
+mouth.&nbsp; But in one of these attempts her tongue and lips
+adhered to the altar, when by divine interposition she was
+detected, and openly disgorged the secret theft.&nbsp; Many
+persons, both Jews and Christians, expressing their astonishment,
+flocked to the place, where for the greater part of the day she
+remained motionless, that no possible doubt might be entertained
+of the miracle.</p>
+<p>In the north of England beyond the Humber, in the church of
+Hovedene, <a name="citation22b"></a><a href="#footnote22b"
+class="citation">[22b]</a> the concubine of the rector
+incautiously sat down on the tomb of St. Osana, sister of king
+Osred, <a name="citation22c"></a><a href="#footnote22c"
+class="citation">[22c]</a> which projected like a wooden seat; on
+wishing to retire, she could not be removed, until the people
+came to her assistance; her clothes were rent, her <a
+name="page23"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 23</span>body was laid
+bare, and severely afflicted with many strokes of discipline,
+even till the blood flowed; nor did she regain her liberty, until
+by many tears and sincere repentance she had showed evident signs
+of compunction.</p>
+<p>What miraculous power hath not in our days been displayed by
+the psalter of Quindreda, sister of St. Kenelm, <a
+name="citation23a"></a><a href="#footnote23a"
+class="citation">[23a]</a> by whose instigation he was
+killed?&nbsp; On the vigil of the saint, when, according to
+custom, great multitudes of women resorted to the feast at
+Winchelcumbe, <a name="citation23b"></a><a href="#footnote23b"
+class="citation">[23b]</a> the under butler of that convent
+committed fornication with one of them within the precincts of
+the monastery.&nbsp; This same man on the following day had the
+audacity to carry the psalter in the procession of the relics of
+the saints; and on his return to the choir, after the solemnity,
+the psalter stuck to his hands.&nbsp; Astonished and greatly
+confounded, and at length calling to his mind his crime on the
+preceding day, he made confession, and underwent penance; and
+being assisted by the prayers of the brotherhood, and having
+shown signs of sincere contrition, he was at length liberated
+from the miraculous bond.&nbsp; That book was held in great
+veneration; because, when the body of St. Kenelm was carried
+forth, and the multitude cried out, &ldquo;He is the martyr of
+God! truly he is the martyr of God!&rdquo;&nbsp; Quindreda,
+conscious and guilty of the murder of her brother, answered,
+&ldquo;He is as truly the martyr of God as it is true that my
+eyes be on that psalter;&rdquo; for, <a name="page24"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 24</span>as she was reading the psalter, both
+her eyes were miraculously torn from her head, and fell on the
+book, where the marks of the blood yet remain.</p>
+<p>Moreover I must not be silent concerning the collar
+(<i>torques</i>) which they call St. Canauc&rsquo;s; <a
+name="citation24"></a><a href="#footnote24"
+class="citation">[24]</a> for it is most like to gold in weight,
+nature, and colour; it is in four pieces wrought round, joined
+together artificially, and clefted as it were in the middle, with
+a dog&rsquo;s head, the teeth standing outward; it is esteemed by
+the inhabitants so powerful a relic, that no man dares swear
+falsely when it is laid before him: it bears the marks of some
+severe blows, as if made with an iron hammer; for a certain man,
+as it is said, endeavouring to break the collar for the sake of
+the gold, experienced the divine vengeance, was deprived of his
+eyesight, and lingered the remainder of his days in darkness.</p>
+<p>A similar circumstance concerning the horn of St. Patrick (not
+golden indeed, but of brass [probably bronze], which lately was
+brought into these parts from Ireland) excites our
+admiration.&nbsp; The miraculous power of this relic first
+appeared with a terrible example in that country, through the
+foolish and absurd blowing of Bernard, a priest, as is set forth
+in our Topography of Ireland.&nbsp; Both the laity and clergy in
+Ireland, Scotland, and Wales held in such great veneration
+portable bells, and staves crooked at the top, and covered with
+gold, silver, or brass, and similar relics of the saints, that
+they were much more afraid of swearing falsely by them than by
+the gospels; because, from some hidden and miraculous power with
+which they are gifted, and the vengeance of the saint to whom
+they are particularly pleasing, their despisers and transgressors
+are severely punished.&nbsp; The <a name="page25"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 25</span>most remarkable circumstance
+attending this horn is, that whoever places the wider end of it
+to his ear will hear a sweet sound and melody united, such as
+ariseth from a harp gently touched.</p>
+<p>In our days a strange occurrence happened in the same
+district.&nbsp; A wild sow, which by chance had been suckled by a
+bitch famous for her nose, became, on growing up, so wonderfully
+active in the pursuit of wild animals, that in the faculty of
+scent she was greatly superior to dogs, who are assisted by
+natural instinct, as well as by human art; an argument that man
+(as well as every other animal) contracts the nature of the
+female who nurses him.&nbsp; Another prodigious event came to
+pass nearly at the same time.&nbsp; A soldier, whose name was
+Gilbert Hagernel, after an illness of nearly three years, and the
+severe pains as of a woman in labour, in the presence of many
+people, voided a calf.&nbsp; A portent of some new and unusual
+event, or rather the punishment attendant on some atrocious
+crime.&nbsp; It appears also from the ancient and authentic
+records of those parts, that during the time St. Elwitus <a
+name="citation25a"></a><a href="#footnote25a"
+class="citation">[25a]</a> led the life of a hermit at
+Llanhamelach, <a name="citation25b"></a><a href="#footnote25b"
+class="citation">[25b]</a> the mare that used to carry his
+provisions to him was covered by a stag, and produced an animal
+of wonderful speed, resembling a horse before and a stag
+behind.</p>
+<p><a name="page26"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 26</span>Bernard
+de Newmarch <a name="citation26a"></a><a href="#footnote26a"
+class="citation">[26a]</a> was the first of the Normans who
+acquired by conquest from the Welsh this province, which was
+divided into three cantreds. <a name="citation26b"></a><a
+href="#footnote26b" class="citation">[26b]</a>&nbsp; He married
+the daughter of Nest, daughter of Gruffydd, son of Llewelyn, who,
+by his tyranny, for a long time had oppressed Wales; his wife
+took her mother&rsquo;s name of Nest, which the English
+transmuted into Anne; by whom he had children, one of whom, named
+Mahel, a distinguished soldier, was thus unjustly deprived of his
+paternal inheritance.&nbsp; His mother, in violation of the
+marriage contract, held an adulterous intercourse with a certain
+knight; on the discovery of which, the son met the knight
+returning in the night from his mother, and having inflicted on
+him a severe corporal punishment, and mutilated him, sent him
+away with great disgrace.&nbsp; The mother, alarmed at the
+confusion which this event caused, and agitated with grief,
+breathed nothing but revenge.&nbsp; She therefore went to king
+Henry I., and declared with assertions more vindictive than true,
+and corroborated by an oath, that her son Mahel was not the son
+of Bernard, but of another person with whom she had been secretly
+connected.&nbsp; Henry, on account of this oath, or rather
+perjury, and swayed more by his inclination than by reason, gave
+away her eldest daughter, <a name="page27"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 27</span>whom she owned as the legitimate
+child of Bernard, in marriage to Milo Fitz-Walter, <a
+name="citation27"></a><a href="#footnote27"
+class="citation">[27]</a> constable of Gloucester, with the
+honour of Brecheinoc as a portion; and he was afterwards created
+earl of Hereford by the empress Matilda, daughter of the said
+king.&nbsp; By this wife he had five celebrated warriors; Roger,
+Walter, Henry, William, and Mahel; all of whom, by divine
+vengeance, or by fatal misfortunes, came to untimely ends; and
+yet each of them, except William, succeeded to the paternal
+inheritance, but left no issue.&nbsp; Thus this woman (not
+deviating from the nature of her sex), in order to satiate her
+anger and revenge, with the heavy loss of modesty, and with the
+disgrace of infamy, by the same act deprived her son of his
+patrimony, and herself of honour.&nbsp; Nor is it wonderful if a
+woman follows her innate bad disposition: for it is written in
+Ecclesiastes, &ldquo;I have found one good man out of a thousand,
+but not one good woman;&rdquo; and in Ecclesiasticus,
+&ldquo;There is no head above the head of a serpent; and there is
+no wrath above the wrath of a woman;&rdquo; and again,
+&ldquo;Small is the wickedness of man compared to the wickedness
+of woman.&rdquo;&nbsp; And in the same manner, as we may gather
+grapes off thorns, or figs off thistles, Tully, describing the
+nature of women, says, &ldquo;Men, perhaps, for the sake of some
+advantage will commit one crime; but woman, to gratify one
+inclination, will not scruple to perpetrate all sorts of
+wickedness.&rdquo;&nbsp; Thus Juvenal, speaking of women,
+say,</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;&mdash; Nihil est audacior illis<br />
+Deprensis, iram atque animos a crimine sumunt.<br />
+&mdash; Mulier s&aelig;vissima tunc est<br />
+<a name="page28"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 28</span>Cum
+stimulos animo pudor admovet.<br />
+&mdash; colllige, quod vindicta<br />
+Nemo magis gaudet quam f&oelig;mina.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>But of the five above-mentioned brothers and sons of earl
+Milo, the youngest but one, and the last in the inheritance, was
+the most remarkable for his inhumanity; he persecuted David II.,
+bishop of St. David&rsquo;s, to such a degree, by attacking his
+possessions, lands, and vassals, that he was compelled to retire
+as an exile from the district of Brecheinoc into England, or to
+some other parts of his diocese.&nbsp; Meanwhile, Mahel, being
+hospitably entertained by Walter de Clifford, <a
+name="citation28a"></a><a href="#footnote28a"
+class="citation">[28a]</a> in the castle of Brendlais, <a
+name="citation28b"></a><a href="#footnote28b"
+class="citation">[28b]</a> the house was by accident burned down,
+and he received a mortal blow by a stone falling from the
+principal tower on his head: upon which he instantly dispatched
+messengers to recal the bishop, and exclaimed with a lamentable
+voice, &ldquo;O, my father and high priest, your saint has taken
+most cruel vengeance of me, not waiting the conversion of a
+sinner, but hastening his death and overthrow.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Having often repeated similar expressions, and bitterly lamented
+his situation, he thus ended his tyranny and life together; the
+first year of his government not having elapsed.</p>
+<p>A powerful and noble personage, by name Brachanus, was in
+ancient times the ruler of the province of Brecheinoc, and from
+him it derived this name.&nbsp; The British histories testify
+that he had four-and-twenty daughters, <a name="page29"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 29</span>all of whom, dedicated from their
+youth to religious observances, happily ended their lives in
+sanctity.&nbsp; There are many churches in Wales distinguished by
+their names, one of which, situated on the summit of a hill, near
+Brecheinoc, and not far from the castle of Aberhodni, is called
+the church of St. Almedda, <a name="citation29a"></a><a
+href="#footnote29a" class="citation">[29a]</a> after the name of
+the holy virgin, who, refusing there the hand of an earthly
+spouse, married the Eternal King, and triumphed in a happy
+martyrdom; to whose honour a solemn feast is annually held in the
+beginning of August, and attended by a large concourse of people
+from a considerable distance, when those persons who labour under
+various diseases, through the merits of the Blessed Virgin,
+received their wished-for health.&nbsp; The circumstances which
+occur at every anniversary appear to me remarkable.&nbsp; You may
+see men or girls, now in the church, now in the churchyard, now
+in the dance, which is led round the churchyard with a song, on a
+sudden falling on the ground as in a trance, then jumping up as
+in a frenzy, and representing with their hands and feet, before
+the people, whatever work they have unlawfully done on feast
+days; you may see one man put his hand to the plough, and
+another, as it were, goad on the oxen, mitigating their sense of
+labour, by the usual rude song: <a name="citation29b"></a><a
+href="#footnote29b" class="citation">[29b]</a> <a
+name="page30"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 30</span>one man
+imitating the profession of a shoemaker; another, that of a
+tanner.&nbsp; Now you may see a girl with a distaff, drawing out
+the thread, and winding it again on the spindle; another walking,
+and arranging the threads for the web; another, as it were,
+throwing the shuttle, and seeming to weave.&nbsp; On being
+brought into the church, and led up to the altar with their
+oblations, you will be astonished to see them suddenly awakened,
+and coming to themselves.&nbsp; Thus, by the divine mercy, which
+rejoices in the conversion, not in the death, of sinners, many
+persons from the conviction of their senses, are on these feast
+days corrected and mended.</p>
+<p>This country sufficiently abounds with grain, and if there is
+any deficiency, it is amply supplied from the neighbouring parts
+of England; it is well stored with pastures, woods, and wild and
+domestic animals.&nbsp; River-fish are plentiful, supplied by the
+Usk on one side, and by the Wye on the other; each of them
+produces salmon and trout; but the Wye abounds most with the
+former, the Usk with the latter.&nbsp; The salmon of the Wye are
+in season during the winter, those of the Usk in summer; but the
+Wye alone produces the fish called umber, <a
+name="citation30a"></a><a href="#footnote30a"
+class="citation">[30a]</a> the praise of which is celebrated in
+the works of Ambrosius, as being found in great numbers in the
+rivers near Milan; &ldquo;What,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;is more
+beautiful to behold, more agreeable to smell, or more pleasant to
+taste?&rdquo;&nbsp; The famous lake of Brecheinoc supplies the
+courntry with pike, perch, excellent trout, tench, and
+eels.&nbsp; A circumstance concerning this lake, which happened a
+short time before our days, must not be passed over in
+silence.&nbsp; &ldquo;In the reign of king Henry I., Gruffydd, <a
+name="citation30b"></a><a href="#footnote30b"
+class="citation">[30b]</a> son of Rhys <a name="page31"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 31</span>ap Tewdwr, held under the king one
+comot, namely, the fourth part of the cantred of Caoc, <a
+name="citation31"></a><a href="#footnote31"
+class="citation">[31]</a> in the cantref Mawr, which, in title
+and dignity, was esteemed by the Welsh equal to the southern part
+of Wales, called Deheubarth, that is, the right-hand side of
+Wales.&nbsp; When Gruffydd, on his return from the king&rsquo;s
+court, passed near this lake, which at that cold season of the
+year was covered with water-fowl of various sorts, being
+accompanied by Milo, earl of Hereford, and lord of Brecheinoc,
+and Payn Fitz-John, lord of Ewyas, who were at that time
+secretaries and privy counsellors to the king; earl Milo, wishing
+to draw forth from Gruffydd some discourse concerning his innate
+nobility, rather jocularly than seriously <a
+name="page32"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 32</span>thus
+addressed him: &ldquo;It is an ancient saying in Wales, that if
+the natural prince of the country, coming to this lake, shall
+order the birds to sing, they will immediately obey
+him.&rdquo;&nbsp; To which Gruffydd, richer in mind than in gold,
+(for though his inheritance was diminished, his ambition and
+dignity still remained), answered, &ldquo;Do you therefore, who
+now hold the dominion of this land, first give the
+command;&rdquo; but he and Payn having in vain commanded, and
+Gruffydd, perceiving that it was necessary for him to do so in
+his turn, dismounted from his horse, and falling on his knees
+towards the east, as if he had been about to engage in battle,
+prostrate on the ground, with his eyes and hands uplifted to
+heaven, poured forth devout prayers to the Lord: at length,
+rising up, and signing his face and forehead with the figure of
+the cross, he thus openly spake: &ldquo;Almighty God, and Lord
+Jesus Christ, who knowest all things, declare here this day thy
+power.&nbsp; If thou hast caused me to descend lineally from the
+natural princes of Wales, I command these birds in thy name to
+declare it;&rdquo; and immediately the birds, beating the water
+with their wings, began to cry aloud, and proclaim him.&nbsp; The
+spectators were astonished and confounded; and earl Milo hastily
+returning with Payn Fitz-John to court, related this singular
+occurrence to the king, who is said to have replied, &ldquo;By
+the death of Christ (an oath he was accustomed to use), it is not
+a matter of so much wonder; for although by our great authority
+we commit acts of violence and wrong against these people, yet
+they are known to be the rightful inheritors of this
+land.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The lake also <a name="citation32"></a><a href="#footnote32"
+class="citation">[32]</a> (according to the testimony of the
+inhabitants) <a name="page33"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+33</span>is celebrated for its miracles; for, as we have before
+observed, it sometimes assumed a greenish hue, so in our days it
+has appeared to be tinged with red, not universally, but as if
+blood flowed partially through certain veins and small
+channels.&nbsp; Moreover it is sometimes seen by the inhabitants
+covered and adorned with buildings, pastures, gardens, and
+orchards.&nbsp; In the winter, when it is frozen over, and the
+surface of the water is converted into a shell of ice, it emits a
+horrible sound resembling the moans of many animals collected
+together; but this, perhaps, may be occasioned by the sudden
+bursting of the shell, and the gradual ebullition of the air
+through imperceptible channels.&nbsp; This country is well
+sheltered on every side (except the northern) by high mountains;
+on the western by those of cantref Bychan; <a
+name="citation33a"></a><a href="#footnote33a"
+class="citation">[33a]</a> on the southern, by that range, of
+which the principal is Cadair Arthur, <a
+name="citation33b"></a><a href="#footnote33b"
+class="citation">[33b]</a> or the chair of Arthur, so <a
+name="page34"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 34</span>called from
+two peaks rising up in the form of a chair, and which, from its
+lofty situation, is vulgarly ascribed to Arthur, the most
+distinguished king of the Britons.&nbsp; A spring of water rises
+on the summit of this mountain, deep, but of a square shape, like
+a well, and although no stream runs from it, trout are said to be
+sometimes found in it.</p>
+<p>Being thus sheltered on the south by high mountains, the
+cooler breezes protect this district from the heat of the sun,
+and, by their natural salubrity, render the climate most
+temperate.&nbsp; Towards the east are the mountains of Talgarth
+and Ewyas. <a name="citation34a"></a><a href="#footnote34a"
+class="citation">[34a]</a>&nbsp; The natives of these parts,
+actuated by continual enmities and implacable hatred, are
+perpetually engaged in bloody contests.&nbsp; But we leave to
+others to describe the great and enormous excesses, which in our
+time have been here committed, with regard to marriages,
+divorces, and many other circumstances of cruelty and
+oppression.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER III<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">EWYAS AND LLANTHONI</span></h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">In</span> the deep vale of Ewyas, <a
+name="citation34b"></a><a href="#footnote34b"
+class="citation">[34b]</a> which is about an arrow-shot broad,
+encircled on all sides by lofty mountains, stands <a
+name="page35"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 35</span>the church of
+Saint John the Baptist, covered with lead, and built of wrought
+stone; and, considering the nature of the place, not unhandsomely
+constructed, on the very spot where the humble chapel of David,
+the archbishop, had formerly stood decorated only with moss and
+ivy.&nbsp; A situation truly calculated for religion, and more
+adapted to canonical discipline, than all the monasteries of the
+British isle.&nbsp; It was founded by two hermits, in honour of
+the retired life, far removed from the bustle of mankind, in a
+solitary vale watered by the river Hodeni.&nbsp; From Hodeni it
+was called Lanhodeni, for Lan signifies an ecclesiastical
+place.&nbsp; This derivation may appear far-fetched, for the name
+of the place, in Welsh, is Nanthodeni.&nbsp; Nant signifies a
+running stream, from whence this place is still called by the
+inhabitants Landewi Nanthodeni, <a name="citation35"></a><a
+href="#footnote35" class="citation">[35]</a> or the church of
+Saint David upon the river Hodeni.&nbsp; The English therefore
+corruptly call it Lanthoni, whereas it should either be called
+Nanthodeni, that is, the brook of the Hodeni, or Lanhodeni, the
+church upon the Hodeni.&nbsp; Owing to its mountainous situation,
+the rains are frequent, the winds boisterous, <a
+name="page36"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 36</span>and the
+clouds in winter almost continual.&nbsp; The air, though heavy,
+is healthy; and diseases are so rare, that the brotherhood, when
+worn out by long toil and affliction during their residence with
+the daughter, retiring to this asylum, and to their
+mother&rsquo;s <a name="citation36a"></a><a href="#footnote36a"
+class="citation">[36a]</a> lap, soon regain their long-wished-for
+health.&nbsp; For as my Topographical History of Ireland
+testifies, in proportion as we proceed to the eastward, the face
+of the sky is more pure and subtile, and the air more piercing
+and inclement; but as we draw nearer to the westward, the air
+becomes more cloudy, but at the same time is more temperate and
+healthy.&nbsp; Here the monks, sitting in their cloisters,
+enjoying the fresh air, when they happen to look up towards the
+horizon, behold the tops of the mountains, as it were, touching
+the heavens, and herds of wild deer feeding on their summits: the
+body of the sun does not become visible above the heights of the
+mountains, even in a clear atmosphere, till about the hour of
+prime, or a little before.&nbsp; A place truly fitted for
+contemplation, a happy and delightful spot, fully competent, from
+its first establishment, to supply all its own wants, had not the
+extravagance of English luxury, the pride of a sumptuous table,
+the increasing growth of intemperance and ingratitude, added to
+the negligence of its patrons and prelates, reduced it from
+freedom to servility; and if the step-daughter, no less enviously
+than odiously, had not supplanted her mother.</p>
+<p>It seems worthy of remark, that all the priors who were
+hostile to this establishment, died by divine visitation.&nbsp;
+William, <a name="citation36b"></a><a href="#footnote36b"
+class="citation">[36b]</a> who first despoiled the place of its
+herds and storehouses, being deposed by the fraternity, forfeited
+his right of sepulture amongst the priors.&nbsp; Clement <a
+name="page37"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 37</span>seemed to
+like this place of study and prayer, yet, after the example of
+Heli the priest, as he neither reproved nor restrained his
+brethren from plunder and other offences, he died by a paralytic
+stroke.&nbsp; And Roger, who was more an enemy to this place than
+either of his predecessors, and openly carried away every thing
+which they had left behind, wholly robbing the church of its
+books, ornaments, and privileges, was also struck with a
+paralytic affection long before his death, resigned his honours,
+and lingered out the remainder of his days in sickness.</p>
+<p>In the reign of king Henry I., when the mother church was as
+celebrated for her affluence as for her sanctity (two qualities
+which are seldom found thus united), the daughter not yet being
+in existence (and I sincerely wish she never had been produced),
+the fame of so much religion attracted hither Roger, bishop of
+Salisbury, who was at that time prime minister; for it is virtue
+to love virtue, even in another man, and a great proof of innate
+goodness to show a detestation of those vices which hitherto have
+not been avoided.&nbsp; When he had reflected with admiration on
+the nature of the place, the solitary life of the fraternity,
+living in canonical obedience, and serving God without a murmur
+or complaint, he returned to the king, and related to him what he
+thought most worthy of remark; and after spending the greater
+part of the day in the praises of this place, he finished his
+panegyric with these words: &ldquo;Why should I say more? the
+whole treasure of the king and his kingdom would not be
+sufficient to build such a cloister.&rdquo;&nbsp; Having held the
+minds of the king and the court for a long time in suspense by
+this assertion, he at length explained the enigma, by saying that
+he alluded to the cloister of mountains, by which this church is
+on every side surrounded.&nbsp; But William, a knight, who first
+discovered this place, and his companion Ervistus, a priest,
+having heard, perhaps, as it is written in the Fathers, according
+to the opinion of Jerome, &ldquo;that the church of Christ <a
+name="page38"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 38</span>decreased in
+virtues as it increased in riches,&rdquo; were accustomed often
+devoutly to solicit the Lord that this place might never attain
+great possessions.&nbsp; They were exceedingly concerned when
+this religious foundation began to be enriched by its first lord
+and patron, Hugh de Lacy, <a name="citation38"></a><a
+href="#footnote38" class="citation">[38]</a> and by the lands and
+ecclesiastical benefices conferred upon it by the bounty of
+others of the faithful: from their predilection to poverty, they
+rejected many offers of manors and churches; and being situated
+in a wild spot, they would not suffer the thick and wooded parts
+of the valley to be cultivated and levelled, lest they should be
+tempted to recede from their heremitical mode of life.</p>
+<p>But whilst the establishment of the mother church increased
+daily in riches and endowments, availing herself of the hostile
+state of the country, a rival daughter sprang up at Gloucester,
+under the protection of Milo, earl of Hereford; as if by divine
+providence, and through the merits of the saints and prayers of
+those holy men (of whom two lie buried before the high altar), it
+were destined that the daughter church should be founded in
+superfluities, whilst the mother continued in that laudable state
+of mediocrity which she had always affected and coveted.&nbsp;
+Let the active therefore reside there, the contemplative here;
+there the pursuit of terrestrial riches, here the love of
+celestial delights; there let them enjoy the concourse of men,
+here the presence of angels; there let the powerful of this world
+be entertained, here let the poor of Christ be relieved; there, I
+say, let human actions and declamations be heard, but here let
+reading and prayers be heard only in whispers; there let
+opulence, <a name="page39"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+39</span>the parent and nurse of vice, increase with cares, here
+let the virtuous and golden mean be all-sufficient.&nbsp; In both
+places the canonical discipline instituted by Augustine, which is
+now distinguished above all other orders, is observed; for the
+Benedictines, when their wealth was increased by the fervour of
+charity, and multiplied by the bounty of the faithful, under the
+pretext of a bad dispensation, corrupted by gluttony and
+indulgence an order which in its original state of poverty was
+held in high estimation.&nbsp; The Cistercian order, derived from
+the former, at first deserved praise and commendation from its
+adhering voluntarily to the original vows of poverty and
+sanctity: until ambition, the blind mother of mischief, unable to
+fix bounds to prosperity, was introduced; for as Seneca says,
+&ldquo;Too great happiness makes men greedy, nor are their
+desires ever so temperate, as to terminate in what is
+acquired:&rdquo; a step is made from great things to greater, and
+men having attained what they did not expect, form the most
+unbounded hopes; to which the poet Ovid thus alludes.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Luxuriant animi rebus plerumque
+secundis,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Nec facile est &aelig;qua commoda mente
+pati;&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>And again:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Creverunt opes et opum furiosa cupido,<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Et cum possideant plurima, plura petunt.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>And also the poet Horace:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;&mdash;scilicet improb&aelig;<br />
+Crescunt diviti&aelig;, tamen<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Curt&aelig; nescio quid semper abest rei.<br />
+Crescentem sequitur cura pecuniam<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Majorumque fames.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>To which purpose the poet Lucan says:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;&mdash;O vit&aelig; tuta facultas<br />
+Pauperis, angustique lares, o munera nondum<br />
+Intellecta De&ucirc;m!&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><a name="page40"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 40</span>And
+Petronius:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Non bibit inter aquas nec poma fugacia
+carpit<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Tantalus infelix, quem sua vota premunt.<br />
+Divitis hic magni facies erit, omnia late<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Qui tenet, et sicco concoquit ore famem.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The mountains are full of herds and horses, the woods well
+stored with swine and goats, the pastures with sheep, the plains
+with cattle, the arable fields with ploughs; and although these
+things in very deed are in great abundance, yet each of them,
+from the insatiable nature of the mind, seems too narrow and
+scanty.&nbsp; Therefore lands are seized, landmarks removed,
+boundaries invaded, and the markets in consequence abound with
+merchandise, the courts of justice with law-suits, and the senate
+with complaints.&nbsp; Concerning such things, we read in Isaiah,
+&ldquo;Woe unto them that join house to house, that lay field to
+field, till there be no place, that they be placed alone in the
+midst of the earth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>If therefore, the prophet inveighs so much against those who
+proceed to the boundaries, what would he say to those who go far
+beyond them?&nbsp; From these and other causes, the true colour
+of religion was so converted into the dye of falsehood, that
+manners internally black assumed a fair exterior:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Qui color albus erat, nunc est contrarius
+albo.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>So that the scripture seems to be fulfilled concerning these
+men, &ldquo;Beware of false prophets, who come to you in
+sheep&rsquo;s clothing, but inwardly they are ravenous
+wolves.&rdquo;&nbsp; But I am inclined to think this avidity does
+not proceed from any bad intention.&nbsp; For the monks of this
+Order (although themselves most abstemious) incessantly exercise,
+more than any others, the acts of charity and beneficence towards
+the poor and strangers; and because they do not live as others
+upon fixed incomes, but depend only on their labour and
+forethought for subsistence, they are anxious to obtain lands,
+farms, <a name="page41"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 41</span>and
+pastures, which may enable them to perform these acts of
+hospitality.&nbsp; However, to repress and remove from this
+sacred Order the detestable stigma of ambition, I wish they would
+sometimes call to mind what is written in Ecclesiasticus,
+&ldquo;Whoso bringeth an offering of the goods of the poor, doth
+as one that killeth the son before his father&rsquo;s
+eyes;&rdquo; and also the sentiment of Gregory, &ldquo;A good use
+does not justify things badly acquired;&rdquo; and also that of
+Ambrose, &ldquo;He who wrongfully receives, that he may well
+dispense, is rather burthened than assisted.&rdquo;&nbsp; Such
+men seem to say with the Apostle, &ldquo;Let us do evil that good
+may come.&rdquo;&nbsp; For it is written, &ldquo;Mercy ought to
+be of such a nature as may be received, not rejected, which may
+purge away sins, not make a man guilty before the Lord, arising
+from your own just labours, not those of other men.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Hear what Solomon says; &ldquo;Honour the Lord from your just
+labours.&rdquo;&nbsp; What shall they say who have seized upon
+other men&rsquo;s possessions, and exercised charity?&nbsp;
+&ldquo;O Lord! in thy name we have done charitable deeds, we have
+fed the poor, clothed the naked, and hospitably received the
+stranger:&rdquo; to whom the Lord will answer; &ldquo;Ye speak of
+what ye have given away, but speak not of the rapine ye have
+committed; ye relate concerning those ye have fed, and remember
+not those ye have killed.&rdquo;&nbsp; I have judged it proper to
+insert in this place an instance of an answer which Richard, king
+of the English, made to Fulke, <a name="citation41"></a><a
+href="#footnote41" class="citation">[41]</a> a good and holy man,
+by whom <a name="page42"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+42</span>God in these our days has wrought many signs in the
+kingdom of France.&nbsp; This man had among other things said to
+the king; &ldquo;You have three daughters, namely, Pride, Luxury,
+and Avarice; and as long as they shall remain with you, you can
+never expect to be in favour with God.&rdquo;&nbsp; To which the
+king, after a short pause, replied: &ldquo;I have already given
+away those daughters in marriage: Pride to the Templars, Luxury
+to the Black Monks, and Avarice to the White.&rdquo;&nbsp; It is
+a remarkable circumstance, or rather a miracle, concerning
+Lanthoni, that, although it is on every side surrounded by lofty
+mountains, not stony or rocky, but of a soft nature, and covered
+with grass, Parian stones are frequently found there, and are
+called free-stones, from the facility with which they admit of
+being cut and polished; and with these the church is beautifully
+built.&nbsp; It is also wonderful, that when, after a diligent
+search, all the stones have been removed from the mountains, and
+no more can be found, upon another search, a few days afterwards,
+they reappear in greater quantities to those who seek them.&nbsp;
+With respect to the two Orders, the Cluniac and the Cistercian,
+this may be relied upon; although the latter are possessed of
+fine buildings, with ample revenues and estates, they will soon
+be reduced to poverty and destruction.&nbsp; To the former, on
+the contrary, you would allot a barren desert and a solitary
+wood; yet in a few years you will find them in possession of
+sumptuous churches and houses, and encircled with an extensive
+property.&nbsp; The difference of manners (as it appears to me)
+causes this contrast.&nbsp; For as without meaning offence to
+either party, I shall speak the truth, the one feels the benefits
+<a name="page43"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 43</span>of
+sobriety, parsimony, and prudence, whilst the other suffers from
+the bad effects of gluttony and intemperance: the one, like bees,
+collect their stores into a heap, and unanimously agree in the
+disposal of one well-regulated purse; the others pillage and
+divert to improper uses the largesses which have been collected
+by divine assistance, and by the bounties of the faithful; and
+whilst each individual consults solely his own interest, the
+welfare of the community suffers; since, as Sallust observes,
+&ldquo;Small things increase by concord, and the greatest are
+wasted by discord.&rdquo;&nbsp; Besides, sooner than lessen the
+number of one of the thirteen or fourteen dishes which they claim
+by right of custom, or even in a time of scarcity or famine
+recede in the smallest degree from their accustomed good fare,
+they would suffer the richest lands and the best buildings of the
+monastery to become a prey to usury, and the numerous poor to
+perish before their gates.</p>
+<p>The first of these Orders, at a time when there was a
+deficiency in grain, with a laudable charity, not only gave away
+their flocks and herds, but resigned to the poor one of the two
+dishes with which they were always contented.&nbsp; But in these
+our days, in order to remove this stain, it is ordained by the
+Cistercians, &ldquo;That in future neither farms nor pastures
+shall be purchased; and that they shall be satisfied with those
+alone which have been freely and unconditionally bestowed upon
+them.&rdquo;&nbsp; This Order, therefore, being satisfied more
+than any other with humble mediocrity, and, if not wholly, yet in
+a great degree checking their ambition; and though placed in a
+worldly situation, yet avoiding, as much as possible, its
+contagion; neither notorious for gluttony or drunkenness, for
+luxury or lust; is fearful and ashamed of incurring public
+scandal, as will be more fully explained in the book we mean (by
+the grace of God) to write concerning the ecclesiastical
+Orders.</p>
+<p>In these temperate regions I have obtained (according to the
+usual expression) a place of dignity, but no great <a
+name="page44"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 44</span>omen of
+future pomp or riches; and possessing a small residence <a
+name="citation44a"></a><a href="#footnote44a"
+class="citation">[44a]</a> near the castle of Brecheinoc, well
+adapted to literary pursuits, and to the contemplation of
+eternity, I envy not the riches of Croesus; happy and contented
+with that mediocrity, which I prize far beyond all the perishable
+and transitory things of this world.&nbsp; But let us return to
+our subject.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER IV<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">THE JOURNEY BY COED GRONO AND
+ABERGEVENNI</span></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">From</span> thence <a
+name="citation44b"></a><a href="#footnote44b"
+class="citation">[44b]</a> we proceeded through the narrow, woody
+tract called the bad pass of Coed Grono, leaving the <a
+name="page45"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 45</span>noble
+monastery of Lanthoni, inclosed by its mountains, on our
+left.&nbsp; The castle of Abergevenni is so called from its
+situation at the confluence of the river Gevenni with the
+Usk.</p>
+<p>It happened a short time after the death of king Henry I.,
+that Richard de Clare, a nobleman of high birth, and lord of
+Cardiganshire, passed this way on his journey from England into
+Wales, accompanied by Brian de Wallingford, lord of this
+province, and many men-at-arms.&nbsp; At the passage of Coed
+Grono, <a name="citation45"></a><a href="#footnote45"
+class="citation">[45]</a> and at the entrance into the wood, he
+dismissed him and his attendants, though much against their will,
+and proceeded on his journey unarmed; from too great a
+presumption of security, preceded only by a minstrel and a
