Article 3012N Will of nature in the vast glittering salt marsh

Will of nature in the vast glittering salt marsh

by
Paul Evans
from Environment | The Guardian on (#3012N)

Glastraeth, Gwynedd A vastness of light and water, the sea's immensity and the intimacy of the creeks, overwhelms the self

Among the glittering spillways, a vastness of light and water, the self is overwhelmed by the immensity of mountains and sea, and the intimacy of samphire lawns, sea aster flowers and creeks. We wander into the salt marsh with sheep, a drift of Canada geese, an egret sharpening its idea of the strike, a group of Romany foragers, a raven and a story.

When the monastery at Bangor-is-y-Coed was sacked in the early seventh century, on account of its allegiance to the Pelagian heresy, the surviving monks fled to what is now the magically circular walled church of Llanfihangel-y-Traethau on a little hill above the Dwyryd and Glaslyn estuary.

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