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Skrine, John Huntley, 1848-1923

"Uppingham by the Sea a Narrative of the Year at Borth"


JUNE 27TH, 1878,
FOUNDER'S DAY.


CHAPTER I.--EXILES, OLD AND NEW.

"_O what have we ta'en_?" _said the fisher-prince_,
"_What have we ta'en this morning's tide_?
_Get thee down to the wave_, _my carl_,
_And row me the net to the meadow's-side_."
_In he waded, the fisher-carl_,
_And_ "_Here_," _quoth he_, "_is a wondrous thing_!
_A cradle_, _prince_, _and a fair man-child_,
_Goodly to see as the son of a king_!"
_The fisher-prince he caught the word_,
_And_ "_Hail_," _he cried_, "_to the king to be_!
_Stranger he comes from the storm and the night_;
_But his fame shall wax, and his name be bright_,
_While the hills look down on the Cymry sea_."
FINDING OF TALIESIN.
Elphin, son of Gwyddno, the prince who ruled the coasts between the Dovey
and the Ystwith, came down on a May-day morning to his father's fishing-
weir. All that was taken that morning was to be Elphin's, had Gwyddno
said. Not a fish was taken that day; and Elphin, who was ever a luckless
youth, would have gone home empty-handed, but that one of his men found,
entangled in the poles of the weir, a coracle, and a fair child in it.


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