+singer, one accompanying the other on the fiddle.&nbsp; The Welsh
+awaiting his arrival, with Iorwerth, brother of Morgan of
+Caerleon, at their head, and others of his family, rushed upon
+him unawares from the thickets, and killed him and many of his
+followers.&nbsp; Thus it appears how incautious and neglectful of
+itself is too great presumption; for fear teaches foresight and
+caution in prosperity, but audacity is precipitate, and
+inconsiderate rashness will not await the advice of the
+leader.</p>
+<p><a name="page46"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 46</span>A
+sermon having been delivered at Abergevenni, <a
+name="citation46"></a><a href="#footnote46"
+class="citation">[46]</a> and many persons converted to the
+cross, a certain nobleman of those parts, named Arthenus, came to
+the archbishop, who was proceeding towards the castle of Usk, and
+humbly begged pardon for having neglected to meet him
+sooner.&nbsp; Being questioned whether he would take the cross,
+he replied, &ldquo;That ought not be done without the advice of
+his friends.&rdquo;&nbsp; The archbishop then asked him,
+&ldquo;Are you not going to consult your wife?&rdquo;&nbsp; To
+which he modestly answered, with a downcast look, &ldquo;When the
+work of a man is to be undertaken, the counsel of a woman ought
+not to be asked;&rdquo; and instantly received the cross from the
+archbishop.</p>
+<p>We leave to others the relation of those frequent and cruel
+excesses which in our times have arisen amongst the inhabitants
+of these parts, against the governors of castles, and the
+vindictive retaliations of the governors against the
+natives.&nbsp; But king Henry II. was the true author, and Ranulf
+Poer, sheriff of Hereford, the instrument, of the enormous
+cruelties and slaughter perpetrated here in our days, which I
+thought better to omit, <a name="page47"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 47</span>lest bad men should be induced to
+follow the example; for although temporary advantage may seem to
+arise from a base cause, yet, by the balance of a righteous
+judge, the punishment of wickedness may be deferred, though not
+totally avoided, according to the words of the poet,&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Non habet eventus sordida pr&aelig;da
+bonos.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>For after seven years of peace and tranquillity, the sons and
+grandsons of the deceased, having attained the age of manhood,
+took advantage of the absence of the lord of the castle
+(Abergevenni), and, burning with revenge, concealed themselves,
+with no inconsiderable force during the night, within the woody
+foss of the castle.&nbsp; One of them, name Sisillus (Sitsylt)
+son of Eudaf, on the preceding day said rather jocularly to the
+constable, &ldquo;Here will we enter this night,&rdquo; pointing
+out to him a certain angle in the wall where it seemed the
+lowest; but since</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;&mdash;Ridendo dicere verum<br />
+Quis vetat?&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>and</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;&mdash;fas est et ab hoste
+doceri,&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>the constable and his household watched all night under arms,
+till at length, worn out by fatigue, they all retired to rest on
+the appearance of daylight, upon which the enemy attacked the
+walls with scaling-ladders, at the very place that had been
+pointed out.&nbsp; The constable and his wife were taken
+prisoners, with many others, a few persons only escaping, who had
+sheltered themselves in the principal tower.&nbsp; With the
+exception of this stronghold, the enemy violently seized and
+burned everything; and thus, by the righteous judgment of God,
+the crime was punished in the very place where it had been
+committed.&nbsp; A short time after the taking of this fortress,
+when the aforesaid sheriff was building a castle <a
+name="page48"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 48</span>at
+Landinegat, <a name="citation48"></a><a href="#footnote48"
+class="citation">[48]</a> near Monmouth, with the assistance of
+the army he had brought from Hereford, he was attacked at break
+of day, when</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Tythoni croceum linquens Aurora
+cubile&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>was only beginning to divest herself of the shades of night,
+by the young men from Gwent and the adjacent parts, with the
+descendants of those who had been slain.&nbsp; Through aware of
+this premeditated attack, and prepared and drawn up in battle
+array, they were nevertheless repulsed within their
+intrenchments, and the sheriff, together with nine of the chief
+men of Hereford, and many others, were pierced to death with
+lances.&nbsp; It is remarkable that, although Ranulf, besides
+many other mortal wounds, had the veins and arteries of his neck
+and his windpipe separated with a sword, he made signs for a
+priest, and from the merit of his past life, and the honour and
+veneration he had shewn to those chosen into the sacred order of
+Christ, he was confessed, and received extreme unction before he
+died.&nbsp; And, indeed, many events concur to prove that, as
+those who respect the priesthood, in their latter days enjoy the
+satisfaction of friendly intercourse, so do their revilers and
+accusers often die without that consolation.&nbsp; William de
+Braose, who was not the author of the crime we have preferred
+passing over in silence, but the executioner, or, rather, not the
+preventer of its execution, while the murderous bands were
+fulfilling the orders they had received, was precipitated into a
+deep foss, and being taken by the enemy, was drawn forth, and
+only by a sudden effort of his own troops, and by divine mercy,
+escaped uninjured.&nbsp; Hence it is evident that he who offends
+in a less degree, and unwillingly permits a thing to be done, is
+more mildly punished than he who adds counsel and authority to
+his act.&nbsp; Thus, in the sufferings of Christ, Judas was <a
+name="page49"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 49</span>punished with
+hanging, the Jews with destruction and banishment, and Pilate
+with exile.&nbsp; But the end of the king, who assented to and
+ordered this treachery, sufficiently manifested in what manner,
+on account of this and many other enormities he had committed (as
+in the book &ldquo;De Instructione Principis,&rdquo; by
+God&rsquo;s guidance, we shall set forth), he began with
+accumulated ignominy, sorrow, and confusion, to suffer punishment
+in this world. <a name="citation49a"></a><a href="#footnote49a"
+class="citation">[49a]</a></p>
+<p>It seems worthy of remark, that the people of what is called
+Venta <a name="citation49b"></a><a href="#footnote49b"
+class="citation">[49b]</a> are more accustomed to war, more
+famous for valour, and more expert in archery, than those of any
+other part of Wales.&nbsp; The following examples prove the truth
+of this assertion.&nbsp; In the last capture of the aforesaid
+castle, which happened in our days, two soldiers passing over a
+bridge to take refuge in a tower built on a mound of earth, the
+Welsh, taking them in the rear, penetrated with their arrows the
+oaken portal of the tower, which was four fingers thick; in
+memory of which circumstance, the arrows were preserved in the
+gate.&nbsp; William de Braose also testifies that one of his
+soldiers, in a conflict with the Welsh, was wounded by an arrow,
+which passed through his thigh and the armour with which it was
+cased on both sides, and, through that part of the saddle which
+is called the <i>alva</i>, mortally wounded the horse.&nbsp;
+Another soldier had his hip, equally sheathed in armour,
+penetrated by an arrow quite to the saddle, and on turning his
+horse round, received a similar wound on the opposite hip, which
+fixed him on both sides of his seat.&nbsp; What more could be
+expected from a balista?&nbsp; Yet the bows used by this people
+are not made of horn, <a name="page50"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 50</span>ivory, or yew, but of wild elm;
+unpolished, rude, and uncouth, but stout; not calculated to shoot
+an arrow to a great distance, but to inflict very severe wounds
+in close fight.</p>
+<p>But let us again return to our Itinerary.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER V<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">OF THE PROGRESS BY THE CASTLE OF USK AND
+THE TOWN OF CAERLEON</span></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">At</span> the castle of Usk, a multitude
+of persons influenced by the archbishop&rsquo;s sermon, and by
+the exhortations of the good and worthy William bishop of Landaf,
+<a name="citation50a"></a><a href="#footnote50a"
+class="citation">[50a]</a> who faithfully accompanied us through
+his diocese, were signed with the cross; Alexander archdeacon of
+Bangor <a name="citation50b"></a><a href="#footnote50b"
+class="citation">[50b]</a> acting as interpreter to the
+Welsh.&nbsp; It is remarkable that many of the most notorious
+murderers, thieves, and robbers of the neighbourhood were here
+converted, to the astonishment of the spectators.&nbsp; Passing
+from thence through Caerleon and leaving far on our left hand the
+castle of Monmouth, and the noble forest of Dean, situated on the
+other side of the Wye and on this side the Severn, and which
+amply supplies Gloucester with iron and venison, we spent the
+night at Newport, having crossed the river Usk three times. <a
+name="citation50c"></a><a href="#footnote50c"
+class="citation">[50c]</a>&nbsp; Caerleon means the city of
+Legions, Caer, in the British language, signifying a city or
+camp, for there the Roman legions, sent into this island, were
+accustomed to winter, and from this circumstance it was styled
+the city of legions.&nbsp; This city was of undoubted <a
+name="page51"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 51</span>antiquity,
+and handsomely built of masonry, with courses of bricks, by the
+Romans.&nbsp; Many vestiges of its former splendour may yet be
+seen; immense palaces, formerly ornamented with gilded roofs, in
+imitation of Roman magnificence, inasmuch as they were first
+raised by the Roman princes, and embellished with splendid
+buildings; a tower of prodigious size, remarkable hot baths,
+relics of temples, and theatres, all inclosed within fine walls,
+parts of which remain standing.&nbsp; You will find on all sides,
+both within and without the circuit of the walls, subterraneous
+buildings, aqueducts, underground passages; and what I think
+worthy of notice, stoves contrived with wonderful art, to
+transmit the heat insensibly through narrow tubes passing up the
+side walls.</p>
+<p>Julius and Aaron, after suffering martyrdom, were buried in
+this city, and had each a church dedicated to him.&nbsp; After
+Albanus and Amphibalus, they were esteemed the chief protomartyrs
+of Britannia Major.&nbsp; In ancient times there were three fine
+churches in this city: one dedicated to Julius the martyr, graced
+with a choir of nuns; another to Aaron, his associate, and
+ennobled with an order of canons; and the third distinguished as
+the metropolitan of Wales.&nbsp; Amphibalus, the instructor of
+Albanus in the true faith, was born in this place.&nbsp; This
+city is well situated on the river Usk, navigable to the sea, and
+adorned with woods and meadows.&nbsp; The Roman ambassadors here
+received their audience at the court of the great king Arthur;
+and here also, the archbishop Dubricius ceded his honours to
+David of Menevia, the metropolitan see being translated from this
+place to Menevia, according to the prophecy of Merlin
+Ambrosius.&nbsp; &ldquo;Menevia pallio urbis Legionum
+induetur.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Menevia shall be invested with the
+pall of the city of Legions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Not far hence is a rocky eminence, impending over the Severn,
+called by the English Gouldcliffe <a name="citation51"></a><a
+href="#footnote51" class="citation">[51]</a> or golden rock, <a
+name="page52"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 52</span>because from
+the reflections of the sun&rsquo;s rays it assumes a bright
+golden colour:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Nec mihi de facili fieri persuasio
+posset,<br />
+Quod frustra tantum dederit natura nito rem<br />
+Saxis, quodque suo fuerit flos hic sine fructu.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Nor can I be easily persuaded that nature hath given such
+splendour to the rocks in vain, and that this flower should be
+without fruit, if any one would take the pains to penetrate
+deeply into the bowels of the earth; if any one, I say, would
+extract honey from the rock, and oil from the stone.&nbsp; Indeed
+many riches of nature lie concealed through inattention, which
+the diligence of posterity will bring to light; for, as necessity
+first taught the ancients to discover the conveniences of life,
+so industry, and a greater acuteness of intellect, have laid open
+many things to the moderns; as the poet says, assigning two
+causes for these discoveries,</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;&mdash;labor omnia vincit<br />
+Improbus, et duris urgens in rebus egestas.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>It is worthy of observation, that there lived in the
+neighbourhood of this City of Legions, in our time, a Welshman
+named Melerius, who, under the following circumstances, acquired
+the knowledge of future and occult events.&nbsp; Having, on a
+certain night, namely that of Palm Sunday, met a damsel whom he
+had long loved, in a pleasant and convenient place, while he was
+indulging in her embraces, suddenly, instead of a beautiful girl,
+he found in his arms a hairy, rough, and hideous creature, the
+sight of which deprived him of his senses, and he became
+mad.&nbsp; After remaining many years in this condition, he was
+restored to health in the church of St. David&rsquo;s, through
+the merits of its saints.&nbsp; But having always an
+extraordinary familiarity with unclean spirits, <a
+name="page53"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 53</span>by seeing
+them, knowing them, talking with them, and calling each by his
+proper name, he was enabled, through their assistance, to foretel
+future events.&nbsp; He was, indeed, often deceived (as they are)
+with respect to circumstances at a great distance of time or
+place, but was less mistaken in affairs which were likely to
+happen nearer, or within the space of a year.&nbsp; The spirits
+appeared to him, usually on foot, equipped as hunters, with horns
+suspended from their necks, and truly as hunters, not of animals,
+but of souls.&nbsp; He particularly met them near monasteries and
+monastic cells; for where rebellion exists, there is the greatest
+need of armies and strength.&nbsp; He knew when any one spoke
+falsely in his presence, for he saw the devil, as it were,
+leaping and exulting upon the tongue of the liar.&nbsp; If he
+looked on a book faultily or falsely written, or containing a
+false passage, although wholly illiterate, he would point out the
+place with his finger.&nbsp; Being questioned how he could gain
+such knowledge, he said that he was directed by the demon&rsquo;s
+finger to the place.&nbsp; In the same manner, entering into the
+dormitory of a monastery, he indicated the bed of any monk not
+sincerely devoted to religion.&nbsp; He said, that the spirit of
+gluttony and surfeit was in every respect sordid; but that the
+spirit of luxury and lust was more beautiful than others in
+appearance, though in fact most foul.&nbsp; If the evil spirits
+oppressed him too much, the Gospel of St. John was placed on his
+bosom, when, like birds, they immediately vanished; but when that
+book was removed, and the History of the Britons, by Geoffrey
+Arthur, <a name="citation53"></a><a href="#footnote53"
+class="citation">[53]</a> was substituted in its place, they
+instantly reappeared in greater numbers, and remained a longer
+time than usual on his body and on the book.</p>
+<p>It is worthy of remark, that Barnabas placed the Gospel of St.
+Matthew upon sick persons, and they were healed; from which, as
+well as from the foregoing circumstance, it appears how great a
+dignity and reverence is due to the sacred books of the gospel,
+and with what danger and <a name="page54"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 54</span>risk of damnation every one who
+swears falsely by them, deviates from the paths of truth.&nbsp;
+The fall of Enoch, abbot of Strata Marcella, <a
+name="citation54"></a><a href="#footnote54"
+class="citation">[54]</a> too well known in Wales, was revealed
+to many the day after it happened, by Melerius, who, being asked
+how he knew this circumstance, said, that a demon came to him
+disguised as a hunter, and, exulting in the prospect of such a
+victory, foretold the ruin of the abbot, and explained in what
+manner he would make him run away with a nun from the
+monastery.&nbsp; The end in view was probably the humiliation and
+correction of the abbot, as was proved from his shortly returning
+home so humbled and amended, that he scarcely could be said to
+have erred.&nbsp; Seneca says, &ldquo;He falls not badly, who
+rises stronger from his fall.&rdquo;&nbsp; Peter was more
+strenuous after his denial of Christ, and Paul after being
+stoned; since, where sin abounds, there will grace also
+superabound.&nbsp; Mary Magdalen was strengthened after her
+frailty.&nbsp; He secretly revealed to Canon, the good and
+religious abbot of Alba-domus, his opinion of a certain woman
+whom he had seen; upon which the holy man confessed, with tears
+in his eyes, his predilection for her, and received from three
+priests the discipline of incontinence.&nbsp; For as that long
+and experienced subtle enemy, by arguing from certain conjectural
+signs, may foretell future by past events, so by insidious
+treachery and contrivance, added to exterior appearances, he may
+sometimes be able to discover the interior workings of the
+mind.</p>
+<p>At the same time there was in Lower Gwent a demon <a
+name="page55"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 55</span>incubus, who,
+from his love for a certain young woman, and frequenting the
+place where she lived, often conversed with men, and frequently
+discovered hidden things and future events.&nbsp; Melerius being
+interrogated concerning him, said he knew him well, and mentioned
+his name.&nbsp; He affirmed that unclean spirits conversed with
+mankind before war, or any great internal disturbance, which was
+shortly afterwards proved, by the destruction of the province by
+Howel, son of Iorwerth of Caerleon.&nbsp; At the same time, when
+king Henry II., having taken the king of Scotland prisoner, had
+restored peace to his kingdom, Howel, fearful of the royal
+revenge for the war he had waged, was relieved from his
+difficulties by these comfortable words of Melerius: &ldquo;Fear
+not,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;Howel, the wrath of the king, since
+he must go into other parts.&nbsp; An important city which he
+possesses beyond sea is now besieged by the king of France, on
+which account he will postpone every other business, and hasten
+thither with all possible expedition.&rdquo;&nbsp; Three days
+afterwards, Howel received advice that this event had really come
+to pass, owing to the siege of the city of Rouen.&nbsp; He
+forewarned also Howel of the betraying of his castle at Usk, a
+long time before it happened, and informed him that he should be
+wounded, but not mortally; and that he should escape alive from
+the town.&nbsp; In this alone he was deceived, for he soon after
+died of the same wound.&nbsp; Thus does that archenemy favour his
+friends for a time, and thus does he at last reward them.</p>
+<p>In all these singular events it appears to me most wonderful
+that he saw those spirits so plainly with his carnal eyes,
+because spirits cannot be discerned by the eyes of mortals,
+unless they assume a corporeal substance; but if in order to be
+seen they had assumed such a substance, how could they remain
+unperceived by other persons who were present?&nbsp; Perhaps they
+were seen by such a miraculous vision as when king Balthazar saw
+the hand of one writing on the wall, &ldquo;Mane, Techel,
+Phares,&rdquo; <a name="page56"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+56</span>that is, weighed, numbered, divided; who in the same
+night lost both his kingdom and his life.&nbsp; But Cambria well
+knows how in these districts, from a blind desire of dominion, a
+total dissolution of the endearing ties of consanguinity, and a
+bad and depraved example diffused throughout the country, good
+faith has been so shamefully perverted and abused.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER VI<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">NEWPORT AND CAERDYF</span></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">At</span> Newport, where the river Usk,
+descending from its original source in Cantref Bachan, falls into
+the sea, many persons were induced to take the cross.&nbsp;
+Having passed the river Remni, we approached the noble castle of
+Caerdyf, <a name="citation56a"></a><a href="#footnote56a"
+class="citation">[56a]</a> situated on the banks of the river
+Taf.&nbsp; In the neighbourhood of Newport, which is in the
+district of Gwentluc, <a name="citation56b"></a><a
+href="#footnote56b" class="citation">[56b]</a> there is a small
+stream called Nant Pencarn, <a name="citation56c"></a><a
+href="#footnote56c" class="citation">[56c]</a> passable only at
+certain fords, not so much owing to the depth of its waters, as
+from the hollowness of its channel and muddy bottom.&nbsp; The
+public road led formerly to a ford, called Ryd Pencarn, that is,
+the ford <a name="page57"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+57</span>under the head of a rock, from Rhyd, which in the
+British language signifies a ford, Pen, the head, and Cam, a
+rock; of which place Merlin Sylvester had thus prophesied:
+&ldquo;Whenever you shall see a mighty prince with a freckled
+face make an hostile irruption into the southern part of Britain,
+should he cross the ford of Pencarn, then know ye, that the force
+of Cambria shall be brought low.&rdquo;&nbsp; Now it came to pass
+in our times, that king Henry II. took up arms against Rhys, the
+son of Gruffydd, and directed his march through the southern part
+of Wales towards Caermardyn.&nbsp; On the day he intended to pass
+over Nant Pentcarn, the old Britons of the neighbourhood watched
+his approach towards the ford with the utmost solicitude;
+knowing, since he was both mighty and freckled, that if the
+passage of the destined ford was accomplished, the prophecy
+concerning him would undoubtedly be fulfilled.&nbsp; When the
+king had followed the road leading to a more modern ford of the
+river (the old one spoken of in the prophecy having been for a
+long time in disuse), and was preparing to pass over, the pipers
+and trumpeters, called Cornhiriet, from <i>hir</i>, long, and
+<i>cornu</i>, a horn, began to sound their instruments on the
+opposite bank, in honour of the king.&nbsp; The king&rsquo;s
+horse, startling at the wild, unusual noise, refused to obey the
+spur, and enter the water; upon which, the king, gathering up the
+reins, hastened, in violent wrath, to the ancient ford, which he
+rapidly passed; and the Britons returned to their homes, alarmed
+and dismayed at the destruction which seemed to await them.&nbsp;
+An extraordinary circumstance occurred likewise at the castle of
+Caerdyf.&nbsp; William earl of Gloucester, son of earl Robert, <a
+name="citation57"></a><a href="#footnote57"
+class="citation">[57]</a> who, besides that castle, <a
+name="page58"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 58</span>possessed by
+hereditary right all the province of Gwladvorgan, <a
+name="citation58a"></a><a href="#footnote58a"
+class="citation">[58a]</a> that is, the land of Morgan, had a
+dispute with one of his dependants, whose name was Ivor the
+Little, being a man of short stature, but of great courage.&nbsp;
+This man was, after the manner of the Welsh, owner of a tract of
+mountainous and woody country, of the whole, or a part of which,
+the earl endeavoured to deprive him.&nbsp; At that time the
+castle of Caerdyf was surrounded with high walls, guarded by one
+hundred and twenty men-at-arms, a numerous body of archers, and a
+strong watch.&nbsp; The city also contained many stipendiary
+soldiers; yet, in defiance of all these precautions of security,
+Ivor, in the dead of night, secretly scaled the walls, and,
+seizing the count and countess, with their only son, carried them
+off into the woods, and did not release them until he had
+recovered everything that had been unjustly taken from him, and
+received a compensation of additional property; for, as the poet
+observes,</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Spectandum est semper ne magna injuria
+fiat<br />
+Fortibus et miseris; tollas licet omne quod usquam est<br />
+Argenti atque auri, spoliatis arma supersunt.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In this same town of Caerdyf, king Henry II., on his return
+from Ireland, the first Sunday after Easter, passed the
+night.&nbsp; In the morning, having heard mass, he remained at
+his devotions till every one had quitted the chapel of St.
+Piranus. <a name="citation58b"></a><a href="#footnote58b"
+class="citation">[58b]</a>&nbsp; As he mounted his horse at the
+<a name="page59"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 59</span>door, a
+man of a fair complexion, with a round tonsure and meagre
+countenance, tall, and about forty years of age, habited in a
+white robe falling down to his naked feet, thus addressed him in
+the Teutonic tongue: &ldquo;God hold the, cuing,&rdquo; which
+signifies, &ldquo;May God protect you, king;&rdquo; and
+proceeded, in the same language, &ldquo;Christ and his Holy
+Mother, John the Baptist, and the Apostle Peter salute thee, and
+command thee strictly to prohibit throughout thy whole dominions
+every kind of buying or selling on Sundays, and not to suffer any
+work to be done on those days, except such as relates to the
+preparation of daily food; that due attention may be paid to the
+performance of the divine offices.&nbsp; If thou dost this, all
+thy undertakings shall be successful, and thou shalt lead a happy
+life.&rdquo;&nbsp; The king, in French, desired Philip de
+Mercros, <a name="citation59"></a><a href="#footnote59"
+class="citation">[59]</a> who held the reins of his horse, to ask
+the rustic if he had dreamt this? and when the soldier explained
+to him the king&rsquo;s question in English, he replied in the
+same language he had before used, &ldquo;Whether I have dreamt it
+or not, observe what day this is (addressing himself to the king,
+not to the interpreter), and unless thou shalt do so, and quickly
+amend thy life, before the expiration of one year, thou shalt
+hear such things concerning what thou lovest best in this world,
+and shalt thereby be so much troubled, that thy disquietude shall
+continue to thy life&rsquo;s end.&rdquo;&nbsp; The king, spurring
+his horse, proceeded a little way towards the gate, when,
+stopping suddenly, he ordered his attendants to call the good man
+back.&nbsp; The soldier, and a young man named William, the only
+persons who remained <a name="page60"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 60</span>with the king, accordingly called
+him, and sought him in vain in the chapel, and in all the inns of
+the city.&nbsp; The king, vexed that he had not spoken more to
+him, waited alone a long time, while other persons went in search
+of him; and when he could not be found, pursued his journey over
+the bridge of Remni to Newport.&nbsp; The fatal prediction came
+to pass within the year, as the man had threatened; for the
+king&rsquo;s three sons, Henry, the eldest, and his brothers,
+Richard of Poitou, and Geoffrey, count of Britany, in the
+following Lent, deserted to Louis king of France, which caused
+the king greater uneasiness than he had ever before experienced;
+and which, by the conduct of some one of his sons, was continued
+till the time of his decease.&nbsp; This monarch, through divine
+mercy (for God is more desirous of the conversion than the
+destruction of a sinner), received many other admonitions and
+reproofs about this time, and shortly before his death; all of
+which, being utterly incorrigible, he obstinately and obdurately
+despised, as will be more fully set forth (by the favour of God)
+in my book, &ldquo;de Principis Instructione.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Not far from Caerdyf is a small island situated near the shore
+of the Severn, called Barri, from St. Baroc <a
+name="citation60"></a><a href="#footnote60"
+class="citation">[60]</a> who formerly lived there, and whose
+remains are deposited in a chapel overgrown with ivy, having been
+<a name="page61"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+61</span>transferred to a coffin.&nbsp; From hence a noble
+family, of the maritime parts of South Wales, who owned this
+island and the adjoining estates, received the name of de
+Barri.&nbsp; It is remarkable that, in a rock near the entrance
+of the island, there is a small cavity, to which, if the ear is
+applied, a noise is heard like that of smiths at work, the
+blowing of bellows, strokes of hammers, grinding of tools, and
+roaring of furnaces; and it might easily be imagined that such
+noises, which are continued at the ebb and flow of the tides,
+were occasioned by the influx of the sea under the cavities of
+the rocks.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER VII<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">THE SEE OF LANDAF AND MONASTERY OF MARGAN,
+AND THE REMARKABLE THINGS IN THOSE PARTS</span></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">On</span> the following morning, the
+business of the cross being publicly proclaimed at Landaf, the
+English standing on one side, and the Welsh on the other, many
+persons of each nation took the cross, and we remained there that
+night with William bishop of that place, <a
+name="citation61a"></a><a href="#footnote61a"
+class="citation">[61a]</a> a discreet and good man.&nbsp; The
+word Landaf <a name="citation61b"></a><a href="#footnote61b"
+class="citation">[61b]</a> signifies the church situated upon the
+river Taf, and is now called the church of St. Teileau, formerly
+bishop of that see.&nbsp; The archbishop having celebrated mass
+early in the morning, before the high altar of the cathedral, we
+immediately pursued our journey by the little cell of Ewenith <a
+name="citation61c"></a><a href="#footnote61c"
+class="citation">[61c]</a> to the <a name="page62"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 62</span>noble Cistercian monastery of Margan.
+<a name="citation62"></a><a href="#footnote62"
+class="citation">[62]</a>&nbsp; This monastery, under the
+direction of Conan, a learned and prudent abbot, was at this time
+more celebrated for its charitable deeds than any other of that
+order in Wales.&nbsp; On this account, it is an undoubted fact,
+that, as a reward for that abundant charity which the monastery
+had always, in times of need, exercised towards strangers and
+poor persons, in a season of approaching famine, their corn and
+provisions were perceptibly, by divine assistance, increased,
+like the widow&rsquo;s cruise of oil by the means of the prophet
+Elijah.&nbsp; About the time of its foundation, a young man of
+those parts, by birth a Welshman, having claimed and endeavoured
+to apply to his own use certain lands which had been given to the
+monastery, by the instigation of the devil set on fire the best
+barn belonging to the monks, which was filled with corn; but,
+immediately becoming mad, he ran about the country in a
+distracted state, nor ceased raving until he was seized by his
+parents and bound.&nbsp; Having burst his bonds, and tired out
+his keepers, he came the next morning to the gate of the
+monastery, incessantly howling out that he was inwardly burnt by
+the influence of the monks, and thus in a few days expired,
+uttering the most miserable complaints.&nbsp; It happened also,
+that a young man was struck by another in the guests&rsquo; hall;
+but on the following day, by divine vengeance, the aggressor was,
+in the presence of the fraternity, killed by an enemy, and his
+lifeless body was laid out in the same spot in the hall where the
+sacred house had been violated.&nbsp; In our time too, in a
+period of scarcity, while great multitudes of poor were daily
+crowding before the gates for relief, <a name="page63"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 63</span>by the unanimous consent of the
+brethren, a ship was sent to Bristol to purchase corn for
+charitable purposes.&nbsp; The vessel, delayed by contrary winds,
+and not returning (but rather affording an opportunity for the
+miracle), on the very day when there would have been a total
+deficiency of corn, both for the poor and the convent, a field
+near the monastery was found suddenly to ripen, more than a month
+before the usual time of harvest: thus, divine Providence
+supplied the brotherhood and the numerous poor with sufficient
+nourishment until autumn.&nbsp; By these and other signs of
+virtues, the place accepted by God began to be generally esteemed
+and venerated.</p>
+<p>It came to pass also in our days, during the period when the
+four sons of Caradoc son of Iestin, and nephews of prince Rhys by
+his sister, namely, Morgan, Meredyth, Owen, and Cadwallon, bore
+rule for their father in those parts, that Cadwallon, through
+inveterate malice, slew his brother Owen.&nbsp; But divine
+vengeance soon overtook him; for on his making a hostile attack
+on a certain castle, he was crushed to pieces by the sudden fall
+of its walls: and thus, in the presence of a numerous body of his
+own and his brother&rsquo;s forces, suffered the punishment which
+his barbarous and unnatural conduct had so justly merited.</p>
+<p>Another circumstance which happened here deserves
+notice.&nbsp; A greyhound belonging to the aforesaid Owen, large,
+beautiful, and curiously spotted with a variety of colours,
+received seven wounds from arrows and lances, in the defence of
+his master, and on his part did much injury to the enemy and
+assassins.&nbsp; When his wounds were healed, he was sent to king
+Henry II. by William earl of Gloucester, in testimony of so great
+and extraordinary a deed.&nbsp; A dog, of all animals, is most
+attached to man, and most easily distinguishes him; sometimes,
+when deprived of his master, he refuses to live, and in his
+master&rsquo;s defence is bold enough to brave death; ready,
+therefore, to die, either with or for his master.&nbsp; <a
+name="page64"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 64</span>I do not
+think it superfluous to insert here an example which Suetonius
+gives in his book on the nature of animals, and which Ambrosius
+also relates in his Exameron.&nbsp; &ldquo;A man, accompanied by
+a dog, was killed in a remote part of the city of Antioch, by a
+soldier, for the sake of plunder.&nbsp; The murderer, concealed
+by the darkness of the morning, escaped into another part of the
+city; the corpse lay unburied; a large concourse of people
+assembled; and the dog, with bitter howlings, lamented his
+master&rsquo;s fate.&nbsp; The murderer, by chance, passed that
+way, and, in order to prove his innocence, mingled with the crowd
+of spectators, and, as if moved by compassion, approached the
+body of the deceased.&nbsp; The dog, suspending for a while his
+moans, assumed the arms of revenge; rushed upon the man, and
+seized him, howling at the same time in so dolorous a manner,
+that all present shed tears.&nbsp; It was considered as a proof
+against the murderer, that the dog seized him from amongst so
+many, and would not let him go; and especially, as neither the
+crime of hatred, envy, or injury, could possibly, in this case,
+be urged against the dog.&nbsp; On account, therefore, of such a
+strong suspicion of murder (which the soldier constantly denied),
+it was determined that the truth of the matter should be tried by
+combat.&nbsp; The parties being assembled in a field, with a
+crowd of people around, the dog on one side, and the soldier,
+armed with a stick of a cubit&rsquo;s length, on the other, the
+murderer was at length overcome by the victorious dog, and
+suffered an ignominious death on the common gallows.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Pliny and Solinus relate that a certain king, who was very
+fond of dogs, and addicted to hunting, was taken and imprisoned
+by his enemies, and in a most wonderful manner liberated, without
+any assistance from his friends, by a pack of dogs, who had
+spontaneously sequestered themselves in the mountainous and woody
+regions, and from thence committed many atrocious acts of
+depredation on the neighbouring herds and flocks.&nbsp; I shall
+take this opportunity of mentioning what from <a
+name="page65"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 65</span>experience
+and ocular testimony I have observed respecting the nature of
+dogs.&nbsp; A dog is in general sagacious, but particularly with
+respect to his master; for when he has for some time lost him in
+a crowd, he depends more upon his nose than upon his eyes; and,
+in endeavouring to find him, he first looks about, and then
+applies his nose, for greater certainty, to his clothes, as if
+nature had placed all the powers of infallibility in that
+feature.&nbsp; The tongue of a dog possesses a medicinal quality;
+the wolf&rsquo;s, on the contrary, a poisonous: the dog heals his
+wounds by licking them, the wolf, by a similar practice, infects
+them; and the dog, if he has received a wound in his neck or
+head, or any part of his body where he cannot apply his tongue,
+ingeniously makes use of his hinder foot as a conveyance of the
+healing qualities to the parts affected.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER VIII<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">PASSAGE OF THE RIVERS AVON AND
+NETH&mdash;AND OF ABERTAWE AND GOER</span></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">Continuing</span> our journey, <a
+name="citation65"></a><a href="#footnote65"
+class="citation">[65]</a> not far from Margan, where the
+alternate vicissitudes of a sandy shore and the tide commence, we
+forded over the river Avon, having been considerably delayed by
+the ebbing of the sea; and under the guidance of Morgan, eldest
+son of Caradoc, proceeded along the sea-shore towards the river
+Neth, which, on account of its quicksands, is the most dangerous
+and inaccessible river in South Wales.&nbsp; A pack-horse
+belonging <a name="page66"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+66</span>to the author, which had proceeded by the lower way near
+the sea, although in the midst of many others, was the only one
+which sunk down into the abyss, but he was at last, with great
+difficulty, extricated, and not without some damage done to the
+baggage and books.&nbsp; Yet, although we had Morgan, the prince
+of that country, as our conductor, we did not reach the river
+without great peril, and some severe falls; for the alarm
+occasioned by this unusual kind of road, made us hasten our steps
+over the quicksands, in opposition to the advice of our guide,
+and fear quickened our pace; whereas, through these difficult
+passages, as we there learned, the mode of proceeding should be
+with moderate speed.&nbsp; But as the fords of that river
+experience a change by every monthly tide, and cannot be found
+after violent rains and floods, we did not attempt the ford, but
+passed the river in a boat, leaving the monastery of Neth <a
+name="citation66"></a><a href="#footnote66"
+class="citation">[66]</a> on our right hand, approaching again to
+the district of St. David&rsquo;s, and leaving the diocese of
+Landaf (which we had entered at Abergevenny) behind us.</p>
+<p>It happened in our days that David II., bishop of St.
