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Cardiau post Cylch yr Orsedd, Eisteddfod Y Rhyl, 1904, ac arysgrif yn ymwneud â'r arwisgiad, 1911,

  • NLW Misc. Records 466.
  • File
  • 1904-1959.

Ceir hefyd tri cherdyn post yn dangos lluniau fel a ganlyn - (1) grŵp, yn cynnwys Olwen Silvester ar achlysur dathlu hanner canmlwyddiant Cymdeithas Cymmrodorion y Rhyl, 1959, (2) y Parchedig Rowland Williams ('Hwfa Mon; 1823-1905), a (3) golygfa yn ninas Caeredin, 1905 (gyda darn o farddoniaeth Gymraeg wedi ei ysgrifennu ar y cefn). Rhaglen gwasanaeth a gynhaliwyd yng Nghapel Clwyd Street, Rhyl, 22 Mehefin 1911, ar achlysur coroniad Sior V. Llythyr, 1931, oddi wrth Ifan ab Owen Edwards at y rhodddwr ynglŷn â phenillion a gynigiodd i'w cyhoeddi yn Cymru'r Plant.

Leaflet containing verses in memory of David Evan Rees, Llanelli,

  • NLW Misc. Records 463.
  • File
  • 1897.

Leaflet, printed in Welsh, containing verses by W. Walters (Talmai) Llanelli, in memory of David Evan, son of Mr. & Mrs. Wm. Rees of the 'Ship and Pilot', Llanelli, who died 22 July 1897 at the age of 12, after being crushed by a steel roll near Pantyffynon, which he was delivering by a waggon with his father.

Pamffledi etholiadol Plaid Cymru, plwyf Llangiwg,

  • NLW Misc. Records 309.
  • File
  • Mawrth 1934.

Pamffledi etholiadol (2), 1934, a ddosparthwyd ar ran y Parch H. Samuel pan oedd yn ymgeisydd dros Blaid Cymru yn Etholiad Cyngor Plwyfol Llangiwg, Morgannwg. = Two election pamphlets, 1934, of the Rev. H. Samuel as a Plaid Cymru candidate in Llangiwg Parish Council Election.

Teulu Syr Ben Bowen Thomas,

  • NLW Misc. Records 288.
  • File
  • 1827-1838.

Tudalen o Feibl teulu yn cynnwys dyddiadau geni tad-cu a mam-gu Syr Ben Bowen Thomas. = Page from a family Bible giving dates of birth of Sir Ben Bowen Thomas's grandparents.

Untitled

Cwestiynau gan Dewi Z. Phillipps,

  • NLW Misc. Records 279.
  • File
  • 1974.

Cwestiynau a luniwyd yn Saesneg gan yr Athro Dewi Z. Phillipps, Coleg Prifysgol Cymru, Abertawe, mewn ateb i ddarlith ar y testun 'Beth yw pwrpas llenydda?' a draddodwyd gan y Dr. R. M. Jones, Coleg Prifysgol Cymru, Aberystwyth, yn yr Eisteddfod Genedlaethol yng Nghaerfyrddin, Awst 1974. Am fersiwn Gymraeg o'r cwestiynau gan yr Athro Bedwyr Lewis Jones gweler Y Traethodydd, Ionawr 1975, tt. 10-44.

Cerddi, traethawd, a beirniadaethau H. Griffiths ('Hywel Myrddin'), Caerfyrddin,

  • NLW Misc. Records 274.
  • File
  • [1925-1943].

Copïau o gerddi ac o draethawd gan H. Griffiths ('Hywel Myrddin'), Caerfyrddin, ynghyd â llyfr nodiadau yn cynnwys ei feirniadaethau ar gyfansoddiadau llenyddol yn Eisteddfod Beulah, a llythyr ato oddi wrth J. Iorwerth Roberts, Llangollen. = Copies of poems and an essay by H. Griffiths ('Hywel Myrddin'), Carmarthen; a note-book containing his adjudications on literary compositions at Beulah Eisteddfod; and a letter to him from. J. Iorwerth Roberts, Llangollen.

