Angeles & Internazionale ~ "Closed Water I" (Musik)

Angeles & Internazionale ~ "Closed Water I"  


Der Todesking -Youtube Channel




My quotations:


"...He said, 'Bet you can't catch me.' The man ran and they ran after him.  He jumped into a hole.  The boys could hear all sorts of noises coming from the hole, but they couldn't couldn't see the man. They ran to the man's house to tell his wife.  She said that the man had not been out of the house all day.  Aweek later, the man died." - A Collection of Folklore by Undergraduate Students of East Tennessee State University, Ed. by  Thomas G. Burton and Ambrose N. Manning, September, Johnson City, 1966.


"...Various people began to hear Beautiful Nell's voice, calling from along the banks of the Pasquotank (river).  While there, she (Nell Cropseys' Mother) had heard Nell distinctly calling 'Mama! Come and fetch me!' ...Mrs. Cropsey thought that she saw 'something white' floating on the surface of the river..."  The Dark Spirit, Dr. Bob Curran, Cassell & Co., London, 2001.   Folktale from North Carolina, U.S.


Via Cantre'r Gwaelod -Wikipedia Entry- Accessed 2-10-17


"...There are several versions of the myth. The earliest known form of the legend is usually said to appear in the Black Book of Carmarthen (Welsh: Llyfr Du Caerfyrddin'), in which the land is referred to as Maes Gwyddno (English: the Plain of Gwyddno). In this version, the land was lost to floods when a well-maiden named Mererid neglected her duties and allowed the well to overflow.[2]
Rachel Bromwich questions this identification, saying that "There is no certainty, however, that in twelfth century tradition Maes Gwyddneu did represent the submerged land in Cardigan Bay." She also links Gwyddno with the northern British kingdoms, not Wales.[3]
The popular version known today is thought to have been formed from the 17th century onwards. Cantre'r Gwaelod is described as a low-lying land fortified against the sea by a dyke, Sarn Badrig (Saint Patrick's causeway), with a series of sluice gates which were opened at low tide to drain the land.[2]
Cantre'r Gwaelod's capital was Caer Wyddno (English: the Fort of Gwyddno), seat of the ruler Gwyddno Garanhir. Two princes of the realm held charge over the dyke. One of these princes, called Seithenyn, is described in one version as a notorious drunkard and carouser, and it was through his negligence that the sea swept through the open floodgates, ruining the land.
The church bells of Cantre'r Gwaelod are said to ring out in times of danger..."


2. "Cantre'r Gwaelod – The Lost Land of Wales". Legacies - UK History Local to You. BBC. Retrieved 4 January 2012.


 3. Rachel Bromwich (1950). "Cantre'r Gwaelod and Ker-Is". In Cyril Fox, Bruce Dickins. The Early Cultures of North-West Europe. Cambridge University Press. p. 231.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

An Almuten Figuris Calculator

Finnish "Werewolf song" L.E.A.F - SUURIN