+David&rsquo;s, passing this way, and finding the ford agitated by
+a recent storm, a chaplain of those parts, named Rotherch Falcus,
+being conversant in the proper method of crossing these rivers,
+undertook, at the desire of the bishop, the dangerous task of
+trying the ford.&nbsp; Having mounted a large and powerful horse,
+which had been <a name="page67"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+67</span>selected from the whole train for this purpose, he
+immediately crossed the ford, and fled with great rapidity to the
+neighbouring woods, nor could he be induced to return until the
+suspension which he had lately incurred was removed, and a full
+promise of security and indemnity obtained; the horse was then
+restored to one party, and his service to the other.</p>
+<p>Entering the province called Goer, <a
+name="citation67a"></a><a href="#footnote67a"
+class="citation">[67a]</a> we spent the night at the castle of
+Sweynsei, <a name="citation67b"></a><a href="#footnote67b"
+class="citation">[67b]</a> which in Welsh is called Abertawe, or
+the fall of the river Tawe into the sea.&nbsp; The next morning,
+the people being assembled after mass, and many having been
+induced to take the cross, an aged man of that district, named
+Cador, thus addressed the archbishop: &ldquo;My lord, if I now
+enjoyed my former strength, and the vigour of youth, no alms
+should ransom me, no desire of inactivity restrain me, from
+engaging in the laudable undertaking you preach; but since my
+weak age and the injuries of time deprive me of this desirable
+benefit (for approaching years bring with them many comforts,
+which those that are passed take away), if I cannot, owing to the
+infirmity of my body, attain a full merit, yet suffer me, by
+giving a tenth of all I possess, to attain a half.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Then falling down at the feet of the archbishop, he deposited in
+his hands, for <a name="page68"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+68</span>the service of the cross, the tenth of his estate,
+weeping bitterly, and intreating from him the remission of one
+half of the enjoined penance.&nbsp; After a short time he
+returned, and thus continued: &ldquo;My lord, if the will directs
+the action, and is itself, for the most part, considered as the
+act, and as I have a full and firm inclination to undertake this
+journey, I request a remission of the remaining part of the
+penance, and in addition to my former gift, I will equal the sum
+from the residue of my tenths.&rdquo;&nbsp; The archbishop,
+smiling at his devout ingenuity, embraced him with
+admiration.</p>
+<p>On the same night, two monks, who waited in the
+archbishop&rsquo;s chamber, conversing about the occurrences of
+their journey, and the dangers of the road, one of them said
+(alluding to the wildness of the country), &ldquo;This is a hard
+province;&rdquo; the other (alluding to the quicksands), wittily
+replied, &ldquo;Yet yesterday it was found too soft.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A short time before our days, a circumstance worthy of note
+occurred in these parts, which Elidorus, a priest, most
+strenuously affirmed had befallen himself.&nbsp; When a youth of
+twelve years, and learning his letters, since, as Solomon says,
+&ldquo;The root of learning is bitter, although the fruit is
+sweet,&rdquo; in order to avoid the discipline and frequent
+stripes inflicted on him by his preceptor, he ran away, and
+concealed himself under the hollow bank of a river.&nbsp; After
+fasting in that situation for two days, two little men of pigmy
+stature appeared to him, saying, &ldquo;If you will come with us,
+we will lead you into a country full of delights and
+sports.&rdquo;&nbsp; Assenting and rising up, he followed his
+guides through a path, at first subterraneous and dark, into a
+most beautiful country, adorned with rivers and meadows, woods
+and plains, but obscure, and not illuminated with the full light
+of the sun.&nbsp; All the days were cloudy, and the nights
+extremely dark, on account of the absence of the moon and
+stars.&nbsp; The boy was brought before the king, and introduced
+to him in the presence of the court; who, having examined him <a
+name="page69"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 69</span>for a long
+time, delivered him to his son, who was then a boy.&nbsp; These
+men were of the smallest stature, but very well proportioned in
+their make; they were all of a fair complexion, with luxuriant
+hair falling over their shoulders like that of women.&nbsp; They
+had horses and greyhounds adapted to their size.&nbsp; They
+neither ate flesh nor fish, but lived on milk diet, made up into
+messes with saffron.&nbsp; They never took an oath, for they
+detested nothing so much as lies.&nbsp; As often as they returned
+from our upper hemisphere, they reprobated our ambition,
+infidelities, and inconstancies; they had no form of public
+worship, being strict lovers and reverers, as it seemed, of
+truth.</p>
+<p>The boy frequently returned to our hemisphere, sometimes by
+the way he had first gone, sometimes by another: at first in
+company with other persons, and afterwards alone, and made
+himself known only to his mother, declaring to her the manners,
+nature, and state of that people.&nbsp; Being desired by her to
+bring a present of gold, with which that region abounded, he
+stole, while at play with the king&rsquo;s son, the golden ball
+with which he used to divert himself, and brought it to his
+mother in great haste; and when he reached the door of his
+father&rsquo;s house, but not unpursued, and was entering it in a
+great hurry, his foot stumbled on the threshold, and falling down
+into the room where his mother was sitting, the two pigmies
+seized the ball which had dropped from his hand, and departed,
+shewing the boy every mark of contempt and derision.&nbsp; On
+recovering from his fall, confounded with shame, and execrating
+the evil counsel of his mother, he returned by the usual track to
+the subterraneous road, but found no appearance of any passage,
+though he searched for it on the banks of the river for nearly
+the space of a year.&nbsp; But since those calamities are often
+alleviated by time, which reason cannot mitigate, and length of
+time alone blunts the edge of our afflictions, and puts an end to
+many evils, the youth having been brought back by his friends and
+mother, and <a name="page70"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+70</span>restored to his right way of thinking, and to his
+learning, in process of time attained the rank of
+priesthood.&nbsp; Whenever David II., bishop of St.
+David&rsquo;s, talked to him in his advanced state of life
+concerning this event, he could never relate the particulars
+without shedding tears.&nbsp; He had made himself acquainted with
+the language of that nation, the words of which, in his younger
+days, he used to recite, which, as the bishop often had informed
+me, were very conformable to the Greek idiom.&nbsp; When they
+asked for water, they said Ydor ydorum, which meant bring water,
+for Ydor in their language, as well as in the Greek, signifies
+water, from whence vessels for water are called
+&#8017;&delta;&zeta;&iota;&alpha;&iota;; and D&ucirc;r also, in
+the British language, signifies water.&nbsp; When they wanted
+salt they said, Halgein ydorum, bring salt: salt is called
+&#7937;&lambda; in Greek, and Halen in British, for that
+language, from the length of time which the Britons (then called
+Trojans, and afterwards Britons, from Brito, their leader)
+remained in Greece after the destruction of Troy, became, in many
+instances, similar to the Greek.</p>
+<p>It is remarkable that so many languages should correspond in
+one word, &#7937;&lambda; in Greek, Halen in British, and Halgein
+in the Irish tongue, the g being inserted; Sal in Latin, because,
+as Priscian says, &ldquo;the s is placed in some words instead of
+an aspirate,&rdquo; as &#7937;&lambda;&sigmaf; in Greek is called
+Sal in Latin,
+&#7953;&mu;&iota;&mdash;semi&mdash;&#7953;&pi;&tau;&alpha;&mdash;septem&mdash;Sel
+in French&mdash;the <i>a</i> being changed into
+<i>e</i>&mdash;Salt in English, by the addition of <i>t</i> to
+the Latin; Sout, in the Teutonic language: there are therefore
+seven or eight languages agreeing in this one word.&nbsp; If a
+scrupulous inquirer should ask my opinion of the relation here
+inserted, I answer with Augustine, &ldquo;that the divine
+miracles are to be admired, not discussed.&rdquo;&nbsp; Nor do I,
+by denial, place bounds to the divine power, nor, by assent,
+insolently extend what cannot be extended.&nbsp; But I always
+call to mind the saying of St. Jerome; &ldquo;You will
+find,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;many things incredible and
+improbable, which nevertheless are true; for nature cannot in any
+respect prevail <a name="page71"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+71</span>against the lord of nature.&rdquo;&nbsp; These things,
+therefore, and similar contingencies, I should place, according
+to the opinion of Augustine, among those particulars which are
+neither to be affirmed, nor too positively denied.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER IX<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">PASSAGE OVER THE RIVERS LOCHOR AND
+WENDRAETH; AND OF CYDWELI</span></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">Thence</span> we proceeded towards the
+river Lochor, <a name="citation71a"></a><a href="#footnote71a"
+class="citation">[71a]</a> through the plains in which Howel, son
+of Meredyth of Brecheinoc, after the decease of king Henry I.,
+gained a signal victory over the English.&nbsp; Having first
+crossed the river Lochor, and afterwards the water called
+Wendraeth, <a name="citation71b"></a><a href="#footnote71b"
+class="citation">[71b]</a> we arrived at the castle of Cydweli.
+<a name="citation71c"></a><a href="#footnote71c"
+class="citation">[71c]</a>&nbsp; In this district, after the
+death of king Henry, whilst Gruffydd <a name="page72"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 72</span>son of Rhys, the prince of South
+Wales, was engaged in soliciting assistance from North Wales, his
+wife Gwenliana (like the queen of the Amazons, and a second
+Penthesilea) led an army into these parts; but she was defeated
+by Maurice de Londres, lord of that country, and Geoffrey, the
+bishop&rsquo;s constable. <a name="citation72"></a><a
+href="#footnote72" class="citation">[72]</a>&nbsp; Morgan, one of
+her sons, whom she had arrogantly brought with her in that
+expedition, was slain, and the other, Malgo, taken prisoner; and
+she, with many of her followers, was put to death.&nbsp; During
+the reign of king Henry I., when Wales enjoyed a state of
+tranquillity, the above-mentioned Maurice had a forest in that
+neighbourhood, well stocked with wild animals, and especially
+deer, and was extremely tenacious of his venison.&nbsp; His wife
+(for women are often very expert in deceiving men) made use of
+this curious stratagem.&nbsp; Her husband possessed, on the side
+of the wood next the sea, some extensive pastures, and large
+flocks of sheep.&nbsp; Having made all the shepherds and chief
+people in her house accomplices and favourers of her design, and
+taking advantage of the simple courtesy of her husband, she thus
+addressed him: &ldquo;It is wonderful that being lord over
+beasts, you have ceased to exercise dominion over them; and by
+not making use of your deer, do not now rule over them, but are
+subservient to them; and behold how great an abuse arises from
+too much patience; for they attack our sheep with such an
+unheard-of rage, and unusual voracity, that from many they are
+become few; from being innumerable, only numerous.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+To make her story more probable, she caused some wool to be
+inserted between the intestines of two stags which had been
+embowelled; and her husband, thus artfully deceived, sacrificed
+his deer to the rapacity of his dogs.</p>
+<h3><a name="page73"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+73</span>CHAPTER X<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">TYWY
+RIVER&mdash;CAERMARDYN&mdash;MONASTERY OF ALBELANDE</span></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">Having</span> crossed the river Tywy in a
+boat, we proceeded towards Caermardyn, leaving Lanstephan and
+Talachar <a name="citation73a"></a><a href="#footnote73a"
+class="citation">[73a]</a> on the sea-coast to our left.&nbsp;
+After the death of king Henry II., Rhys, the son of Gruffydd,
+took these two castles by assault; then, having laid waste, by
+fire and sword, the provinces of Penbroch and Ros, he besieged
+Caermardyn, but failed in his attempt.&nbsp; Caermardyn <a
+name="citation73b"></a><a href="#footnote73b"
+class="citation">[73b]</a> signifies the city of Merlin, because,
+according to the British History, he was there said to have been
+begotten of an incubus.</p>
+<p>This ancient city is situated on the banks of the noble river
+Tywy, surrounded by woods and pastures, and was strongly inclosed
+with walls of brick, part of which are still standing; having
+Cantref Mawr, the great cantred, or hundred, on the eastern side,
+a safe refuge, in times of danger, to the inhabitants of South
+Wales, on account of its thick woods; where is also the castle of
+Dinevor, <a name="citation73c"></a><a href="#footnote73c"
+class="citation">[73c]</a> built <a name="page74"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 74</span>on a lofty summit above the Tywy, the
+royal seat of the princes of South Wales.&nbsp; In ancient times,
+there were three regal palaces in Wales: Dinevor in South Wales,
+Aberfrau in North Wales, situated in Anglesea, and Pengwern in
+Powys, now called Shrewsbury (Slopesburia); Pengwern signifies
+the head of a grove of alders.&nbsp; Recalling to mind those
+poetical passages:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Dolus an virtus quis in hoste
+requirat?&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>and</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Et si non recte possis quocunque modo
+rem,&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>my pen shrinks with abhorrence from the relation of the
+enormous vengeance exercised by the court against its vassals,
+within the comot of Caeo, in the Cantref Mawr.&nbsp; Near
+Dinevor, on the other side of the river Tywy, in the Cantref
+Bychan, or the little cantred, there is a spring which, like the
+tide, ebbs and flows twice in twenty-four hours. <a
+name="citation74a"></a><a href="#footnote74a"
+class="citation">[74a]</a>&nbsp; Not far to the north of
+Caermardyn, namely at Pencadair, <a name="citation74b"></a><a
+href="#footnote74b" class="citation">[74b]</a> that is, the head
+of the chair, when Rhys, the son of Gruffydd, was more by
+stratagem than force compelled to surrender, and was carried away
+into England, king Henry II. despatched a knight, born in
+Britany, on whose wisdom and fidelity he could rely, under the
+conduct of Guaidanus, dean of Cantref Mawr, to explore the
+situation of Dinevor castle, and the strength of the
+country.&nbsp; The priest, being desired to take the knight by
+the easiest and best road to the castle, led him purposely aside
+by the most difficult and inaccessible paths, and wherever they
+passed through woods, the priest, to the general surprise of all
+present, fed upon grass, asserting that, in times of need, the <a
+name="page75"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 75</span>inhabitants
+of that country were accustomed to live upon herbs and
+roots.&nbsp; The knight returning to the king, and relating what
+had happened, affirmed that the country was uninhabitable, vile,
+and inaccessible, and only affording food to a beastly nation,
+living like brutes.&nbsp; At length the king released Rhys,
+having first bound him to fealty by solemn oaths and the delivery
+of hostages.</p>
+<p>On our journey from Caermardyn towards the Cistercian
+monastery called Alba Domus, <a name="citation75a"></a><a
+href="#footnote75a" class="citation">[75a]</a> the archbishop was
+informed of the murder of a young Welshman, who was devoutly
+hastening to meet him; when turning out of the road, he ordered
+the corpse to be covered with the cloak of his almoner, and with
+a pious supplication commended the soul of the murdered youth to
+heaven.&nbsp; Twelve archers of the adjacent castle of St. Clare,
+<a name="citation75b"></a><a href="#footnote75b"
+class="citation">[75b]</a> who had assassinated the young man,
+were on the following day <a name="page76"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 76</span>signed with the cross at Alba Domus,
+as a punishment for their crime.&nbsp; Having traversed three
+rivers, the Taf, then the Cleddeu, under Lanwadein, <a
+name="citation76a"></a><a href="#footnote76a"
+class="citation">[76a]</a> and afterwards another branch of the
+same river, we at length arrived at Haverford.&nbsp; This
+province, from its situation between two rivers, has acquired the
+name of Daugleddeu, <a name="citation76b"></a><a
+href="#footnote76b" class="citation">[76b]</a> being enclosed and
+terminated, as it were, by two swords, for cleddue, in the
+British language, signifies a sword.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER XI<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">OF HAVERFORD AND ROS</span></h3>
+<p>A <span class="smcap">sermon</span> having been delivered at
+Haverford <a name="citation76c"></a><a href="#footnote76c"
+class="citation">[76c]</a> by the archbishop, and the word of God
+preached to the people by the archdeacon, whose name appears on
+the title-page of this work, many soldiers and plebeians were
+induced to take the cross.&nbsp; It appeared wonderful and
+miraculous, that, although the archdeacon addressed them both in
+the Latin and French tongues, those persons who understood
+neither of those languages were equally affected, and flocked in
+great numbers to the cross.</p>
+<p>An old woman of those parts, who for three preceding years had
+been blind, having heard of the archbishop&rsquo;s arrival, sent
+her son to the place where the sermon was to be preached, that he
+might bring back to her some <a name="page77"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 77</span>particle, if only of the fringe of
+his garment.&nbsp; The young man being prevented by the crowd
+from approaching the archbishop, waited till the assembly was
+dispersed, and then carried a piece of the earth on which the
+preacher had stood.&nbsp; The mother received the gift with great
+joy, and falling immediately on her knees, applied the turf to
+her mouth and eyes; and thus, through the merits of the holy man,
+and her own faith and devotion, recovered the blessing of sight,
+which she had entirely lost.</p>
+<p>The inhabitants of this province derived their origin from
+Flanders, and were sent by king Henry I. to inhabit these
+districts; a people brave and robust, ever most hostile to the
+Welsh; a people, I say, well versed in commerce and woollen
+manufactories; a people anxious to seek gain by sea or land, in
+defiance of fatigue and danger; a hardy race, equally fitted for
+the plough or the sword; a people brave and happy, if Wales (as
+it ought to have been) had been dear to its sovereign, and had
+not so frequently experienced the vindictive resentment and
+ill-treatment of its governors.</p>
+<p>A circumstance happened in the castle of Haverford during our
+time, which ought not to be omitted.&nbsp; A famous robber was
+fettered and confined in one of its towers, and was often visited
+by three boys, the son of the earl of Clare, and two others, one
+of whom was son of the lord of the castle, and the other his
+grandson, sent thither for their education, and who applied to
+him for arrows, with which he used to supply them.&nbsp; One day,
+at the request of the children, the robber, being brought from
+his dungeon, took advantage of the absence of the gaoler, closed
+the door, and shut himself up with the boys.&nbsp; A great
+clamour instantly arose, as well from the boys within, as from
+the people without; nor did he cease, with an uplifted axe, to
+threaten the lives of the children, until indemnity and security
+were assured to him in the most ample manner.&nbsp; A similar
+accident happened at Chateau-roux in France.&nbsp; The lord of
+that <a name="page78"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 78</span>place
+maintained in the castle a man whose eyes he had formerly put
+out, but who, by long habit, recollected the ways of the castle,
+and the steps leading to the towers.&nbsp; Seizing an opportunity
+of revenge, and meditating the destruction of the youth, he
+fastened the inward doors of the castle, and took the only son
+and heir of the governor of the castle to the summit of a high
+tower, from whence he was seen with the utmost concern by the
+people beneath.&nbsp; The father of the boy hastened thither,
+and, struck with terror, attempted by every possible means to
+procure the ransom of his son, but received for answer, that this
+could not be effected, but by the same mutilation of those lower
+parts, which he had likewise inflicted on him.&nbsp; The father,
+having in vain entreated mercy, at length assented, and caused a
+violent blow to be struck on his body; and the people around him
+cried out lamentably, as if he had suffered mutilation.&nbsp; The
+blind man asked him where he felt the greatest pain? when he
+replied in his reins, he declared it was false and prepared to
+precipitate the boy.&nbsp; A second blow was given, and the lord
+of the castle asserting that the greatest pains were at his
+heart, the blind man expressing his disbelief, again carried the
+boy to the summit of the tower.&nbsp; The third time, however,
+the father, to save his son, really mutilated himself; and when
+he exclaimed that the greatest pain was in his teeth; &ldquo;It
+is true,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;as a man who has had experience
+should be believed, and thou hast in part revenged my
+injuries.&nbsp; I shall meet death with more satisfaction, and
+thou shalt neither beget any other son, nor receive comfort from
+this.&rdquo;&nbsp; Then, precipitating himself and the boy from
+the summit of the tower, their limbs were broken, and both
+instantly expired.&nbsp; The knight ordered a monastery to be
+built on the spot for the soul of the boy, which is still extant,
+and called De Doloribus.</p>
+<p>It appears remarkable to me that the entire inheritance should
+devolve on Richard, son of Tankard, governor of the aforesaid
+castle of Haverford, being the <a name="page79"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 79</span>youngest son, and having many
+brothers of distinguished character who died before him.&nbsp; In
+like manner the dominion of South Wales descended to Rhys son of
+Gruffyd, owing to the death of several of his brothers.&nbsp;
+During the childhood of Richard, a holy man, named Caradoc, led a
+pious and recluse life at St. Ismael, in the province of Ros, <a
+name="citation79a"></a><a href="#footnote79a"
+class="citation">[79a]</a> to whom the boy was often sent by his
+parents with provisions, and he so ingratiated himself in the
+eyes of the good man, that he very often promised him, together
+with his blessing, the portion of all his brothers, and the
+paternal inheritance.&nbsp; It happened that Richard, being
+overtaken by a violent storm of rain, turned aside to the
+hermit&rsquo;s cell; and being unable to get his hounds near him,
+either by calling, coaxing, or by offering them food, the holy
+man smiled; and making a gentle motion with his hand, brought
+them all to him immediately.&nbsp; In process of time, when
+Caradoc <a name="citation79b"></a><a href="#footnote79b"
+class="citation">[79b]</a> <a name="page80"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 80</span>had happily completed the course of
+his existence, Tankard, father of Richard, violently detained his
+body, which by his last will he had bequeathed to the church of
+St. David; but being suddenly seized with a severe illness, he
+revoked his command.&nbsp; When this had happened to him a second
+and a third time, and the corpse at last was suffered to be
+conveyed away, and was proceeding over the sands of Niwegal
+towards St. David&rsquo;s, a prodigious fall of rain inundated
+the whole country; but the conductors of the sacred burthen, on
+coming forth from their shelter, found the silken pall, with
+which the bier was covered, dry and uninjured by the storm; and
+thus the miraculous body of Caradoc was brought into the church
+of St. Andrew and St. David, and with due solemnity deposited in
+the left aisle, near the altar of the holy proto-martyr
+Stephen.</p>
+<p>It is worthy of remark, that these people (the Flemings), from
+the inspection of the right shoulders of rams, which have been
+stripped of their flesh, and not roasted, but boiled, can
+discover future events, or those which have passed and remained
+long unknown. <a name="citation80"></a><a href="#footnote80"
+class="citation">[80]</a>&nbsp; They know, also, what is
+transpiring at a distant place, by a wonderful art, and a
+prophetic kind of spirit.&nbsp; They declare, also, by means of
+signs, the undoubted symptoms of approaching peace and war,
+murders and fires, domestic adulteries, the state of the king,
+his life and death.&nbsp; It happened in our time, that a man of
+those parts, whose name was William Mangunel, a person of high
+rank, and excelling all others in the aforesaid art, had a wife
+big with child by her own husband&rsquo;s grandson.&nbsp; Well
+aware of the fact, he ordered a ram from his own flock to be sent
+to his wife, as a present from her neighbour, which was carried
+to the cook, and dressed.&nbsp; At dinner, the <a
+name="page81"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 81</span>husband
+purposely gave the shoulder-bone of the ram, properly cleaned, to
+his wife, who was also well skilled in this art, for her
+examination; when, having for a short time examined the secret
+marks, she smiled, and threw the oracle down on the table.&nbsp;
+Her husband, dissembling, earnestly demanded the cause of her
+smiling, and the explanation of the matter.&nbsp; Overcome by his
+entreaties, she answered: &ldquo;The man to whose fold this ram
+belongs, has an adulterous wife, at this time pregnant by the
+commission of incest with his own grandson.&rdquo;&nbsp; The
+husband, with a sorrowful and dejected countenance, replied:
+&ldquo;You deliver, indeed, an oracle supported by too much
+truth, which I have so much more reason to lament, as the
+ignominy you have published redounds to my own
+injury.&rdquo;&nbsp; The woman, thus detected, and unable to
+dissemble her confusion, betrayed the inward feelings of her mind
+by external signs; shame and sorrow urging her by turns, and
+manifesting themselves, now by blushes, now by paleness, and
+lastly (according to the custom of women), by tears.&nbsp; The
+shoulder of a goat was also once brought to a certain person,
+instead of a ram&rsquo;s&mdash;both being alike, when cleaned;
+who, observing for a short time the lines and marks, exclaimed,
+&ldquo;Unhappy cattle, that never was multiplied! unhappy,
+likewise, the owner of the cattle, who never had more than three
+or four in one flock!&rdquo;&nbsp; Many persons, a year and a
+half before the event, foresaw, by the means of shoulder-bones,
+the destruction of their country, after the decease of king Henry
+I., and, selling all their possessions, left their homes, and
+escaped the impending ruin.</p>
+<p>It happened also in Flanders, from whence this people came,
+that a certain man sent a similar bone to a neighbour for his
+inspection; and the person who carried it, on passing over a
+ditch, broke wind, and wished it in the nostrils of the man on
+whose account he was thus troubled.&nbsp; The person to whom the
+bone was taken, on examination, said, &ldquo;May you have in your
+own nose, that which you wished to be in mine.&rdquo;&nbsp; In
+our time, a soothsayer, on <a name="page82"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 82</span>the inspection of a bone, discovered
+not only a theft, and the manner of it, but the thief himself,
+and all the attendant circumstances; he heard also the striking
+of a bell, and the sound of a trumpet, as if those things which
+were past were still performing.&nbsp; It is wonderful,
+therefore, that these bones, like all unlawful conjurations,
+should represent, by a counterfeit similitude to the eyes and
+ears, things which are passed, as well as those which are now
+going on.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER XII<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">OF PENBROCH</span></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> province of Penbroch adjoins
+the southern part of the territory of Ros, and is separated from
+it by an arm of the sea.&nbsp; Its principal city, and the
+metropolis of Demetia, is situated on an oblong rocky eminence,
+extending with two branches from Milford Haven, from whence it
+derived the name of Penbroch, which signifies the head of the
+&aelig;stuary.&nbsp; Arnulph de Montgomery, <a
+name="citation82a"></a><a href="#footnote82a"
+class="citation">[82a]</a> in the reign of king Henry I., erected
+here a slender fortress with stakes and turf, which, on returning
+to England, he consigned to the care of Giraldus de Windesor, <a
+name="citation82b"></a><a href="#footnote82b"
+class="citation">[82b]</a> his constable and lieutenant-general,
+a <a name="page83"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 83</span>worthy
+and discreet man.&nbsp; Immediately on the death of Rhys son of
+Tewdwr, who a short time before had been slain by the treachery
+of his own troops at Brecheinoc, leaving his son, Gruffydd, a
+child, the inhabitants of South Wales besieged the castle.&nbsp;
+One night, when fifteen soldiers had deserted, and endeavoured to
+escape from the castle in a small boat, on the following morning
+Giraldus invested their armour bearers with the arms and estates
+of their masters, and decorated them with the military
+order.&nbsp; The garrison being, from the length of the siege,
+reduced to the utmost want of provisions, the constable, with
+great prudence and flattering hopes of success, caused four hogs,
+which yet remained, to be cut into small pieces and thrown down
+to the enemy from the fortifications.&nbsp; The next day, having
+again recourse to a more refined stratagem, he contrived that a
+letter, sealed with his own signet, should be found before the
+house of Wilfred, <a name="citation83"></a><a href="#footnote83"
+class="citation">[83]</a> bishop of St. David&rsquo;s, who was
+then by chance in that neighbourhood, as if accidentally dropped,
+stating that there would be no necessity of soliciting the
+assistance of earl Arnulph for the next four months to
+come.&nbsp; The contents of these letters being made known to the
+army, the troops abandoned the siege of the castle, and retired
+to their own homes.&nbsp; Giraldus, in order to make himself and
+his dependants more secure, married Nest, the sister of Gruffydd,
+prince of South Wales, by whom he had an illustrious progeny of
+both sexes; and by whose means both the maritime parts of South
+Wales were retained by the English, and the walls of Ireland
+afterwards stormed, as our Vaticinal History declares.</p>
+<p><a name="page84"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 84</span>In our
+time, a person residing at the castle of Penbroch, found a brood
+of young weasels concealed within a fleece in his dwelling house,
+which he carefully removed and hid.&nbsp; The mother, irritated
+at the loss of her young, which she had searched for in vain,
+went to a vessel of milk that had been set aside for the use of
+the master&rsquo;s son, and raising herself up, polluted it with
+her deadly poison; thus revenging, as it were, the loss of her
+young, by the destruction of the child.&nbsp; The man, observing
+what passed, carried the fleece back to its former place; when
+the weasel, agitated by maternal solicitude, between hope and
+fear, on finding again her young, began to testify her joy by her
+cries and actions, and returning quickly to the vessel, overthrew
+it; thus, in gratitude for the recovery of her own offspring,
+saving that of her host from danger.</p>
+<p>In another place, an animal of the same species had brought
+out her young into a plain for the enjoyment of the sun and air;
+when an insidious kite carried off one of them.&nbsp; Concealing
+herself with the remainder behind some shrubs, grief suggested to
+her a stratagem of exquisite revenge; she extended herself on a
+heap of earth, as if dead, within sight of the plunderer, and (as
+success always increases avidity) the bird immediately seized her
+and flew away, but soon fell down dead by the bite of the
+poisonous animal.</p>
+<p>The castle called Maenor Pyrr, <a name="citation84"></a><a
+href="#footnote84" class="citation">[84]</a> that is, the mansion
+of <a name="page85"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 85</span>Pyrrus,
+who also possessed the island of Chaldey, which the Welsh call
+Inys Pyrr, or the island of Pyrrus, is distant about three miles
+from Penbroch.&nbsp; It is excellently well defended by turrets
+and bulwarks, and is situated on the summit of a hill extending
+on the western side towards the sea-port, having on the northern
+and southern sides a fine fish-pond under its walls, as
+conspicuous for its grand appearance, as for the depth of its
+waters, and a beautiful orchard on the same side, inclosed on one
+part by a vineyard, and on the other by a wood, remarkable for
+the projection of its rocks, and the height of its hazel
+trees.&nbsp; On the right hand of the promontory, between the
+castle and the church, near the site of a very large lake and
+mill, a rivulet of never-failing water flows through a valley,
+rendered sandy by the violence of the winds.&nbsp; Towards the
+west, the Severn sea, bending its course to Ireland, enters a
+hollow bay at some distance from the castle; and the southern
+rocks, if extended a little further towards the north, would
+render it a most excellent harbour for shipping.&nbsp; From this
+point of sight, you will see almost all the ships from Great
+Britain, which the east wind drives upon the Irish coast,
+daringly brave the inconstant waves and raging sea.&nbsp; This
+country is well supplied with corn, sea-fish, and imported wines;
+and what is preferable to every other advantage, from its
+vicinity to Ireland, it is tempered by a salubrious air.&nbsp;
+Demetia, therefore, with its seven cantreds, is the most
+beautiful, as well as the most powerful district of Wales;
+Penbroch, the finest part of the province of Demetia; and the
+place I have just described, the most delightful part of
+Penbroch.&nbsp; It is evident, therefore, that Maenor Pirr is the
+pleasantest spot in Wales; and the author may be pardoned for
+having thus extolled his native soil, his genial territory, with
+a profusion of praise and admiration.</p>
+<p><a name="page86"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 86</span>In this
+part of Penbroch, unclean spirits have conversed, nor visibly,
+but sensibly, with mankind; first in the house of Stephen Wiriet,
+<a name="citation86a"></a><a href="#footnote86a"
+class="citation">[86a]</a> and afterwards in the house of William
+Not; <a name="citation86b"></a><a href="#footnote86b"
+class="citation">[86b]</a> manifesting their presence by throwing
+dirt at them, and more with a view of mockery than of
+injury.&nbsp; In the house of William, they cut holes in the
+linen and woollen garments, much to the loss of the owner of the
+house and his guests; nor could any precaution, or even bolts,
+secure them from these inconveniences.&nbsp; In the house of
+Stephen, the spirit in a more extraordinary manner conversed with
+men, and, in reply to their taunts, upbraided them openly with
+everything they had done from their birth, and which they were
+not willing should be known or heard by others.&nbsp; I do not
+presume to assign the cause of this event, except that it is said
+to be the presage of a sudden change from poverty to riches, or
+rather from affluence to poverty and distress; as it was found to
+be the case in both these instances.&nbsp; And it appears to me
+very extraordinary that these places could not be purified from
+such illusions, either by the sprinkling of holy water, or the
+assistance of any other religious ceremony; for the priests
+themselves, though protected by the crucifix, or the holy water,
+on devoutly entering the house, were equally subject to the same
+insults.&nbsp; From whence it appears that things pertaining to
+the sacraments, as well as the sacraments themselves, defend us
+from hurtful, but not from harmless things; from annoyances, but
+not from illusions.&nbsp; It is worthy of note, that in our time,
+a woman in Poitou was possessed by a demon, who, through her
+mouth, artfully and acutely disputed with the learned.&nbsp; He
+sometimes upbraided people with <a name="page87"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 87</span>their secret actions, and those
+things which they wished not to hear; but when either the books
+of the gospel, or the relics of saints, were placed upon the
+mouth of the possessed, he fled to the lower part of her throat;
+and when they were removed thither, he descended into her
+belly.&nbsp; His appearance was indicated by certain inflations
+and convulsions of the parts which he possessed, and when the
+relics were again placed in the lower parts, he directly returned
+to the upper.&nbsp; At length, when they brought the body of
+Christ, and gave it to the patient, the demon answered, &ldquo;Ye
+fools, you are doing nothing, for what you give her is not the
+food of the body, but of the soul; and my power is confined to
+the body, not to the soul.&rdquo;&nbsp; But when those persons
+whom he had upbraided with their more serious actions, had
+confessed, and returned from penance, he reproached them no
+more.&nbsp; &ldquo;I have known, indeed,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;I
+have known but now I know not, (he spake this as it were a
+reproach to others), and I hold my tongue, for what I know, I
+know not.&rdquo;&nbsp; From which it appears, that after
+confession and penance, the demons either do not know the sins of
+men, or do not know them to their injury and disgrace; because,
+as Augustine says, &ldquo;If man conceals, God discovers; if man
+discovers, God conceals.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Some people are surprised that lightning often strikes our
+places of worship, and damages the crosses and images of him who