Pedigree of John Edwards of Stansty

  • NLW MS 24200G.
  • File
  • 1654-[?1670s]

Pedigree and achievement, 1654, of John Edwards (1619-1673) of Stanste [Stansty], Denbighshire, compiled and executed by Randle Holme II, containing thirty-nine other fully painted coats of arms, mostly impaled, tracing Edwards's descent in the male line from Coel Godebog and Cadwalader ap Cadwallon, through their mutual descendant Rhodri Mawr, alongside his paternal grandmother's descent from Morion ap Morgenew, Lord of Dyffryn Clwyd.
The names of individuals, together with additional biographical and genealogical information, are enclosed in roundels, with those of the earliest royal and noble figures being surmounted by crowns, coronets or caps of maintenance as appropriate. The pedigree is mostly arranged as two parallel lines of descent, except the final three generations where other relatives such as siblings and John Edwards's son and stepchildren are recorded, without heraldry. The title, beginning 'The Genealogie or Pedegree of John Edwards of Stanste', is given in a scroll cartouche at the head of the roll; the achievement of John Edwards, with eleven quarterings, is placed at the foot. There are a few additions in a different hand, [?1670s], including notice of the marriage of John Edwards the younger (aged 2 in 1654) to Mary, daughter of the Rev. Robert Lloyd of Llanychan; two sections of text appear to have been altered by scraping away the original ink. The pedigree is an example of Style 3 in Michael Powell Siddons, Welsh Pedigree Rolls (Aberystwyth, 1996), pp. 11-12.

Holme, Randle, approximately 1601-1659

Observations upon the picturesque scenery of North Wales

  • NLW MS 24199C.
  • File
  • [late 1790s]

Travel journal, [late 1790s] (watermark 1796), of Richard Cust [stationer and gentleman naturalist, of Westminster and Carlisle], containing his 'Observations on the Picturesque Scenery of North Wales in the Autumn of the year 1783' (ff. 7-73 passim), together with thirteen monochrome wash watercolours of landscapes viewed (ff. 15, 16, 23, 25, 26, 28, 35, 41, 42, 46, 47, 49, 50). The journal primarily describes Cust's impressions of the scenery in terms of the ideals of the picturesque and the sublime; the entries are undated.
As explained in the introductory section (ff. 2-5) the Observations were transcribed by Cust from his original 1783 travel journal, with the illustrations being based on brief sketches. Cust and his unnamed companion(s) travelled by coach from London (f.7) to Llangollen (ff. 8 verso-9), then via Conwy (f. 10) and Bangor (f. 13) to Anglesey (ff. 13 verso-17 verso) and Caernarfon (ff. 19 recto-verso, 22 recto-verso). From there they went on excursions up Snowdon (ff. 24-34 passim) and to [Aberglaslyn] (ff. 34 recto-verso, 37-38) and Llanbenys [Llanberis] (ff. 39-40 verso, 43 recto-verso, 44 verso-51 passim, 54-55 verso), before returning to Conwy (ff. 57 recto-verso, 59-61 verso) and Llangollen (ff. 64-65 verso, 68-69, 70 verso, 72-73). There are descriptions of the castles at Caernarfon (ff. 19 recto-verso, 22 recto-verso), Dolbadarn (ff. 40 verso, 43, 55) and Conwy (ff. 57 recto-verso, 59-60); four of the watercolours also depict Dolbadarn Castle (ff. 41, 42, 46, 47), the others are mostly views of mountains and rocky outcrops. The narrative is incomplete and breaks off after a description of the River Dee at Llangollen (f. 73); additionally, eleven pages have been left blank to provide space for further illustrations (ff. 20, 21, 29, 32, 36, 53, 56, 58, 66, 67, 71, usually with indicative captions written in pencil on the otherwise blank versos).

