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Folk-Lore of West and Mid-Wales

Chapter 260: A REMARKABLE FULFILMENT OF A CONDEMNED MAN’S PREDICTION.
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About This Book

A compilation of folk beliefs, tales, and customs gathered across western and mid-Wales from elderly informants and local tradition. It presents translated Welsh narratives and organized material on fairies, mermaids and water‑horses, ghosts, witches and wizards, omens, animal superstitions, and popular spells, alongside accounts of wedding, birth, funeral, inheritance and sheep‑shearing customs, divination practices, augury, and prophecies. The emphasis is on literal fidelity to oral testimony and on preserving vanishing traditions rather than offering theoretical interpretation.

A REMARKABLE FULFILMENT OF A CONDEMNED MAN’S PREDICTION.

In the Churchyard of Montgomery is a grave where the grass refuses to grow, though it is in the midst of luxurious vegetation. The unfortunate man named John Newton, who was buried there in the year 1821, had predicted this as a proof that he was innocent of the charge brought against him at the Assizes, when he was condemned to die on the evidence of two men named Thomas Pearce, and Robert Parker, who charged him with highway robbery. On being asked at the trial why judgment should not be passed upon him, he said before the judge: “I venture to assert that as I am innocent of the crime for which I suffer, the grass, for one generation at least, will not cover my grave.” The poor man’s prediction proved true, for the grave to this day remains a bare spot.

THE GRAVE ON WHICH THE GRASS WILL NOT GROW.

(Sketched by Miss E. M. Howes, North Walsham, Norfolk, and now of Llanilar Vicarage, Cardiganshire).

One of the condemned man’s accusers became a drunkard, and the other “wasted away from the earth,” and a curse seems to follow every one who attempts to get anything to grow on the spot. At the head of the grave is the stem of a rose tree, and it is said that the man who put it there soon fell sick and died. I had heard of this grave even when I was a boy, and some account of the story respecting it has appeared in the papers from time to time.