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"Have you good ale?" said I in English to a good-looking buxom dame of about forty, whom I saw in the passage. She looked at me but returned no answer. "Oes genoch cwrw da?" said I. "Oes!" she replied with a smile, and opening the door of a room on the left-hand bade me walk in.
I just tasted it, gave the child a penny and blessed her. "Oes genoch tad?" "No," said she; "but I have a mam." Tad in mam; blessed sounds; in all languages expressing the same blessed things. After walking for some hours I saw a tall blue hill in the far distance before me. "What is the name of that hill?" said I to a woman whom I met. "Pen Caer Gybi," she replied.
At the beginning of the eighteenth century, John Adair, the laird of Little Genoch, was married to Mary Agnew, a near kinswoman of the celebrated Sir Andrew, colonel of the Scots Fusiliers at Dettingen.
But oes genoch dim Cumraeg you have no Welsh." Thereupon I proceeded along the path in the direction of the east. Forthwith the fellow said something to his animal, and both came following fast behind. I quickened my pace, but the fellow and his beast were close in my rear. Presently I came to a place where another path branched off to the south.
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