Cust, Richard, 1754-1844

An excursion to North Wales and Chester

  • NLW MS 24197B.
  • File
  • 1829

A manuscript account of an excursion to North Wales and Cheshire, 3-[6] September 1829, by Elizabeth Bower, [of Broxholme House, Doncaster], travelling with her husband John Seddon Bower (f. 1-19).
The couple left Crosby on 3 September and boarded the Prince Llewelyn steam packet at Liverpool (f. 1 verso), sailing along the North Wales coast (ff. 2-5) to Beaumaris (ff. 5-6 verso). They crossed the Menai Bridge (ff. 7-9) and proceeded to Bangor (ff. 9-10 verso), Conway (ff. 12-13 verso) and Chester (ff. 14 verso-18), returning to Liverpool and then Crosby on the [6] September (f. 19). Included are descriptions of Penrhyn Castle, Bangor (f. 11 recto-verso), and Eaton Hall, Chester (ff. 16-18).

Bower, Elizabeth, 1785-1858

In parenthesis: BBC introduction

  • NLW MS 24194E.
  • File
  • [1946]

A manuscript draft, [1946], of David Jones's introduction to the BBC radio production of his war poem 'In Parenthesis', first transmitted on the Third Programme, 19 November 1946. The draft contains deletions and revisions in ink and pencil in the hand of the author.
This draft is much closer to the script in its final typescript form (see NLW, David Jones (Artist and Writer) Papers LP5/3, ff. vii-x) than are the other extant drafts (ibid, LP5/4, ff. 1-9). The only significant changes that remained to be incorporated are: a new sentence to replace the line at the beginning of f. 2, the loss of a reference to Brittany (f. 2), the truncation of a section on Maximus the Great (f. 2) and a much expanded ending, with a list of four quotes to be taken directly from the book's introduction substituted with the full quotations (f. 3). The introduction was pre-recorded by Jones; the remainder of the programme was performed live by the cast on 19 November, with a live repeat the following evening.

Jones, David, 1895-1974

In parenthesis: proof copy

  • NLW MS 24193B.
  • File
  • 1937

An uncorrected, bound, proof copy, [?April 1937] of David Jones, In Parenthesis: Seinnyessit e gledyf ym penn mameu (London: Faber & Faber Ltd, 1937).
The proof is effectively identical to the three sets used to produce the corrected proofs now NLW, David Jones (Artist and Writer) Papers LP4/4-6, dated 7-17 April 1937; parts of the subsequent revise (ibid, LP4/8-9) were passed for press. In Parenthesis was published in June 1937, corresponding to the date inscribed on the front cover.

Jones, David, 1895-1974

Ruth Bidgood letters to the Rev. James Coutts

  • NLW MS 24192i-iiD.
  • File
  • 1975-2014

Some ninety-nine letters and postcards, 1975-2013, from the poet and local historian Ruth Bidgood, Abergwesyn and later Beulah, Powys, addressed to the Rev. James Coutts, and frequently also to his wife Stevie, discussing her poetry, publications and public readings, her daily life and her family, containing frequent references to friends including Anne Cluysenaar, Angela Morton and A. M. (Donald) Allchin (ff. 1-188, 191-214).
Also included are typescript copies of eighteen of Bidgood's poems and sequences of poems, published and unpublished, [c. 1979]-2014, notably 'Hymn to Sant Ffraed' (ff. 215-225), most given by her to Coutts and a few re-typed by him, and cuttings and photocopies of a further fifteen poems from periodicals, 1983-2002 (ff. 25, 37-38, 52-53, 70, 116, 120, 215-265); typescript drafts, cuttings and photocopies of articles, interviews and reviews, [1978]-2006 (ff. 266-299), including two typescript articles by Donald Allchin (ff. 279-293); and a letter from Bidgood's friend Mary [MacGregor], of Myddfai, to James Coutts, 2 June 2009 (ff. 189-190). Many of the letters were written on the backs of sixty-three of Bidgood's own photographs, so as to resemble postcards; besides these a further twenty-nine of her photographs are also included amongst the letters.