+was crucified, before the eyes of one who seeth all things, and
+permits these circumstances to happen; to whom I shall only
+answer with Ovid,</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Summa petit livor, perflant altissima
+venti,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Summa petunt dextra fulmina missa Jovis.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>On the same subject, Peter Abelard, in the presence of Philip
+king of France, is said to have answered a Jew, who urged these
+and similar things against the faith.&nbsp; &ldquo;It is true
+that the lightning descending from on high, directs itself most
+commonly to the highest object on <a name="page88"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 88</span>earth, and to those most resembling
+its own nature; it never, therefore, injures your synagogues,
+because no man ever saw or heard of its falling upon a
+privy.&rdquo;&nbsp; An event worthy of note, happened in our time
+in France.&nbsp; During a contention between some monks of the
+Cistercian order, and a certain knight, about the limits of their
+fields and lands, a violent tempest, in one night, utterly
+destroyed and ruined the cultivated grounds of the monks, while
+the adjoining territory of the knight remained undamaged.&nbsp;
+On which occasion he insolently inveighed against the fraternity,
+and publicly asserted that divine vengeance had thus punished
+them for unlawfully keeping possession of his land; to which the
+abbot wittily replied, &ldquo;It is by no means so; but that the
+knight had more friends in that riding than the monastery;&rdquo;
+and he clearly demonstrated that, on the other hand, the monks
+had more enemies in it.</p>
+<p>In the province of Penbroch, another instance occurred, about
+the same time, of a spirit&rsquo;s appearing in the house of
+Elidore de Stakepole, <a name="citation88"></a><a
+href="#footnote88" class="citation">[88]</a> not only sensibly,
+but visibly, under the form of a red-haired young man, who called
+himself Simon.&nbsp; First seizing the keys from the person to
+whom they were entrusted, he impudently assumed the
+steward&rsquo;s office, which he managed so prudently and
+providently, that all things seemed to abound under his care, and
+there was no deficiency in the house.&nbsp; Whatever the master
+or mistress secretly thought of having for their daily use or
+provision, he procured with wonderful agility, and without any
+previous directions, saying, &ldquo;You wished that to be done,
+and it shall be done for you.&rdquo;&nbsp; He was also well
+acquainted with their treasures and secret hoards, and sometimes
+upbraided them on that account; for as often as they seemed to
+act sparingly <a name="page89"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+89</span>and avariciously, he used to say, &ldquo;Why are you
+afraid to spend that heap of gold or silver, since your lives are
+of so short duration, and the money you so cautiously hoard up
+will never do you any service?&rdquo;&nbsp; He gave the choicest
+meat and drink to the rustics and hired servants, saying that
+&ldquo;Those persons should be abundantly supplied, by whose
+labours they were acquired.&rdquo;&nbsp; Whatever he determined
+should be done, whether pleasing or displeasing to his master or
+mistress (for, as we have said before, he knew all their
+secrets), he completed in his usual expeditious manner, without
+their consent.&nbsp; He never went to church, or uttered one
+Catholic word.&nbsp; He did not sleep in the house, but was ready
+at his office in the morning.</p>
+<p>He was at length observed by some of the family to hold his
+nightly converse near a mill and a pool of water; upon which
+discovery he was summoned the next morning before the master of
+the house and his lady, and, receiving his discharge, delivered
+up the keys, which he had held for upwards of forty days.&nbsp;
+Being earnestly interrogated, at his departure, who he was? he
+answered, &ldquo;That he was begotten upon the wife of a rustic
+in that parish, by a demon, in the shape of her husband,&rdquo;
+naming the man, and his father-in-law, then dead, and his mother,
+still alive; the truth of which the woman, upon examination,
+openly avowed.&nbsp; A similar circumstance happened in our time
+in Denmark.&nbsp; A certain unknown priest paid court to the
+archbishop, and, from his obsequious behaviour and discreet
+conduct, his general knowledge of letters and quick memory, soon
+contracted a great familiarity with him.&nbsp; Conversing one day
+with the archbishop about ancient histories and unknown events,
+on which topic he most frequently heard him with pleasure, it
+happened that when the subject of their discourse was the
+incarnation of our Lord, he said, amongst other things,
+&ldquo;Before Christ assumed human nature, the demons had great
+power over mankind, which, at his coming, was much diminished; <a
+name="page90"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 90</span>insomuch that
+they were dispersed on every side, and fled from his
+presence.&nbsp; Some precipitated themselves into the sea, others
+into the hollow parts of trees, or the clefts of rocks; and I
+myself leaped into a well;&rdquo; on which he blushed for shame,
+and took his departure.&nbsp; The archbishop, and those who were
+with him, being greatly astonished at that speech, began to ask
+questions by turns, and form conjectures; and having waited some
+time (for he was expected to return soon), the archbishop ordered
+some of his attendants to call him, but he was sought for in
+vain, and never re-appeared.&nbsp; Soon afterwards, two priests,
+whom the archbishop had sent to Rome, returned; and when this
+event was related to them, they began to inquire the day and hour
+on which the circumstance had happened?&nbsp; On being told it,
+they declared that on the very same day and hour he had met them
+on the Alps, saying, that he had been sent to the court of Rome,
+on account of some business of his master&rsquo;s (meaning the
+archbishop), which had lately occurred.&nbsp; And thus it was
+proved, that a demon had deluded them under a human form.</p>
+<p>I ought not to omit mentioning the falcons of these parts,
+which are large, and of a generous kind, and exercise a most
+severe tyranny over the river and land birds.&nbsp; King Henry
+II. remained here some time, making preparations for his voyage
+to Ireland; and being desirous of taking the diversion of
+hawking, he accidentally saw a noble falcon perched upon a
+rock.&nbsp; Going sideways round him, he let loose a fine Norway
+hawk, which he carried on his left hand.&nbsp; The falcon, though
+at first slower in its flight, soaring up to a great height,
+burning with resentment, and in his turn becoming the aggressor,
+rushed down upon his adversary with the greatest impetuosity, and
+by a violent blow struck the hawk dead at the feet of the
+king.&nbsp; From that time the king sent every year, about the
+breeding season, for the falcons <a name="citation90"></a><a
+href="#footnote90" class="citation">[90]</a> of <a
+name="page91"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 91</span>this country,
+which are produced on the sea cliffs; nor can better be found in
+any part of his dominions.&nbsp; But let us now return to our
+Itinerary.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER XIII<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">OF THE PROGRESS BY CAMROS AND
+NIWEGAL</span></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">From</span> Haverford we proceeded on our
+journey to Menevia, distant from thence about twelve miles, and
+passed through Camros, <a name="citation91a"></a><a
+href="#footnote91a" class="citation">[91a]</a> where, in the
+reign of king Stephen, the relations and friends of a
+distinguished young man, Giraldus, son of William, revenged his
+death by a too severe retaliation on the men of Ros.&nbsp; We
+then passed over Niwegal sands, at which place (during the winter
+that king Henry II. spent in Ireland), as well as in almost all
+the other western ports, a very remarkable circumstance
+occurred.&nbsp; The sandy shores of South Wales, being laid bare
+by the extraordinary violence of a storm, the surface of the
+earth, which had been covered for many ages, re-appeared, and
+discovered the trunks of trees cut off, standing in the very sea
+itself, the strokes of the hatchet appearing as if made only
+yesterday. <a name="citation91b"></a><a href="#footnote91b"
+class="citation">[91b]</a>&nbsp; The soil was very black, and the
+wood like ebony.&nbsp; By a wonderful revolution, the road for
+ships became impassable, and looked, not like a shore, but like a
+grove cut down, perhaps, at <a name="page92"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 92</span>the time of the deluge, or not long
+after, but certainly in very remote ages, being by degrees
+consumed and swallowed up by the violence and encroachments of
+the sea.&nbsp; During the same tempest many sea fish were driven,
+by the violence of the wind and waves, upon dry land.&nbsp; We
+were well lodged at St. David&rsquo;s by Peter, bishop of the
+see, a liberal man, who had hitherto accompanied us during the
+whole of our journey.</p>
+<h2><a name="page93"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 93</span>BOOK
+II</h2>
+<h3><a name="page94"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+94</span>PREFACE</h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">Since</span>, therefore, St. David&rsquo;s
+is the head, and in times past was the metropolitan, city of
+Wales, though now, alas! retaining more of the <i>name</i> than
+of the <i>omen</i>, <a name="citation94"></a><a
+href="#footnote94" class="citation">[94]</a> yet I have not
+forborne to weep over the obsequies of our ancient and undoubted
+mother, to follow the mournful hearse, and to deplore with
+tearful sighs the ashes of our half-buried matron.&nbsp; I shall,
+therefore, endeavour briefly to declare to you in what manner,
+from whence, and from what period the pall was first brought to
+St. David&rsquo;s, and how it was taken away; how many prelates
+were invested with the pall; and how many were despoiled thereof;
+together with their respective names to this present day.</p>
+<h3><a name="page95"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+95</span>CHAPTER I<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">OF THE SEE OF SAINT
+DAVID&rsquo;S</span></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">We</span> are informed by the British
+histories, that Dubricius, archbishop of Caerleon, sensible of
+the infirmities of age, or rather being desirous of leading a
+life of contemplation, resigned his honours to David, who is said
+to have been uncle to king Arthur; and by his interest the see
+was translated to Menevia, although Caerleon, as we have observed
+in the first book, was much better adapted for the episcopal
+see.&nbsp; For Menevia is situated in a most remote corner of
+land upon the Irish ocean, the soil stony and barren, neither
+clothed with woods, distinguished by rivers, nor adorned by
+meadows, ever exposed to the winds and tempests, and continually
+subject to the hostile attacks of the Flemings on one side, and
+of the Welsh on the other.&nbsp; For the holy men who settled
+here, chose purposely such a retired habitation, that by avoiding
+the noise of the world, and preferring an heremitical to a
+pastoral life, they might more freely provide for &ldquo;that
+part which shall not be taken away;&rdquo; for David was
+remarkable for his sanctity and religion, as the history of his
+life will testify.&nbsp; Amongst the many miracles recorded of
+him, three appear to me the most worthy of admiration: his origin
+and conception; his pre-election thirty years before his birth;
+and what exceeds all, the sudden rising of the ground, at Brevy,
+under his feet while preaching, to the great astonishment of all
+the beholders.</p>
+<p>Since the time of David, twenty-five archbishops presided over
+the see of Menevia, whose names are here subjoined: David,
+Cenauc, Eliud, who was also called <a name="page96"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 96</span>Teilaus, Ceneu, Morwal, Haerunen,
+Elwaed, Gurnuen, Lendivord, Gorwysc, Cogan, Cledauc, Anian,
+Euloed, Ethelmen, Elauc, Malscoed, Sadermen, Catellus,
+Sulhaithnai, Nonis, Etwal, Asser, Arthuael, Sampson.&nbsp; In the
+time of Sampson, the pall was translated from Menevia in the
+following manner: a disorder called the yellow plague, and by the
+physicians the icteric passion, of which the people died in great
+numbers, raged throughout Wales, at the time when Sampson held
+the archiepiscopal see.&nbsp; Though a holy man, and fearless of
+death, he was prevailed upon, by the earnest intreaties of his
+people, to go on board a vessel, which was wafted, by a south
+wind, to Britannia Armorica, <a name="citation96"></a><a
+href="#footnote96" class="citation">[96]</a> where he and his
+attendants were safely landed.&nbsp; The see of Dol being at that
+time vacant, he was immediately elected bishop.&nbsp; Hence it
+came to pass, that on account of the pall which Sampson had
+brought thither with him, the succeeding bishops, even to our
+times, always retained it.&nbsp; But during the presidency of the
+archbishop of Tours, this adventitious dignity ceased; yet our
+countrymen, through indolence or poverty, or rather owing to the
+arrival of the English into the island, and the frequent
+hostilities committed against them by the Saxons, lost their
+archiepiscopal honours.&nbsp; But until the entire subjugation of
+Wales by king Henry I., the Welsh bishops were always consecrated
+by the bishop of St. David&rsquo;s; and he was consecrated by his
+suffragans, without any profession or submission being made to
+any other church.</p>
+<p>From the time of Sampson to that of king Henry I., nineteen
+bishops presided over this see: Ruelin, Rodherch, Elguin,
+Lunuerd, Nergu, Sulhidir, Eneuris, Morgeneu, who was the first
+bishop of St. David&rsquo;s who ate flesh, and was there killed
+by pirates; and he appeared <a name="page97"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 97</span>to a certain bishop in Ireland on the
+night of his death, shewing his wounds, and saying,
+&ldquo;Because I ate flesh, I am become flesh.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Nathan, Ievan (who was bishop only one night), Argustel,
+Morgenueth, Ervin, Tramerin, Joseph, Bleithud, Sulghein, Abraham,
+Wilfred.&nbsp; Since the subjugation of Wales to the present
+time, three only have held the see: in the reign of king Henry
+I., Bernard; in the reign of king Stephen, David II.; and in the
+reign of king Henry II., Peter, a monk of the order of Cluny; who
+all, by the king&rsquo;s mandate, were consecrated at Canterbury;
+as also Geoffrey, prior and canon of Lanthoni, who succeeded them
+in the reign of king John, and was preferred to this see by the
+interest of Hubert, archbishop of Canterbury, and afterwards
+consecrated by him.&nbsp; We do not hear that either before or
+after that subjugation, any archbishop of Canterbury ever entered
+the borders of Wales, except Baldwin, a monk of the Cistercian
+order, abbot of Ford, and afterwards bishop of Worcester, who
+traversed that rough, inaccessible, and remote country with a
+laudable devotion for the service of the cross; and as a token of
+investiture, celebrated mass in all the cathedral churches.&nbsp;
+So that till lately the see of St. David&rsquo;s owed no
+subjection to that of Canterbury, as may be seen in the English
+History of Bede, who says that &ldquo;Augustine, bishop of the
+Angles, after the conversion of king Ethelfred and the English
+people, called together the bishops of Wales on the confines of
+the West Saxons, as legate of the apostolic see.&nbsp; When the
+seven bishops <a name="citation97"></a><a href="#footnote97"
+class="citation">[97]</a> appeared, Augustine, sitting in his
+chair, with Roman pride, did not rise up at their entrance.&nbsp;
+Observing his haughtiness (after the example of a holy anchorite
+of their nation), they immediately returned, and treated him and
+his statutes with contempt, publicly proclaiming that they would
+not acknowledge him for their archbishop; alleging, that if he
+now refused to rise up to us, how much <a name="page98"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 98</span>more will he hold us in contempt, if
+we submit to be subject to him?&rdquo;&nbsp; That there were at
+that time seven bishops in Wales, and now only four, may be thus
+accounted for; because perhaps there were formerly more cathedral
+churches in Wales than there are at present, or the extent of
+Wales might have been greater.&nbsp; Amongst so many bishops thus
+deprived of their dignity, Bernard, the first French [<i>i.e.</i>
+Norman] bishop of St. David&rsquo;s, alone defended the rights of
+his church in a public manner; and after many expensive and
+vexatious appeals to the court of Rome, would not have reclaimed
+them in vain, if false witnesses had not publicly appeared at the
+council of Rheims, before pope Eugenius, and testified that he
+had made profession and submission to the see of
+Canterbury.&nbsp; Supported by three auxiliaries, the favour and
+intimacy of king Henry, a time of peace, and consequent plenty,
+he boldly hazarded the trial of so great a cause, and so
+confident was he of his just right, that he sometimes caused the
+cross to be carried before him during his journey through
+Wales.</p>
+<p>Bernard, however commendable in some particulars, was
+remarkable for his insufferable pride and ambition.&nbsp; For as
+soon as he became courtier and a creature of the king&rsquo;s,
+panting after English riches by means of translation, (a malady
+under which all the English sent hither seem to labour), he
+alienated many of the lands of his church without either
+advantage or profit, and disposed of others so indiscreetly and
+improvidently, that when ten carucates <a
+name="citation98"></a><a href="#footnote98"
+class="citation">[98]</a> of land were required for military
+purposes, he would, with a liberal hand, give twenty or thirty;
+and of the canonical rites and ordinances which he had miserably
+and unhappily instituted at St. David&rsquo;s, he would hardly
+make use of one, at most only of two or three.&nbsp; With respect
+to the two sees of Canterbury and St. David&rsquo;s, I will
+briefly explain my opinion of their <a name="page99"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 99</span>present state.&nbsp; On one side, you
+will see royal favour, affluence of riches, numerous and opulent
+suffragan bishops, great abundance of learned men and well
+skilled in the laws; on the other side, a deficiency of all these
+things, and a total want of justice; on which account the
+recovery of its ancient rights will not easily be effected, but
+by means of those great changes and vicissitudes which kingdoms
+experience from various and unexpected events.</p>
+<p>The spot where the church of St. David&rsquo;s stands, and was
+founded in honour of the apostle St. Andrew, is called the Vale
+of Roses; which ought rather to be named the vale of marble,
+since it abounds with one, and by no means with the other.&nbsp;
+The river Alun, a muddy and unproductive rivulet, <a
+name="citation99a"></a><a href="#footnote99a"
+class="citation">[99a]</a> bounding the churchyard on the
+northern side, flows under a marble stone, called Lechlavar,
+which has been polished by continual treading of passengers, and
+concerning the name, size, and quality of which we have treated
+in our Vaticinal History. <a name="citation99b"></a><a
+href="#footnote99b" class="citation">[99b]</a>&nbsp; Henry II.,
+on his return from Ireland, is said to have passed over this
+stone, before he devoutly entered the church of St. Andrew and
+St. David.&nbsp; Having left the following garrisons in Ireland,
+namely, Hugh de Lacy (to whom he had given Meath in fee) in
+Dublin, with twenty knights; Fitz-Stephen and Maurice Fitzgerald,
+with other twenty; Humphrey de Bohun, Robert Fitz-Bernard, and
+Hugh de Grainville at Waterford, with forty; and William
+Fitz-Adelm and Philip de Braose at Wexford, with twenty; on the
+second day of Easter, the king embarked at sunrise on board a
+vessel in the outward port of Wexford, and, with a south wind,
+landed about noon in the harbour of Menevia.&nbsp; Proceeding
+towards the shrine of St. David, habited like a pilgrim, and
+leaning on a staff, he met at the white gate a procession of the
+canons of the church coming forth to <a name="page100"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 100</span>receive him with due honour and
+reverence.&nbsp; As the procession solemnly moved along, a Welsh
+woman threw herself at the king&rsquo;s feet, and made a
+complaint against the bishop of the place, which was explained to
+the king by an interpreter.&nbsp; The woman, immediate attention
+not being paid to her petition, with violent gesticulation, and a
+loud and impertinent voice, exclaimed repeatedly, &ldquo;Revenge
+us this day, Lechlavar! revenge us and the nation in this
+man!&rdquo;&nbsp; On being chidden and driven away by those who
+understood the British language, she more vehemently and forcibly
+vociferated in the like manner, alluding to the vulgar fiction
+and proverb of Merlin, &ldquo;That a king of England, and
+conqueror of Ireland, should be wounded in that country by a man
+with a red hand, and die upon Lechlavar, on his return through
+Menevia.&rdquo;&nbsp; This was the name of that stone which
+serves as a bridge over the river Alun, which divides the
+cemetery from the northern side of the church.&nbsp; It was a
+beautiful piece of marble, polished by the feet of passengers,
+ten feet in length, six in breadth, and one in thickness.&nbsp;
+Lechlavar signifies in the British language a talking stone. <a
+name="citation100"></a><a href="#footnote100"
+class="citation">[100]</a>&nbsp; There was an ancient tradition
+respecting this stone, that at a time when a corpse was carried
+over it for interment, it broke forth into speech, and by the
+effort cracked in the middle, which fissure is still visible; and
+on account of this barbarous and ancient superstition, the
+corpses are no longer brought over it.&nbsp; The king, who had
+heard the prophecy, approaching the stone, stopped for a short
+time at the foot of it, and, looking earnestly at it, boldly
+passed over; then, turning round, and looking towards the stone,
+thus indignantly inveighed against the prophet: &ldquo;Who will
+hereafter give credit to the lying Merlin?&rdquo;&nbsp; A person
+standing by, and observing what had passed, in order to vindicate
+the injury done to the prophet, replied, with a loud voice,
+&ldquo;Thou art not that <a name="page101"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 101</span>king by whom Ireland is to be
+conquered, or of whom Merlin prophesied!&rdquo;&nbsp; The king
+then entering the church founded in honour of St. Andrew and St.
+David, devoutly offered up his prayers, and heard mass performed
+by a chaplain, whom alone, out of so large a body of priests,
+Providence seems to have kept fasting till that hour, for this
+very purpose.&nbsp; Having supped at St. David&rsquo;s, the king
+departed for the castle of Haverford, distant about twelve
+miles.&nbsp; It appears very remarkable to me, that in our days,
+when David II. presided over the see, the river should have
+flowed with wine, and that the spring, called Pistyll Dewi, or
+the <i>Pipe</i> of David, from its flowing through a pipe into
+the eastern side of the churchyard, should have run with
+milk.&nbsp; The birds also of that place, called jackdaws, from
+being so long unmolested by the clergy of the church, were grown
+so tame and domesticated, as not to be afraid of persons dressed
+in black.&nbsp; In clear weather the mountains of Ireland are
+visible from hence, and the passage over the Irish sea may be
+performed in one short day; on which account William, the son of
+William the Bastard, and the second of the Norman kings in
+England, who was called Rufus, and who had penetrated far into
+Wales, on seeing Ireland from these rocks, is reported to have
+said, &ldquo;I will summon hither all the ships of my realm, and
+with them make a bridge to attack that country.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Which speech being related to Murchard, prince of Leinster, he
+paused awhile, and answered, &ldquo;Did the king add to this
+mighty threat, If God please?&rdquo; and being informed that he
+had made no mention of God in his speech, rejoicing in such a
+prognostic, he replied, &ldquo;Since that man trusts in human,
+not divine power, I fear not his coming.&rdquo;</p>
+<h3><a name="page102"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+102</span>CHAPTER II<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">OF THE JOURNEY BY CEMMEIS&mdash;THE
+MONASTERY OF ST. DOGMAEL</span></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> archbishop having celebrated
+mass early in the morning before the high altar of the church of
+St. David, and enjoined to the archdeacon (Giraldus) the office
+of preaching to the people, hastened through Cemmeis <a
+name="citation102a"></a><a href="#footnote102a"
+class="citation">[102a]</a> to meet prince Rhys at Aberteive. <a
+name="citation102b"></a><a href="#footnote102b"
+class="citation">[102b]</a>&nbsp; Two circumstances occurred in
+the province of Cemmeis, the one in our own time, the other a
+little before, which I think right not to pass over in
+silence.&nbsp; In our time, a young man, native of this country,
+during a severe illness, suffered as violent a persecution from
+toads, <a name="citation102c"></a><a href="#footnote102c"
+class="citation">[102c]</a> as if the reptiles of the whole
+province had come to him by agreement; and though destroyed by
+his nurses and friends, they increased again on all sides in
+infinite numbers, like hydras&rsquo; heads.&nbsp; His attendants,
+both friends and strangers, being wearied out, he was drawn up in
+a kind of bag, into a high tree, stripped of its leaves, and
+shred; nor was he there secure from his venomous enemies, for
+they crept up the tree in great numbers, and consumed him even to
+the very bones.&nbsp; The young man&rsquo;s name was Sisillus
+Esceir-hir, that is, Sisillus Long Leg.&nbsp; It is also recorded
+that by the hidden but never unjust will of God, another man
+suffered a similar persecution from rats.&nbsp; In the same
+province, during the reign of king Henry I., a rich man, who had
+a residence on the northern side of the Preseleu <a
+name="page103"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 103</span>mountains,
+<a name="citation103a"></a><a href="#footnote103a"
+class="citation">[103a]</a> was warned for three successive
+nights, by dreams, that if he put his hand under a stone which
+hung over the spring of a neighbouring well, called the fountain
+of St. Bernacus, <a name="citation103b"></a><a
+href="#footnote103b" class="citation">[103b]</a> he would find
+there a golden torques.&nbsp; Obeying the admonition on the third
+day, he received, from a viper, a deadly wound in his finger; but
+as it appears that many treasures have been discovered through
+dreams, it seems to me probable that, with respect to rumours, in
+the same manner as to dreams, some ought, and some ought not, to
+be believed.</p>
+<p>I shall not pass over in silence the circumstance which
+occurred in the principal castle of Cemmeis at Lanhever, <a
+name="citation103c"></a><a href="#footnote103c"
+class="citation">[103c]</a> in our days.&nbsp; Rhys, son of
+Gruffydd, by the instigation of his son Gruffydd, a cunning and
+artful man, took away by force, from William, son of Martin (de
+Tours), his son-in-law, the castle of Lanhever, notwithstanding
+he had solemnly sworn, by the most precious relics, that his
+indemnity and security should be faithfully maintained, and,
+contrary to his word and oath, gave it to his son Gruffydd; but
+since &ldquo;A sordid prey has not a good ending,&rdquo; the
+Lord, who by the mouth of his prophet, exclaims &ldquo;Vengeance
+is mine, and I will repay!&rdquo; ordained that the castle should
+be taken away from the contriver of this wicked plot, Gruffydd,
+and bestowed upon the man in the world he most hated, his brother
+Malgon.&nbsp; Rhys, also, about two years afterwards, intending
+to disinherit his own daughter, and two granddaughters <a
+name="page104"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 104</span>and
+grandsons, by a singular instance of divine vengeance, was taken
+prisoner by his sons in battle, and confined in this same castle;
+thus justly suffering the greatest disgrace and confusion in the
+very place where he had perpetrated an act of the most consummate
+baseness.&nbsp; I think it also worthy to be remembered, that at
+the time this misfortune befell him, he had concealed in his
+possession, at Dinevor, the collar of St. Canauc of Brecknock,
+for which, by divine vengeance, he merited to be taken prisoner
+and confined.</p>
+<p>We slept that night in the monastery of St. Dogmael, where, as
+well as on the next day at Aberteivi, we were handsomely
+entertained by prince Rhys.&nbsp; On the Cemmeis side of the
+river, not far from the bridge, the people of the neighbourhood
+being assembled together, and Rhys and his two sons, Malgon and
+Gruffydd, being present, the word of the Lord was persuasively
+preached both by the archbishop and the archdeacon, and many were
+induced to take the cross; one of whom was an only son, and the
+sole comfort of his mother, far advanced in years, who,
+steadfastly gazing on him, as if inspired by the Deity, uttered
+these words:&mdash;&ldquo;O, most beloved Lord Jesus Christ, I
+return thee hearty thanks for having conferred on me the blessing
+of bringing forth a son, whom thou mayest think worthy of thy
+service.&rdquo;&nbsp; Another woman at Aberteivi, of a very
+different way of thinking, held her husband fast by his cloak and
+girdle, and publicly and audaciously prevented him from going to
+the archbishop to take the cross; but, three nights afterwards,
+she heard a terrible voice, saying, &ldquo;Thou hast taken away
+my servant from me, therefore what thou most lovest shall be
+taken away from thee.&rdquo;&nbsp; On her relating this vision to
+her husband, they were struck with mutual terror and amazement;
+and on falling asleep again, she unhappily overlaid her little
+boy, whom, with more affection than prudence, she had taken to
+bed with her.&nbsp; The husband, relating to the bishop of the
+diocese both the vision and its fatal prediction, took the cross,
+<a name="page105"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 105</span>which
+his wife spontaneously sewed on her husband&rsquo;s arm.</p>
+<p>Near the head of the bridge where the sermons were delivered,
+the people immediately marked out the site for a chapel, <a
+name="citation105a"></a><a href="#footnote105a"
+class="citation">[105a]</a> on a verdant plain, as a memorial of
+so great an event; intending that the altar should be placed on
+the spot where the archbishop stood while addressing the
+multitude; and it is well known that many miracles (the
+enumeration of which would be too tedious to relate) were
+performed on the crowds of sick people who resorted hither from
+different parts of the country.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER III<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">OF THE RIVER TEIVI, CARDIGAN, AND
+EMELYN</span></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> noble river Teivi flows here,
+and abounds with the finest salmon, more than any other river of
+Wales; it has a productive fishery near Cilgerran, which is
+situated on the summit of a rock, at a place called Canarch Mawr,
+<a name="citation105b"></a><a href="#footnote105b"
+class="citation">[105b]</a> the ancient residence of St. Ludoc,
+where the river, falling from a great height, forms a cataract,
+which the salmon ascend, by leaping from the bottom to the top of
+a rock, which is about the height of the longest spear, and would
+appear wonderful, were it not the nature of that species of fish
+to leap: hence they have received the name of salmon, from
+<i>salio</i>.&nbsp; Their particular manner of leaping (as I have
+specified in my Topography of Ireland) is thus: fish of this
+kind, naturally swimming against the <a name="page106"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 106</span>course of the river (for as birds
+fly against the wind, so do fish swim against the stream), on
+meeting with any sudden obstacle, bend their tail towards their
+mouth, and sometimes, in order to give a greater power to their
+leap, they press it with their mouth, and suddenly freeing
+themselves from this circular form, they spring with great force
+(like a bow let loose) from the bottom to the top of the leap, to
+the great astonishment of the beholders.&nbsp; The church
+dedicated to St. Ludoc, <a name="citation106a"></a><a
+href="#footnote106a" class="citation">[106a]</a> the mill,
+bridge, salmon leap, an orchard with a delightful garden, all
+stand together on a small plot of ground.&nbsp; The Teivi has
+another singular particularity, being the only river in Wales, or
+even in England, which has beavers; <a name="citation106b"></a><a
+href="#footnote106b" class="citation">[106b]</a> in Scotland they
+are said to be found in one river, but are very scarce.&nbsp; I
+think it not a useless labour, to insert a few remarks respecting
+the nature of these animals&mdash;the manner in which they bring
+their materials from the woods to the water, and with what skill
+they connect them in the construction of their dwellings in the
+midst of rivers; their means of defence on the eastern and <a
+name="page107"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 107</span>western
+sides against hunters; and also concerning their fish-like
+tails.</p>
+<p>The beavers, in order to construct their castles in the middle
+of rivers, make use of the animals of their own species instead
+of carts, who, by a wonderful mode of carnage, convey the timber
+from the woods to the rivers.&nbsp; Some of them, obeying the
+dictates of nature, receive on their bellies the logs of wood cut
+off by their associates, which they hold tight with their feet,
+and thus with transverse pieces placed in their mouths, are drawn
+along backwards, with their cargo, by other beavers, who fasten
+themselves with their teeth to the raft.&nbsp; The moles use a
+similar artifice in clearing out the dirt from the cavities they
+form by scraping.&nbsp; In some deep and still corner of the
+river, the beavers use such skill in the construction of their
+habitations, that not a drop of water can penetrate, or the force
+of storms shake them; nor do they fear any violence but that of
+mankind, nor even that, unless well armed.&nbsp; They entwine the
+branches of willows with other wood, and different kinds of
+leaves, to the usual height of the water, and having made
+within-side a communication from floor to floor, they elevate a
+kind of stage, or scaffold, from which they may observe and watch
+the rising of the waters.&nbsp; In the course of time, their
+habitations bear the appearance of a grove of willow trees, rude
+and natural without, but artfully constructed within.&nbsp; This
+animal can remain in or under water at its pleasure, like the
+frog or seal, who shew, by the smoothness or roughness of their
+skins, the flux and reflux of the sea.&nbsp; These three animals,
+therefore, live indifferently under the water, or in the air, and
+have short legs, broad bodies, stubbed tails, and resemble the
+mole in their corporal shape.&nbsp; It is worthy of remark, that
+the beaver has but four teeth, two above, and two below, which
+being broad and sharp, cut like a carpenter&rsquo;s axe, and as
+such he uses them.&nbsp; They make excavations and dry hiding
+places in the banks near their dwellings, and when they hear the
+<a name="page108"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 108</span>stroke
+of the hunter, who with sharp poles endeavours to penetrate them,
+they fly as soon as possible to the defence of their castle,
+having first blown out the water from the entrance of the hole,
+and rendered it foul and muddy by scraping the earth, in order
+thus artfully to elude the stratagems of the well-armed hunter,
+who is watching them from the opposite banks of the river.&nbsp;
+When the beaver finds he cannot save himself from the pursuit of
+the dogs who follow him, that he may ransom his body by the
+sacrifice of a part, he throws away that, which by natural
+instinct he knows to be the object sought for, and in the sight
+of the hunter castrates himself, from which circumstance he has
+gained the name of Castor; and if by chance the dogs should chase
+an animal which had been previously castrated, he has the
+sagacity to run to an elevated spot, and there lifting up his
+leg, shews the hunter that the object of his pursuit is
+gone.&nbsp; Cicero speaking of them says, &ldquo;They ransom
+themselves by that part of the body, for which they are chiefly
+sought.&rdquo;&nbsp; And Juvenal says,</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;&mdash;Qui se<br />
+Eunuchum ipse facit, cupiens evadere damno<br />
+Testiculi.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>And St. Bernard,</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Prodit enim castor proprio de corpore
+velox<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Reddere quas sequitur hostis avarus opes.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Thus, therefore, in order to preserve his skin, which is
+sought after in the west, and the medicinal part of his body,
+which is coveted in the east, although he cannot save himself
+entirely, yet, by a wonderful instinct and sagacity, he
+endeavours to avoid the stratagems of his pursuers.&nbsp; The
+beavers have broad, short tails, thick, like the palm of a hand,
+which they use as a rudder in swimming; and although the rest of
+their body is hairy, this part, like that of seals, is without
+hair, and smooth; upon which account, in Germany and the arctic
+regions, where beavers abound, great and religious persons, in <a
+name="page109"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 109</span>times of
+fasting, eat the tails of this fish-like animal, as having both
+the taste and colour of fish.</p>
+<p>We proceeded on our journey from Cilgerran towards
+Pont-Stephen, <a name="citation109a"></a><a href="#footnote109a"
+class="citation">[109a]</a> leaving Cruc Mawr, <i>i.e.</i> the
+great hill, near Aberteivi, on our left hand.&nbsp; On this spot
+Gruffydd, son of Rhys ap Tewdwr, soon after the death of king
+Henry I., by a furious onset gained a signal victory against the
+English army, which, by the murder of the illustrious Richard de
+Clare, near Abergevenny (before related), had lost its leader and
+chief. <a name="citation109b"></a><a href="#footnote109b"
+class="citation">[109b]</a>&nbsp; A tumulus is to be seen on the
+summit of the aforesaid hill, and the inhabitants affirm that it
+will adapt itself to persons of all stature and that if any
+armour is left there entire in the evening, it will be found,
+according to vulgar tradition, broken to pieces in the
+morning.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER IV<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">OF THE JOURNEY BY PONT STEPHEN, THE ABBEY
+OF STRATFLUR, LANDEWI BREVI, AND LHANPADARN VAWR</span></h3>
+<p>A <span class="smcap">sermon</span> having been preached on
+the following morning at Pont Stephen, <a
+name="citation109c"></a><a href="#footnote109c"
+class="citation">[109c]</a> by the archbishop and archdeacon, and
+also by two abbots of the Cistercian order, John of Albadomus,
+and Sisillus of Stratflur, <a name="citation109d"></a><a
+href="#footnote109d" class="citation">[109d]</a> who faithfully
+<a name="page110"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 110</span>attended
+us in those parts, and as far as North Wales, many persons were
+induced to take the cross.&nbsp; We proceeded to Stratflur, where
+we passed the night.&nbsp; On the following morning, having on
+our right the lofty mountains of Moruge, which in Welsh are
+called Ellennith, <a name="citation110a"></a><a
+href="#footnote110a" class="citation">[110a]</a> we were met near
+the side of a wood by Cyneuric son of Rhys, accompanied by a body
+of light-armed youths.&nbsp; This young man was of a fair
+complexion, with curled hair, tall and handsome; clothed only,
+according to the custom of his country, with a thin cloak and
+inner garment, his legs and feet, regardless of thorns and
+thistles were left bare; a man, not adorned by art, but nature;
+bearing in his presence an innate, not an acquired, dignity of
+manners.&nbsp; A sermon having been preached to these three young
+men, Gruffydd, Malgon, and Cyneuric, in the presence of their
+father, prince Rhys, and the brothers disputing about taking the
+cross, at length Malgon strictly promised that he would accompany
+the archbishop to the king&rsquo;s court, and would obey the
+king&rsquo;s and archbishop&rsquo;s counsel, unless prevented by
+them.&nbsp; From thence we passed through Landewi Brevi, <a
+name="citation110b"></a><a href="#footnote110b"
+class="citation">[110b]</a> that is, the church of David of
+Brevi, situated on the summit of that hill which had formerly
+risen up under his feet whilst preaching, during the period of
+that celebrated synod, when all the bishops, abbots, and clergy
+of Wales, and many other persons, were collected <a
+name="page111"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 111</span>thither on
+account of the Pelagian heresy, which, although formerly exploded
+from Britain by Germanus, bishop of Auxerre, had lately been
+revived in these parts.&nbsp; At this place David was reluctantly
+raised to the archbishopric, by the unanimous consent and
+election of the whole assembly, who by loud acclamations
+testified their admiration of so great a miracle.&nbsp; Dubricius
+had a short time before resigned to him this honour in due form
+at Caerleon, from which city the metropolitan see was transferred
+to St. David&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p>Having rested that night at Lhanpadarn Vawr, <a
+name="citation111"></a><a href="#footnote111"
+class="citation">[111]</a> or the church of Paternus the Great,
+we attracted many persons to the service of Christ on the
+following morning.&nbsp; It is remarkable that this church, like
+many others in Wales and Ireland, has a lay abbot; for a bad
+custom has prevailed amongst the clergy, of appointing the most
+powerful people of a parish stewards, or, rather, patrons, of
+their churches; who, in process of time, from a desire of gain,
+have usurped the whole right, appropriating to their own use the
+possession of all the lands, leaving only to the clergy the
+altars, with their tenths and oblations, and assigning even these
+to their sons and relations in the church.&nbsp; Such defenders,
+or rather destroyers, of the church, have caused themselves to be
+called abbots, and presumed to attribute to themselves a title,
+as well as estates, to which they have no just claim.&nbsp; In
+this state we found the church of Lhanpadarn, without a
+head.&nbsp; A certain old man, waxen old in iniquity (whose name
+was Eden Oen, son of Gwaithwoed), being abbot, and his sons
+officiating at the altar.&nbsp; But in the reign of king Henry
+I., when the authority of the English prevailed in Wales, the
+monastery of St. Peter at Gloucester held quiet possession of
+this church; but after his death, the English being driven out,
+the monks were expelled from their cloisters, and their places
+supplied by the same <a name="page112"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 112</span>violent intrusion of clergy and
+laity, which had formerly been practised.&nbsp; It happened that
+in the reign of king Stephen, who succeeded Henry I., a knight,
+born in Armorican Britain, having travelled through many parts of
+the world, from a desire of seeing different cities, and the
+manners of their inhabitants, came by chance to Lhanpadarn.&nbsp;
+On a certain feast-day, whilst both the clergy and people were
+waiting for the arrival of the abbot to celebrate mass, he
+perceived a body of young men, armed, according to the custom of
+their country, approaching towards the church; and on enquiring
+which of them was the abbot, they pointed out to him a man
+walking foremost, with a long spear in his hand.&nbsp; Gazing on
+him with amazement, he asked, &ldquo;If the abbot had not another
+habit, or a different staff, from that which he now carried
+before him?&rdquo;&nbsp; On their answering, &ldquo;No!&rdquo; he
+replied, &ldquo;I have seen indeed and heard this day a wonderful
+novelty!&rdquo; and from that hour he returned home, and finished
+his labours and researches.&nbsp; This wicked people boasts, that
+a certain bishop <a name="citation112"></a><a href="#footnote112"
+class="citation">[112]</a> of their church (for it formerly was a
+cathedral) was murdered by their predecessors; and on this
+account, chiefly, they ground their claims of right and
+possession.&nbsp; No public complaint having been made against
+their conduct, we have thought it more prudent to pass over, for
+the present, the enormities of this wicked race with
+dissimulation, than exasperate them by a further relation.</p>
+<h3><a name="page113"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+113</span>CHAPTER V<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">OF THE RIVER DEVI, AND THE LAND OF THE
+SONS OF CONAN</span></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">Approaching</span> to the river Devi, <a
+name="citation113a"></a><a href="#footnote113a"
+class="citation">[113a]</a> which divides North and South Wales,
+the bishop of St. David&rsquo;s, and Rhys the son of Gruffydd,
+who with a liberality peculiarly praiseworthy in so illustrious a
+prince, had accompanied us from the castle of Aberteivi,
+throughout all Cardiganshire, to this place, returned home.&nbsp;
+Having crossed the river in a boat, and quitted the diocese of
+St. David&rsquo;s, we entered the land of the sons of Conan, or
+Merionyth, the first province of Venedotia on that side of the
+country, and belonging to the bishopric of Bangor. <a
+name="citation113b"></a><a href="#footnote113b"
+class="citation">[113b]</a>&nbsp; We slept that night at
+Towyn.&nbsp; Early next morning, Gruffydd son of Conan <a
+name="citation113c"></a><a href="#footnote113c"
+class="citation">[113c]</a> came to meet us, humbly and devoutly
+asking pardon for having so long delayed his attention to the
+archbishop.&nbsp; On the same day, we ferried over the bifurcate
+river Maw, <a name="citation113d"></a><a href="#footnote113d"
+class="citation">[113d]</a> where Malgo, son of Rhys, who had
+attached himself to the archbishop, as a companion to the
+king&rsquo;s court, discovered a ford near <a
+name="page114"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 114</span>the
+sea.&nbsp; That night we lay at Llanvair, <a
+name="citation114a"></a><a href="#footnote114a"
+class="citation">[114a]</a> that is the church of St. Mary, in
+the province of Ardudwy. <a name="citation114b"></a><a
+href="#footnote114b" class="citation">[114b]</a>&nbsp; This
+territory of Conan, and particularly Merionyth, is the rudest and
+roughest district of all Wales; the ridges of its mountains are
+very high and narrow, terminating in sharp peaks, and so
+irregularly jumbled together, that if the shepherds conversing or
+disputing with each other from their summits, should agree to
+meet, they could scarcely effect their purpose in the course of
+the whole day.&nbsp; The lances of this country are very long;
+for as South Wales excels in the use of the bow, so North Wales
+is distinguished for its skill in the lance; insomuch that an
+iron coat of mail will not resist the stroke of a lance thrown at
+a small distance.&nbsp; The next morning, the youngest son of
+Conan, named Meredyth, met us at the passage of a bridge,
+attended by his people, where many persons were signed with the
+cross; amongst whom was a fine young man of his suite, and one of
+his intimate friends; and Meredyth, observing that the cloak, on
+which the cross was to be sewed, appeared of too thin and of too
+common a texture, with a flood of tears, threw him down his
+own.</p>
+<h3><a name="page115"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+115</span>CHAPTER VI<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">PASSAGE OF TRAETH MAWR AND TRAETH BACHAN,
+AND OF NEVYN, CARNARVON, AND BANGOR</span></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">We</span> continued our journey over the
+Traeth Mawr, <a name="citation115a"></a><a href="#footnote115a"
+class="citation">[115a]</a> and Traeth Bachan, <a
+name="citation115b"></a><a href="#footnote115b"
+class="citation">[115b]</a> that is, the greater and the smaller
+arm of the sea, where two stone castles have newly been erected;
+one called Deudraeth, belonging to the sons of Conan, situated in
+Evionyth, towards the northern mountains; the other named Carn
+Madryn, the property of the sons of Owen, built on the other side
+of the river towards the sea, on the head-land Lleyn. <a
+name="citation115c"></a><a href="#footnote115c"
+class="citation">[115c]</a>&nbsp; Traeth, in the Welsh language,
+signifies a tract of sand flooded by the tides, and left bare
+when the sea ebbs.&nbsp; We had before passed over the noted
+rivers, the Dissenith, <a name="citation115d"></a><a
+href="#footnote115d" class="citation">[115d]</a> between the Maw
+and Traeth Mawr, and the Arthro, between the Traeth Mawr and
+Traeth Bachan.&nbsp; We slept that night at Nevyn, on the eve of
+Palm Sunday, where the archdeacon, after long inquiry and
+research, is said to have found Merlin Sylvestris. <a
+name="citation115e"></a><a href="#footnote115e"
+class="citation">[115e]</a></p>
+<p><a name="page116"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+116</span>Beyond Lleyn, there is a small island inhabited by very
+religious monks, called C&aelig;libes, or Colidei.&nbsp; This
+island, either from the wholesomeness of its climate, owing to
+its vicinity to Ireland, or rather from some miracle obtained by
+the merits of the saints, has this wonderful peculiarity, that
+the oldest people die first, because diseases are uncommon, and
+scarcely any die except from extreme old age.&nbsp; Its name is
+Enlli in the Welsh, and Berdesey <a name="citation116a"></a><a
+href="#footnote116a" class="citation">[116a]</a> in the Saxon
+language; and very many bodies of saints are said to be buried
+there, and amongst them that of Daniel, bishop of Bangor.</p>
+<p>The archbishop having, by his sermon the next day, induced
+many persons to take the cross, we proceeded towards Banchor,
+passing through Caernarvon, <a name="citation116b"></a><a
+href="#footnote116b" class="citation">[116b]</a> that is, the
+castle of Arvon; it is called Arvon, the province opposite to
+M&ocirc;n, because it is so situated with respect to the island
+of Mona.&nbsp; Our road leading us to a steep valley, <a
+name="citation116c"></a><a href="#footnote116c"
+class="citation">[116c]</a> with many broken ascents and
+descents, we dismounted <a name="page117"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 117</span>from our horses, and proceeded on
+foot, rehearsing, as it were, by agreement, some experiments of
+our intended pilgrimage to Jerusalem.&nbsp; Having traversed the
+valley, and reached the opposite side with considerable fatigue,
+the archbishop, to rest himself and recover his breath, sat down
+on an oak which had been torn up by the violence of the winds;
+and relaxing into a pleasantry highly laudable in a person of his
+approved gravity, thus addressed his attendants: &ldquo;Who
+amongst you, in this company, can now delight our wearied ears by
+whistling?&rdquo; which is not easily done by people out of
+breath.&nbsp; He affirming that he could, if he thought fit, the
+sweet notes are heard, in an adjoining wood, of a bird, which
+some said was a woodpecker, and others, more correctly, an
+aureolus.&nbsp; The woodpecker is called in French, <i>spec</i>,
+and with its strong bill, perforates oak trees; the other bird in
+called aureolus, from the golden tints of its feathers, and at
+certain seasons utters a sweet whistling note instead of a
+song.&nbsp; Some persons having remarked, that the nightingale
+was never heard in this country, the archbishop, with a
+significant smile, replied, &ldquo;The nightingale followed wise
+counsel, and never came into Wales; but we, unwise counsel, who
+have penetrated and gone through it.&rdquo;&nbsp; We remained
+that night at Banchor, <a name="citation117"></a><a
+href="#footnote117" class="citation">[117]</a> <a
+name="page118"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 118</span>the
+metropolitan see of North Wales, and were well entertained by the
+bishop of the diocese. <a name="citation118a"></a><a
+href="#footnote118a" class="citation">[118a]</a>&nbsp; On the
+next day, mass being celebrated by the archbishop before the high
+altar, the bishop of that see, at the instance of the archbishop
+and other persons, more importunate than persuasive, was
+compelled to take the cross, to the general concern of all his
+people of both sexes, who expressed their grief on this occasion
+by loud and lamentable vociferations.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER VII<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">THE ISLAND OF MONA</span></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">From</span> hence, we crossed over a small
+arm of the sea to the island of Mona, <a
+name="citation118b"></a><a href="#footnote118b"
+class="citation">[118b]</a> distant from thence about two miles,
+where Roderic, the younger son of Owen, attended by nearly all
+the inhabitants of the island, and many others from the adjacent
+countries, came in a devout manner to meet us.&nbsp; Confession
+having been made in a place near the shore, where the surrounding
+rocks seemed to form a natural theatre, <a
+name="citation118c"></a><a href="#footnote118c"
+class="citation">[118c]</a> many persons were <a
+name="page119"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 119</span>induced to
+take the cross, by the persuasive discourses of the archbishop,
+and Alexander, our interpreter, archdeacon of that place, and of
+Sisillus, abbot of Stratflur.&nbsp; Many chosen youths of the
+family of Roderic were seated on an opposite rock, and not one of
+them could be prevailed upon to take the cross, although the
+archbishop and others most earnestly exhorted them, but in vain,
+by an address particularly directed to them.&nbsp; It came to
+pass within three days, as if by divine vengeance, that these
+young men, with many others, pursued some robbers of that
+country.&nbsp; Being discomfited and put to flight, some were
+slain, others mortally wounded, and the survivors voluntarily
+assumed that cross they had before despised.&nbsp; Roderic, also,
+who a short time before had incestuously married the daughter of
+Rhys, related to him by blood in the third degree, in order, by
+the assistance of that prince, to be better able to defend
+himself against the sons of his brothers, whom he had
+disinherited, not paying attention to the wholesome admonitions
+of the archbishop on this subject, was a little while afterwards
+dispossessed of all his lands by their means; thus deservedly
+meeting with disappointment from the very source from which he
+expected support.&nbsp; The <a name="page120"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 120</span>island of Mona contains three
+hundred and forty-three vills, considered equal to three
+cantreds.&nbsp; Cantred, a compound word from the British and
+Irish languages, is a portion of land equal to one hundred
+vills.&nbsp; There are three islands contiguous to Britain, on
+its different sides, which are said to be nearly of an equal
+size&mdash;the Isle of Wight on the south, Mona on the west, and
+Mania (Man) on the north-west side.&nbsp; The two first are
+separated from Britain by narrow channels; the third is much
+further removed, lying almost midway between the countries of
+Ulster in Ireland and Galloway in Scotland.&nbsp; The island of
+Mona is an arid and stony land, rough and unpleasant in its
+appearance, similar in its exterior qualities to the land of
+Pebidion, <a name="citation120a"></a><a href="#footnote120a"
+class="citation">[120a]</a> near St. David&rsquo;s, but very
+different as to its interior value.&nbsp; For this island is
+incomparably more fertile in corn than any other part of Wales,
+from whence arose the British proverb, &ldquo;Mon mam Cymbry,
+Mona mother of Wales;&rdquo; and when the crops have been
+defective in all other parts of the country, this island, from
+the richness of its soil and abundant produce, has been able to
+supply all Wales.</p>
+<p>As many things within this island are worthy of remark, I
+shall not think it superfluous to make mention of some of
+them.&nbsp; There is a stone here resembling a human thigh, <a
+name="citation120b"></a><a href="#footnote120b"
+class="citation">[120b]</a> which possesses this innate virtue,
+that whatever distance it may be carried, it returns, of its own
+accord, the following night, as has often been experienced by the
+inhabitants.&nbsp; Hugh, earl of Chester, <a
+name="citation120c"></a><a href="#footnote120c"
+class="citation">[120c]</a> <a name="page121"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 121</span>in the reign of king Henry I.,
+having by force occupied this island and the adjacent country,
+heard of the miraculous power of this stone, and, for the purpose
+of trial, ordered it to be fastened, with strong iron chains, to
+one of a larger size, and to be thrown into the sea.&nbsp; On the
+following morning, however, according to custom, it was found in
+its original position, on which account the earl issued a public
+edict, that no one, from that time, should presume to move the
+stone from its place.&nbsp; A countryman, also, to try the powers
+of this stone, fastened it to his thigh, which immediately became
+putrid, and the stone returned to its original situation.</p>
+<p>There is in the same island a stony hill, not very large or
+high, from one side of which, if you cry aloud, you will not be
+heard on the other; and it is called (by anti-phrasis) the rock
+of hearers.&nbsp; In the northern part of Great Britain
+(Northumberland) so named by the English, from its situation
+beyond the river Humber, there is a hill of a similar nature,
+where if a loud horn or trumpet is sounded on one side, it cannot
+be heard on the opposite one.&nbsp; There is also in this island
+the church of St. Tefredaucus, <a name="citation121"></a><a
+href="#footnote121" class="citation">[121]</a> into which Hugh,
+earl of Shrewsbury, (who, together with the earl of Chester, had
+forcibly entered Anglesey), on a certain night put some dogs,
+which on the following morning were found mad, and he himself
+died within a month; for some pirates, from the Orcades, having
+entered the port of the island in their long vessels, the earl,
+apprised of their approach, boldly met them, rushing into the sea
+upon a spirited horse.&nbsp; <a name="page122"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 122</span>The commander of the expedition,
+Magnus, standing on the prow of the foremost ship, aimed an arrow
+at him; and, although the earl was completely equipped in a coat
+of mail, and guarded in every part of his body except his eyes,
+the unlucky weapon struck his right eye, and, entering his brain,
+he fell a lifeless corpse into the sea.&nbsp; The victor, seeing
+him in this state, proudly and exultingly exclaimed, in the
+Danish tongue, &ldquo;Leit loup,&rdquo; let him leap; and from
+this time the power of the English ceased in Anglesey.&nbsp; In
+our times, also, when Henry II. was leading an army into North
+Wales, where he had experienced the ill fortune of war in a
+narrow, woody pass near Coleshulle, he sent a fleet into
+Anglesey, and began to plunder the aforesaid church, and other
+sacred places.&nbsp; But the divine vengeance pursued him, for
+the inhabitants rushed upon the invaders, few against many,
+unarmed against armed; and having slain great numbers, and taken
+many prisoners, gained a most complete and bloody victory.&nbsp;
+For, as our Topography of Ireland testifies, that the Welsh and
+Irish are more prone to anger and revenge than any other nations,
+the saints, likewise, of those countries appear to be of a more
+vindictive nature.</p>
+<p>Two noble persons, and uncles of the author of this book, were
+sent thither by the king; namely, Henry, son of king Henry I.,
+and uncle to king Henry II., by Nest, daughter of Rhys, prince of
+South Wales; and Robert Fitz-Stephen, brother to Henry, a man who
+in our days, shewing the way to others, first attacked Ireland,
+and whose fame is recorded in our Vaticinal History.&nbsp; Henry,
+actuated by too much valour, and ill supported, was pierced by a
+lance, and fell amongst the foremost, to the great concern of his
+attendants; and Robert, despairing of being able to defend
+himself, was badly wounded, and escaped with difficulty to the
+ships.</p>
+<p>There is a small island, almost adjoining to Anglesey, which
+is inhabited by hermits, living by manual labour, and serving
+God.&nbsp; It is remarkable that when, by the <a
+name="page123"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 123</span>influence
+of human passions, any discord arises among them, all their
+provisions are devoured and infected by a species of small mice,
+with which the island abounds; but when the discord ceases, they
+are no longer molested.&nbsp; Nor is it to be wondered at, if the
+servants of God sometimes disagree, since Jacob and Esau
+contended in the womb of Rebecca, and Paul and Barnabas differed;
+the disciples also of Jesus disputed which of them should be the
+greatest, for these are the temptations of human infirmity; yet
+virtue is often made perfect by infirmity, and faith is increased
+by tribulations.&nbsp; This island is called in Welsh, Ynys
+Lenach, <a name="citation123a"></a><a href="#footnote123a"
+class="citation">[123a]</a> or the ecclesiastical island, because
+many bodies of saints are deposited there, and no woman is
+suffered to enter it.</p>
+<p>We saw in Anglesey a dog, who accidentally had lost his tail,
+and whose whole progeny bore the same defect.&nbsp; It is
+wonderful that nature should, as it were, conform itself in this
+particular to the accident of the father.&nbsp; We saw also a
+knight, named Earthbald, born in Devonshire, whose father,
+denying the child with which his mother was pregnant, and from
+motives of jealousy accusing her of inconstancy, nature alone
+decided the controversy by the birth of the child, who, by a
+miracle, exhibited on his upper lip a scar, similar to one his
+father bore in consequence of a wound he had received from a
+lance in one of his military expeditions.&nbsp; Stephen, the son
+of Earthbald, had a similar mark, the accident being in a manner
+converted into nature.&nbsp; A like miracle of nature occurred in
+earl Alberic, son of Alberic earl of Veer, <a
+name="citation123b"></a><a href="#footnote123b"
+class="citation">[123b]</a> whose father, during the pregnancy of
+his <a name="page124"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+124</span>mother, the daughter of Henry of Essex, having laboured
+to procure a divorce, on account of the ignominy of her father,
+the child, when born, had the same blemish in its eye, as the
+father had got from a casual hurt.&nbsp; These defects may be
+entailed on the offspring, perhaps, by the impression made on the
+memory by frequent and steady observation; as it is reported that
+a queen, accustomed to see the picture of a negro in her chamber,
+unexpectedly brought forth a black child, and is exculpated by
+Quintilian, on account of the picture.&nbsp; In like manner it
+happened to the spotted sheep, given by Laban out of his flock to
+his nephew Jacob, and which conceived by means of variegated
+rods. <a name="citation124"></a><a href="#footnote124"
+class="citation">[124]</a>&nbsp; Nor is the child always affected
+by the mother&rsquo;s imagination alone, but sometimes by that of
+the father; for it is well known that a man, seeing a passenger
+near him, who was convulsed both behind and before, on going home
+and telling his wife that he could not get the impression of this
+sight off his mind, begat a child who was affected in a similar
+manner.</p>
+<h3><a name="page125"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+125</span>CHAPTER VIII<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">PASSAGE OF THE RIVER CONWY IN A BOAT, AND
+OF DINAS EMRYS</span></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">On</span> our return to Banchor from Mona,
+we were shown the tombs of prince Owen and his younger brother
+Cadwalader, <a name="citation125a"></a><a href="#footnote125a"
+class="citation">[125a]</a> who were buried in a double vault
+before the high altar, although Owen, on account of his public
+incest with his cousin-german, had died excommunicated by the
+blessed martyr St. Thomas, the bishop of that see having been
+enjoined to seize a proper opportunity of removing his body from
+the church.&nbsp; We continued our journey on the sea coast,
+confined on one side by steep rocks, and by the sea on the other,
+towards the river Conwy, which preserves its waters unadulterated
+by the sea.&nbsp; Not far from the source of the river Conwy, at
+the head of the Eryri mountain, which on this side extends itself
+towards the north, stands Dinas Emrys, that is, the promontory of
+Ambrosius, where Merlin <a name="citation125b"></a><a
+href="#footnote125b" class="citation">[125b]</a> uttered his
+prophecies, whilst Vortigern was seated upon the bank.&nbsp;
+There were two Merlins; the one called Ambrosius who prophesied
+in the time of king Vortigern, <a name="page126"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 126</span>was begotten by a demon incubus, and
+found at Caermardin, from which circumstance that city derived
+its name of Caermardin, or the city of Merlin; the other Merlin,
+born in Scotland, was named Celidonius, from the Celidonian wood
+in which he prophesied; and Sylvester, because when engaged in
+martial conflict, he discovered in the air a terrible monster,
+and from that time grew mad, and taking shelter in a wood, passed
+the remainder of his days in a savage state.&nbsp; This Merlin
+lived in the time of king Arthur, and is said to have prophesied
+more fully and explicitly than the other.&nbsp; I shall pass over
+in silence what was done by the sons of Owen in our days, after
+his death, or while he was dying, who, from the wicked desire of
+reigning, totally disregarded the ties of fraternity; but I shall
+not omit mentioning another event which occurred likewise in our
+days.&nbsp; Owen, <a name="citation126"></a><a
+href="#footnote126" class="citation">[126]</a> son of Gruffyth,
+prince of North Wales, had many sons, but only one legitimate,
+namely, Iorwerth Drwyndwn, which in Welsh means flat-nosed, who
+had a son named Llewelyn.&nbsp; This young man, being only twelve
+years of age, began, during the period of our journey, to molest
+his uncles David and Roderic, the sons of Owen by Christiana, his
+cousin-german; and although they had divided amongst themselves
+all North Wales, except the land of Conan, and although David,
+having married the sister of king Henry II., by whom he had one
+son, was powerfully supported by the English, yet within a few
+years the legitimate son, destitute of lands or money (by the aid
+of divine vengeance), bravely expelled from North Wales those who
+were born in public incest, though supported by their own wealth
+and by that of <a name="page127"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+127</span>others, leaving them nothing but what the liberality of
+his own mind and the counsel of good men from pity suggested: a
+proof that adulterous and incestuous persons are displeasing to
+God.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER IX<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">OF THE MOUNTAINS OF ERYRI</span></h3>
+<p>I <span class="smcap">must</span> not pass over in silence the
+mountains called by the Welsh Eryri, but by the English Snowdon,
+or Mountains of Snow, which gradually increasing from the land of
+the sons of Conan, and extending themselves northwards near
+Deganwy, seem to rear their lofty summits even to the clouds,
+when viewed from the opposite coast of Anglesey.&nbsp; They are
+said to be of so great an extent, that according to an ancient
+proverb, &ldquo;As Mona could supply corn for all the inhabitants
+of Wales, so could the Eryri mountains afford sufficient pasture
+for all the herds, if collected together.&rdquo;&nbsp; Hence
+these lines of Virgil may be applied to them:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Et quantum longis carpent armenta
+diebus,<br />
+Exigua tautum gelidus ros nocte reponet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And what is cropt by day the night renews,<br />
+Shedding refreshful stores of cooling dews.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>On the highest parts of these mountains are two lakes worthy
+of admiration.&nbsp; The one has a floating island in it, which
+is often driven from one side to the other by the force of the
+winds; and the shepherds behold with astonishment their cattle,
+whilst feeding, carried to the distant parts of the lake.&nbsp; A
+part of the bank naturally bound together by the roots of willows
+and other shrubs may have been broken off, and increased by the
+alluvion of the earth from the shore; and being continually <a
+name="page128"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 128</span>agitated by
+the winds, which in so elevated a situation blow with great
+violence, it cannot reunite itself firmly with the banks.&nbsp;
+The other lake is noted for a wonderful and singular
+miracle.&nbsp; It contains three sorts of fish&mdash;eels, trout,
+and perch, all of which have only one eye, the left being
+wanting; but if the curious reader should demand of me the
+explanation of so extraordinary a circumstance, I cannot presume
+to satisfy him.&nbsp; It is remarkable also, that in two places
+in Scotland, one near the eastern, the other near the western
+sea, the fish called mullets possess the same defect, having no
+left eye.&nbsp; According to vulgar tradition, these mountains
+are frequented by an eagle who, perching on a fatal stone every
+fifth holiday, in order to satiate her hunger with the carcases
+of the slain, is said to expect war on that same day, and to have
+almost perforated the stone by cleaning and sharpening her
+beak.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER X<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">OF THE PASSAGE BY DEGANWY AND RUTHLAN, AND
+THE SEE OF LANELWY, AND OF COLESHULLE</span></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">Having</span> crossed the river Conwy, <a
+name="citation128a"></a><a href="#footnote128a"
+class="citation">[128a]</a> or rather an arm of the sea, under
+Deganwy, leaving the Cistercian monastery of Conwy <a
+name="citation128b"></a><a href="#footnote128b"
+class="citation">[128b]</a> on the western bank of the river to
+our right hand, we arrived at Ruthlan, a noble castle on the <a
+name="page129"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 129</span>river
+Cloyd, belonging to David, the eldest son of Owen <a
+name="citation129a"></a><a href="#footnote129a"
+class="citation">[129a]</a> where, at the earnest invitation of
+David himself, we were handsomely entertained that night.</p>
+<p>There is a spring not far from Ruthlan, in the province of
+Tegengel, <a name="citation129b"></a><a href="#footnote129b"
+class="citation">[129b]</a> which not only regularly ebbs and
+flows like the sea, twice in twenty-four hours, but at other
+times frequently rises and falls both by night and day.&nbsp;
+Trogus Pompeius says, &ldquo;that there is a town of the
+Garamantes, where there is a spring which is hot and cold
+alternately by day and night.&rdquo; <a
+name="citation129c"></a><a href="#footnote129c"
+class="citation">[129c]</a></p>
+<p>Many persons in the morning having been persuaded to dedicate
+themselves to the service of Christ, we proceeded from Ruthlan to
+the small cathedral church of Lanelwy; <a
+name="citation129d"></a><a href="#footnote129d"
+class="citation">[129d]</a> from whence (the archbishop having
+celebrated mass) we continued our journey through a country rich
+in minerals of silver, where money is sought in the bowels of the
+earth, to the little cell of Basinwerk, <a
+name="citation129e"></a><a href="#footnote129e"
+class="citation">[129e]</a> where we passed the night.&nbsp; The
+following day we traversed a long quicksand, and not without some
+degree of apprehension, leaving the woody district of Coleshulle,
+<a name="citation129f"></a><a href="#footnote129f"
+class="citation">[129f]</a> or hill of coal, on our right hand,
+where Henry II., who in our time, actuated by youthful and
+indiscreet ardour, made a hostile irruption into Wales, and
+presuming to pass through that narrow and woody defile,
+experienced a signal defeat, and a very heavy loss <a
+name="page130"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 130</span>of men. <a
+name="citation130"></a><a href="#footnote130"
+class="citation">[130]</a>&nbsp; The aforesaid king invaded Wales
+three times with an army; first, North Wales at the
+above-mentioned place; secondly, South Wales, by the sea-coast of
+Glamorgan and Goer, penetrating as far as Caermarddin and
+Pencadair, and returning by Ellennith and Melenith; and thirdly,
+the country of Powys, near Oswaldestree; but in all these
+expeditions the king was unsuccessful, because he placed no
+confidence in the prudent and well-informed chieftains of the
+country, but was principally advised by people remote from the
+marches, and ignorant of the manners and customs of the
+natives.&nbsp; In every expedition, as the artificer is to be
+trusted in his trade, so the advice of those people should be
+consulted, who, by a long residence in the country, are become
+conversant with the manners and customs of the natives; and to
+whom it is of high importance that the power of the hostile
+nation, with whom, by a long and continued warfare, they have
+contracted an implacable enmity and hatred, should be weakened or
+destroyed, as we have set forth in our Vaticinal History.</p>
+<p>In this wood of Coleshulle, a young Welshman was killed while
+passing through the king&rsquo;s army; the greyhound who
+accompanied him did not desert his master&rsquo;s corpse for
+eight days, though without food; but faithfully defended it from
+the attacks of dogs, wolves, and birds of prey, with a wonderful
+attachment.&nbsp; What son to his father, what Nisus to Euryalus,
+what Polynices to Tydeus, what Orestes to Pylades, would have
+shewn such an affectionate regard?&nbsp; As a mark of favour to
+the dog, who was almost starved to death, the English, although
+bitter enemies to the Welsh, ordered the body, now nearly putrid,
+to be deposited in the ground with the accustomed offices of
+humanity.</p>
+<h3><a name="page131"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+131</span>CHAPTER XI<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">OF THE PASSAGE OF THE RIVER DEE, AND OF
+CHESTER</span></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">Having</span> crossed the river Dee below
+Chester, (which the Welsh call Doverdwy), on the third day before
+Easter, or the day of absolution (holy Thursday), we reached
+Chester.&nbsp; As the river Wye towards the south separates Wales
+from England, so the Dee near Chester forms the northern
+boundary.&nbsp; The inhabitants of these parts assert, that the
+waters of this river change their fords every month, and, as it
+inclines more towards England or Wales, they can, with certainty,
+prognosticate which nation will be successful or unfortunate
+during the year.&nbsp; This river derives its origin from the
+lake Penmelesmere, <a name="citation131a"></a><a
+href="#footnote131a" class="citation">[131a]</a> and, although it
+abounds with salmon, yet none are found in the lake.&nbsp; It is
+also remarkable, that this river is never swollen by rains, but
+often rises by the violence of the winds.</p>
+<p>Chester boasts of being the burial-place of Henry, <a
+name="citation131b"></a><a href="#footnote131b"
+class="citation">[131b]</a> a Roman emperor, who, after having
+imprisoned his carnal and spiritual father, pope Paschal, gave
+himself up to penitence; and, becoming a voluntary exile in this
+country, ended his days in solitary retirement.&nbsp; It is also
+asserted, that the remains of Harold are here deposited.&nbsp; He
+was the last of the Saxon kings in England, and as a punishment
+for his perjury, was defeated in the battle of Hastings, fought
+against the Normans.&nbsp; Having received many wounds, and lost
+his left eye by an <a name="page132"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+132</span>arrow in that engagement, he is said to have escaped to
+these parts, where, in holy conversation, leading the life of an
+anchorite, and being a constant attendant at one of the churches
+of this city, he is believed to have terminated his days happily.
