CHAPTER
XII
THE
GREAT PLYNLIMMON
"CARDIGAN is a
country to itself," says one who knows Wales well. Except,
indeed, for the towns on the coast, Lampeter, with its college, and a
famous abbey in the south, the whole country has been described as a
"mountain wilderness." But since some of us prefer such
untrodden wastes to those parts that have become merely playgrounds
for the English tourist, we will pay it a visit to-day.
At the north-eastern
corner of the county stands Plynlimmon, the home of the Severn, the
Wye, and many a smaller river which ploughs its way through the wild
region we are traversing. And let us note, by the way, that, since
railways and even good roads are unknown except on the very fringe of
this district, our best method of travelling will be on foot.
THE WYE NEAR
RHAYADER
Many years ago, when that
delightful person, George Borrow, a native of Norfolk, made a long
tour all over Wales on "Shanks's mare," seeing thereby far
more of the country and its people than the motor-car or railroad
travellers of more modern times, he explored this part of the country
very thoroughly, and this description of his visit to Plynlimmon is
too good not to quote at length:
"The mountain of
Plynlimmon, to which I was bound, is the third in Wales for height,
being only inferior to Snowdon and Cader Idris. Its proper name is
Pum or Pump Lumon, signifying the 'five points,' because towards the
upper part it is divided into five hills or points.
"Plynlimmon... has
been the scene of many remarkable events. In the tenth century a
dreadful battle was fought on one of its spurs between the Danes and
the Welsh, in which the former sustained a bloody overthrow. In
1401 a conflict took place in one of its valleys between the Welsh
under Glendower and the 'Flemings' of Pembrokeshire, who, angry at
having their homesteads plundered and burnt by the chieftain, the
mortal enemy of their race, assembled in great numbers and drove
Glendower and his forces before them to Plynlimmon, where the
Welshmen stood at bay, and with difficulty won a victory....
"...I started about
ten o'clock on my expedition, after making, of course, a very
hearty breakfast ... and went duly north till I came to a place
among hills where the road was crossed by an angry looking
rivulet. I was just going to pull off my boots and stockings in order
to wade through, when I perceived a pole and a rail laid over the
stream at a little distance above where I was. This rustic bridge
enabled me to cross without running the danger of getting a regular
sousing, for these mountain streams, even when not reaching so
high as the knee, occasionally sweep the wader off his legs, as I
know by my own experience. From a lad I learnt that the place where I
crossed the water was called the 'Foot of the Red Slope.'
"About twenty
minutes' walk brought me . . . near a spur of the Plynlimmon range.
Here I engaged a man to show me the sources of the rivers and the
other wonders of the mountain. He was a tall, athletic fellow, and
had much more the appearance of an Irishman than the Welshman that he
was....
"After ascending a
steep hill and passing over its top, we went down its western side,
and soon came to a black, frightful bog between two hills. Beyond the
bog, and at some distance to the west of the two hills, rose a brown
mountain, not abruptly, but gradually, and looking more like what the
Welsh call a slope than a mountain.
" 'That, sir,' said
my guide, 'is the Great Plynlimmon.'
" 'It does not look
much of a hill,' said I.
" 'We are on very
high ground, sir, or it would look much higher. I question, upon the
whole, whether there is a higher hill in the world. God bless
Plynlimmon Mawr!' said he, looking with reverence towards the hill.
'I am sure I have a right to say so, for many is the good crown I
have got by showing gentlefolks, like yourself, to the top of him.'
" 'You talk of
Plynlimmon Mawr, or the Great Plynlimmon,' said I; 'where are the
smaller ones?'
" 'Yonder they are,'
said the guide, pointing to two hills towards the north—'the Middle
and the Small Plynlimmon.... Those two hills we have just passed make
up the five. That small hill connected with the big Plynlimmon
on the right is called the Hill of the Calf, or Calf Plynlimmon,
which makes the sixth summit.'
" 'Very good,' said
I, 'and perfectly satisfactory. Now let us ascend the big
Plynlimmon.'
"In about a quarter
of an hour we reached the summit of the hill, where stood a large
cairn, or heap of stones. I got up on the top and looked around me.
"A mountainous
wilderness extended on every side, a waste of russet-coloured hills,
with here and there a black, craggy summit. No signs of life or
cultivation were to be discovered, and the eye might search in vain
for a grove, or even a single tree. The scene would have been
cheerless in the extreme had not a bright sun lighted up the
landscape.
" 'This does not
seem to be a country of much society,' I said to my guide.
" 'It is not, sir.
The nearest house is the inn we came from, which is now three miles
behind us. Straight before you there is not one for at least ten, and
on either side it is a wilderness to a vast distance. Plynlimmon is
not a sociable country, sir; nothing to be found in it, but here and
there a few sheep or a shepherd.'
" 'Now,' said I,
descending from the cairn, 'we will proceed to the sources of the
rivers ' (the Severn, the Wye, and the Rheidol). The source of the
Rheidol is a small, beautiful lake, about a quarter of a mile in
length. It is overhung on the east and north by frightful crags, from
which it is fed by a number of small rills. The water is of the
deepest blue, and of very considerable depth. The banks, except to
the north and east, slope gently down, and are clad with soft and
beautiful moss. The river, of which it is the head, emerges at the
south-eastern side, and brawls away in the shape of a considerable
brook amidst moss and rushes down a wild glen to the south. If few
rivers have a more wild and wondrous channel than the Rheidol, fewer
still have a more beautiful and romantic source.
"After kneeling down
and drinking freely of the lake, I followed my guide over a hill into
a valley, at the farther end of which I saw a brook streaming to the
south.
" 'That brook,' said
the guide, 'is the young Severn.'
"The brook came from
round the side of a very lofty rock, singularly variegated, black and
white, the northern summit presenting somewhat the appearance of
the head of a horse. Passing round this crag, we came to a fountain,
surrounded with rushes, out of which the brook, now exceedingly
small, came murmuring.
" 'The crag above,'
said my guide, 'is called the Rock of the Horse, and this spring at
its foot is generally called the Source of the Severn. However,
drink not of it, master, for the source is higher up. Follow me.'
"I followed him up a
steep and very narrow dingle. Presently we came to some beautiful
little pools of water in the turf, which is here remarkably green.
" 'These are very
pretty pools, aren't they, master?' said my companion. ` Now, if I
was a false guide I should bid you stoop and drink, saying that these
were the sources of the Severn; but the true source is higher up.
Don't fret, however, but follow me, and we shall be there in a
minute.'
"So I did as he bade
me, following him, without fretting, higher up.
"Just at the top he
halted, and said: 'Now, master, I have conducted you to the source of
the Severn. I have considered the matter deeply, and have come to the
conclusion that here, and here only, is the true source. Therefore
stoop down and drink, in full confidence that you are taking
possession of the Holy Severn.'
"The source of the
Severn is a little pool of water some 20 inches long, 6 wide, and
about 3 deep. It is covered at the bottom with small stones, from
between which the water gushes up. Turf-heaps, both large and small,
are in abundance near by.
"After taking
possession of the Severn by drinking at its source, I said: 'Now
let us go to the fountain of the Wye.'
"The source of the
Wye, which is a little pool, not much larger than the source of the
Severn, stands near the top of a grassy hill which forms part of the
Great Plynlimmon.
"The stream, after
leaving its source, runs down the hill towards the east, and then
takes a line to the south.
"The fountains of
the Severn and the Wye are in close proximity to one another. That of
the Rheidol stands somewhat apart from both, as if, proud of its own
beauty, it disdained the other two for its homeliness."
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