Prawfddarllenwyd y dudalen hon
Grammar and Style, xxxv
Caer Baddon on p. 112, is very strilcing, and is the natural outcome of the features already mentioned.
I have sought to enumerate the leading characteristics of this great worlc. The boolc is not without its blemishes ; in this or that par- ticular, more especially perhaps in the structure of the sentence, we find superior craftsmen like Elis Wyn and others, but in his felicity of word, phrase and quotation he seems to ranlc with the best, while in his wonderful similes and his skill in telling his story well he seems to me the consummate artist whom generations of his fellow-countrymen have proclaimed to be without a peer among Welsh writers.