第 120 节
作者:随便看看      更新:2021-02-25 00:47      字数:9321
  into Carmarthen Bay。
  I did not fail to pay a visit to Tregaron church。  It is an antique
  building with a stone tower。  The door being open; as the door of a
  church always should be; I entered; and was kindly shown by the
  clerk; whom I met in the aisle; all about the sacred edifice。
  There was not much to be seen。  Amongst the monuments was a stone
  tablet to John Herbert; who died 1690。  The clerk told me that the
  name of the clergyman of Tregaron was Hughes; he said that he was
  an excellent; charitable man; who preached the Gospel; and gave
  himself great trouble in educating the children of the poor。  He
  certainly seemed to have succeeded in teaching them good manners:
  as I was leaving the church; I met a number of little boys
  belonging to the church school:  no sooner did they see me than
  they drew themselves up it; a rank on one side; and as I passed
  took off their caps and simultaneously shouted; 〃Good…morning!〃
  And now something with respect to the celebrated hero of Tregaron;
  Tom Shone Catti; concerning whom I picked up a good deal during my
  short stay there; and of whom I subsequently read something in
  printed books。 (14)
  According to the tradition of the country; he was the illegitimate
  son of Sir John Wynn of Gwedir; by one Catherine Jones of Tregaron;
  and was born at a place called Fynnon Lidiart; close by Tregaron;
  towards the conclusion of the sixteenth century。  He was baptised
  by the name of Thomas Jones; but was generally called Tom Shone
  Catti; that is Tom Jones; son of Catti or Catherine。  His mother;
  who was a person of some little education; brought him up; and
  taught him to read and write。  His life; till his eighteenth year;
  was much like other peasant boys; he kept crows; drove bullocks;
  and learned to plough and harrow; but always showed a disposition
  to roguery and mischief。  Between eighteen and nineteen; in order
  to free himself and his mother from poverty which they had long
  endured; he adopted the profession of a thief; and soon became
  celebrated through the whole of Wales for the cleverness and
  adroitness which he exercised in his calling; qualities in which he
  appears to have trusted much more than in strength and daring;
  though well endowed with both。  His disguises were innumerable; and
  all impenetrable; sometimes he would appear as an ancient crone;
  sometimes as a begging cripple; sometimes as a broken soldier。
  Though by no means scrupulous as to what he stole; he was
  particularly addicted to horse and cattle stealing; and was no less
  successful in altering the appearance of animals than his own; as
  he would frequently sell cattle to the very persons from whom he
  had stolen them; after they had been subjected to such a
  metamorphosis; by means of dyes and the scissors; that recognition
  was quite impossible。  Various attempts were made to apprehend him;
  but all without success; he was never at home to people who
  particularly wanted him; or if at home he looked anything but the
  person they came in quest of。  Once a strong and resolute man; a
  farmer; who conceived; and very justly; that Tom had abstracted a
  bullock from his stall; came to Tregaron well armed in order to
  seize him。  Riding up to the door of Tom's mother; he saw an aged
  and miserable…looking object; with a beggar's staff and wallet;
  sitting on a stone bench beside the door。  Does Tom Shone Catti
  live here?〃 said the farmer。  〃Oh yes; he lives here;〃 replied the
  beggar。  〃Is he at home?〃  〃Oh yes; he is at home。〃  〃Will you hold
  my horse whilst I go in and speak to him?〃  〃Oh yes; I will hold
  your horse。〃  Thereupon the man dismounted; took a brace of pistols
  out of his holsters; gave the cripple his horse's bridle and
  likewise his whip; and entered the house boldly。  No sooner was he
  inside than the beggar; or rather Tom Shone Catti; for it was he;
  jumped on the horse's back; and rode away to the farmer's house
  which was some ten miles distant; altering his dress and appearance
  as he rode along; having various articles of disguise in his
  wallet。  Arriving at the house he told the farmer's wife that her
  husband was in the greatest trouble; and wanted fifty pounds; which
  she was to send by him; and that he came mounted on her husband's
  horse; and brought his whip; that she might know he was authorised
  to receive the money。  The wife; seeing the horse and the whip;
  delivered the money to Tom without hesitation; who forthwith made
  the best of his way to London; where he sold the horse; and made
