Thmyl-fyd-myt-asdar-261-llandrwyd
An old poet from Caernarfon, when shown the text, laughed darkly. “That’s no code,” he said. “It’s a spell broken. ‘Thmyl’ is a mishearing of ‘thymial’ — thimble. ‘Fyd myt’ — ‘my foot’ in a dialect dead four centuries. ‘Asdar’ — as in ‘as darllen’ — ‘for reading aloud’. And 261 steps from the old Llandrwyd well to the yew tree.”
thmyl — no dictionary matched it. fyd — Welsh for “would be”. myt — perhaps a mutation of “myd” (my), or a scrap of Latin “mitto” (I send). asdar — close to Persian ashtar (star), or Arabic asdār (chests/volumes).
In the archive’s deepest shelf, dust had settled into the grooves of a wooden box no one had opened in eighty years. Inside: a single scrap of vellum, inked in faded brown. thmyl-fyd-myt-asdar-261-llandrwyd
He poured his tea. “Then Llandrwyd returns. And so do the ones they buried there without a name.” If you intended it to be a puzzle to solve, I can also try it as a cipher — just let me know what system you had in mind.
261 — a grid reference? A page number? A year (AD 261, when Rome was crumbling and British tribes whispered old names)? An old poet from Caernarfon, when shown the
The village of Llandrwyd hadn’t appeared on any map since before the Great War. Folklore said it had been “un-made” — erased not by conquest, but by forgetting. Yet here was its name, bound to numbers and strange syllables.
This looks like a coded or structured string: "thmyl-fyd-myt-asdar-261-llandrwyd" . ‘Thmyl’ is a mishearing of ‘thymial’ — thimble
“And if you walk those steps at midnight, speaking the words backward?”
thmyl-fyd-myt-asdar-261-llandrwyd