INTRODUCTION.
I.—THE AUTHOR’S LIFE.
II.—THE TEXT.
III.—A BRIEF SUMMARY.
I. VISION OF THE WORLD.
II. THE VISION OF DEATH.
III. THE VISION OF HELL.
TO THE READER.
I.—VISION OF THE WORLD.
II.—THE VISION OF DEATH IN HIS NETHERMOST COURT.
III.—THE VISION OF HELL.
WITH HEAVY HEART.
I.—THE AUTHOR’S LIFE.
Ellis
Wynne was born in 1671 at Glasynys, near Harlech; his father, Edward
Wynne, came of the family of Glyn Cywarch (mentioned in the second
Vision), his mother, whose name is not known, was heiress of
Glasynys. It will be seen from the accompanying table that he
was descended from some of the best families in his native county,
and through
Osborn Wyddel,
from the Desmonds of Ireland. His birth-place, which still
stands, and is shown in the frontispiece hereto, is situate about a
mile and a half from the town of Harlech, in the beautiful Vale of
Ardudwy. The natural scenery amidst which he was brought up,
cannot have failed to leave a deep impression upon his mind; and in
the Visions we come across unmistakeable descriptions of scenes and
places around his home. Mountain and sea furnished him with
many a graphic picture; the precipitous heights and dark ravines of
Hell, its caverns and its cliffs, are all evidently drawn from
nature. The neighbourhood is also rich in romantic lore and
historic associations; Harlech Castle, some twenty-five years before
his birth, had been the scene of many a fray between Roundheads and
Cavaliers, and of the last stand made by the Welsh for King Charles.
These events were fresh in the memory of his elders, whom he had, no
doubt, often heard speaking of those stirring times; members of his
own family had, perhaps, fought in the ranks of the rival parties;
his father’s grand-uncle, Col. John Jones, was one of those “who
erstwhile drank of royal blood.”It
is not known where he received his early education, and it has been
generally stated by his biographers that he was not known to have
entered either of the Universities; but, as the following notice
proves, he at least matriculated at Oxford:—Wynne,
Ellis, s. Edw. of Lasypeys, co. Merioneth, pleb. Jesus Coll. matric.
1st March 1691–2, aged 21; rector of Llandanwg, 1705, & of
Llanfair-juxta-Harlech (both) co. Merioneth, 1711. (Vide
Foster’s
Index Eccles.)Probably
his stay at the University was brief, and that he left without taking
his degree, for I have been unable to find anything further recorded
of his academic career.
[0a]
The Rev. Edmund Prys, Vicar of Clynnog-Fawr, in a prefatory
englyn
to Ellis Wynne’s translation of the “Holy
Living”
says that “in order to enrich his own, he had ventured upon the
study of three other tongues.” This fact, together with much
that appears in the Visions, justifies the conclusion that his
scholarly attainments were of no mean order. But how and where
he spent the first thirty years of his life, with the possible
exception of a period at Oxford, is quite unknown, the most probable
surmise being that they were spent in the enjoyment of a simple rural
life, and in the pursuit of his studies, of whatever nature they may
have been.According
to Rowlands’s
Cambrian Bibliography
his first venture into the fields of literature was a small volume
entitled,
Help i ddarllen yr Yscrythur Gyssegr-Lân
(“Aids to reading Holy Writ”), being a translation of the
Whole Duty of Man
“by E. W., a clergyman of the Church of England,” published at
Shrewsbury in 1700. But as Ellis Wynne was not ordained until
1704, this work must be ascribed to some other author who, both as to
name and calling, answered to the description on the title-page
quoted above. But in 1701 an accredited work of his appeared,
namely, a translation into Welsh of Jeremy Taylor’s
Rules and Exercises of Holy Living,
a 12mo. volume published in London. It was dedicated to the
Rev. Humphrey Humphreys, D.D., Bishop of Bangor, who was a native of
the same district of Merionethshire as Ellis Wynne, and, as is shown
in the genealogical table hereto, was connected by marriage with his
family.In
1702
[0b]
he was married to Lowri Llwyd—anglicè,
Laura Lloyd—of Hafod-lwyfog, Beddgelert, and had issue by her, two
daughters and three sons; one of the daughters, Catherine, died
young, and the second son, Ellis, predeceased his father by two
years.
