Pilgrims to Llangollen
plillllilllllillllllllllllililllllillllllillliillliiliiillliilllllllilllilllllilllillim 1 The little lad shown in our illustration to-day is evidently a con- gj H firmed " hiker." Notice the purposeful air with which he is striding jj fl forth in the photograph taken from the rear! || He is off to Llangollen! That historic village is but a name to most £| I young New Zealanders, but it is a name associated with one of the best- g known romances of the Welsh countryside. Probably you have never g, II heard of the Ladies of the Vale, but their story was one that was known | Jj air over Great Britain nearly two hundred years ago, and it is one that g p! is well worth re-telling in this age, when girls have won the freedom II and independence foreshadowed in the daring eccentricities of those g IFjj historic ladies.' of long ago. g= liiliiliiHiSlfi
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19360613.2.219.40.14
Bibliographic details
New Zealand Herald, Volume LXXIII, Issue 22444, 13 June 1936, Page 8 (Supplement)
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146Pilgrims to Llangollen New Zealand Herald, Volume LXXIII, Issue 22444, 13 June 1936, Page 8 (Supplement)
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