[168i] Davies the carpenter was undoubtedly the man; he was noted for his stature. Dim-yn-clywed—deaf.

[168j] Dr. Knapp here says “descriptions omitted.” Up to this point they are complete, but from here onward only a selection has been transcribed by him.

[169a] The inn is now a private residence.

[169b] Aber-Gwaen.

[169c] Mathry.

[169d] Aber-Teifi, i.e., Cardigan.

[169e] Borrow alludes to his traverse of this region in a passage in Wild Wales (chap. 93), where he says that “long subsequently” (to 1854) he found that these parts of Breconshire and Carmarthenshire contain some of the wildest solitudes and most romantic scenery in Wales. The “long subsequently,” however, was really not quite three years!