  himself merry with the price; and with what he got from the
  farmer's wife; not returning to Wales for several months。  Though
  Tom was known by everybody to be a thief; he appears to have lived
  on very good terms with the generality of his neighbours; both rich
  and poor。  The poor he conciliated by being very free of the money
  which he acquired by theft and robbery; and with the rich he
  ingratiated himself by humorous jesting; at which he was a
  proficient; and by being able to sing a good song。  At length;
  being an extremely good…looking young fellow; he induced a wealthy
  lady to promise to marry him。  This lady is represented by some as
  a widow; and by others as a virgin heiress。  After some time;
  however; she refused to perform her promise and barred her doors
  against him。  Tom retired to a cave on the side of a steep wild
  hill near the lady's house; to which he frequently repaired; and at
  last; having induced her to stretch her hand to him through the
  window bars; under the pretence that he wished to imprint a parting
  kiss upon it; he won her by seizing her hand and threatening to cut
  it off unless she performed her promise。  Then; as everything at
  the time at which he lived could be done by means of money; he soon
  obtained for himself a general pardon; and likewise a commission as
  justice of the peace; which he held to the time of his death; to
  the satisfaction of everybody except thieves and ill…doers; against
  whom he waged incessant war; and with whom he was admirably
  qualified to cope; from the knowledge he possessed of their ways
  and habits; from having passed so many years of his life in the
  exercise of the thieving trade。  In his youth he was much addicted
  to poetry; and a great many pennillion of his composition; chiefly
  on his own thievish exploits; are yet recited by the inhabitants of
  certain districts of the shires of Brecon; Carmarthen; and
  Cardigan。
  Such is the history or rather the outline of the history of Twm
  Shone Catti。  Concerning the actions attributed to him; it is
  necessary to say that the greater part consist of myths; which are
  told of particular individuals of every country; from the Indian
  Ocean to the Atlantic:  for example; the story of cutting off the
  bull's tail is not only told of him but of the Irish thief Delany;
  and is to be found in the 〃Lives of Irish Rogues and Rapparees;〃
  certain tricks related of him in the printed tale bearing his name
  are almost identical with various rogueries related in the story…
  book of Klim the Russian robber; (15) and the most poetical part of
  Tom Shone's history; namely; that in which he threatens to cut off
  the hand of the reluctant bride unless she performs her promise;
  is; in all probability; an offshoot of the grand myth of 〃the
  severed hand;〃 which in various ways figures in the stories of most
  nations; and which is turned to considerable account in the tale of
  the above…mentioned Russian worthy Klim。
  CHAPTER XCIV
  Llan Ddewi Brefi … Pelagian Heresy … Hu Gadarn … God of Agriculture
  … The Silver Cup … Rude Tablet。
  IT was about eleven o'clock in the morning when I started from
  Tregaron; the sky was still cloudy and heavy。  I took the road to
  Lampeter; distant about eight miles; intending; however; to go much
  farther ere I stopped for the night。  The road lay nearly south…
  west。  I passed by Aber Coed; a homestead near the bottom of a
  dingle down which runs a brook into the Teivi; which flows here
  close by the road; then by Aber Carvan; where another brook
  disembogues。  Aber; as perhaps the reader already knows; is a
  disemboguement; and wherever a place commences with Aber there to a
  certainty does a river flow into the sea; or a brook or rivulet
  into a river。  I next passed through Nant Derven; and in about
  three…quarters of an hour after leaving Tregaron reached a place of
  old renown called Llan Ddewi Brefi。
  Llan Ddewi Brefi is a small village situated at the entrance of a
  gorge leading up to some lofty hills which rise to the east and
  belong to the same mountain range as those near Tregaron。  A brook
  flowing from the hills murmurs through it and at length finds its
  way into the Teivi。  An ancient church stands on a little rising
  ground just below the hills; multitudes of rooks inhabit its
  steeple and fill throughout the day the air with their cawing。  The
  place wears a remarkable air of solitude; but presents nothing of
  gloom and horror; and seems just the kind of spot in which some
  quiet pensive man; fatigued but not soured by the turmoil of the
  world; might settle down; enjoy a few innocent