The Washington Post, August 7th, 1988
Away in the top left corner of Wales, in the country the Welsh call Eifionydd, the little river Dwyfor runs helter-skelter from the mountains to the sea. Its whole course is no more than 12 miles long. It rises in the lee of the mountain called Moel Hebog, the Bare Summit of the Hawk, it falls out of the high valley called Cwn Pennant into the pastoral country below, and it debouches at a shaly estuary into Cardigan Bay. No cities lie along its course. No great monuments ennoble it. Its width is never more than 50 feet, I would guess, and in summer you can sometimes walk across even its broade...
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