About This Time He Wrote An
Interlude Himself, Founded On "John Bunyan's Spiritual Courtship,"
Which Was, However, Stolen From Him By A Young Fellow From
Anglesey, Along With The Greater Part Of The Poems And Pieces Which
He Had Copied.
This affair at first very much disheartened Tom:
Plucking up his spirits, however, he went on composing, and soon
acquired amongst his neighbours the title of "the poet," to the
great mortification of his parents, who were anxious to see him
become an industrious husbandman.
"Before I was quite fourteen," says he, "I had made another
interlude, but when my father and mother heard about it they did
all they could to induce me to destroy it. However, I would not
burn it, but gave it to Hugh of Llangwin, a celebrated poet of the
time, who took it to Landyrnog, where he sold it for ten shillings
to the lads of the place, who performed it the following summer;
but I never got anything for my labour, save a sup of ale from the
players when I met them. This at the heel of other things would
have induced me to give up poetry, had it been in the power of
anything to do so. I made two interludes," he continues, "one for
the people of Llanbedr in the Vale of Clwyd, and the other for the
lads of Llanarmon in Yale, one on the subject of Naaman's leprosy,
and the other about hypocrisy, which was a re-fashionment of the
work of Richard Parry of Ddiserth.
Enter page number
PreviousNext
Page 465 of 856
Words from 127811 to 128068
of 235675