My Neighbors

Caradoc Evans
My Neighbors

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Title: My Neighbors Stories of the Welsh People
Author: Caradoc Evans
Release Date: October 8, 2005 [EBook #16823]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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NEIGHBORS ***

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MY NEIGHBORS STORIES OF THE WELSH PEOPLE
BY CARADOC EVANS
NEW YORK HARCOURT, BRACE AND HOWE 1920

COPYRIGHT, 1920, BY HARCOURT, BRACE AND HOWE, INC.
THE QUINN & BODEN COMPANY RAHWAY, N.J.

TO MY FRIEND THOMAS BURKE OF "LIMEHOUSE NIGHTS"

CONTENTS
CHAPTER PAGE
THE WELSH PEOPLE 3 I. LOVE AND HATE 11 II. ACCORDING
TO THE PATTERN 31 III. THE TWO APOSTLES 59 IV.
EARTHBRED 81 V. FOR BETTER 99 VI. TREASURE AND
TROUBLE 117 VII. SAINT DAVID AND THE PROPHETS 131 VIII.
JOSEPH'S HOUSE 155 IX. LIKE BROTHERS 173 X. A WIDOW
WOMAN 187 XI. UNANSWERED PRAYERS 199 XII. LOST
TREASURE 215 XIII. PROFIT AND GLORY 231

THE WELSH PEOPLE
Our God is a big man: a tall man much higher than the highest chapel
in Wales and broader than the broadest chapel. For the promised day
that He comes to deliver us a sermon we shall have made a hole in the
roof and taken down a wall. Our God has a long, white beard, and he is
not unlike the Father Christmas of picture-books. Often he lies on his
stomach on Heaven's floor, an eye at one of his myriads of peepholes,
watching that we keep his laws. Our God wears a frock coat, a starched
linen collar and black necktie, and a silk hat, and on the Sabbath he
preaches to the congregation of Heaven.
Heaven is a Welsh chapel; but its pulpit is of gold, and its walls, pews,
floor, roof, harmonium, and its clock--which marks the days of the

month as well as the hours of the day--are of glass. The inhabitants are
clothed in the white shirts in which they were buried and in which they
arose at the Call; and the language of God and his angels and of the
Company of Prophets is Welsh, that being the language spoken in the
Garden of Eden and by Jacob, Moses, Abraham, and Elijah.
Wales is Heaven on earth, and every Welsh chapel is a little Heaven;
and God has favored us greatly by choosing to rule over us preachers
who are fashioned in his likeness and who are without spot or blemish.
Every Welsh child knows that the preacher is next to God; "I am the
Big Man's photograph," the preacher shouts; and the child is brought up
in the fear of the preacher.
Jealous of his trust, the preacher has made rules for the salvation of our
bodies and souls. Temptations such as art, drama, dancing, and the
study of folklore he has removed from our way. Those are vanities,
which make men puffed up and vainglorious; and they are unsavory in
the nostrils of the Big Man. And look you, the preacher asks, do they
not cost money? Are they not time wasters? The capel needs your
money, boys bach, that the light--the grand, religious light--shall shine
in the pulpit.
That is the lamp which burns throughout Wales. It keeps our feet from
Church door and public house, and it guides us to the polling booth
where we record our votes as the preacher has instructed us. Be the
season never so hard and be men and women never so hungry, its flame
does not wane and the oil in its vessel is not low.
White cabbages and new potatoes, eggs and measures of corn, milk and
butter and money we give to the preacher. We trim our few acres until
our shoulders are crutched and the soil is in the crevices of our flesh
that his estate shall be a glory unto God. We make for him a house
which is as a mansion set amid hovels and for the building thereof the
widow must set aside portions of her weekly old age pension. These
things and many more we do, for forgiveness of sin is obtained by
sacrifice. Such folk as hold back their offerings have their names
proclaimed in the pulpit.

Said the preacher: "Heavy was the punishment of the Big Man on Twm
Cwm, persons, because Twm speeched against the capel. Was he not
put in the coffin in his farm trowsis and jacket? And do you know, the
Big
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