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Tales Of Wales
1: Vicars and Tramps
During the Victorian
era the diarist Reverend Francis Kilvert was the incumbent at
various small parishes on the Welsh Border. When he was the curate
for the village of Clyro, near Hay-on-Wye, he spent much of his
time walking over the nearby hills. On one such walk he came across
one of Mid Wales' most eccentric characters - the Reverend John
Price. The Rev. Price was the vicar at St. Peter's church Llanbedr,
a minute hamlet nestling in the Radnor Hills.
When Kilvert knew him,
Price was about 60 years old, with luxuriant chestnut hair and
moustache and a white beard. He wore a greasy black dress coat,
broken shoes, a large cravat and a tall hat. There was no vicarage
and he lived first in a small cottage, then in three bathing machines
known as The Huts, and finally, when The Huts were destroyed by
fire, in a small grey building which had once been a chicken shed.
Kilvert went to visit him in this cabin, called Cwm Ceilio, and
found inside a wild confusion of litter, books and decaying food;
but outside it was "open to the South, and the sun, and the
great valley of the Wye, and the distant blue mountains".
To find new members for
his congregation, the Rev. Price scoured the highways and hedgerows.
Soon his offer of sixpence (two and a half pence in contemporary
UK coinage) per head per service began to fill his pews with unwashed
tramps. Furthermore he provided oil stoves so that the tramps
could cook meals during the sermon. Later, when he lost his tiny
private income, the fee of sixpence had to be reduced to fourpence.
This new proposal was solemnly discussed in the churchyard and
finally accepted by a sort of informal tramps' trade union.
Price
also offered 5 shillings to each pair of vagrants 'living in sin'
who would consent to let him join them in Holy Wedlock. As his
sight was very weak, several business-like couples let him marry
them half a dozen times.
Having sunk into a very
neglected state in his old age, he was taken by friends to Talgarth
hospital, in the lea of the Black Mountains, where it was found
necessary to cut his clothes off his skin. He did not survive
the bath which followed. Despite the squalor and loneliness, Price
was a scholar who had invented and published two methods of shorthand.
Tourist Info:
The Radnor Hills, to the north of Hay-on-Wye, are great cycling
country. If you want to visit John Price's church (his grave can
be seen in the churchyard) the map reference is: SO 142464 (Ordnance
Survey map 148). You can read more about Rev. Francis Kilvert
and the time he spent in Mid Wales and the Welsh Borders in 'Kilvert's
Diaries', paperback, published by Penguin Books.
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