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When he said he'd fallen in love with her and wanted
to marry her, she scolded him for not telling her to stop before, and
making his poor horse work so hard. Then she said she'd be happy to
marry
him, because it would save her from marrying Gwawl, who she despised and
who had tricked her
into an engagement. Rhiannon and Pwyll conspired together to deceive
Gwawl and thus Pwyll won her as his bride.
The newborn child had been in fact found by Teyrnon, the lord of Gwent-Is-Coed. He was a horse lord
whose beautiful mare gave him a foal every May Eve, but each year. the foal would disappear. Before his mare had her next foal he took her into his house and sat vigil with her. After her foal was born he saw a monstrous claw trying to take the newborn foal through the window, so he slashed at the monster with his sword, before rushing outside. He found the monster gone, and a human baby lying by the door. He and his wife cared for the boy as their own, naming him Gwri Wallt Euryn (Gwri of the Golden Hair). The child grew rapidly, and had a great affinity for horses. As the boy grew, Teyrnon who once served Pwyll as a courtier, recognised his resemblance to his father. He was an honourable man, and so he returned the boy to the Dyfed royal house.
Rhiannon is also connected to three mystical birds. The Birds of Rhiannon (Adar Rhiannon) appear in the Second Branch, in the Triads of Britain, and in Culhwch ac Olwen. In the latter, the giant Ysbaddaden demands them as part of the bride price of his daughter. They are described as "they that wake the dead and lull the living to sleep."
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