A TOUR ROUND NORTH WALES. 



Dee peeping in and adding other beau- 

 ties to the fcene. I parted Trevor Hall, 

 the family feat of 'the Lloyds, finely 

 feated on an eminence above the road. 



Having gone rather more than four 

 miles, I turned down a road on the right, 

 and croffed the bridge over the Dee, 

 called Pont y Cyflyllte, where I faw 

 the famous Aqueduct, forming a few 

 hundred yards below it, for conveying 

 the water of the Ellefmere canal, over 

 the river Dee and the vale of Llangol- 

 len. At the time I was here there were 

 eleven handfome fquare flone columns 

 creeled, the two of which that flood in 

 the bed of the river, were each about a 

 hundred and twenty feet high. From 

 a tablet on one of them I copied the 

 following infcription, which will fuffi- 

 ciently explain the nature of the under- 

 taking. 



The 



