. The London & North-Western Railway . he loser, filled with chagrin andjealousy, enlisted a witchs help, and a demon steedwas provided. On the way to church this steed bolted,pursued by the bridegroom. He came up with it onthe heights of Penmaenmawr, and just as he laid holdof his bride both horses and their riders plungedheadlong over the cliff. Overlooking the Lake of Llanberis on the westernslopes of Snowdon, Dolbadarn guarded one of the fivegreat passes which led into the heart of Wild is the Welsh Chillon, for within its walls for twenty-three years, from 1254 to I277> Llewel
. The London & North-Western Railway . he loser, filled with chagrin andjealousy, enlisted a witchs help, and a demon steedwas provided. On the way to church this steed bolted,pursued by the bridegroom. He came up with it onthe heights of Penmaenmawr, and just as he laid holdof his bride both horses and their riders plungedheadlong over the cliff. Overlooking the Lake of Llanberis on the westernslopes of Snowdon, Dolbadarn guarded one of the fivegreat passes which led into the heart of Wild is the Welsh Chillon, for within its walls for twenty-three years, from 1254 to I277> Llewellyn, the lastPrince of Wales, imprisoned his brother Owen Goch 32 The Castles of Old Wales (Owen the Red) for taking part in rebellion againsthim. The fate of the captive was the subject of apoem by a Welsh Byron of his own time: From yonder heights a captives sighsAre wafted towards me by the gale ;There chained, abandoned, Owen lies, And I still live to tell the tale-To tell how, by a brothers doom,Yon towers are Owens living tomb !. Snowdon from Llyn Llydaw. David, another brother of Llewellyn — he whoinstigated the prince to the fatal rising againstEdward I. on the strength of a prophecy of Merlin—held the stronghold, after Llewellyns death, againstthe Earl of Pembroke, but was forced to escape fromit and hide with his wife and children among the wild L. & 33 5 London and North-Western Railway marshes and glens about Snowdon, till captured atlast and carried off to his cruel execution. On the eastern side of Snowdon again, on the linesouth of Bettws-y-Coed, the upper end of the Vale ofConway is dominated by the ruin of DolwyddelenCastle. This is said to have been built about theyear 500 by a Welsh prince whose name has been for-gotten, and it is alluded to by Southey in his its chief memory is the fact that within its wallsLlewellyn the Great was born. It is believed to havebeen the last stronghold in Wales to hold out againstEdward I. The king had pushe
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectlondonandnorthwester