Capel Sion

A young man whose heart is filled with the glory of Sion conceals the mouth of the well and calls the servant he has got with child. The son of Enoch, the Teller of Things, dies in Morfa, and Enoch takes his body by force to have it buried in Capel Sion. The doltish virgin, Silah Penlon, denounces Amos, chief of the praying men, and Pedr comes down from the moor to warn the people that the Big One will loosen the sea of Morfa because wickedness is in the grounds of Capel Sion.

Timeless in its milieu, yet striking in its modernity, Caradoc Evans's second short-story collection pits the cunning and greed of Welsh farmers and ministers in the Edwardian era against the stony pastures and barren moors of Cardiganshire and Carmarthenshire.

About the Author

Caradoc Evans was born in Rhydlewis, Ceredigion in 1878, but left Wales at the age of fourteen to work first as a draper's apprentice in London, and later as a journalist. His first book, published in 1915, was My People, castigated in Wales for its misrepresentation of Welsh idiom and its harsh portrayal of Welsh life and religion, yet now acclaimed for its Biblical cadence, its timeless air, and its electrifying effect on Welsh writing in English. He married the Romantic novelist Oliver Sandys, and returned to Wales in 1940, where he died in 1945.

About Cockatrice Books

Cockatrice Books (http://www.cockatrice-books.com) brings you new and classic translations of Welsh literature, and original Welsh fiction. No money is spent on advertising. Reviews, shares and recommendations are greatly appreciated.

Cockatrice Classics are neither facsimiles nor computer-generated reprints, and are free from the blotched or faded print, and the error-strewn, unreadable text to be found in more mercenary, including more expensive, editions. All Cockatrice's books are published by CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform using print-on-demand technology. Createspace binding is neat, and the pages are clean, though the density of the print may be low. All books are covered by CreateSpace's warranty, and Cockatrice is grateful to readers who report defective manufacture to their supplier.

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Capel Sion

A young man whose heart is filled with the glory of Sion conceals the mouth of the well and calls the servant he has got with child. The son of Enoch, the Teller of Things, dies in Morfa, and Enoch takes his body by force to have it buried in Capel Sion. The doltish virgin, Silah Penlon, denounces Amos, chief of the praying men, and Pedr comes down from the moor to warn the people that the Big One will loosen the sea of Morfa because wickedness is in the grounds of Capel Sion.

Timeless in its milieu, yet striking in its modernity, Caradoc Evans's second short-story collection pits the cunning and greed of Welsh farmers and ministers in the Edwardian era against the stony pastures and barren moors of Cardiganshire and Carmarthenshire.

About the Author

Caradoc Evans was born in Rhydlewis, Ceredigion in 1878, but left Wales at the age of fourteen to work first as a draper's apprentice in London, and later as a journalist. His first book, published in 1915, was My People, castigated in Wales for its misrepresentation of Welsh idiom and its harsh portrayal of Welsh life and religion, yet now acclaimed for its Biblical cadence, its timeless air, and its electrifying effect on Welsh writing in English. He married the Romantic novelist Oliver Sandys, and returned to Wales in 1940, where he died in 1945.

About Cockatrice Books

Cockatrice Books (http://www.cockatrice-books.com) brings you new and classic translations of Welsh literature, and original Welsh fiction. No money is spent on advertising. Reviews, shares and recommendations are greatly appreciated.

Cockatrice Classics are neither facsimiles nor computer-generated reprints, and are free from the blotched or faded print, and the error-strewn, unreadable text to be found in more mercenary, including more expensive, editions. All Cockatrice's books are published by CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform using print-on-demand technology. Createspace binding is neat, and the pages are clean, though the density of the print may be low. All books are covered by CreateSpace's warranty, and Cockatrice is grateful to readers who report defective manufacture to their supplier.

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Capel Sion

Capel Sion

Capel Sion

Capel Sion

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Overview

A young man whose heart is filled with the glory of Sion conceals the mouth of the well and calls the servant he has got with child. The son of Enoch, the Teller of Things, dies in Morfa, and Enoch takes his body by force to have it buried in Capel Sion. The doltish virgin, Silah Penlon, denounces Amos, chief of the praying men, and Pedr comes down from the moor to warn the people that the Big One will loosen the sea of Morfa because wickedness is in the grounds of Capel Sion.

Timeless in its milieu, yet striking in its modernity, Caradoc Evans's second short-story collection pits the cunning and greed of Welsh farmers and ministers in the Edwardian era against the stony pastures and barren moors of Cardiganshire and Carmarthenshire.

About the Author

Caradoc Evans was born in Rhydlewis, Ceredigion in 1878, but left Wales at the age of fourteen to work first as a draper's apprentice in London, and later as a journalist. His first book, published in 1915, was My People, castigated in Wales for its misrepresentation of Welsh idiom and its harsh portrayal of Welsh life and religion, yet now acclaimed for its Biblical cadence, its timeless air, and its electrifying effect on Welsh writing in English. He married the Romantic novelist Oliver Sandys, and returned to Wales in 1940, where he died in 1945.

About Cockatrice Books

Cockatrice Books (http://www.cockatrice-books.com) brings you new and classic translations of Welsh literature, and original Welsh fiction. No money is spent on advertising. Reviews, shares and recommendations are greatly appreciated.

Cockatrice Classics are neither facsimiles nor computer-generated reprints, and are free from the blotched or faded print, and the error-strewn, unreadable text to be found in more mercenary, including more expensive, editions. All Cockatrice's books are published by CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform using print-on-demand technology. Createspace binding is neat, and the pages are clean, though the density of the print may be low. All books are covered by CreateSpace's warranty, and Cockatrice is grateful to readers who report defective manufacture to their supplier.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781854113085
Publisher: Seren
Publication date: 05/01/2002
Series: Seren Classics
Pages: 112
Product dimensions: 5.00(w) x 8.00(h) x 0.40(d)
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