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IN THE northwest corner of the
parish of Beddgelert there is a place which used
to be called by the old inhabitants the Land of
the Fairies, and it reaches from Cwm Hafod Ruffydd
along the slope of the mountain of Drws y Coed as
far as Llyn y Dywarchen. The old people of former
times used to find much pleasure and amusement in
this district in listening every moonlight night
to the charming music of the fair family, and in
looking at their dancing and their mirthful
sports.
One on a time, a long while ago, there lived at
upper Drws y Coed a youth, who was joyous and
active, brave and determined of heart. This young
man amused himself every night by looking on and
listening to them. One night they had come to a
field near the house, near the shore of Llyn y
Dywarchen, to pass a merry night. He went, as
usual, to look at them, when his glances at once
fell on one of the ladies, who possessed such
beauty as he had never seen in a human being. Her
appearance was like that of alabaster; her voice
was as agreeable as the nightingale's, and as
unruffled as the zephyr in a flower garden at the
noon of a long summer's day; and her gait was
pretty and aristocratic; her feet moved in the
dance as lightly on the grass as the rays of the
sun had a few hours before on the lake hard by.
He fell in love with her over head and ears, and
in the strength of that passion -- for what is
stronger than love! -- he rushed, when the bustle
was at its height, into the midst of the fair
crowd, and snatched the graceful damsel in his
arms, and ran instantly with her to the house.
When the fair family saw the violence used by a
mortal, they broke up the dance and ran after her
toward the house; but, when they arrived, the door
had been bolted with iron, wherefore they could
not get near her or touch her in any way; and the
damsel had been placed securely in a chamber.
The youth, having her now under his roof, as is
the saying, endeavored, with all his talent, to
win her affection and to induce her to wed. But at
first she would on no account hear of it. On
seeing his persistence, however, and on finding
that he would not let her go to return to her
people, she consented to be his servant if he
could find out her name; but she would not be
married to him.
As he thought that was not impossible, he half
agreed to the condition; but, after bothering his
head with all the names known in that
neighborhood, he found himself no nearer his
point, though he was not willing to give up the
search hurriedly.
One night, as he was going home from Carnarvon
market, he saw a number of the fair folks in a
turbary not far from his path. They seemed to him
to be engaged in an important deliberation, and it
struck him that they were planning how to recover
their abducted sister. He thought, moreover, that
if he could secretly get within hearing, he might
possibly find her name out. On looking carefully
around, he saw that a ditch ran through the
turbary and passed near the spot where they stood.
So he made his way round to the ditch, and crept,
on all fours, along it until he was within hearing
of the family.
After listening a little, he found that their
deliberation was as to the fate of the lady he had
carried away, and he heard one of them crying,
piteously, "O Penelop, O Penelop, my sister, why
didst thou run away with a mortal!"
"Penelop," said the young man to himself, "that
must be the name of my beloved; that is enough."
At once he began to creep back quietly, and he
returned home safely without having been seen by
the fairies. When he got into the house, he called
out to the girl, saying, "Penelop, my beloved one,
come here!" and she came forward and asked, in
astonishment, "O mortal, who has betrayed my name
to thee?"
Then, lifting up her tiny folded hands, she
exclaimed, "Alas, my fate, my fate!"
But she grew contented with her fate, and took to
her work in earnest. Everything in the house and
on the farm prospered under her charge. There was
no better or cleanlier housewife in the
neighborhood around, or one that was more
provident than she.
The young man, however, was not satisfied that she
should be a servant to him, and, after he had long
and persistently sought it, she consented to be
married, on the one condition, that, if ever he
should touch her with iron, she would be free to
leave him and return to her family.
He agreed to that condition, since he believed
that such a thing would never happen at his hands.
So they were marred, and lived several years
happily and comfortably together. Two children
where born to them, a boy and a girl, the picture
of their mother and the idols of their father. But
one morning, when the husband wanted to go to the
fair at Carnarvon, he went out to catch a filly
that was grazing in the field by the house; but
for the life of him he could not catch her, and he
called to his wife to come to assist him.
She came without delay, and they managed to drive
the filly to a secure corner, as they thought;
but, as the man approached to catch her, she
rushed past him. In his excitement, he threw the
bridle after her; but who should be running in the
direction of it, but his wife!
The iron bit struck her on the cheek, and she
vanished out of sight on the spot. Her husband
never saw her any more; but one cold frosty night,
a long time after this event, he was awakened from
his sleep by somebody rubbing the glass of his
window, and, after he had given a response, he
recognized the gentle and tender voice of his wife
saying to him:
Lest my son should find it cold,
Place on him his father's coat;
Lest the fair one find it cold,
Place on her my petticoat.
It is said that the descendants of this family
still continue in these neighborhoods, and that
they are easy to be recognized by their light and
fair complexion.
Rhys, John. Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx.Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1901. Volume
1.
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