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These tales were told by storytellers long ago, from people all
over the world who emigrated to Wales. In this book you'll meet the
rowdy mermaids of Cardigan Bay, the hidden lands below the sea, an
ancient tree with a door into the otherworld, an old woman who
makes love potions and mischief, the wise old toad who lives in a
bog and knows everything, a clever girl who transforms into a swan,
a green man who lives in no one's land, the enchantress who
swallows a poet, a herd of fairy cattle who live beneath a lake, a
boy who wears a frock to stop a castle being built, and an elephant
who may or may not have died in Tregaron. These stories only come
alive for a moment when a storiwr tells them. They are about
transformation in ourselves and our world, our friendships and
hopes, and scary sounds at night. Just ask those Welsh mountains.
They have lived longer than we have. They have listened to birdsong
and the sound of rivers and sea. They have heard these tales
before.
This book, a selection of folk tales, true tales, tall tales,
myths, gossip, legends and memories, celebrates and honours unique
Welsh stories. Some are well known, others from forgotten
manuscripts or out-of-print volumes, and some are contemporary oral
tales. They reflect the diverse tradition of storytelling, and the
many meanings of 'chwedlau'. If someone says, 'Chwedl Cymraeg?'
they are asking, 'Do you speak Welsh?' and 'Do you tell a tale in
Welsh?' Here is the root of storytelling, or 'chwedleua', in Wales.
It is part of conversation. This book, one to linger over and to
treasure, keeps these ancient tales alive by retelling them for a
new audience.
The perfect introduction to letters and numbers for young children.
Ages 2+.
Following recent high profile cases of surgical error in the Uk and
USA, patient safety has become a key issue in healthcare, now
placed at the heart of junior doctor's training. Errors made by
doctors are very similar to those made in other high risk
organizations, such as aviation, nuclear and petrochemical
industries. Practical Patient Safety aims to demonstrate how core
principles of safety from these industries can be applied in
surgical and medical practice, in particular through training for
health care professionals and healthcare managers.
While theoretical aspects of risk management form the backdrop, the
book focuses on key techniques and principles of patient safety in
a practical way, giving the reader practical advice on how to avoid
personal errors, and more importantly, how to start patient safety
training within his or her department or hospital.
The Grimms called them The Quiet Folk, in Maori they are
Patupaiarehe, in Wales Y Tylwyth Teg: hidden people who live
unseen, speak their own languages and move around like migrants,
shrouded from our eyes - like those who lived in the utopian world
of Plant Rhys Ddwfn off the west Welsh coast, where this book
begins. In mythology, lost lands are coral castles beneath the sea,
ancient forests where spirits live, and mountain swamps where
trolls lurk. Strip away the mythology, and they become valleys and
villages flooded to provide drinking water to neighbouring
kingdoms, campsites where travellers are told they can't travel,
and reservations where the rights of first nations people are
ignored. The folk tales in this book tell of these lost lands and
hidden people, remembered through migrations, dreams and memories.
A lone man wanders from swamp to swamp searching for himself, a
wolf-girl visits Wales and eats the sheep, a Welsh criminal marries
an 'Indian Princess', Lakota men re-enact the Wounded Knee Massacre
in Cardiff and, all the while, mountain women practise Appalachian
hoodoo, native healing and Welsh witchcraft. These stories are a
mixture of true tales, tall tales and folk tales, that tell of the
lives of migrants who left Wales and settled in America, of the
native and enslaved people who had long been living there, and
those curious travellers who returned to find their roots in the
old country. They were explorers, miners, dreamers, hobos,
tourists, farmers, radicals, showmen, sailors, soldiers, witches,
warriors, poets, preachers, prospectors, political dissidents,
social reformers, and wayfaring strangers. The Cherokee called
them: 'the Moon-Eyed People'.
Ceredigion is a land shaped by mythology, where mermaids and magic
mix with humans and where ordinary people achieve extraordinary
things. This is a captivating collection of traditional and modern
stories, including the submerged city of Cantre'r Gwaelod, or the
'Welsh Atlantis', how the Devil came to build a bridge over the
Rheidol, the elephant that died in Tregaron, and how the Holy Grail
came to Nanteos. All the while the tylwyth teg (the Welsh fairies)
and changelings run riot through the countryside. Storyteller and
illustrator Peter Stevenson takes us on a tour of a county steeped
in legend, encountering ghosts, witches and heroes at every turn.
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