Above the road is the old house of Brynford, at present the pro|perty of Richard Garnons, esquire. It had been that of the Ed|wards's. Their descent is given at p. 239. I remember it in|habited by Thomas Edwards, esquire, a most respectable old gen|tleman, blind with age, of great charity and benevolence; and who, most grateful to Providence, increased his charities in pro|portion to the increase of his abilities, in obedience to the direc|tion of Heaven, to observe its frequent injunctions to the per|formance of that virtue.
OPPOSITE to the house, on the other side of the road, was for|merly a profitable lead-mine, called Pen y Bryn, belonging to lord Kilmorey. It was remarkable for the quantity of refracting spar, spatum Islandicum, of great purity and trasparency; and often ele|gantly infected with marcasite finely disposed in lines.
THIS road ends on the mountain on the borders of Skyviog parish, the boundary of Holywell parish on this side.
I RETURN to the turnpike road, and continuing my way, pass on the right by Pistill, a neat small house, the property of Peter Parry, esquire, of Twissog, in the county of Denbigh.
IN order to proceed towards the rich mineral country I am entering on, I shall continue the enumeration of veins from C••etiau'r Odyn (see p. 241.)
THE next to that, eastward, is Caleb Bell, a north and south vein, which is traced from the east side of Pen-y-Bal, descends from the mountain, towards the late John Denman's, but as yet has not been traced to the road. This has in old times been very rich in several places.
THE old vein, or Pant Ithel, is another rich vein, which first