+<a name="citation132"></a><a href="#footnote132"
+class="citation">[132]</a>&nbsp; The truth of these two
+circumstances was declared (and not before known) by the dying
+confession of each party.&nbsp; We saw here, what appeared novel
+to us, cheese made of deer&rsquo;s milk; for the countess and her
+mother keeping tame deer, presented to the archbishop three small
+cheeses made from their milk.</p>
+<p>In this same country was produced, in our time, a cow
+partaking of the nature of a stag, resembling its mother in the
+fore parts and the stag in its hips, legs, and feet, and having
+the skin and colour of the stag; but, partaking more of the
+nature of the domestic than of the wild animal, it remained with
+the herd of cattle.&nbsp; A bitch also was pregnant by a monkey,
+and produced a litter of whelps resembling a monkey before, and
+the dog behind; which the rustic keeper of the military hall
+seeing with astonishment and abhorrence, immediately killed with
+the stick he carried in his hand; thereby incurring the severe
+resentment and anger of his lord, when the latter became
+acquainted with the circumstance.</p>
+<p>In our time, also, a woman was born in Chester without hands,
+to whom nature had supplied a remedy for that defect by the
+flexibility and delicacy of the joints of her feet, with which
+she could sew, or perform any work with thread or scissors, as
+well as other women.</p>
+<h3><a name="page133"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+133</span>CHAPTER XII<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">OF THE JOURNEY BY THE WHITE MONASTERY,
+OSWALDESTREE, POWYS, AND SHREWSBURY</span></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> feast of Easter having been
+observed with due solemnity, and many persons, by the
+exhortations of the archbishop, signed with the cross, we
+directed our way from Chester to the White Monastery, <a
+name="citation133a"></a><a href="#footnote133a"
+class="citation">[133a]</a> and from thence towards Oswaldestree;
+where, on the very borders of Powys, we were met by Gruffydd son
+of Madoc, and Elissa, princes of that country, and many others;
+some few of whom having been persuaded to take the cross (for
+several of the multitude had been previously signed by Reiner, <a
+name="citation133b"></a><a href="#footnote133b"
+class="citation">[133b]</a> the bishop of that place), Gruffydd,
+prince of the district, publicly adjured, in the presence of the
+archbishop, his cousin-german, Angharad, daughter of prince Owen,
+whom, according to the vicious custom of the country, he had long
+considered as his wife.&nbsp; We slept at Oswaldestree, or the
+tree of St. Oswald, and were most sumptuously entertained after
+the English manner, by William Fitz-Alan, <a
+name="citation133c"></a><a href="#footnote133c"
+class="citation">[133c]</a> a noble and liberal <a
+name="page134"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 134</span>young
+man.&nbsp; A short time before, whilst Reiner was preaching, a
+robust youth being earnestly exhorted to follow the example of
+his companions in taking the cross, answered, &ldquo;I will not
+follow your advice until, with this lance which I bear in my
+hand, I shall have avenged the death of my lord,&rdquo; alluding
+to Owen, son of Madoc, a distinguished warrior, who had been
+maliciously and treacherously slain by Owen Cyfeilioc, his
+cousin-german; and while he was thus venting his anger and
+revenge, and violently brandishing his lance, it suddenly snapped
+asunder, and fell disjointed in several pieces to the ground, the
+handle only remaining in his hand.&nbsp; Alarmed and astonished
+at this omen, which he considered as a certain signal for his
+taking the cross, he voluntarily offered his services.</p>
+<p>In this third district of Wales, called Powys, there are most
+excellent studs put apart for breeding, and deriving their origin
+from some fine Spanish horses, which Robert de Belesme, <a
+name="citation134a"></a><a href="#footnote134a"
+class="citation">[134a]</a> earl of Shrewsbury, brought into this
+country: on which account the horses sent from hence are
+remarkable for their majestic proportion and astonishing
+fleetness.</p>
+<p>Here king Henry II. entered Powys, in our days, upon an
+expensive, though fruitless, expedition. <a
+name="citation134b"></a><a href="#footnote134b"
+class="citation">[134b]</a>&nbsp; Having dismembered the hostages
+whom he had previously received, he was compelled, by a sudden
+and violent fall <a name="page135"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+135</span>of rain, to retreat with his army.&nbsp; On the
+preceding day, the chiefs of the English army had burned some of
+the Welsh churches, with the villages and churchyards; upon which
+the sons of Owen the Great, with their light-armed troops,
+stirred up the resentment of their father and the other princes
+of the country, declaring that they would never in future spare
+any churches of the English.&nbsp; When nearly the whole army was
+on the point of assenting to this determination, Owen, a man of
+distinguished wisdom and moderation&mdash;the tumult being in
+some degree subsided&mdash;thus spake: &ldquo;My opinion, indeed,
+by no means agrees with yours, for we ought to rejoice at this
+conduct of our adversary; for, unless supported by divine
+assistance, we are far inferior to the English; and they, by
+their behaviour, have made God their enemy, who is able most
+powerfully to avenge both himself and us.&nbsp; We therefore most
+devoutly promise God that we will henceforth pay greater
+reverence than ever to churches and holy places.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+After which, the English army, on the following night,
+experienced (as has before been related) the divine
+vengeance.</p>
+<p>From Oswaldestree, we directed our course towards Shrewsbury
+(<i>Salopesburia</i>), which is nearly surrounded by the river
+Severn, where we remained a few days to rest and refresh
+ourselves; and where many people were induced to take the cross,
+through the elegant sermons of the archbishop and
+archdeacon.&nbsp; We also excommunicated Owen de Cevelioc,
+because he alone, amongst the Welsh princes, did not come to meet
+the archbishop with his people.&nbsp; Owen was a man of more
+fluent speech than his contemporary princes, and was conspicuous
+for the good management of his territory.&nbsp; Having generally
+favoured the royal cause, and opposed the measures of his own
+chieftains, he had contracted a great familiarity with king Henry
+II.&nbsp; Being with the king at table at Shrewsbury, Henry, as a
+mark of peculiar honour and regard, sent him one of his own
+loaves; he immediately brake it into small pieces, like
+alms-bread, and having, <a name="page136"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 136</span>like an almoner, placed them at a
+distance from him, he took them up one by one and ate them.&nbsp;
+The king requiring an explanation of this proceeding, Owen, with
+a smile, replied, &ldquo;I thus follow the example of my
+lord;&rdquo; keenly alluding to the avaricious disposition of the
+king, who was accustomed to retain for a long time in his own
+hands the vacant ecclesiastical benefices.</p>
+<p>It is to be remarked that three princes, <a
+name="citation136"></a><a href="#footnote136"
+class="citation">[136]</a> distinguished for their justice,
+wisdom, and princely moderation, ruled, <a
+name="page137"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 137</span>in our
+time, over the three provinces of Wales: Owen, son of Gruffydd,
+in Venedotia, or North Wales; Meredyth, his grandson, son of
+Gruffydd, who died early in life, in South Wales; and Owen de
+Cevelioc, in Powys.&nbsp; But two other princes were highly
+celebrated for their generosity; Cadwalader, son of Gruffydd, in
+North Wales, and Gruffydd of Maelor, son of Madoc, in Powys; and
+Rhys, son of Gruffydd, in South Wales, deserved commendation for
+his enterprising and independent spirit.&nbsp; In North Wales,
+David, son of Owen, and on the borders of Morgannoc, in South
+Wales, Howel, son of Iorwerth of Caerleon, maintained their good
+faith and credit, by observing a strict neutrality between the
+Welsh and English.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER XIII<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">OF THE JOURNEY BY WENLOCH, BRUMFELD, THE
+CASTLE OF LUDLOW, AND LEOMINSTER, TO HEREFORD</span></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">From</span> Shrewsbury, we continued our
+journey towards Wenloch, by a narrow and rugged way, called
+Evil-street, where, in our time, a Jew, travelling with the
+archdeacon of the place, whose name was Sin (<i>Peccatum</i>),
+and the dean, whose name was Devil, towards Shrewsbury, hearing
+the archdeacon say, that his archdeaconry began at a place called
+Evil-street, and extended as far as Mal-pas, towards Chester,
+pleasantly told them, &ldquo;It would be a miracle, if his fate
+brought him safe out of a country, whose archdeacon was Sin,
+whose dean the devil; the entrance to the archdeaconry
+Evil-street, and its exit Bad-pass.&rdquo; <a
+name="citation137"></a><a href="#footnote137"
+class="citation">[137]</a></p>
+<p>From Wenloch, we passed by the little cell of Brumfeld, <a
+name="citation138"></a><a href="#footnote138"
+class="citation">[138]</a> <a name="page138"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 138</span>the noble castle of Ludlow, through
+Leominster to Hereford leaving on our right hand the districts of
+Melenyth and Elvel; thus (describing as it were a circle) we came
+to the same point from which we had commenced this laborious
+journey through Wales.</p>
+<p>During this long and laudable legation, about three thousand
+men were signed with the cross; well skilled in the use of arrows
+and lances, and versed in military matters; impatient to attack
+the enemies of the faith; profitably and happily engaged for the
+service of Christ, if the expedition of the Holy Cross had been
+forwarded with an alacrity equal to the diligence and devotion
+with which the forces were collected.&nbsp; But by the secret,
+though never unjust, judgment of God, the journey of the Roman
+emperor was delayed, and dissensions arose amongst our
+kings.&nbsp; The premature and fatal hand of death arrested the
+king of Sicily, who had been the foremost sovereign in supplying
+the holy land with corn and provisions during the period of their
+distress.&nbsp; In consequence of his death, violent contentions
+arose amongst our princes respecting their several rights to the
+kingdom; and the faithful beyond sea suffered severely by want
+and famine, surrounded on all sides by enemies, and most
+anxiously waiting for supplies.&nbsp; But as affliction may
+strengthen the understanding, as gold is tried by fire, and
+virtue may be confirmed in weakness, these things are suffered to
+happen; since adversity (as Gregory testifies) opposed to good
+prayers is the probation of virtue, not the judgment of
+reproof.&nbsp; For who does not know how fortunate a circumstance
+it was that <a name="page139"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+139</span>Paul went to Italy, and suffered so dreadful a
+shipwreck?&nbsp; But the ship of his heart remained unbroken
+amidst the waves of the sea.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER XIV<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">A DESCRIPTION OF BALDWIN, ARCHBISHOP OF
+CANTERBURY</span> <a name="citation139"></a><a
+href="#footnote139" class="citation">[139]</a></h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">Let</span> it not be thought superfluous
+to describe the exterior and inward qualities of that person, the
+particulars of whose embassy, and as it were holy peregrination,
+we have briefly and succinctly related.&nbsp; He was a man of a
+dark complexion, of an open and venerable countenance, of a
+moderate stature, a good person, and rather inclined to be thin
+than corpulent.&nbsp; He was a modest and grave man, of so great
+abstinence and continence, that ill report scarcely ever presumed
+to say any thing against him; a man of few words; slow to anger,
+temperate and moderate in all his passions and affections; swift
+to hear, slow to speak; he was from an early age well instructed
+in literature, and bearing the yoke of the Lord from his youth,
+by the purity of his morals became a distinguished luminary to
+the people; wherefore voluntarily resigning the honour of the
+archlevite, <a name="citation140"></a><a href="#footnote140"
+class="citation">[140]</a> <a name="page140"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 140</span>which he had canonically obtained,
+and despising the pomps and vanities of the world, he assumed
+with holy devotion the habit of the Cistercian order; and as he
+had been formerly more than a monk in his manners, within the
+space of a year he was appointed abbot, and in a few years
+afterwards preferred first to a bishopric, and then to an
+archbishopric; and having been found faithful in a little, had
+authority given him over much.&nbsp; But, as Cicero says,
+&ldquo;Nature had made nothing entirely perfect;&rdquo; when he
+came into power, not laying aside that sweet innate benignity
+which he had always shewn when a private man, sustaining his
+people with his staff rather than chastising them with rods,
+feeding them as it were with the milk of a mother, and not making
+use of the scourges of the father, he incurred public scandal for
+his remissness.&nbsp; So great was his lenity that he put an end
+to all pastoral rigour; and was a better monk than abbot, a
+better bishop than archbishop.&nbsp; Hence pope Urban addressed
+him; &ldquo;Urban, servant of the servants of God, to the most
+fervent monk, to the warm abbot, to the luke-warm bishop, to the
+remiss archbishop, health, etc.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This second successor to the martyr Thomas, having heard of
+the insults offered to our Saviour and his holy cross, was
+amongst the first who signed themselves with the cross, and
+manfully assumed the office of preaching its service both at home
+and in the most remote parts of the kingdom.&nbsp; Pursuing his
+journey to the Holy Land, he embarked on board a vessel at
+Marseilles, and landed safely in a port at Tyre, from whence he
+proceeded to Acre, where he found our army both attacking and
+attacked, our forces dispirited by the defection of the princes,
+and thrown into a state of desolation and despair; fatigued by
+long expectation of supplies, greatly afflicted by hunger and
+want, and distempered by the inclemency of the air: finding his
+end approaching, <a name="page141"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+141</span>he embraced his fellow subjects, relieving their wants
+by liberal acts of charity and pious exhortations, and by the
+tenor of his life and actions strengthened them in the faith;
+whose ways, life, and deeds, may he who is alone the &ldquo;way,
+the truth, and the life,&rdquo; the way without offence, the
+truth without doubt, and the life without end, direct in truth,
+together with the whole body of the faithful, and for the glory
+of his name and the palm of faith which he hath planted, teach
+their hands to war, and their fingers to fight.</p>
+<h2>FOOTNOTES:</h2>
+<p><a name="footnote0a"></a><a href="#citation0a"
+class="footnote">[0a]</a>&nbsp; It is a somewhat curious
+coincidence that the island of Barry is now owned by a descendant
+of Gerald de Windor&rsquo;s elder brother&mdash;the Earl of
+Plymouth.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote0b"></a><a href="#citation0b"
+class="footnote">[0b]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;Mirror of the
+Church,&rdquo; ii. 33.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote0c"></a><a href="#citation0c"
+class="footnote">[0c]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;Social England,&rdquo;
+vol. i. p. 342.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote0d"></a><a href="#citation0d"
+class="footnote">[0d]</a>&nbsp; Published in the first instance
+in the &ldquo;Transactions of the Cymmrodaian Society,&rdquo; and
+subsequently amplified and brought out in book form.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote0e"></a><a href="#citation0e"
+class="footnote">[0e]</a>&nbsp; Introduction to Borrow&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;Wild Wales&rdquo; in the Everyman Series.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote0f"></a><a href="#citation0f"
+class="footnote">[0f]</a>&nbsp; Geoffrey, who ended his life as
+Bishop of St. Asaph, was supposed to have found the material for
+his &ldquo;History of the British Kings&rdquo; in a Welsh book,
+containing a history of the Britons, which Waltor Colenius,
+Archdeacon of Oxford, picked up during a journey in Brittany.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote0g"></a><a href="#citation0g"
+class="footnote">[0g]</a>&nbsp; Walter Map, another Archdeacon of
+Oxford, was born in Glamorganshire, the son of a Norman knight by
+a Welsh mother.&nbsp; <i>Inter alia</i> he was the author of a
+Welsh work on agriculture.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote0h"></a><a href="#citation0h"
+class="footnote">[0h]</a>&nbsp; Green, &ldquo;Hist. Eng.
+People,&rdquo; i. 172.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote0i"></a><a href="#citation0i"
+class="footnote">[0i]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;England under the Angevin
+Kings,&rdquo; vol. ii. 457.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote0j"></a><a href="#citation0j"
+class="footnote">[0j]</a>&nbsp; Project Gutenberg has released
+&ldquo;The Description of Wales&rdquo; as a separate
+eText&mdash;David Price.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote11"></a><a href="#citation11"
+class="footnote">[11]</a>&nbsp; Giraldus has committed an error
+in placing Urban III. at the head of the apostolic see; for he
+died at Ferrara in the month of October, <span
+class="GutSmall">A.D.</span> 1187, and was succeeded by Gregory
+VIII., whose short reign expired in the month of December
+following.&nbsp; Clement III. was elected pontiff in the year
+1188.&nbsp; Frederick I., surnamed Barbarossa, succeeded Conrad
+III. in the empire of Germany, in March, 1152, and was drowned in
+a river of Cilicia whilst bathing, in 1190.&nbsp; Isaac Angelus
+succeeded Andronicus I. as emperor of Constantinople, in 1185,
+and was dethroned in 1195.&nbsp; Philip II., surnamed Augustus,
+from his having been born in the month of August, was crowned at
+Rheims, in 1179, and died at Mantes, in 1223. William II., king
+of Sicily, surnamed the Good, succeeded in 1166 to his father,
+William the Bad, and died in 1189.&nbsp; Bela III., king of
+Hungary, succeeded to the throne in 1174, and died in 1196.&nbsp;
+Guy de Lusignan was crowned king of Jerusalem in 1186, and in the
+following year his city was taken by the victorious Saladin.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote12a"></a><a href="#citation12a"
+class="footnote">[12a]</a>&nbsp; New Radnor.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote12b"></a><a href="#citation12b"
+class="footnote">[12b]</a>&nbsp; Rhys ap Gruffydd was grandson to
+Rhys ap Tewdwr, prince of South Wales, who, in 1090, was slain in
+an engagement with the Normans.&nbsp; He was a prince of great
+talent, but great versatility of character, and made a
+conspicuous figure in Welsh history.&nbsp; He died in 1196, and
+was buried in the cathedral of St. David&rsquo;s; where his
+effigy, as well as that of his son Rhys Gryg, still remain in a
+good state of preservation.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote12c"></a><a href="#citation12c"
+class="footnote">[12c]</a>&nbsp; Peter de Leia, prior of the
+Benedictine monastery of Wenlock, in Shropshire, was the
+successful rival of Giraldus for the bishopric of Saint
+David&rsquo;s, vacant by the death of David Fitzgerald, the uncle
+of our author; but he did not obtain his promotion without
+considerable opposition from the canons, who submitted to the
+absolute sequestration of their property before they consented to
+his election, being desirous that the nephew should have
+succeeded his uncle.&nbsp; He was consecrated in 1176, and died
+in 1199.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote12d"></a><a href="#citation12d"
+class="footnote">[12d]</a>&nbsp; In the Latin of Giraldus, the
+name of Eineon is represented by &AElig;neas, and Eineon Clyd by
+&AElig;neas Claudius.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote13"></a><a href="#citation13"
+class="footnote">[13]</a>&nbsp; Cruker Castle.&nbsp; The
+corresponding distance between Old and New Radnor evidently
+places this castle at Old Radnor, which was anciently called
+Pen-y-craig, Pencraig, or Pen-cr&ucirc;g, from its situation on a
+rocky eminence.&nbsp; Cruker is a corruption, probably, from
+Cr&ucirc;g-caerau, the mount, or height, of the
+fortifications.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote14a"></a><a href="#citation14a"
+class="footnote">[14a]</a>&nbsp; Buelth or Builth, a large market
+town on the north-west edge of the county of Brecon, on the
+southern banks of the Wye, over which there is a long and
+handsome bridge of stone.&nbsp; It had formerly a strong castle,
+the site and earthworks of which still remain, but the building
+is destroyed.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote14b"></a><a href="#citation14b"
+class="footnote">[14b]</a>&nbsp; Llan-Avan, a small church at the
+foot of barren mountains about five or six miles north-west of
+Buelth.&nbsp; The saint from whom it takes its name, was one of
+the sons of Cedig ab Cunedda; whose ancestor, Cunedda, king of
+the Britons, was the head of one of the three holy families of
+Britain.&nbsp; He is said to have lived in the beginning of the
+sixth century.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote14c"></a><a href="#citation14c"
+class="footnote">[14c]</a> Melenia, Warthrenion, Elevein,
+Elvenia, Melenyth, and Elvein, places mentioned in this first
+chapter, and varying in their orthography, were three different
+districts in Radnorshire: Melenyth is a hundred in the northern
+part of the county, extending into Montgomeryshire, in which is
+the church of Keri: Elvein retains in modern days the name of
+Elvel, and is a hundred in the southern part of the county,
+separated from Brecknockshire by the Wye; and Warthrenion, in
+which was the castle built by prince Rhys at Rhaiadyr-gwy, seems
+to have been situated between the other two.&nbsp; Warthrenion
+may more properly be called Gwyrthrynion, it was anciently one of
+the three comots of Arwystli, a cantref of Merioneth.&nbsp; In
+the year 1174, Melyenith was in the possession of Cadwallon ap
+Madawc, cousin german to prince Rhys; Elvel was held by Eineon
+Clyd and Gwyrthrynion by Eineon ap Rhys, both sons-in-law to that
+illustrious prince.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote15a"></a><a href="#citation15a"
+class="footnote">[15a]</a>&nbsp; The church of Saint Germanus is
+now known by the name of Saint Harmans, and is situated three or
+four miles from Rhaiadyr, in Radnorshire, on the right-hand of
+the road from thence to Llanidloes; it is a small and simple
+structure, placed on a little eminence, in a dreary plain
+surrounded by mountains.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote15b"></a><a href="#citation15b"
+class="footnote">[15b]</a>&nbsp; Several churches in Wales have
+been dedicated to Saint Curig, who came into Wales in the seventh
+century.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote16a"></a><a href="#citation16a"
+class="footnote">[16a]</a>&nbsp; Glascum is a small village in a
+mountainous and retired situation between Builth and Kington, in
+Herefordshire.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote16b"></a><a href="#citation16b"
+class="footnote">[16b]</a>&nbsp; Bangu.&mdash;This was a hand
+bell kept in all the Welsh churches, which the clerk or sexton
+took to the house of the deceased on the day of the funeral: when
+the procession began, a psalm was sung; the bellman then sounded
+his bell in a solemn manner for some time, till another psalm was
+concluded; and he again sounded it at intervals, till the funeral
+arrived at the church.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote16c"></a><a href="#citation16c"
+class="footnote">[16c]</a>&nbsp; Rhaiadyr, called also
+Rhaiader-gwy, is a small village and market-town in
+Radnorshire.&nbsp; The site only of the castle, built by prince
+Rhys, <span class="GutSmall">A.D.</span> 1178, now remains at a
+short distance from the village; it was strongly situated on a
+natural rock above the river Wye, which, below the bridge, forms
+a cataract.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote16d"></a><a href="#citation16d"
+class="footnote">[16d]</a>&nbsp; Llywel, a small village about a
+mile from Trecastle, on the great road leading from thence to
+Llandovery; it was anciently a township, and by charter of Philip
+and Mary was attached to the borough of Brecknock, by the name of
+Trecastle ward.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote17"></a><a href="#citation17"
+class="footnote">[17]</a>&nbsp; Leland, in his description of
+this part of Wales, mentions a lake in Low Elvel, or Elvenia,
+which may perhaps be the same as that alluded to in this passage
+of Giraldus.&nbsp; &ldquo;There is a llinne in Low Elvel within a
+mile of Payne&rsquo;s castel by the church called Lanpeder.&nbsp;
+The llinne is caullid Bougklline, and is of no great quantite,
+but is plentiful of pike, and perche, and
+eles.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Leland</i>, <i>Itin.</i> tom. v. p. 72.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote18a"></a><a href="#citation18a"
+class="footnote">[18a]</a>&nbsp; Hay.&mdash;A pleasant
+market-town on the southern banks of the river Wye, over which
+there is a bridge.&nbsp; It still retains some marks of baronial
+antiquity in the old castle, within the present town, the gateway
+of which is tolerably perfect.&nbsp; A high raised tumulus
+adjoining the church marks the site of the more ancient
+fortress.&nbsp; The more modern and spacious castle owes its
+foundation probably to one of those Norman lords, who, about the
+year 1090, conquered this part of Wales.&nbsp; Little notice is
+taken of this castle in the Welsh chronicles; but we are informed
+that it was destroyed in 1231, by Henry II., and that it was
+refortified by Henry III.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote18b"></a><a href="#citation18b"
+class="footnote">[18b]</a>&nbsp; Llanddew, a small village, about
+two miles from Brecknock, on the left of the road leading from
+thence to Hay; its manor belongs to the bishops of Saint
+David&rsquo;s, who had formerly a castellated mansion there, of
+which some ruins still remain.&nbsp; The tithes of this parish
+are appropriated to the archdeaconry of Brecknock, and here was
+the residence of our author Giraldus, which he mentions in
+several of his writings, and alludes to with heartfelt
+satisfaction at the end of the third chapter of this
+Itinerary.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote18c"></a><a href="#citation18c"
+class="footnote">[18c]</a>&nbsp; Aberhodni, the ancient name of
+the town and castle of Brecknock, derived from its situation at
+the confluence of the river Hodni with the Usk.&nbsp; The castle
+and two religious buildings, of which the remains are still
+extant, owed their foundation to Bernard de Newmarch, a Norman
+knight, who, in the year 1090, obtained by conquest the lordship
+of Brecknock.&nbsp; [The modern Welsh name is Aberhonddu.]</p>
+<p><a name="footnote19a"></a><a href="#citation19a"
+class="footnote">[19a]</a>&nbsp; Iestyn ap Gwrgant was lord of
+the province of Morganwg, or Glamorgan, and a formidable rival to
+Rhys ap Tewdwr, prince of South Wales; but unable to cope with
+him in power, he prevailed on Robert Fitzhamon, a Norman knight,
+to come to his assistance.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote19b"></a><a href="#citation19b"
+class="footnote">[19b]</a>&nbsp; This little river rises near the
+ruins of Blanllyfni castle, between Llangorse pool and the
+turnpike road leading from Brecknock to Abergavenny, and empties
+itself into the river Usk, near Glasbury.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote19c"></a><a href="#citation19c"
+class="footnote">[19c]</a>&nbsp; A pretty little village on the
+southern banks of the Usk, about four miles from Hay, on the road
+leading to Brecknock.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote19d"></a><a href="#citation19d"
+class="footnote">[19d]</a>&nbsp; The great desolation here
+alluded to, is attributed by Dr. Powel to Howel and Meredyth,
+sons of Edwyn ap Eineon; not to Howel, son of Meredith.&nbsp; In
+the year 1021, they conspired against Llewelyn ap Sitsyllt, and
+slew him: Meredith was slain in 1033, and Howel in 1043.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote19e"></a><a href="#citation19e"
+class="footnote">[19e]</a>&nbsp; William de Breusa, or Braose,
+was by extraction a Norman, and had extensive possessions in
+England, as well as Normandy: he was succeeded by his son Philip,
+who, in the reign of William Rufus, favoured the cause of king
+Henry against Robert Curthose, duke of Normandy; and being
+afterwards rebellious to his sovereign, was disinherited of his
+lands.&nbsp; By his marriage with Berta, daughter of Milo, earl
+of Hereford, he gained a rich inheritance in Brecknock, Overwent,
+and Gower.&nbsp; He left issue two sons: William and Philip:
+William married Maude de Saint Wallery, and succeeded to the
+great estate of his father and mother, which he kept in peaceable
+possession during the reigns of king Henry II. and king Richard
+I.&nbsp; In order to avoid the persecutions of king John, he
+retired with his family to Ireland; and from thence returned into
+Wales; on hearing of the king&rsquo;s arrival in Ireland, his
+wife Maude fled with her sons into Scotland, where she was taken
+prisoner, and in the year 1210 committed, with William, her son
+and heir, to Corf castle, and there miserably starved to death,
+by order of king John; her husband, William de Braose, escaped
+into France, disguised, and dying there, was buried in the abbey
+church of Saint Victor, at Paris.&nbsp; The family of Saint
+Walery, or Valery, derived their name from a sea-port in
+France.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote21"></a><a href="#citation21"
+class="footnote">[21]</a> A small church dedicated to Saint
+David, in the suburbs of Brecknock, on the great road leading
+from thence to Trecastle.&nbsp; &ldquo;The paroche of Llanvays,
+Llan-chirch-Vais extra, ac si diceres, extra muros.&nbsp; It
+standeth betwixt the river of Uske and Tyrtorelle brooke, that
+is, about the lower ende of the town of
+Brekenok.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Leland</i>, <i>Itin.</i> tom. v. p.
+69.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote22a"></a><a href="#citation22a"
+class="footnote">[22a]</a>&nbsp; David Fitzgerald was promoted to
+the see of Saint David&rsquo;s in 1147, or according to others,
+in 1149.&nbsp; He died <span class="GutSmall">A.D.</span>
+1176.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote22b"></a><a href="#citation22b"
+class="footnote">[22b]</a>&nbsp; Now Howden, in the East Riding
+of Yorkshire.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote22c"></a><a href="#citation22c"
+class="footnote">[22c]</a>&nbsp; Osred was king of the
+Northumbrians, and son of Alfred.&nbsp; He commenced to reign in
+<span class="GutSmall">A.D.</span> 791, but was deprived of his
+crown the following year.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote23a"></a><a href="#citation23a"
+class="footnote">[23a]</a>&nbsp; St. Kenelm was the only son and
+heir of Kenulfus, king of the Mercians, who left him under the
+care of his two sisters, Quendreda and Bragenilda.&nbsp; The
+former, blinded by ambition, resolved to destroy the innocent
+child, who stood between her and the throne; and for that purpose
+prevailed on Ascebert, who attended constantly on the king, to
+murder him privately, giving him hopes, in case he complied with
+her wishes, of making him her partner in the kingdom.&nbsp; Under
+the pretence of diverting his young master, this wicked servant
+led him into a retired vale at Clent, in Staffordshire, and
+having murdered him, dug a pit, and cast his body into it, which
+was discovered by a miracle, and carried in solemn procession to
+the abbey of Winchelcomb.&nbsp; In the parish of Clent is a small
+chapel dedicated to this saint.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote23b"></a><a href="#citation23b"
+class="footnote">[23b]</a>&nbsp; Winchelcumbe, or Winchcomb, in
+the lower part of the hundred of Kiftsgate, in Gloucestershire, a
+few miles to the north of Cheltenham.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote24"></a><a href="#citation24"
+class="footnote">[24]</a>&nbsp; St. Kynauc, who flourished about
+the year 492, was the reputed son of Brychan, lord of Brecknock,
+by Benadulved, daughter of Benadyl, a prince of Powis, whom he
+seduced during the time of his detention as an hostage at the
+court of her father.&nbsp; He is said to have been murdered upon
+the mountain called the Van, and buried in the church of Merthyr
+Cynawg, or Cynawg the Martyr, near Brecknock, which is dedicated
+to his memory.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote25a"></a><a href="#citation25a"
+class="footnote">[25a]</a>&nbsp; In Welsh, Illtyd, which has been
+latinised into Iltutus, as in the instance of St. Iltutus, the
+celebrated disciple of Germanus, and the master of the learned
+Gildas, who founded a college for the instruction of youth at
+Llantwit, on the coast of Glamorganshire; but I do not conceive
+this to be the same person.&nbsp; The name of Ty-Illtyd, or St.
+Illtyd&rsquo;s house, is still known as Llanamllech, but it is
+applied to one of those monuments of Druidical antiquity called a
+cistvaen, erected upon an eminence named Maenest, at a short
+distance from the village.&nbsp; A rude, upright stone stood
+formerly on one side of it, and was called by the country people
+Maen Illtyd, or Illtyd&rsquo;s stone, but was removed about a
+century ago.&nbsp; A well, the stream of which divides this
+parish from the neighbouring one of Llansaintfraid, is called
+Ffynnon Illtyd, or Illtyd&rsquo;s well.&nbsp; This was evidently
+the site of the hermitage mentioned by Giraldus.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote25b"></a><a href="#citation25b"
+class="footnote">[25b]</a>&nbsp; Lhanhamelach, or Llanamllech, is
+a small village, three miles from Brecknock, on the road to
+Abergavenny.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote26a"></a><a href="#citation26a"
+class="footnote">[26a]</a>&nbsp; The name of Newmarche appears in
+the chartulary of Battel abbey, as a witness to one of the
+charters granted by William the Conqueror to the monks of Battel
+in Sussex, upon his foundation of their house.&nbsp; He obtained
+the territory of Brecknock by conquest, from Bleddyn ap Maenarch,
+the Welsh regulus thereof, about the year 1092, soon after his
+countryman, Robert Fitzhamon, had reduced the county of
+Glamorgan.&nbsp; He built the present town of Brecknock, where he
+also founded a priory of Benedictine monks.&nbsp; According to
+Leland, he was buried in the cloister of the cathedral church at
+Gloucester, though the mutilated remains of an effigy and
+monument are still ascribed to him in the priory church at
+Brecknock.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote26b"></a><a href="#citation26b"
+class="footnote">[26b]</a>&nbsp; Brecheinoc, now Brecknockshire,
+had three cantreds or hundreds, and eight comots.&mdash;1.
+Cantref Selef with the comots of Selef and Trahayern.&mdash;2.
+Cantref Canol, or the middle hundred, with the comots Talgarth,
+Ystradwy, and Brwynlys, or Eglyws Yail.&mdash;3. Cantref Mawr, or
+the great hundred, with the comots of Tir Raulff Llywel, and
+Cerrig Howel.&mdash;Powel&rsquo;s description of Wales, p.
+20.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote27"></a><a href="#citation27"
+class="footnote">[27]</a>&nbsp; Milo was son to Walter, constable
+of England in the reign of Henry I., and Emme his wife, one of
+the daughters of Dru de Baladun, sister to Hameline de Baladun, a
+person of great note, who came into England with William the
+Conqueror, and, being the first lord of Overwent in the county of
+Monmouth, built the castle of Abergavenny.&nbsp; He was wounded
+by an arrow while hunting, on Christmas eve, in 1144, and was
+buried in the chapter-house of Lanthoni, near Gloucester.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote28a"></a><a href="#citation28a"
+class="footnote">[28a]</a>&nbsp; Walter de Clifford.&nbsp; The
+first of this ancient family was called Ponce; he had issue three
+sons, Walter, Drogo or Dru, and Richard.&nbsp; The
+Conqueror&rsquo;s survey takes notice of the two former, but from
+Richard the genealogical line is preserved, who, being called
+Richard de Pwns, obtained, as a gift from king Henry I., the
+cantref Bychan, or little hundred, and the castle of Llandovery,
+in Wales; he left three sons, Simon, Walter, and Richard.&nbsp;
+The Walter de Clifford here mentioned was father to the
+celebrated Fair Rosamond, the favourite of king Henry II.; and
+was succeeded by his eldest son, Walter, who married Margaret,
+daughter to Llewelyn, prince of Wales, and widow of John de
+Braose.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote28b"></a><a href="#citation28b"
+class="footnote">[28b]</a>&nbsp; Brendlais, or Brynllys, is a
+small village on the road between Brecknock and Hay, where a
+stately round tower marks the site of the ancient castle of the
+Cliffords, in which the tyrant Mahel lost his life.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote29a"></a><a href="#citation29a"
+class="footnote">[29a]</a>&nbsp; St. Almedha, though not included
+in the ordinary lists, is said to have been a daughter of
+Brychan, and sister to St. Canoc, and to have borne the name of
+Elevetha, Aled, or Elyned, latinised into Almedha.&nbsp; The
+Welsh genealogists say, that she suffered martyrdom on a hill
+near Brecknock, where a chapel was erected to her memory; and
+William of Worcester says she was buried at Usk.&nbsp; Mr. Hugh
+Thomas (who wrote an essay towards the history of Brecknockshire
+in the year 1698) speaks of the chapel as standing, though
+unroofed and useless, in his time; the people thereabouts call it
+St. Tayled.&nbsp; It was situated on an eminence, about a mile to
+the eastward of Brecknock, and about half a mile from a
+farm-house, formerly the mansion and residence of the Aubreys,
+lords of the manor of Slwch, which lordship was bestowed upon Sir
+Reginald Awbrey by Bernard Newmarche, in the reign of William
+Rufus.&nbsp; Some small vestiges of this building may still be
+traced, and an aged yew tree, with a well at its foot, marks the
+site near which the chapel formerly stood.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote29b"></a><a href="#citation29b"
+class="footnote">[29b]</a>&nbsp; This same habit is still (in Sir
+Richard Colt Hoare&rsquo;s time) used by the Welsh ploughboys;
+they have a sort of chaunt, consisting of half or even quarter
+notes, which is sung to the oxen at plough: the countrymen
+vulgarly supposing that the beasts are consoled to work more
+regularly and patiently by such a lullaby.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote30a"></a><a href="#citation30a"
+class="footnote">[30a]</a>&nbsp; The umber, or grayling, is still
+a plentiful and favourite fish in the rivers on the Welsh
+border.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote30b"></a><a href="#citation30b"
+class="footnote">[30b]</a>&nbsp; About the year 1113,
+&ldquo;there was a talke through South Wales, of Gruffyth, the
+sonne of Rees ap Theodor, who, for feare of the king, had beene
+of a child brought up in Ireland, and had come over two yeares
+passed, which time he had spent privilie with his freends,
+kinsfolks, and affines; as with Gerald, steward of Penbrooke, his
+brother-in-law, and others.&nbsp; But at the last he was accused
+to the king, that he intended the kingdome of South Wales as his
+father had enjoied it, which was now in the king&rsquo;s hands;
+and that all the countrie hoped of libertie through him;
+therefore the king sent to take him.&nbsp; But Gryffyth ap Rees
+hering this, sent to Gruffyth ap Conan, prince of North Wales,
+desiring him of his aid, and that he might remaine safelie within
+his countrie; which he granted, and received him joiouslie for
+his father&rsquo;s sake.&rdquo;&nbsp; He afterwards proved so
+troublesome and successful an antagonist, that the king
+endeavoured by every possible means to get him into his
+power.&nbsp; To Gruffyth ap Conan he offered &ldquo;mountaines of
+gold to send the said Gruffyth or his head to him.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And at a subsequent period, he sent for Owen ap-Cadogan said to
+him, &ldquo;Owen, I have found thee true and faithful unto me,
+therefore I desire thee to take or kill that murtherer, that doth
+so trouble my loving subjects.&rdquo;&nbsp; But Gruffyth escaped
+all the snares which the king had laid for him, and in the year
+1137 died a natural and honourable death; he is styled in the
+Welsh chronicle, &ldquo;the light, honor, and staie of South
+Wales;&rdquo; and distinguished as the bravest, the wisest, the
+most merciful, liberal, and just, of all the princes of
+Wales.&nbsp; By his wife Gwenllian, the daughter of Gruffyth ap
+Conan, he left a son, commonly called the lord Rhys, who met the
+archbishop at Radnor, as is related in the first chapter of this
+Itinerary.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote31"></a><a href="#citation31"
+class="footnote">[31]</a>&nbsp; This cantref, which now bears the
+name of Caeo, is placed, according to the ancient divisions of
+Wales, in the cantref Bychan, or little hundred, and not in the
+Cantref Mawr, or great hundred.&nbsp; A village between Lampeter
+in Cardiganshire and Llandovery in Caermarthenshire, still bears
+the name of Cynwil Caeo, and, from its picturesque situation and
+the remains of its mines, which were probably worked by the
+Romans, deserves the notice of the curious traveller.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote32"></a><a href="#citation32"
+class="footnote">[32]</a>&nbsp; The lake of Brecheinoc bears the
+several names of Llyn Savaddan, Brecinau-mere, Llangorse, and
+Talyllyn Pool, the two latter of which are derived from the names
+of parishes on its banks.&nbsp; It is a large, though by no means
+a beautiful, piece of water, its banks being low and flat, and
+covered with rushes and other aquatic plants to a considerable
+distance from the shore.&nbsp; Pike, perch, and eels are the
+common fish of this water; tench and trout are rarely, I believe,
+(if ever), taken in it.&nbsp; The notion of its having swallowed
+up an ancient city is not yet quite exploded by the natives; and
+some will even attribute the name of Loventium to it; which is
+with much greater certainty fixed at Llanio-isau, between
+Lampeter and Tregaron, in Cardiganshire, on the northern banks of
+the river Teivi, where there are very considerable and undoubted
+remains of a large Roman city.&nbsp; The legend of the town at
+the bottom of the lake is at the same time very old.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote33a"></a><a href="#citation33a"
+class="footnote">[33a]</a>&nbsp; That chain of mountains which
+divides Brecknockshire from Caermarthenshire, over which the
+turnpike road formerly passed from Trecastle to Llandovery, and
+from which the river Usk derives its source.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote33b"></a><a href="#citation33b"
+class="footnote">[33b]</a>&nbsp; This mountain is now called, by
+way of eminence, the Van, or the height, but more commonly, by
+country people, Bannau Brycheinog, or the Brecknock heights,
+alluding to its two peaks.&nbsp; Our author, Giraldus, seems to
+have taken his account of the spring, on the summit of this
+mountain, from report, rather than from ocular testimony.&nbsp; I
+(Sir R. Colt Hoare) examined the summits of each peak very
+attentively, and could discern no spring whatever.&nbsp; The soil
+is peaty and very boggy.&nbsp; On the declivity of the southern
+side of the mountain, and at no considerable distance from the
+summit, is a spring of very fine water, which my guide assured me
+never failed.&nbsp; On the north-west side of the mountain is a
+round pool, in which possibly trout may have been sometimes
+found, but, from the muddy nature of its waters, I do not think
+it very probable; from this pool issues a small brook, which
+falls precipitously down the sides of the mountain, and pursuing
+its course through a narrow and well-wooded valley, forms a
+pretty cascade near a rustic bridge which traverses it.&nbsp; I
+am rather inclined think, that Giraldus confounded in his account
+the spring and the pool together.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote34a"></a><a href="#citation34a"
+class="footnote">[34a]</a>&nbsp; The first of these are now
+styled the Black Mountains, of which the Gadair Fawr is the
+principal, and is only secondary to the Van in height.&nbsp; The
+Black Mountains are an extensive range of hills rising to the
+east of Talgarth, in the several parishes of Talgarth, Llaneliew,
+and Llanigorn, in the county of Brecknock, and connected with the
+heights of Ewyas.&nbsp; The most elevated point is called Y
+Gadair, and, excepting the Brecknock Van (the Cadair Arthur of
+Giraldus), is esteemed the highest mountain in South Wales.&nbsp;
+The mountains of Ewyas are those now called the Hatterel Hills,
+rising above the monastery of Llanthoni, and joining the Black
+Mountains of Talgarth at Capel y Ffin, or the chapel upon the
+boundary, near which the counties of Hereford, Brecknock, and
+Monmouth form a point of union.&nbsp; But English writers have
+generally confounded all distinction, calling them
+indiscriminately the Black Mountains, or the Hatterel Hills.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote34b"></a><a href="#citation34b"
+class="footnote">[34b]</a>&nbsp; If we consider the circumstances
+of this chapter, it will appear very evidently, that the vale of
+Ewyas made no part of the actual Itinerary.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote35"></a><a href="#citation35"
+class="footnote">[35]</a>&nbsp; Landewi Nant Hodeni, or the
+church of St. David on the Hodni, is now better known by the name
+of Llanthoni abbey.&nbsp; A small and rustic chapel, dedicated to
+St. David, at first occupied the site of this abbey; in the year
+1103, William de Laci, a Norman knight, having renounced the
+pleasures of the world, retired to this sequestered spot, where
+he was joined in his austere profession by Ernicius, chaplain to
+queen Maude.&nbsp; In the year 1108, these hermits erected a mean
+church in the place of their hermitage, which was consecrated by
+Urban, bishop of Llandaff, and Rameline, bishop of Hereford, and
+dedicated to St. John the Baptist: having afterward received very
+considerable benefactions from Hugh de Laci, and gained the
+consent of Anselm, archbishop of Canterbury, these same hermits
+founded a magnificent monastery for Black canons, of the order of
+St. Augustine, which they immediately filled with forty monks
+collected from the monasteries of the Holy Trinity in London,
+Merton in Surrey, and Colchester in Essex.&nbsp; They afterwards
+removed to Gloucester, where they built a church and spacious
+monastery, which, after the name of their former residence, they
+called Llanthoni; it was consecrated <span
+class="GutSmall">A.D.</span> 1136, by Simon, bishop of Worcester,
+and Robert Betun bishop of Hereford, and dedicated to the Virgin
+Mary.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote36a"></a><a href="#citation36a"
+class="footnote">[36a]</a>&nbsp; The titles of mother and
+daughter are here applied to the mother church in Wales, and the
+daughter near Gloucester.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote36b"></a><a href="#citation36b"
+class="footnote">[36b]</a>&nbsp; William of Wycumb, the fourth
+prior of Llanthoni, succeeded to Robert de Braci, who was obliged
+to quit the monastery, on account of the hostile molestation it
+received from the Welsh.&nbsp; To him succeeded Clement, the
+sub-prior, and to Clement, Roger de Norwich.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote38"></a><a href="#citation38"
+class="footnote">[38]</a>&nbsp; Walter de Laci came into England
+with William the Conqueror, and left three sons, Roger, Hugh, and
+Walter.&nbsp; Hugh de Laci was the lord of Ewyas, and became
+afterwards the founder of the convent of Llanthoni; his elder
+brother, Robert, held also four caracutes of land within the
+limits of the castle of Ewyas, which king William had bestowed on
+Walter, his father; but joining in rebellion against William
+Rufus, he was banished the kingdom, and all his lands were given
+to his brother Hugh, who died without issue.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote41"></a><a href="#citation41"
+class="footnote">[41]</a>&nbsp; This anecdote is thus related by
+the historian Hollinshed: &ldquo;Hereof it came on a time, whiles
+the king sojourned in France about his warres, which he held
+against king Philip, there came unto him a French priest, whose
+name was Fulco, who required the king in anywise to put from him
+three abominable daughters which he had, and to bestow them in
+marriage, least God punished him for them.&nbsp; &lsquo;Thou
+liest, hypocrite (said the king), to thy verie face; for all the
+world knoweth I have not one daughter.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;I lie
+not (said the priest), for thou hast three daughters: one of them
+is called Pride, the second Covetousness, and the third
+Lecherie.&rsquo;&nbsp; With that the king called to him his lords
+and barons, and said to them, &lsquo;This hypocrite heere hath
+required me to marry awaie my three daughters, which (as he
+saith) I cherish, nourish, foster, and mainteine; that is to say,
+Pride, Covetousness, and Lecherie: and now that I have found out
+necessarie and fit husbands for them, I will do it with effect,
+and seeks no more delaies.&nbsp; I therefore bequeath my pride to
+the high-minded Templars and Hospitallers, which are as proud as
+Lucifer himselfe; my covetousness I give unto the White Monks,
+otherwise called of the Cisteaux order, for they covet the divell
+and all; my lecherie I commit to the prelats of the church, who
+have most pleasure and felicitie therein.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p><a name="footnote44a"></a><a href="#citation44a"
+class="footnote">[44a]</a>&nbsp; This small residence of the
+archdeacon was at Landeu, a place which has been described
+before: the author takes this opportunity of hinting at his love
+of literature, religion, and mediocrity.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote44b"></a><a href="#citation44b"
+class="footnote">[44b]</a>&nbsp; The last chapter having been
+wholly digressive, we must now recur back to Brecknock, or
+rather, perhaps, to our author&rsquo;s residence at Landeu, where
+we left him, and from thence accompany him to Abergavenny.&nbsp;
+It appears that from Landeu he took the road to Talgarth, a small
+village a little to the south east of the road leading from
+Brecknock to Hay; from whence, climbing up a steep ascent, now
+called Rhiw Cwnstabl, or the Constable&rsquo;s ascent, he crossed
+the black mountains of Llaneliew to the source of the Gronwy-fawr
+river, which rises in that eminence, and pursues its rapid course
+into the Vale of Usk.&nbsp; From thence a rugged and uneven track
+descends suddenly into a narrow glen, formed by the torrent of
+the Gronwy, between steep, impending mountains; bleak and barren
+for the first four or five miles, but afterwards wooded to the
+very margin of the stream.&nbsp; A high ledge of grassy hills on
+the left hand, of which the principal is called the Bal, or Y
+Fal, divides this formidable pass (the &ldquo;Malus passus&rdquo;
+of Giraldus) from the vale of Ewyas, in which stands the noble
+monastery of Llanthoni, &ldquo;montibus suis inclusum,&rdquo;
+encircled by its mountains.&nbsp; The road at length emerging
+from this deep recess of Coed Grono, or Cwm Gronwy, the vale of
+the river Gronwy, crosses the river at a place called Pont Escob,
+or the Bishop&rsquo;s bridge, probably so called from this very
+circumstance of its having been now passed by the archbishop and
+his suite, and is continued through the forest of Moel, till it
+joins the Hereford road, about two miles from Abergavenny.&nbsp;
+This formidable defile is at least nine miles in length.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote45"></a><a href="#citation45"
+class="footnote">[45]</a>&nbsp; In the vale of the Gronwy, about
+a mile above Pont Escob, there is a wood called Coed Dial, or the
+Wood of Revenge.&nbsp; Here again, by the modern name of the
+place, we are enabled to fix the very spot on which Richard de
+Clare was murdered.&nbsp; The Welsh Chronicle informs us, that
+&ldquo;in 1135, Morgan ap Owen, a man of considerable quality and
+estate in Wales, remembering the wrong and injury he had received
+at the hands of Richard Fitz-Gilbert, slew him, together with his
+son Gilbert.&rdquo;&nbsp; The first of this great family, Richard
+de Clare, was the eldest son of Gislebert, surnamed Crispin, earl
+of Brion, in Normandy.&nbsp; This Richard Fitz-Gilbert came into
+England with William the Conqueror, and received from him great
+advancement in honour and possessions.&nbsp; On the death of the
+Conqueror, favouring the cause of Robert Curthose, he rebelled
+against William Rufus, but when that king appeared in arms before
+his castle at Tunbridge, he submitted; after which, adhering to
+Rufus against Robert, in 1091, he was taken prisoner, and shortly
+after the death of king Henry I., was assassinated, on his
+journey through Wales, in the manner already related.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote46"></a><a href="#citation46"
+class="footnote">[46]</a>&nbsp; Hamelin, son of Dru de Baladun,
+who came into England with William the Conqueror, was the first
+lord of Over-Went, and built a castle at Abergavenny, on the same
+spot where, according to ancient tradition, a giant called Agros
+had erected a fortress.&nbsp; He died in the reign of William
+Rufus, and was buried in the priory which he had founded at
+Abergavenny; having no issue, he gave the aforesaid castle and
+lands to Brian de Insula, or Brian de Wallingford, his nephew, by
+his sister Lucia.&nbsp; The enormous excesses mentioned by
+Giraldus, as having been perpetrated in this part of Wales during
+his time, seem to allude to a transaction that took place in the
+castle of Abergavenny, in the year 1176, which is thus related by
+two historians, Matthew Paris and Hollinshed.&nbsp; &ldquo;<span
+class="GutSmall">A.D.</span> 1176, The same yeare, William de
+Breause having got a great number of Welshmen into the castle of
+Abergavennie, under a colourable pretext of communication,
+proposed this ordinance to be received of them with a corporall
+oth, &lsquo;That no traveller by the waie amongst them should
+beare any bow, or other unlawful weapon,&rsquo; which oth, when
+they refused to take, because they would not stand to that
+ordinance, he condemned them all to death.&nbsp; This deceit he
+used towards them, in revenge of the death of his uncle Henrie of
+Hereford, whom upon Easter-even before they had through treason
+murthered, and were now acquited was the like
+againe.&rdquo;&mdash;Hollinshed, tom. ii. p. 95.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote48"></a><a href="#citation48"
+class="footnote">[48]</a>&nbsp; Landinegat, or the church of St.
