Huw Morus was born in 1622 and was the son of Forys ap Sion ap Ednyfed. The family lived at the 14th-century farm of Pont-y-meibion in the parish of
Llansilin near
Glyn Ceiriog. In appearance he was tall, sallow, and marked by smallpox. Being a younger (the third) son, he was apprenticed to a tanner, but he did not complete his term of apprenticeship. He lived at Pont y Meibion, helping on the farm his father, his eldest brother, and his nephew in succession, and gradually winning a great reputation as a composer of ballads, carols, and occasional verse. He was a devout Protestant, and the trial of the seven bishops, of whom William Lloyd of St. Asaph had expressed admiration of his poetry, forced him to transfer his allegiance from James II to William of Orange, whose cause he warmly supported from 1688 onwards. In his old age Huw Morus was revered by the countryside as a kind of oracle, and tradition says that in the customary procession out of Llansilin parish church after service the first place was always yielded to him by the vicar. He died unmarried on 31 Aug. 1709, and was buried at Llansilin, where a slab to his memory bears
englynion by the Rev. Robert Wynne, Gwyddelwern. ==Work==