bren o wyllt a gwar, Gwawr ysbrydau.
"Aylwin"
Theodore Watts-Dunton
For who that will take any body corporal, And do what he can it to destroy, To break it or grind it into powder small, To wash, to drown, to bren it, or to dry, Yet the air and fire thereof naturally To their own proper places will ascend, The water to the water, the earth to the earth tend; For if heat or moisture of anything certain By fire or by water be consumed, Yet earth or ashes on earth will remain, So the elements can never be destroyed.
"A Select Collection of Old English Plays, Volume I."
R. Dodsley
Nay, yet at a stake rather bren in a fire.
"A Select Collection of Old English Plays, Volume I."
R. Dodsley