The Dylluan — The Oldest Creatures.
Much rain fell about the middle of
the month; in the intervals of the showers I occasionally
walked by the banks of the river which speedily became
much swollen; it was quite terrible both to the sight
and ear near the “Robber’s Leap;”
there were breakers above the higher stones at least
five feet high and a roar around almost sufficient
“to scare a hundred men.” The pool
of Lingo was strangely altered; it was no longer the
quiet pool which it was in summer, verifying the words
of the old Welsh poet that the deepest pool of the
river is always the stillest in the summer and of
the softest sound, but a howling turbid gulf, in which
branches of trees, dead animals and rubbish were whirling
about in the wildest confusion. The nights were
generally less rainy than the days, and sometimes
by the pallid glimmer of the moon I would take a stroll
along some favourite path or road. One night
as I was wandering slowly along the path leading through
the groves of Pen y Coed I was startled by an unearthly
cry — it was the shout of the dylluan or owl,
as it flitted over the tops of the trees on its nocturnal
business.
Oh, that cry of the dylluan! what
a strange wild cry it is; how unlike any other sound
in nature! a cry which no combination of letters can
give the slightest idea of. What resemblance
does Shakespear’s to-whit-to-whoo bear to the
cry of the owl? none whatever; those who hear it for
the first time never know what it is, however accustomed
to talk of the cry of the owl and to-whit-to-whoo.
A man might be wandering through a wood with Shakespear’s
owl-chorus in his mouth, but were he then to hear
for the first time the real shout of the owl he would
assuredly stop short and wonder whence that unearthly
cry could proceed.
Yet no doubt that strange cry is a
fitting cry for the owl, the strangest in its habits
and look of all birds, the bird of whom by all nations
the strangest tales are told. Oh, what strange
tales are told of the owl, especially in connection
with its long-lifedness; but of all the strange wild
tales connected with the age of the owl, strangest
of all is the old Welsh tale. When I heard the
owl’s cry in the groves of Pen y Coed that tale
rushed into my mind. I had heard it from the
singular groom who had taught me to gabble Welsh in
my boyhood, and had subsequently read it in an old
tattered Welsh story-book, which by chance fell into
my hands. The reader will perhaps be obliged
by my relating it.
“The eagle of the alder grove,
after being long married and having had many children
by his mate, lost her by death, and became a widower.
After some time he took it into his head to marry the
owl of the Cowlyd Coomb; but fearing he should have
issue by her, and by that means sully his lineage,
he went first of all to the oldest creatures in the
world in order to obtain information about her age.
First he went to the stag of Ferny-side Brae, whom
he found sitting by the old stump of an oak, and inquired
the age of the owl. The stag said: ’I
have seen this oak an acorn which is now lying on
the ground without either leaves or bark: nothing
in the world wore it up but my rubbing myself against
it once a day when I got up, so I have seen a vast
number of years, but I assure you that I have never
seen the owl older or younger than she is to-day.
However, there is one older than myself, and that is
the salmon-trout of Glyn Llifon.’ To him
went the eagle and asked him the age of the owl and
got for answer: ’I have a year over my head
for every gem on my skin and for every egg in my roe,
yet have I always seen the owl look the same; but
there is one older than myself, and that is the ousel
of Cilgwry.’ Away went the eagle to Cilgwry,
and found the ousel standing upon a little rock, and
asked him the age of the owl. Quoth the ousel:
’You see that the rock below me is not larger
than a man can carry in one of his hands: I have
seen it so large that it would have taken a hundred
oxen to drag it, and it has never been worn save by
my drying my beak upon it once every night, and by
my striking the tip of my wing against it in rising
in the morning, yet never have I known the owl older
or younger than she is to-day. However, there
is one older than I, and that is the toad of Cors
Fochnod; and unless he knows her age no one knows it.’
To him went the eagle and asked the age of the owl,
and the toad replied: ’I have never eaten
anything save what I have sucked from the earth, and
have never eaten half my fill in all the days of my
life; but do you see those two great hills beside
the cross? I have seen the place where they
stand level ground, and nothing produced those heaps
save what I discharged from my body, who have ever
eaten so very little — yet never have I known
the owl anything else but an old hag who cried Too-hoo-hoo,
and scared children with her voice even as she does
at present.’ So the eagle of Gwernabwy;
the stag of Ferny-side Brae; the salmon trout of Glyn
Llifon; the ousel of Cilgwry; the toad of Cors
Fochnod, and the owl of Coomb Cowlyd are the oldest
creatures in the world; the oldest of them all being
the owl.”