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Robert Bryan (poet)

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Robert Bryan (1858 – 5 May 1920) was a Welsh poet, composer and folklorist.

Life

He was born at Llanarmon-yn-Iâl, Denbighshire, Wales, son of Edward and Elinor Bryan . He was a pupil and a pupil teacher at the Wrexham British School and then educated at the Normal College, Bangor, the University College of Wales, Aberystwyth, and at Oxford.[1][2] He was forced to discontinue his studies at Oxford in 1893 without attaining a degree because of ill health. He lived at Wrexham and Marchwiel until 1903 when he moved to Caernarfon, where his brothers, Edward and Joseph Davies Bryan had a house. His brothers ran a successful retail business in Egypt with large stores in Cairo and Alexandria, and branches in Port Said and Khartoum. Robert Bryan spent most of his winters there, returning to Caernarfon each summer.[2][3]

Between 1905 and 1909 he was a teacher at Rhostryfan.

He died in Cairo, Egypt, on 5 May 1920, and was buried there. He was unmarried.

Works

Poems by him were published in Oldlau Can (1901). Another volume Tua'r Wawr, was published posthumously in 1921.[2]

He wrote music arrangements at the request of David Thomas, of Bangor whilst he was teaching. They were written for Alun Mabon of Ceiriog.[4]

Bibliography

Poems

  • Odlau Cân (Llanuwchllyn, 1901)
  • Tua'r Wawr (1921)

Music (As editor):

  • Alawon y Celt - Celtic tunes (two volumes, 1905)

References

  1. ^ Oxford companion to the literature of Wales Meic Stephens, Oxford University Press, 1986. Page 59
  2. ^ a b c Humphreys, Edward Morgan; Robert Thomas Jenkins (2009). "BRYAN , ROBERT ( 1858 - 1920 )". Welsh biography On-Line. National Library of Wales. Retrieved 18 July 2011.
  3. ^ "Papers of the Davies Bryan family (Caernarfon and Cairo)". Archives Wales. Retrieved 18 July 2011.
  4. ^ Wyn Hughes, Elen (October 2002). "Robert Bryan's Melody Arrangements". Archives Wales. Retrieved 18 July 2011. Musical arrangements of the Welsh melodies, Mi roes fy mryd mewn parch , Dowch i'r mynydd , Mentra Gwen and Mae Menna'n y fynwent