Bidgood, Ruth

Tour of New York State and the Niagara Peninsula

  • NLW MS 24191B.
  • File
  • 1816

Manuscript journal of a tour of New York State and the Niagara Peninsula, Upper Canada (now Ontario), 15 August-1 September 1816, written by a Welsh Old Etonian, possibly Pierce Wynne Yorke.
The writer and his companion (identified only as Richard, see ff. 18 and 45) leave New York City on 15 August 1816 (f. 1) and travel by steamer and wagon up the Hudson River valley (ff. 1-10 verso) to Albany, staying there 17-20 August (ff. 10 verso-16); they then continue overland, visiting Utica, 21-[23] August (ff. 21-24 verso), the Finger Lakes (ff. 28 verso-33 verso), and Buffalo, 28-29 August (ff. 35 verso, 38 verso). After crossing the Niagara River into Upper Canada they visit Niagara Falls, 29 August-1 September (ff. 40 verso-45), and continue to Newark [Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario] on 1 September (f. 45 verso). The volume contains frequent references to their accommodation, travel arrangements and the often unseasonable weather (1816 being the so called 'Year without a Summer'), as well as descriptions of the scenery and flora, agricultural practices, Indigenous Americans, American manners and politics and the effects of the War of 1812. Also included, in pencil, are a verse on Col. Cecil Bisshopp (inside front cover), brief accounts of bills paid (f. i) and mostly illegible notes apparently relating to the contents of the journal (inside back cover). The author is not named but evidently has close connections with North Wales (see ff. 4 recto-verso, 5 verso, 27 verso, 28 verso-29 verso, 45), is an Old Etonian and a schoolfriend of Bisshopp, whose grave he visits at Lundy's Lane, Niagara (see f. 44); Pierce (or Peirce) Wynne Yorke of Dyffryn Aled appears to be the most plausible candidate.

Yorke, Pierce Wynne, 1784-1837

Description of Milford Haven

  • NLW MS 24190E.
  • File
  • 1853

A transcript, 1853, in the hand of Matilda Pasley, of a version of George Owen of Henllys's 'Description of Milford Haven', dated 17 December 1595 (ff. 2-26), together with a note by the transcriber (f. 1).
The manuscript mostly agrees with the texts of Cardiff 2.46 and BL Add. 22623, as published in George Owen, The Description of Penbrokshire, ed. by Henry Owen, Cymmrodorion Record Series, 4 vols (London, 1892-1936), pp. 529-562; where Henry Owen lists minor variations between those two manuscripts the present transcript does not consistently correspond with one or the other. The wording of the title page (f. 2) is significantly different (see Henry Owen (ed.), p. 533), while the section beginning 'For the more ease…' which concludes the other manuscripts is here interpolated on ff. 17-18. A memorandum concerning Owen's methodology for drawing his map of Milford Haven does not appear to be recorded elsewhere (f. 22). The present manuscript is itself copied from an intermediate transcript made at Worsley [New] Hall, Lancashire, on 22 October 1852, by Mary L[ouisa Egerton, Viscountess] Brackley, from the original 1595 manuscript belonging to her father-in-law [Francis Egerton, 1st] Earl of Ellesmere (probably the manuscript now Huntington Library MS EL 1145 (34/B/32)) (see f. 1). In 1853 Matilda Pasley's husband, Sir Thomas Pasley, Bart, was in command of Pembroke Dockyard and the Pasleys became acquainted with Lady Brackley during visits to Stackpole Court, the seat of her father, the 1st Earl Cawdor (see Lawrence Phillips, 'Captain Sir Thomas Sabine Pasley, Bt., R.N., and Pembroke Dockyard, 1849-1854', Mariner's Mirror, 71.2 (1985), 159-165 (pp. 160-161)).

Owen, George, 1552-1613

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