TO CWM BYCHAN. 1 9 



•OTer the mofl ftony paths that I had yet feen 

 in the country, and I was ahnofl fahiting from want 

 ef refrefhment : I was therefore under the necef- 

 fity of bemg fatisfied with his account.' In almoft 

 any other cafe I fhould iiave croffed the vale to 

 examine it, for I am convinced, from its appearance 

 at fo great a diftance, that it mufr have been a 

 catara6l of very confiderable height and beauty. 



Betwixt the cromlech and the town of Harlech, 

 I paiTed another druidical circle, fomewhat fmaiier 

 than the one I have before mentioned, but fur- 

 rounded with a fmiilar diflant circle. 



As it happened to be about the ebb of the tide 

 when we returned, the guide pointed out to me 

 part of a long ftone-wall, which runs out into the 

 fea from Mochras, a point of land a few miles fouth 

 of Harlech, in a wefl-fouth-v/efl diredion for near 

 twenty miles. This is called 



Sarn Badrwyg, 



The Shlpivrecking Qaufeway, It is a very v/onderfui 

 'work, being throughout about twenty-four feet thick. 

 Sarn y Bwch runs from a point north-v/efl of Har- 

 lech, and is fuppofed to meet the end of this. The 

 fpace betwixt thefe formed, fome centuries ago, 

 a habitable huQdred belonging to Menonethfhire, 

 .called 



c % Cantref 