+Dingad, is now better known by the name of Dingatstow, or
+Dynastow, a village near Monmouth.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote49a"></a><a href="#citation49a"
+class="footnote">[49a]</a>&nbsp; [For the end of William de
+Braose, see footnote 34.]</p>
+<p><a name="footnote49b"></a><a href="#citation49b"
+class="footnote">[49b]</a>&nbsp; Leland divides this district
+into Low, Middle, and High Venteland, extending from Chepstow to
+Newport on one side, and to Abergavenny on the other; the latter
+of which, he says, &ldquo;maketh the cumpace of Hye
+Venteland.&rdquo;&nbsp; He adds, &ldquo;The soyle of al Venteland
+is of a darke reddische yerth ful of slaty stones, and other
+greater of the same color.&nbsp; The countrey is also sumwhat
+montayneus, and welle replenishid with woodes, also very fertyle
+of corne, but men there study more to pastures, the which be well
+inclosed.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Leland</i>, <i>Itin.</i> tom. v. p.
+6.&nbsp; Ancient Gwentland is now comprised within the county of
+Monmouth.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote50a"></a><a href="#citation50a"
+class="footnote">[50a]</a>&nbsp; William de Salso Marisco, who
+succeeded to the bishopric of Llandaff, <span
+class="GutSmall">A.D.</span> 1185, and presided over that see
+during the time of Baldwin&rsquo;s visitation, in 1188.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote50b"></a><a href="#citation50b"
+class="footnote">[50b]</a>&nbsp; Alexander was the fourth
+archdeacon of the see of Bangor.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote50c"></a><a href="#citation50c"
+class="footnote">[50c]</a>&nbsp; Once at Usk, then at Caerleon,
+and afterwards on entering the town of Newport.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote51"></a><a href="#citation51"
+class="footnote">[51]</a>&nbsp; Gouldcliffe, or Goldcliff, is
+situated a few miles S.E. of Newport, on the banks of the
+Severn.&nbsp; In the year 1113, Robert de Candos founded and
+endowed the church of Goldclive, and, by the advice of king Henry
+I., gave it to the abbey of Bec, in Normandy; its religious
+establishment consisted of a prior and twelve monks of the order
+of St. Benedict.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote53"></a><a href="#citation53"
+class="footnote">[53]</a>&nbsp; [Geoffrey of Monmouth.]</p>
+<p><a name="footnote54"></a><a href="#citation54"
+class="footnote">[54]</a>&nbsp; The Cistercian abbey here alluded
+to was known by the several names of Ystrat Marchel, Strata
+Marcella, Alba domus de Stratmargel, Vallis Crucis, or Pola, and
+was situated between Guilsfield and Welshpool, in
+Montgomeryshire.&nbsp; Authors differ in opinion about its
+original founder.&nbsp; Leland attributes it to Owen Cyveilioc,
+prince of Powys, and Dugdale to Madoc, the son of Gruffydh,
+giving for his authority the original grants and endowments of
+this abbey.&nbsp; According to Tanner, about the beginning of the
+reign of king Edward III., the Welsh monks were removed from
+hence into English abbeys, and English monks were placed here,
+and the abbey was made subject to the visitation of the abbot and
+convent of Buildwas, in Shropshire.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote56a"></a><a href="#citation56a"
+class="footnote">[56a]</a>&nbsp; Cardiff, <i>i.e.</i>, the
+fortress on the river Taf.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote56b"></a><a href="#citation56b"
+class="footnote">[56b]</a>&nbsp; Gwentluc&mdash;so called from
+Gwent, the name of the province, and llug, open, to distinguish
+it from the upper parts of Wentland, is an extensive tract of
+flat, marshy ground, reaching from Newport to the shores of the
+river Severn.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote56c"></a><a href="#citation56c"
+class="footnote">[56c]</a>&nbsp; Nant Pencarn, or the brook of
+Pencarn.&mdash;After a very attentive examination of the country
+round Newport, by natives of that place, and from the information
+I have received on the subject, I am inclined to think that the
+river here alluded to was the Ebwy, which flows about a mile and
+a half south of Newport.&nbsp; Before the new turnpike road and
+bridge were made across Tredegar Park, the old road led to a ford
+lower down the river, and may still be travelled as far as
+Cardiff; and was probably the ford mentioned in the text, as
+three old farm-houses in its neighbourhood still retain the names
+of Great Pencarn, Little Pencarn, and Middle Pencarn.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote57"></a><a href="#citation57"
+class="footnote">[57]</a>&nbsp; Robert Fitz-Hamon, earl of
+Astremeville, in Normandy, came into England with William the
+Conqueror; and, by the gift of William Rufus, obtained the honour
+of Gloucester.&nbsp; He was wounded with a spear at the siege of
+Falaise, in Normandy, died soon afterwards, and was buried, <span
+class="GutSmall">A.D.</span> 1102, in the abbey of Tewkesbury,
+which he had founded.&nbsp; Leaving no male issue, king Henry
+gave his eldest daughter, Mabel, or Maude, who, in her own right,
+had the whole honour of Gloucester, to his illegitimate son
+Robert, who was advanced to the earldom of Gloucester by the
+king, his father.&nbsp; He died <span
+class="GutSmall">A.D.</span> 1147, and left four sons: William,
+the personage here mentioned by Giraldus, who succeeded him in
+his titles and honours; Roger, bishop of Worcester, who died at
+Tours in France, <span class="GutSmall">A.D.</span> 1179; Hamon,
+who died at the siege of Toulouse, <span
+class="GutSmall">A.D.</span> 1159; and Philip.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote58a"></a><a href="#citation58a"
+class="footnote">[58a]</a>&nbsp; The Coychurch Manuscript quoted
+by Mr. Williams, in his History of Monmouthshire, asserts that
+Morgan, surnamed Mwyn-fawr, or the Gentle, the son of Athrwy, not
+having been elected to the chief command of the British armies,
+upon his father&rsquo;s death retired from Caerleon, and took up
+his residence in Glamorganshire, sometimes at Radyr, near
+Cardiff, and at other times at Margam; and from this event the
+district derived its name, quasi Gwlad-Morgan, the country of
+Morgan.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote58b"></a><a href="#citation58b"
+class="footnote">[58b]</a>&nbsp; St. Piranus, otherwise called
+St. Kiaran, or Piran, was an Irish saint, said to have been born
+in the county of Ossory, or of Cork, about the middle of the
+fourth century; and after that by his labours the Gospel had made
+good progress, he forsook all worldly things, and spent the
+remainder of his life in religious solitude.&nbsp; The place of
+his retirement was on the sea-coast of Cornwall, and not far from
+Padstow, where, as Camden informs us, there was a chapel on the
+sands erected to his memory.&nbsp; Leland has informed us, that
+the chapel of St. Perine, at Caerdiff, stood in Shoemaker
+Street.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote59"></a><a href="#citation59"
+class="footnote">[59]</a>&nbsp; So called from a parish of that
+name in Glamorganshire, situated between Monk Nash and St.
+Donat&rsquo;s, upon the Bristol Channel.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote60"></a><a href="#citation60"
+class="footnote">[60]</a>&nbsp; Barri Island is situated on the
+coast of Glamorganshire; and, according to Cressy, took its name
+from St. Baruc, the hermit, who resided, and was buried
+there.&nbsp; The Barrys in Ireland, as well as the family of
+Giraldus, who were lords of it, are said to have derived their
+names from this island.&nbsp; Leland, in speaking of this island,
+says, &ldquo;The passage into Barrey isle at ful se is a flite
+shot over, as much as the Tamise is above the bridge.&nbsp; At
+low water, there is a broken causey to go over, or els over the
+shalow streamelet of Barrey-brook on the sands.&nbsp; The isle is
+about a mile in cumpace, and hath very good corne, grasse, and
+sum wood; the ferme of it worth a &pound;10 a yere.&nbsp; There
+ys no dwelling in the isle, but there is in the middle of it a
+fair little chapel of St. Barrok, where much pilgrimage was
+usid.&rdquo;&nbsp; [The &ldquo;fair little chapel&rdquo; has
+disappeared, and &ldquo;Barry Island&rdquo; is now, since the
+construction of the great dock, connected with the mainland, it
+is covered with houses, and its estimated capital value is now
+&pound;250,000].</p>
+<p><a name="footnote61a"></a><a href="#citation61a"
+class="footnote">[61a]</a>&nbsp; William de Salso Marisco.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote61b"></a><a href="#citation61b"
+class="footnote">[61b]</a>&nbsp; The see of Llandaff is said to
+have been founded by the British king Lucius as early as the year
+180.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote61c"></a><a href="#citation61c"
+class="footnote">[61c]</a>&nbsp; From Llandaff, our crusaders
+proceeded towards the Cistercian monastery of Margam, passing on
+their journey near the little cell of Benedictines at Ewenith, or
+Ewenny.&nbsp; This religious house was founded by Maurice de
+Londres towards the middle of the twelfth century.&nbsp; It is
+situated in a marshy plain near the banks of the little river
+Ewenny.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote62"></a><a href="#citation62"
+class="footnote">[62]</a>&nbsp; The Cistercian monastery of
+Margam, justly celebrated for the extensive charities which its
+members exercised, was founded <span class="GutSmall">A.D.</span>
+1147, by Robert earl of Gloucester, who died in the same
+year.&nbsp; Of this once-famed sanctuary nothing now remains but
+the shell of its chapter-house, which, by neglect, has lost its
+most ornamental parts.&nbsp; When Mr. Wyndham made the tour of
+Wales in the year 1777, this elegant building was entire, and was
+accurately drawn and engraved by his orders.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote65"></a><a href="#citation65"
+class="footnote">[65]</a>&nbsp; In continuing their journey from
+Neath to Swansea, our travellers directed their course by the
+sea-coast to the river Avon, which they forded, and, continuing
+their road along the sands, were probably ferried over the river
+Neath, at a place now known by the name of Breton Ferry, leaving
+the monastery of Neath at some distance to the right: from thence
+traversing another tract of sands, and crossing the river Tawe,
+they arrived at the castle of Swansea, where they passed the
+night.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote66"></a><a href="#citation66"
+class="footnote">[66]</a>&nbsp; The monastery of Neath was
+situated on the banks of a river bearing the same name, about a
+mile to the westward of the town and castle.&nbsp; It was founded
+in 1112, by Richard de Grainville, or Greenefeld, and Constance,
+his wife, for the safety of the souls of Robert, earl of
+Gloucester, Maude, his wife, and William, his son.&nbsp; Richard
+de Grainville was one of the twelve Norman knights who
+accompanied Robert Fitz-Hamon, and assisted him in the conquest
+of Glamorganshire.&nbsp; In the time of Leland this abbey was in
+a high state of preservation, for he says, &ldquo;Neth abbay of
+white monkes, a mile above Neth town, standing in the ripe of
+Neth, semid to me the fairest abbay of al
+Wales.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Leland</i>, <i>Itin.</i> tom. v. p.
+14.&nbsp; The remains of the abbey and of the adjoining
+priory-house are considerable; but this ancient retirement of the
+grey and white monks is now occupied by the inhabitants of the
+neighbouring copper-works.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote67a"></a><a href="#citation67a"
+class="footnote">[67a]</a>&nbsp; Gower, the western district of
+Glamorganshire, appears to have been first conquered by Henry de
+Newburg, earl of Warwick, soon after Robert, duke of Gloucester,
+had made the conquest of the other part of Glamorganshire.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote67b"></a><a href="#citation67b"
+class="footnote">[67b]</a>&nbsp; Sweynsei, Swansea, or Abertawe,
+situated at the confluence of the river Tawe with the Severn sea,
+is a town of considerable commerce, and much frequented during
+the summer months as a bathing-place.&nbsp; The old castle, now
+made use of as a prison, is so surrounded by houses in the middle
+of the town, that a stranger might visit Swansea without knowing
+that such a building existed.&nbsp; The Welsh Chronicle informs
+us, that it was built by Henry de Beaumont, earl of Warwick, and
+that in the year 1113 it was attacked by Gruffydd ap Rhys, but
+without success.&nbsp; This castle became afterwards a part of
+the possessions of the see of St. David&rsquo;s, and was rebuilt
+by bishop Gower.&nbsp; [The old castle is no longer used as a
+prison, but as the office of the &ldquo;Cambria Daily
+Leader.&rdquo;&nbsp; It is significant that Swansea is still
+known to Welshmen, as in the days of Giraldus, as
+&ldquo;Abertawe.&rdquo;]</p>
+<p><a name="footnote71a"></a><a href="#citation71a"
+class="footnote">[71a]</a>&nbsp; Lochor, or Llwchwr, was the
+Leucarum mentioned in the Itineraries, and the fifth Roman
+station on the Via Julia.&nbsp; This small village is situated on
+a tide-river bearing the same name, which divides the counties of
+Glamorgan and Caermarthen, and over which there is a ferry.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Lochor river partith Kidwelli from West
+Gowerlande.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Leland</i>, <i>Itin.</i> tom. v. p.
+23.&nbsp; [The ferry is no more.&nbsp; The river is crossed by a
+fine railway bridge.]</p>
+<p><a name="footnote71b"></a><a href="#citation71b"
+class="footnote">[71b]</a>&nbsp; Wendraeth, or Gwen-draeth, from
+gwen, white, and traeth, the sandy beach of the sea.&nbsp; There
+are two rivers of this name, Gwendraeth fawr, and Gwendraeth
+fychan, the great and the little Gwendraeth, of which Leland thus
+speaks: &ldquo;Vendraeth Vawr and Vendraith Vehan risith both in
+Eskenning commote: the lesse an eight milys of from Kydwelli, the
+other about a ten, and hath but a little nesche of sand betwixt
+the places wher thei go into the se, about a mile beneth the
+towne of Kidwely.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><a name="footnote71c"></a><a href="#citation71c"
+class="footnote">[71c]</a>&nbsp; Cydweli was probably so called
+from cyd, a junction, and wyl, a flow, or gushing out, being
+situated near the junction of the rivers Gwendraeth fawr and
+fychan; but Leland gives its name a very singular derivation, and
+worthy of our credulous and superstitious author Giraldus.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Kidwely, otherwise Cathweli, i.e. Catti lectus, quia
+Cattus olim solebat ibi lectum in quercu facere:&mdash;There is a
+little towne now but newly made betwene Vendraith Vawr and
+Vendraith Vehan.&nbsp; Vendraith Vawr is half a mile
+of.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Leland</i>, <i>Itin.</i> tom. v. p. 22.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote72"></a><a href="#citation72"
+class="footnote">[72]</a>&nbsp; The scene of the battle fought
+between Gwenllian and Maurice de Londres is to this day called
+Maes Gwenllian, the plain or field of Gwenllian; and there is a
+tower in the castle of Cydweli still called Tyr Gwenllian.&nbsp;
+[Maes Gwenllian is now a small farm, one of whose fields is said
+to have been the scene of the battle.]</p>
+<p><a name="footnote73a"></a><a href="#citation73a"
+class="footnote">[73a]</a>&nbsp; The castle of Talachar is now
+better known by the name of Llaugharne.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote73b"></a><a href="#citation73b"
+class="footnote">[73b]</a>&nbsp; Much has been said and written
+by ancient authors respecting the derivation of the name of this
+city, which is generally allowed to be the Muridunum, or
+Maridunum, mentioned in the Roman itineraries.&nbsp; Some derive
+it from Caer and Merddyn, that is, the city of the prophet
+Merddyn; and others from M&ucirc;r and Murddyn, which in the
+British language signify a wall.&nbsp; There can, however, be
+little doubt that it is derived simply from the Roman name
+Muridunum.&nbsp; The county gaol occupies the site of the old
+castle, a few fragments of which are seen intermixed with the
+houses of the town.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote73c"></a><a href="#citation73c"
+class="footnote">[73c]</a>&nbsp; Dinevor, the great castle, from
+dinas, a castle, and vawr, great, was in ancient times a royal
+residence of the princes of South Wales.&nbsp; In the year 876,
+Roderic the Great, having divided the principalities of North and
+South Wales, and Powys land, amongst his three sons, built for
+each of them a palace.&nbsp; The sovereignty of South Wales, with
+the castle of Dinevor, fell to the lot of Cadell.&nbsp; [The
+ruins of Dinevor Castle still crown the summit of the hill which
+overshadows the town of Llandilo, 12 miles from Carmarthen.]</p>
+<p><a name="footnote74a"></a><a href="#citation74a"
+class="footnote">[74a]</a>&nbsp; There is a spring very near the
+north side of Dinevor park wall, which bears the name of
+Nant-y-rhibo, or the bewitched brook, which may, perhaps, be the
+one here alluded to by Giraldus.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote74b"></a><a href="#citation74b"
+class="footnote">[74b]</a>&nbsp; Pencadair is a small village
+situated to the north of Carmarthen.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote75a"></a><a href="#citation75a"
+class="footnote">[75a]</a>&nbsp; Alba Domus was called in Welsh
+Ty Gwyn ar Daf, or the White House on the river Taf.&nbsp; In the
+history of the primitive British church, Ty Gwyn, or white house,
+is used in a sense equivalent to a charter-house.&nbsp; The White
+House College, or Bangor y Ty Gwyn, is pretended to have been
+founded about 480, by Paul H&ecirc;n, or Paulius, a saint of the
+congregation of Illtyd.&nbsp; From this origin, the celebrated
+Cistercian monastery is said to have derived its
+establishment.&nbsp; Powel, in his chronicle, says, &ldquo;For
+the first abbey or frier house that we read of in Wales, sith the
+destruction of the noble house of Bangor, which savoured not of
+Romish dregges, was the Tuy Gwyn, built the yeare 1146, and after
+they swarmed like bees through all the countrie.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+(Powel, p. 254.)&mdash;Authors differ with respect to the founder
+of this abbey; some have attributed it to Rhys ap Tewdwr, prince
+of South Wales; and others to Bernard, bishop of Saint
+David&rsquo;s, who died about the year 1148.&nbsp; The latter
+account is corroborated by the following passage in
+Wharton&rsquo;s Anglia Sacra: &ldquo;Anno 1143 ducti sunt monachi
+ordinis Cisterciensis qui modo sunt apud Albam Landam, in West
+Walliam, per Bernardum episcopum.&rdquo;&nbsp; Leland, in his
+Collectanea, says, &ldquo;Whitland, abbat.&nbsp; Cistert., Rhesus
+filius Theodori princeps Suth Walli&aelig; primus
+fundator;&rdquo; and in his Itinerary, mentions it as a convent
+of Bernardynes, &ldquo;which yet stondeth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><a name="footnote75b"></a><a href="#citation75b"
+class="footnote">[75b]</a>&nbsp; Saint Clears is a long,
+straggling village, at the junction of the river Cathgenny with
+the T&acirc;f.&nbsp; Immediately on the banks of the former, and
+not far from its junction with the latter, stood the castle, of
+which not one stone is left; but the artificial tumulus on which
+the citadel was placed, and other broken ground, mark its ancient
+site.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote76a"></a><a href="#citation76a"
+class="footnote">[76a]</a>&nbsp; Lanwadein, now called Lawhaden,
+is a small village about four miles from Narberth, on the banks
+of the river Cleddeu.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote76b"></a><a href="#citation76b"
+class="footnote">[76b]</a>&nbsp; Daugleddeu, so called from Dau,
+two, and Cled, or Cleddau, a sword.&nbsp; The rivers Cledheu have
+their source in the Prescelly mountain, unite their streams below
+Haverfordwest, and run into Milford Haven, which in Welsh is
+called Aberdaugleddau, or the confluence of the two rivers
+Cledheu.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote76c"></a><a href="#citation76c"
+class="footnote">[76c]</a>&nbsp; Haverford, now called
+Haverfordwest, is a considerable town on the river Cledheu, with
+an ancient castle, three churches, and some monastic
+remains.&nbsp; The old castle (now used as the county gaol), from
+its size and commanding situation, adds greatly to the
+picturesque appearance of this town.&nbsp; [The old castle is no
+longer used as a gaol.]</p>
+<p><a name="footnote79a"></a><a href="#citation79a"
+class="footnote">[79a]</a>&nbsp; The province of Rhos, in which
+the town of Haverfordwest is situated, was peopled by a colony of
+Flemings during the reign of king Henry I.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote79b"></a><a href="#citation79b"
+class="footnote">[79b]</a>&nbsp; St. Caradoc was born of a good
+family in Brecknockshire, and after a liberal education at home,
+attached himself to the court of Rhys Prince of South Wales, whom
+he served a long time with diligence and fidelity.&nbsp; He was
+much esteemed and beloved by him, till having unfortunately lost
+two favourite greyhounds, which had been committed to his care,
+that prince, in a fury, threatened his life; upon which Caradoc
+determined to change masters, and made a vow on the spot to
+consecrate the remainder of his days to God, by a single and
+religious life.&nbsp; He went to Llandaff, received from its
+bishop the clerical tonsure and habit, and retired to the
+deserted church of St. Kined, and afterwards to a still more
+solitary abode in the Isle of Ary, from whence he was taken
+prisoner by some Norwegian pirates, but soon released.&nbsp; His
+last place of residence was at St. Ismael, in the province of
+Rhos, where he died in 1124, and was buried with great honour in
+the cathedral of St. David&rsquo;s.&nbsp; We must not confound
+this retreat of Caradoc with the village of St. Ismael on the
+borders of Milford Haven.&nbsp; His hermitage was situated in the
+parish of Haroldstone, near the town of Haverfordwest, whose
+church has St. Ismael for its patron, and probably near a place
+called Poorfield, the common on which Haverfordwest races are
+held, as there is a well there called Caradoc&rsquo;s Well, round
+which, till within these few years, there was a sort of vanity
+fair, where cakes were sold, and country games celebrated.&nbsp;
+[Caradoc was canonised by Pope Innocent III. at the instance of
+Giraldus.]</p>
+<p><a name="footnote80"></a><a href="#citation80"
+class="footnote">[80]</a>&nbsp; This curious superstition is
+still preserved, in a debased form, among the descendants of the
+Flemish population of this district, where the young women
+practise a sort of divination with the bladebone of a shoulder of
+mutton to discover who will be their sweetheart.&nbsp; It is
+still more curious that William de Rubruquis, in the thirteenth
+century, found the same superstition existing among the
+Tartars.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote82a"></a><a href="#citation82a"
+class="footnote">[82a]</a>&nbsp; Arnulph, younger son of Roger de
+Montgomery, did his homage for Dyved, and is said, by our author,
+to have erected a slender fortress with stakes and turf at
+Pembroke, in the reign of king Henry I., which, however, appears
+to have been so strong as to have resisted the hostile attack of
+Cadwgan ap Bleddyn in 1092, and of several lords of North Wales,
+in 1094.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote82b"></a><a href="#citation82b"
+class="footnote">[82b]</a>&nbsp; Walter Fitz-Other, at the time
+of the general survey of England by William the Conqueror, was
+castellan of Windsor, warden of the forests in Berkshire, and
+possessed several lordships in the counties of Middlesex,
+Hampshire, and Buckinghamshire, which dominus Otherus is said to
+have held in the time of Edward the Confessor.&nbsp; William, the
+eldest son of Walter, took the surname of Windsor from his
+father&rsquo;s office, and was ancestor to the lords Windsor, who
+have since been created earls of Plymouth: and from Gerald,
+brother of William, the Geralds, Fitz-geralds, and many other
+families are lineally descended.&nbsp; The Gerald here mentioned
+by Giraldus is sometimes surnamed De Windsor, and also
+Fitz-Walter, <i>i.e.</i> the son of Walter; having slain Owen,
+son of Cadwgan ap Bleddyn, chief lord of Cardiganshire, he was
+made president of the county of Pembroke.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote83"></a><a href="#citation83"
+class="footnote">[83]</a>&nbsp; Wilfred is mentioned by Browne
+Willis in his list of bishops of St. David&rsquo;s, as the
+forty-seventh, under the title of Wilfride, or Griffin: he died
+about the year 1116.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote84"></a><a href="#citation84"
+class="footnote">[84]</a>&nbsp; Maenor Pyrr, now known by the
+name of Manorbeer, is a small village on the sea coast, between
+Tenby and Pembroke, with the remaining shell of a large
+castle.&nbsp; Our author has given a farfetched etymology to this
+castle and the adjoining island, in calling them the mansion and
+island of Pyrrhus: a much more natural and congenial conjecture
+may be made in supposing Maenor Pyrr to be derived from Maenor, a
+Manor, and Pyrr the plural of Por, a lord; <i>i.e.</i> the Manor
+of the lords, and, consequently, Inys Pyrr, the Island of the
+lords.&nbsp; As no mention whatever is made of the castle in the
+Welsh Chronicle, I am inclined to think it was only a castellated
+mansion, and therefore considered of no military importance in
+those days of continued warfare throughout Wales.&nbsp; It is one
+of the most interesting spots in our author&rsquo;s Itinerary,
+for it was the property of the Barri family, and the birth-place
+of Giraldus; in the parish church, the sepulchral effigy of a
+near relation, perhaps a brother, is still extant, in good
+preservation.&nbsp; Our author has evidently made a digression in
+order to describe this place.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote86a"></a><a href="#citation86a"
+class="footnote">[86a]</a>&nbsp; The house of Stephen Wiriet was,
+I presume, Orielton.&nbsp; There is a monument in the church of
+St. Nicholas, at Pembroke, to the memory of John, son and heir of
+Sir Hugh Owen, of Bodeon in Anglesea, knight, and Elizabeth,
+daughter and heir of George Wiriet, of Orielton, <span
+class="GutSmall">A.D.</span> 1612.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote86b"></a><a href="#citation86b"
+class="footnote">[86b]</a>&nbsp; The family name of Not, or Nott,
+still exists in Pembrokeshire.&nbsp; [The descendants of Sir Hugh
+continued to live at Orielton, and the title is still in
+existence.]</p>
+<p><a name="footnote88"></a><a href="#citation88"
+class="footnote">[88]</a>&nbsp; There are two churches in
+Pembrokeshire called Stackpoole, one of which, called Stackpoole
+Elidor, derived its name probably from the Elidore de Stakepole
+mentioned in this chapter by Giraldus.&nbsp; It contains several
+ancient monuments, and amongst them the effigies of a
+cross-legged knight, which has been for many years attributed to
+the aforesaid Elidore.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote90"></a><a href="#citation90"
+class="footnote">[90]</a>&nbsp; Ramsey Island, near St.
+David&rsquo;s, was always famous for its breed of falcons.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote91a"></a><a href="#citation91a"
+class="footnote">[91a]</a>&nbsp; Camros, a small village,
+containing nothing worthy of remark, excepting a large
+tumulus.&nbsp; It appears, by this route of the Crusaders, that
+the ancient road to Menevia, or St. David&rsquo;s, led through
+Camros, whereas the present turnpike road lies a mile and a half
+to the left of it.&nbsp; It then descends to Niwegal Sands, and
+passes near the picturesque little harbour of Solvach, situated
+in a deep and narrow cove, surrounded by high rocks.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote91b"></a><a href="#citation91b"
+class="footnote">[91b]</a>&nbsp; The remains of vast submerged
+forests are commonly found on many parts of the coast of Wales,
+especially in the north.&nbsp; Giraldus has elsewhere spoken of
+this event in the Vaticinal History, book i. chap. 35.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote94"></a><a href="#citation94"
+class="footnote">[94]</a>&nbsp; Giraldus, ever glad to <i>pun</i>
+upon words, here opposes the word <i>nomen</i> to
+<i>omen</i>.&nbsp; &ldquo;<i>Plus nominis habens qu&agrave;m
+ominis</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; He may have perhaps borrowed this
+expression from Plautus.&nbsp; Plautus Delphini, tom. ii. p.