[0c]
His eldest son, Gwilym, became rector of Llanaber, near Barmouth, and
inherited his ancestral home; his youngest son, Edward, also entered
the Church and became rector of Dolbenmaen and Penmorfa,
Carnarvonshire. Edward Wynne’s son was the rector of
Llanferres, Denbighshire, and his son again was the Rev. John Wynne,
of Llandrillo in Edeyrnion, who died only a few years ago.The
following year (1703), he published the present work—his
magnum opus—which
has secured him a place among the greatest names in Welsh
Literature. It will be noticed that on the title-page to the
first edition the words “Y
Rhann Gyntaf”
(“The First Part”) appear; the explanation given of this is that
Ellis Wynne did actually write a second part, entitled,
The Vision of Heaven,
but that on hearing that he was charged with plagiarism in respect of
his other Visions, he threw the manuscript into the fire, and so
destroyed what, judging from the title, might have proved a greater
success than the first part, as affording scope for lighter and more
pleasing flights of the imagination.It
is said by his biographers that he was induced to abandon the pursuit
of the law, to which he was educated, and to take holy orders, by
Bishop Humphreys, who had recognised in his translation of the
Holy Living
marked ability and piety, and that he was ordained deacon and priest
the same day by the Bishop, at Bangor, in 1701, and presented on the
following day to the living of Llanfair-juxta-Harlech and
subsequently to Llandanwg.All
these statements appear to be incorrect. To deal with them
categorically: I find no record at the Diocesan Registry of his
having been ordained at Bangor at all; the following entry in the
parish register of Llanfair shows that he was not in holy orders in
July, 1704: “Gulielmus
filius Elizaei Wynne generosi de Lâs ynys et uxoris suis baptizatus
fuit quindecimo die Julii,
1704.—W.
Wynne Rr.,
O. Edwards,
Rector.”
His first living was Llandanwg, and not Llanfair, to which he was
collated on January 1st, 1705. Moreover, the above-named Owen
Edwards was the rector of Llanfair until his death which took place
in 1711.
[0d]
From that date on to 1734, the entries in the register at Llanfair
church are all in Ellis Wynne’s handwriting; these facts prove
conclusively that it was in 1711 he became rector of the latter
parish.In
1710 he edited a new and revised edition of the Book of Common
Prayer, at the request of his patron, the Bishop of Hereford (Dr.
Humphreys) and the four Welsh bishops,—a clear proof of the
confidence reposed in him by the dignitaries of his church as a man
of learning and undoubted piety. He himself published nothing
more, but
A Short Commentary on the Catechism
and a few hymns and carols were written by him and published
posthumously by his son, Edward, being included in a volume of his
own, entitled
Prif Addysc y Cristion,
issued in 1755.The
latter part of his life is as completely obscure as the earlier; he
lapsed again into the silence from which he had only just emerged
with such signal success, and confined his efforts as a Christian
worker within the narrow limits of his own native parts, exercising,
doubtlessly, an influence for good upon his immediate neighbourhood
through force of character and noble personality, as upon his
fellow-countrymen at large by means of his published works. His
wife died in 1720, and his son, Ellis, in 1732; two years later he
himself died and was buried under the communion table in Llanfair
church, on the 17th day of July, 1734.
[0e]
There is no marble or “perennial brass” to mark the last
resting-place of the Bard, nor was there, until recent years, any
memorial of him in either of his parish churches, when the late Rev.
John Wynne set up a fine stained-glass window at Llanfair church in
memory of his illustrious ancestor.Ellis
Wynne appeared at a time when his country had sore need of him, when
the appointed teachers of the nation were steeped in apathy and
corruption, when ignorance and immorality overspread the land—the
darkest hour before the dawn. He was one of the early
precursors of the Methodist revival in Wales, a voice crying in the
wilderness, calling upon his countrymen to repent. He neither
feared nor favored any man or class, but delivered his message in
unfaltering tone, and performed his alloted task honestly and
faithfully. How deeply our country is indebted to him who did
her such eminent service in the days of adversity and gloom will
never be known. And now, in the time of prosperity, Wales still
remembers her benefactor, and will always keep honored the name of
Ellis Wynne, the Sleeping Bard.