| (Price) {With a sigh of relief.} | |
| (Price) I was telling your mother after dinner you ought to lie down a bit in the afternoons. | |
| (1, 0) 242 | That's all right, 'nhad! |
| (Gwen) Sit you down, 'nghariad-i. | |
| (Gwen) Where have you been, Gwilym? | |
| (1, 0) 260 | Well, I went for a stroll as far as the Institute, and then I thought I'd wait to hear whom they had selected as candidate. |
| (Price) That feller Pinkerton, I suppose. | |
| (Pugh) Well, I never thought I'd live to see a man like that Pinkerton being Member of Parliament for the valley ─ never! | |
| (1, 0) 296 | They say he's a very able man, Mr. Pugh. |
| (Price) It's men like him are the curse of South Wales to-day. | |
| (Pugh) Well, I thought it was understood, long enough ago, too, that Evan Davies would get it when George Llewelyn went. | |
| (1, 0) 303 | He'd have had it ten years ago, Mr. Pugh. |
| (1, 0) 304 | He might have had it five years ago. |
| (1, 0) 305 | But there's a change come over the valley. |
| (Price) Aay, Gwilym, a change, a sad change, and a bad one. | |
| (Gwen) And the books he was always buying ─ him only a collier, too! | |
| (1, 0) 365 | There's one thing about Lewis, whether you agree with him or not, you can't help feeling proud of him. |