+27.&mdash;Actus iv., Scena iv.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote96"></a><a href="#citation96"
+class="footnote">[96]</a>&nbsp; Armorica is derived from the
+Celtic words Ar and Mor, which signify on or near the sea, and so
+called to distinguish it from the more inland parts of
+Britany.&nbsp; The maritime cities of Gaul were called
+&ldquo;Armoric&aelig; civitates&mdash;Universis civitatibus
+qu&aelig; oceanum attingunt, qu&aelig;que Gallorum consuetudine
+Armoric&aelig;
+appellantur.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>C&aelig;sar</i>.&nbsp;
+<i>Comment</i>, lib. vii.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote97"></a><a href="#citation97"
+class="footnote">[97]</a>&nbsp; The bishops of Hereford,
+Worcester, Llandaff, Bangor, St. Asaph, Llanbadarn, and Margam,
+or Glamorgan.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote98"></a><a href="#citation98"
+class="footnote">[98]</a>&nbsp; The value of the carucate is
+rather uncertain, or, probably, it varied in different districts
+according to the character of the land; but it is considered to
+have been usually equivalent to a hide, that is, to about 240
+statute acres.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote99a"></a><a href="#citation99a"
+class="footnote">[99a]</a>&nbsp; This little brook does not, in
+modern times, deserve the title here given to it by Giraldus, for
+it produces trout of a most delicious flavour.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote99b"></a><a href="#citation99b"
+class="footnote">[99b]</a>&nbsp; See the Vaticinal History, book
+i. c. 37.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote100"></a><a href="#citation100"
+class="footnote">[100]</a> Lechlavar, so called from the words in
+Welsh, Ll&ecirc;c, a stone, and Llavar, speech.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote102a"></a><a href="#citation102a"
+class="footnote">[102a]</a>&nbsp; Cemmeis, Cemmaes, Kemes, and
+Kemeys.&nbsp; Thus is the name of this district variously
+spelt.&nbsp; Cemmaes in Welsh signifies a circle or amphitheatre
+for games.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote102b"></a><a href="#citation102b"
+class="footnote">[102b]</a>&nbsp; [Cardigan.]</p>
+<p><a name="footnote102c"></a><a href="#citation102c"
+class="footnote">[102c]</a>&nbsp; There is place in Cemmaes now
+called Tre-liffan, <i>i.e.</i> Toad&rsquo;s town; and over a
+chimney-piece in the house there is a figure of a toad sculptured
+in marble, said to have been brought from Italy, and intended
+probably to confirm and commemorate this tradition of
+Giraldus.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote103a"></a><a href="#citation103a"
+class="footnote">[103a]</a>&nbsp; Preseleu, Preselaw, Prescelly,
+Presselw.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote103b"></a><a href="#citation103b"
+class="footnote">[103b]</a>&nbsp; St. Bernacus is said, by
+Cressy, to have been a man of admirable sanctity, who, through
+devotion, made a journey to Rome; and from thence returning into
+Britany, filled all places with the fame of his piety and
+miracles.&nbsp; He is commemorated on the 7th of April.&nbsp;
+Several churches in Wales were dedicated to him; one of which,
+called Llanfyrnach, or the church of St. Bernach, is situated on
+the eastern side of the Prescelley mountain.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote103c"></a><a href="#citation103c"
+class="footnote">[103c]</a>&nbsp; The &ldquo;castrum apud
+Lanhever&rdquo; was at Nevern, a small village between Newport
+and Cardigan, situated on the banks of a little river bearing the
+same name which discharges itself into the sea at Newport.&nbsp;
+On a hill immediately above the western side of the parish
+church, is the site of a large castle, undoubtedly the one
+alluded to by Giraldus.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote105a"></a><a href="#citation105a"
+class="footnote">[105a]</a>&nbsp; On the Cemmaes, or
+Pembrokeshire side of the river Teivi, and near the end of the
+bridge, there is a place still called Park y Cappel, or the
+Chapel Field, which is undoubtedly commemorative of the
+circumstance recorded by our author.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote105b"></a><a href="#citation105b"
+class="footnote">[105b]</a>&nbsp; Now known by the name of
+Kenarth, which may be derived from Cefn y garth&mdash;the back of
+the wear, a ridge of land behind the wear.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote106a"></a><a href="#citation106a"
+class="footnote">[106a]</a>&nbsp; The name of St. Ludoc is not
+found in the lives of the saints.&nbsp; Leland mentions a St.
+Clitauc, who had a church dedicated to him in South Wales, and
+who was killed by some of his companions whilst hunting.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Clitaucus Southe-Walli&aelig; regulus inter venandum a
+suis sodalibus occisus est.&nbsp; Ecciesia S. Clitauci in Southe
+Wallia.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Leland</i>, <i>Itin.</i>, tom. viii. p.
+95.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote106b"></a><a href="#citation106b"
+class="footnote">[106b]</a>&nbsp; The Teivy is still very justly
+distinguished for the quantity and quality of its salmon, but the
+beaver no longer disturbs its streams.&nbsp; That this animal did
+exist in the days of Howel Dha (though even then a rarity), the
+mention made of it in his laws, and the high price set upon its
+skin, most clearly evince; but if the castor of Giraldus, and the
+avanc of Humphrey Llwyd and of the Welsh dictionaries, be really
+the same animal, it certainly was not peculiar to the Teivi, but
+was equally known in North Wales, as the names of places
+testify.&nbsp; A small lake in Montgomeryshire is called Llyn yr
+Afangc; a pool in the river Conwy, not far from Bettws, bears the
+same name, and the vale called Nant Ffrancon, upon the river
+Ogwen, in Caernarvonshire, is supposed by the natives to be a
+corruption from Nant yr Afan cwm, or the Vale of the
+Beavers.&nbsp; Mr. Owen, in his dictionary, says, &ldquo;That it
+has been seen in this vale within the memory of man.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Giraldus has previously spoken of the beaver in his Topography of
+Ireland, Distinc. i. c. 21.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote109a"></a><a href="#citation109a"
+class="footnote">[109a]</a>&nbsp; Our author having made a long
+digression, in order to introduce the history of the beaver, now
+continues his Itinerary.&nbsp; From Cardigan, the archbishop
+proceeded towards Pont-Stephen, leaving a hill, called Cruc Mawr,
+on the left hand, which still retains its ancient name, and
+agrees exactly with the position given to it by Giraldus.&nbsp;
+On its summit is a tumulus, and some appearance of an
+intrenchment.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote109b"></a><a href="#citation109b"
+class="footnote">[109b]</a>&nbsp; In 1135.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote109c"></a><a href="#citation109c"
+class="footnote">[109c]</a>&nbsp; Lampeter, or Llanbedr, a small
+town near the river Teivi, still retains the name of
+Pont-Stephen.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote109d"></a><a href="#citation109d"
+class="footnote">[109d]</a>&nbsp; Leland thus speaks of Ystrad
+Fflur or Strata Florida: &ldquo;Strateflere is set round about
+with montanes not far distant, except on the west parte, where
+Diffrin Tyve is.&nbsp; Many hilles therabout hath bene well
+woddid, as evidently by old rotes apperith, but now in them is
+almost no woode&mdash;the causes be these.&nbsp; First, the wood
+cut down was never copisid, and this hath beene a cause of
+destruction of wood thorough Wales.&nbsp; Secondly, after cutting
+down of woodys, the gottys hath so bytten the young spring that
+it never grew but lyke shrubbes.&nbsp; Thirddely, men for the
+monys destroied the great woddis that thei should not harborow
+theves.&rdquo;&nbsp; This monastery is situated in the wildest
+part of Cardiganshire, surrounded on three sides by a lofty range
+of those mountains, called by our author Ellennith; a spot
+admirably suited to the severe and recluse order of the
+Cistercians.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote110a"></a><a href="#citation110a"
+class="footnote">[110a]</a>&nbsp; [Melenydd or Maelienydd.]</p>
+<p><a name="footnote110b"></a><a href="#citation110b"
+class="footnote">[110b]</a>&nbsp; Leaving Stratflur, the
+archbishop and his train returned to Llanddewi Brefi, and from
+thence proceeded to Llanbadarn Vawr.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote111"></a><a href="#citation111"
+class="footnote">[111]</a>&nbsp; Llanbadarn Fawr, the church of
+St. Paternus the Great, is situated in a valley, at a short
+distance from the sea-port town of Aberystwyth in
+Cardiganshire.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote112"></a><a href="#citation112"
+class="footnote">[112]</a>&nbsp; The name of this bishop is said
+to have been Idnerth, and the same personage whose death is
+commemorated in an inscription at Llanddewi Brefi.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote113a"></a><a href="#citation113a"
+class="footnote">[113a]</a>&nbsp; This river is now called
+Dovey.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote113b"></a><a href="#citation113b"
+class="footnote">[113b]</a>&nbsp; From Llanbadarn our travellers
+directed their course towards the sea-coast, and ferrying over
+the river Dovey, which separates North from South Wales,
+proceeded to Towyn, in Merionethshire, where they passed the
+night.&nbsp; [Venedotia is the Latin name for Gwynedd.]</p>
+<p><a name="footnote113c"></a><a href="#citation113c"
+class="footnote">[113c]</a>&nbsp; The province of Merionyth was
+at this period occupied by David, the son of Owen Gwynedd, who
+had seized it forcibly from its rightful inheritor.&nbsp; This
+Gruffydd&mdash;who must not be confused with his
+great-grandfather, the famous Gruffydd ap Conan, prince of
+Gwynedd&mdash;was son to Conan ap Owen Gwynedd; he died <span
+class="GutSmall">A.D.</span> 1200, and was buried in a
+monk&rsquo;s cowl, in the abbey of Conway.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote113d"></a><a href="#citation113d"
+class="footnote">[113d]</a>&nbsp; The epithet
+&ldquo;bifurcus,&rdquo; ascribed by Giraldus to the river Maw,
+alludes to its two branches, which unite their streams a little
+way below Llaneltid bridge, and form an &aelig;stuary, which
+flows down to the sea at Barmouth or Aber Maw.&nbsp; The ford at
+this place, discovered by Malgo, no longer exists.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote114a"></a><a href="#citation114a"
+class="footnote">[114a]</a>&nbsp; Llanfair is a small village,
+about a mile and a half from Harlech, with a very simple church,
+placed in a retired spot, backed by precipitous mountains.&nbsp;
+Here the archbishop and Giraldus slept, on their journey from
+Towyn to Nevyn.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote114b"></a><a href="#citation114b"
+class="footnote">[114b]</a>&nbsp; Ardudwy was a comot of the
+cantref Dunodic, in Merionethshire, and according to Leland,
+&ldquo;Streccith from half Trait Mawr to Abermaw on the shore XII
+myles.&rdquo;&nbsp; The bridge here alluded to, was probably over
+the river Artro, which forms a small &aelig;stuary near the
+village of Llanbedr.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote115a"></a><a href="#citation115a"
+class="footnote">[115a]</a>&nbsp; The Traeth Mawr, or the large
+sands, are occasioned by a variety of springs and rivers which
+flow from the Snowdon mountains, and, uniting their streams, form
+an &aelig;stuary below Pont Aberglaslyn.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote115b"></a><a href="#citation115b"
+class="footnote">[115b]</a> The Traeth Bychan, or the small
+sands, are chiefly formed by the river which runs down the
+beautiful vale of Festiniog to Maentwrog and Tan y bwlch, near
+which place it becomes navigable.&nbsp; Over each of these sands
+the road leads from Merionyth into Caernarvonshire.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote115c"></a><a href="#citation115c"
+class="footnote">[115c]</a>&nbsp; Lleyn, the Canganorum
+promontorium of Ptolemy, was an extensive hundred containing
+three comots, and comprehending that long neck of land between
+Caernarvon and Cardigan bays.&nbsp; Leland says, &ldquo;Al Lene
+is as it were a pointe into the se.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><a name="footnote115d"></a><a href="#citation115d"
+class="footnote">[115d]</a>&nbsp; In mentioning the rivers which
+the missionaries had lately crossed, our author has been guilty
+of a great topographical error in placing the river Dissennith
+between the Maw and Traeth Mawr, as also in placing the Arthro
+between the Traeth Mawr and Traeth Bychan, as a glance at a map
+will shew.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote115e"></a><a href="#citation115e"
+class="footnote">[115e]</a>&nbsp; To two personages of this name
+the gift of prophecy was anciently attributed: one was called
+Ambrosius, the other Sylvestris; the latter here mentioned (and
+whose works Giraldus, after a long research, found at Nefyn) was,
+according to the story, the son of Morvryn, and generally called
+Merddin Wyllt, or Merddin the Wild.&nbsp; He is pretended to have
+flourished about the middle of the sixth century, and ranked with
+Merddin Emrys and Taliesin, under the appellation of the three
+principal bards of the Isle of Britain.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote116a"></a><a href="#citation116a"
+class="footnote">[116a]</a>&nbsp; This island once afforded,
+according to the old accounts, an asylum to twenty thousand
+saints, and after death, graves to as many of their bodies;
+whence it has been called Insula Sanctorum, the Isle of
+Saints.&nbsp; This island derived its British name of Enlli from
+the fierce current which rages between it and the main
+land.&nbsp; The Saxons named it Bardsey, probably from the Bards,
+who retired hither, preferring solitude to the company of
+invading foreigners.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote116b"></a><a href="#citation116b"
+class="footnote">[116b]</a>&nbsp; This ancient city has been
+recorded by a variety of names.&nbsp; During the time of the
+Romans it was called Segontium, the site of which is now called
+Caer Seiont, the fortress on the river Seiont, where the
+Setantiorum portus, and the Seteia &AElig;stuarium of Ptolemy
+have also been placed.&nbsp; It is called, by Nennius, Caer
+Custent, or the city of Constantius; and Matthew of Westminster
+says, that about the year 1283 the body of Constantius, father of
+the emperor Constantine, was found there, and honourably
+desposited in the church by order of Edward I.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote116c"></a><a href="#citation116c"
+class="footnote">[116c]</a>&nbsp; I have searched in vain for a
+valley which would answer the description here given by Geraldus,
+and the scene of so much pleasantry to the travellers; for
+neither do the old or new road, from Caernarvon to Bangor, in any
+way correspond.&nbsp; But I have since been informed, that there
+is a valley called Nant y Garth (near the residence of Ashton
+Smith, Esq. at Vaenol), which terminates at about half a
+mile&rsquo;s distance from the Menai, and therefore not
+observable from the road; it is a serpentine ravine of more than
+a mile, in a direction towards the mountains, and probably that
+which the crusaders crossed on their journey to Bangor.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote117"></a><a href="#citation117"
+class="footnote">[117]</a>&nbsp; Bangor.&mdash;This cathedral
+church must not be confounded with the celebrated college of the
+same name, in Flintshire, founded by Dunod Vawr, son of Pabo, a
+chieftain who lived about the beginning of the sixth century, and
+from him called Bangor Dunod.&nbsp; The Bangor, <i>i.e.</i> the
+college, in Caernarvonshire, is properly called Bangor Deiniol,
+Bangor Vawr yn Arllechwedd, and Bangor Vawr uwch Conwy.&nbsp; It
+owes its origin to Deiniol, son of Dunod ap Pabo, a saint who
+lived in the early part of the sixth century, and in the year 525
+founded this college at Bangor, in Caernarvonshire, over which he
+presided as abbot.&nbsp; Guy Rufus, called by our author Guianus,
+was at this time bishop of this see, and died in 1190.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote118a"></a><a href="#citation118a"
+class="footnote">[118a]</a>&nbsp; Guianus, or Guy Rufus, dean of
+Waltham, in Essex, and consecrated to this see, at Ambresbury,
+Wilts, in May 1177.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote118b"></a><a href="#citation118b"
+class="footnote">[118b]</a>&nbsp; Mona, or Anglesey.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote118c"></a><a href="#citation118c"
+class="footnote">[118c]</a>&nbsp; The spot selected by Baldwin
+for addressing the multitude, has in some degree been elucidated
+by the anonymous author of the Supplement to Rowland&rsquo;s Mona
+Antiqua.&nbsp; He says, that &ldquo;From tradition and memorials
+still retained, we have reasons to suppose that they met in an
+open place in the parish of Landisilio, called Cerrig y
+Borth.&nbsp; The inhabitants, by the grateful remembrance, to
+perpetuate the honour of that day, called the place where the
+archbishop stood, Carreg yr Archjagon, <i>i.e.</i> the
+Archbishop&rsquo;s Rock; and where prince Roderic stood, Maen
+Roderic, or the Stone of Roderic.&rdquo;&nbsp; This account is in
+part corroborated by the following communication from Mr. Richard
+Llwyd of Beaumaris, who made personal inquiries on the
+spot.&nbsp; &ldquo;Cerrig y Borth, being a rough, undulating
+district, could not, for that reason, have been chosen for
+addressing a multitude; but adjoining it there are two eminences
+which command a convenient surface for that purpose; one called
+Maen Rodi (the Stone or Rock of Roderic), the property of Owen
+Williams, Esq.; and the other Carreg Iago, belonging to Lord
+Uxbridge.&nbsp; This last, as now pronounced, means the Rock of
+St. James; but I have no difficulty in admitting, that Carreg yr
+Arch Iagon may (by the compression of common, undiscriminating
+language, and the obliteration of the event from ignorant minds
+by the lapse of so many centuries) be contracted into Carreg
+Iago.&nbsp; Cadair yr archesgob is now also contracted into
+Cadair (chair), a seat naturally formed in the rock, with a rude
+arch over it, on the road side, which is a rough terrace over the
+breast of a rocky and commanding cliff, and the nearest way from
+the above eminences to the insulated church of Landisilio.&nbsp;
+This word Cadair, though in general language a chair, yet when
+applied to exalted situations, means an observatory, as Cadair
+Idris, etc.; but there can, in my opinion, be no doubt that this
+seat in the rock is that described by the words Cadair yr
+Archesgob.&rdquo;&nbsp; [Still more probable, and certainly more
+flattering to Giraldus, is that it was called &ldquo;Cadair yr
+Arch Ddiacon&rdquo; (the Archdeacon&rsquo;s chair).]</p>
+<p><a name="footnote120a"></a><a href="#citation120a"
+class="footnote">[120a]</a>&nbsp; This hundred contained the
+comots of Mynyw, or St. David&rsquo;s, and Pencaer.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote120b"></a><a href="#citation120b"
+class="footnote">[120b]</a>&nbsp; I am indebted to Mr. Richard
+Llwyd for the following curious extract from a Manuscript of the
+late intelligent Mr. Rowlands, respecting this miraculous stone,
+called Maen Morddwyd, or the stone of the thigh, which once
+existed in Llanidan parish.&nbsp; &ldquo;Hic etiam lapis lumbi,
+vulgo Maen Morddwyd, in hujus c&aelig;miterii vallo locum sibi e
+longo a retro tempore obtinuit, exindeque his nuperis annis, quo
+nescio papicola vel qua inscia manu nulla ut olim retinente
+virtute, qu&aelig; tunc penitus elanguit aut vetustate
+evaporavit, nullo sane loci dispendio, nec illi qui eripuit
+emolumento, ereptus et deportatus fuit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><a name="footnote120c"></a><a href="#citation120c"
+class="footnote">[120c]</a>&nbsp; Hugh, earl of Chester.&nbsp;
+The first earl of Chester after the Norman conquest, was Gherbod,
+a Fleming, who, having obtained leave from king William to go
+into Flanders for the purpose of arranging some family concerns,
+was taken and detained a prisoner by his enemies; upon which the
+conqueror bestowed the earldom of Chester on Hugh de Abrincis or
+of Avranches, &ldquo;to hold as freely by the sword, as the king
+himself did England by the crown.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><a name="footnote121"></a><a href="#citation121"
+class="footnote">[121]</a>&nbsp; This church is at Llandyfrydog,
+a small village in Twrkelin hundred, not far distant from
+Llanelian, and about three miles from the Bay of Dulas.&nbsp; St.
+Tyvrydog, to whom it was dedicated, was one of the sons of
+Arwystyl Glof, a saint who lived in the latter part of the sixth
+century.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote123a"></a><a href="#citation123a"
+class="footnote">[123a]</a>&nbsp; Ynys Lenach, now known by the
+name of Priestholme Island, bore also the title of Ynys Seiriol,
+from a saint who resided upon it in the sixth century.&nbsp; It
+is also mentioned by Dugdale and Pennant under the appellation of
+Insula Glannauch.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote123b"></a><a href="#citation123b"
+class="footnote">[123b]</a>&nbsp; Alberic de Veer, or Vere, came
+into England with William the Conqueror, and as a reward for his
+military services, received very extensive possessions and lands,
+particularly in the county of Essex.&nbsp; Alberic, his eldest
+son, was great chamberlain of England in the reign of king Henry
+I., and was killed <span class="GutSmall">A.D.</span> 1140, in a
+popular tumult at London.&nbsp; Henry de Essex married one of his
+daughters named Adeliza.&nbsp; He enjoyed, by inheritance, the
+office of standard-bearer, and behaved himself so unworthily in
+the military expedition which king Henry undertook against Owen
+Gwynedd, prince of North Wales, in the year 1157, by throwing
+down his ensign, and betaking himself to flight, that he was
+challenged for this misdemeanor by Robert de Mountford, and by
+him vanquished in single combat; whereby, according to the laws
+of his country, his life was justly forfeited.&nbsp; But the king
+interposing his royal mercy, spared it, but confiscated his
+estates, ordering him to be shorn a monk, and placed in the abbey
+of Reading.&nbsp; There appears to be some biographical error in
+the words of Giraldus&mdash;&ldquo;Filia scilicet Henrici de
+Essexia,&rdquo; for by the genealogical accounts of the Vere and
+Essex families, we find that Henry de Essex married the daughter
+of the second Alberic de Vere; whereas our author seems to imply,
+that the mother of Alberic the second was daughter to Henry de
+Essex.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote124"></a><a href="#citation124"
+class="footnote">[124]</a>&nbsp; &ldquo;And Jacob took him rods
+of green poplar, and of the hazel, and of the chesnut tree, and
+peeled white strakes in them, and made the white appear which was
+in the rods.&nbsp; And he set the rods, which he had peeled,
+before the flocks in the gutters in the watering troughs, when
+the flocks came to drink, that they should conceive when they
+came to drink.&nbsp; And the flocks conceived before the rods,
+and brought forth cattle speckled and spotted.&rdquo;&mdash;Gen.
+xxx.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote125a"></a><a href="#citation125a"
+class="footnote">[125a]</a>&nbsp; Owen Gwynedd, the son of
+Gruffydd ap Conan, died in 1169, and was buried at Bangor.&nbsp;
+When Baldwin, during his progress, visited Bangor and saw his
+tomb, he charged the bishop (Guy Ruffus) to remove the body out
+of the cathedral, when he had a fit opportunity so to do, in
+regard that archbishop Becket had excommunicated him heretofore,
+because he had married his first cousin, the daughter of Grono ap
+Edwyn, and that notwithstanding he had continued to live with her
+till she died.&nbsp; The bishop, in obedience to the charge, made
+a passage from the vault through the south wall of the church
+underground, and thus secretly shoved the body into the
+churchyard.&mdash;<i>Hengwrt</i>.&nbsp; <i>MSS.</i>&nbsp;
+Cadwalader brother of Owen Gwynedd, died in 1172.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote125b"></a><a href="#citation125b"
+class="footnote">[125b]</a>&nbsp; The Merlin here mentioned was
+called Ambrosius, and according to the Cambrian Biography
+flourished about the middle of the fifth century.&nbsp; Other
+authors say, that this reputed prophet and magician was the son
+of a Welsh nun, daughter of a king of Demetia, and born at
+Caermarthen, and that he was made king of West Wales by
+Vortigern, who then reigned in Britain.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote126"></a><a href="#citation126"
+class="footnote">[126]</a>&nbsp; Owen Gwynedd &ldquo;left behind
+him manie children gotten by diverse women, which were not
+esteemed by their mothers and birth, but by their prowes and
+valiantnesse.&rdquo;&nbsp; By his first wife, Gladus, the
+daughter of Llywarch ap Trahaern ap Caradoc, he had Orwerth
+Drwyndwn, that is, Edward with the broken nose; for which defect
+he was deemed unfit to preside over the principality of North
+Wales and was deprived of his rightful inheritance, which was
+seized by his brother David, who occupied it for the space of
+twenty-four years.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote128a"></a><a href="#citation128a"
+class="footnote">[128a]</a>&nbsp; The travellers pursuing their
+journey along the sea coast, crossed the &aelig;stuary of the
+river Conway under Deganwy, a fortress of very remote
+antiquity.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote128b"></a><a href="#citation128b"
+class="footnote">[128b]</a>&nbsp; At this period the Cistercian
+monastery of Conway was in its infancy, for its foundation has
+been attributed to Llewelyn ap Iorwerth, in the year 1185, (only
+three years previous to Baldwin&rsquo;s visitation,) who endowed
+it with very extensive possessions and singular privileges.&nbsp;
+Like Stratflur, this abbey was the repository of the national
+records, and the mausoleum of many of its princes.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote129a"></a><a href="#citation129a"
+class="footnote">[129a]</a>&nbsp; [David was the illegitimate son
+of Owen Gwynedd, and had dispossessed his brother, Iorwerth
+Drwyndwn.]</p>
+<p><a name="footnote129b"></a><a href="#citation129b"
+class="footnote">[129b]</a>&nbsp; This ebbing spring in the
+province of Tegeingl, or Flintshire, has been placed by the old
+annotator on Giraldus at Kilken, which Humphrey Llwyd, in his
+Breviary, also mentions.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote129c"></a><a href="#citation129c"
+class="footnote">[129c]</a>&nbsp; See before, the Topography of
+Ireland, Distinc. ii. c. 7.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote129d"></a><a href="#citation129d"
+class="footnote">[129d]</a>&nbsp; Saint Asaph, in size, though
+not in revenues, may deserve the epithet of
+&ldquo;paupercula&rdquo; attached to it by Giraldus.&nbsp; From
+its situation near the banks of the river Elwy, it derived the
+name of Llanelwy, or the church upon the Elwy.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote129e"></a><a href="#citation129e"
+class="footnote">[129e]</a>&nbsp; Leaving Llanelwy, or St. Asaph,
+the archbishop proceeded to the little cell of Basinwerk, where
+he and his attendants passed the night.&nbsp; It is situated at a
+short distance from Holywell, on a gentle eminence above a
+valley, watered by the copious springs that issue from St.
+Winefred&rsquo;s well, and on the borders of a marsh, which
+extends towards the coast of Cheshire.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote129f"></a><a href="#citation129f"
+class="footnote">[129f]</a>&nbsp; Coleshill is a township in
+Holywell parish, Flintshire, which gives name to a hundred, and
+was so called from its abundance of fossil fuel.&nbsp; Pennant,
+vol. i. p. 42.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote130"></a><a href="#citation130"
+class="footnote">[130]</a>&nbsp; The three military expeditions
+of king Henry into Wales, here mentioned, were <span
+class="GutSmall">A.D.</span> 1157, the first expedition into
+North Wales; <span class="GutSmall">A.D.</span> 1162, the second
+expedition into South Wales; <span class="GutSmall">A.D.</span>
+1165, the third expedition into North Wales.&nbsp; In the first,
+the king was obliged to retreat with considerable loss, and the
+king&rsquo;s standard-bearer, Henry de Essex, was accused of
+having in a cowardly manner abandoned the royal standard and led
+to a serious disaster.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote131a"></a><a href="#citation131a"
+class="footnote">[131a]</a>&nbsp; The lake of Penmelesmere, or
+Pymplwy meer, or the meer of the five parishes adjoining the
+lake, is, in modern days, better known by the name of Bala
+Pool.&nbsp; The assertion made by Giraldus, of salmon never being
+found in the lake of Bala, is not founded on truth.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote131b"></a><a href="#citation131b"
+class="footnote">[131b]</a>&nbsp; Giraldus seems to have been
+mistaken respecting the burial-place of the emperor Henry V., for
+he died May 23, <span class="GutSmall">A.D.</span> 1125, at
+Utrecht, and his body was conveyed to Spire for interment.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote132"></a><a href="#citation132"
+class="footnote">[132]</a>&nbsp; This legend, which represents
+king Harold as having escaped from the battle of Hastings, and as
+having lived years after as a hermit on the borders of Wales, is
+mentioned by other old writers, and has been adopted as true by
+some modern writers.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote133a"></a><a href="#citation133a"
+class="footnote">[133a]</a>&nbsp; Some difficulty occurs in
+fixing the situation of the Album Monasterium, mentioned in the
+text, as three churches in the county of Shropshire bore that
+appellation; the first at Whitchurch, the second at Oswestry, the
+third at Alberbury.&nbsp; The narrative of our author is so
+simple, and corresponds so well with the topography of the
+country through which they passed, that I think no doubt ought to
+be entertained about the course of their route.&nbsp; From
+Chester they directed their way to the White Monastery, or
+Whitchurch, and from thence towards Oswestry, where they slept,
+and were entertained by William Fitz-Alan, after the English mode
+of hospitality.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote133b"></a><a href="#citation133b"
+class="footnote">[133b]</a>&nbsp; By the Latin context it would
+appear that Reiner was bishop of Oswestree: &ldquo;Ab episcopo
+namque loci illius Reinerio multitudo fuerat ante
+signata.&rdquo;&nbsp; Reiner succeeded Adam in the bishopric of
+St. Asaph in the year 1186, and died in 1220.&nbsp; He had a
+residence near Oswestry, at which place, previous to the arrival
+of Baldwin, he had signed many of the people with the cross.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote133c"></a><a href="#citation133c"
+class="footnote">[133c]</a>&nbsp; In the time of William the
+Conqueror, Alan, the son of Flathald, or Flaald, obtained, by the
+gift of that king, the castle of Oswaldestre, with the territory
+adjoining, which belonged to Meredith ap Blethyn, a Briton.&nbsp;
+This Alan, having married the daughter and heir to Warine,
+sheriff of Shropshire, had in her right the barony of the same
+Warine.&nbsp; To him succeeded William, his son and heir.&nbsp;
+He married Isabel de Say, daughter and heir to Helias de Say,
+niece to Robert earl of Gloucester, lady of Clun, and left issue
+by her, William, his son and successor, who, in the 19th Henry
+II., or before, departed this life, leaving William Fitz-Alan his
+son and heir, who is mentioned in the text.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote134a"></a><a href="#citation134a"
+class="footnote">[134a]</a>&nbsp; Robert de Belesme, earl of
+Shrewsbury, was son of Roger de Montgomery, who led the centre
+division of the army in that memorable battle which secured to
+William the conquest of England, and for his services was
+advanced to the earldoms of Arundel and Shrewsbury.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote134b"></a><a href="#citation134b"
+class="footnote">[134b]</a>&nbsp; This expedition into Wales took
+place <span class="GutSmall">A.D.</span> 1165, and has been
+already spoken of.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote136"></a><a href="#citation136"
+class="footnote">[136]</a>&nbsp; The princes mentioned by
+Giraldus as most distinguished in North and South Wales, and most
+celebrated in his time, were, 1. Owen, son of Gruffydd, in North
+Wales; 2. Meredyth, son of Gruffydd, in South Wales; 3. Owen de
+Cyfeilioc, in Powys; 4. Cadwalader, son of Gruffydd, in North
+Wales; 5. Gruffydd of Maelor in Powys; 6. Rhys, son of Gruffydd,
+in South Wales; 7. David, son of Owen, in North Wales; 8. Howel,
+son of Iorwerth, in South Wales.</p>
+<p>1.&nbsp; Owen Gwynedd, son of Gruffydd ap Conan, died in 1169,
+having governed his country well and worthily for the space of
+thirty-two years.&nbsp; He was fortunate and victorious in all
+his affairs, and never took any enterprise in hand but he
+achieved it.&nbsp; 2. Meredyth ap Gruffydd ap Rhys, lord of
+Caerdigan and Stratywy, died in 1153, at the early age of
+twenty-five; a worthy knight, fortunate in battle, just and
+liberal to all men.&nbsp; 3. Owen Cyfeilioc was the son of
+Gruffydd Meredyth ap Meredyth ap Blethyn, who was created lord of
+Powys by Henry I., and died about the year 1197, leaving his
+principality to his son Gwenwynwyn, from whom that part of Powys
+was called Powys Gwenwynwyn, to distinguish it from Powys Vadoc,
+the possession of the lords of Bromfield.&nbsp; The poems
+ascribed to him possess great spirit, and prove that he was, as
+Giraldus terms him, &ldquo;lingu&aelig; dicacis,&rdquo; in its
+best sense.&nbsp; 4. Cadwalader, son of Gruffydd ap Conan, prince
+of North Wales, died in 1175.&nbsp; Gruffydd of Maelor was son of
+Madoc ap Meredyth ap Blethyn, prince of Powys, who died at
+Winchester in 1160.&nbsp; &ldquo;This man was ever the king of
+England&rsquo;s friend, and was one that feared God, and relieved
+the poor: his body was conveyed honourably to Powys, and buried
+at Myvod.&rdquo;&nbsp; His son Gruffydd succeeded him in the
+lordship of Bromfield, and died about the year 1190.&nbsp; 6.
+Rhys ap Gruffydd, or the lord Rhys, was son of Gruffydd ap Rhys
+ap Tewdwr, who died in 1137.&nbsp; The ancient writers have been
+very profuse in their praises of this celebrated Prince.&nbsp; 7.
+David, son of Owen Gwynedd, who, on the death if his father,
+forcibly seized the principality of North Wales, slaying his
+brother Howel in battle, and setting aside the claims of the
+lawful inheritor of the throne, Iorwerth Trwyndwn, whose son,
+Llewelyn ap Iorwerth, in 1194, recovered his inheritance.&nbsp;
+8. Howel, son of Iorwerth of Caerleon, appears to have been
+distinguished chiefly by his ferocity.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote137"></a><a href="#citation137"
+class="footnote">[137]</a>&nbsp; Malpas in Cheshire.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote138"></a><a href="#citation138"
+class="footnote">[138]</a>&nbsp; It appears that a small college
+of prebendaries, or secular canons, resided at Bromfield in the
+reign of king Henry I.; Osbert, the prior, being recorded as a
+witness to a deed made before the year 1148.&nbsp; In 1155, they
+became Benedictines, and surrendered church and lands to the
+abbey of St. Peter&rsquo;s at Gloucester, whereupon a prior and
+monks were placed there, and continued till the
+dissolution.&nbsp; An ancient gateway and some remains of the
+priory still testify the existence of this religious house, the
+local situation of which, near the confluence of the rivers Oney
+and Teme, has been accurately described by Leland.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote139"></a><a href="#citation139"
+class="footnote">[139]</a>&nbsp; Baldwin was born at Exeter, in
+Devonshire, of a low family, but being endowed by nature with
+good abilities, applied them to an early cultivation of sacred
+and profane literature.&nbsp; His good conduct procured him the
+friendship of Bartholomew bishop of Exeter, who promoted him to
+the archdeaconry of that see; resigning this preferment, he
+assumed the cowl, and in a few years became abbot of the
+Cistercian monastery at Ford.&nbsp; In the year 1180, he was
+advanced to the bishopric of Worcester, and in 1184, translated
+to the archiepiscopal see of Canterbury.&nbsp; In the year 1188,
+he made his progress through Wales, preaching with fervour the
+service of the Cross; to which holy cause he fell a sacrifice in
+the year 1190, having religiously, honourably, and charitably
+ended his days in the Holy Land.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote140"></a><a href="#citation140"
+class="footnote">[140]</a>&nbsp; Giraldus here alludes to the
+dignity of archdeacon, which Baldwin had obtained in the church
+of Exeter.</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ITINERARY OF ARCHIBISHOP BALDWIN
+THROUGH WALES***</p>
+<pre>
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