Megaliths are found throughout the British
Isles. Of these, Stonehenge and Avebury are probably the most famous. However,
there are many more that are not so well known. You will see from the slides
that I’m about to show you that these collections may be the remains of ancient
tombs or long barrows, whilst others appear to have been arranged haphazardly
with no discernible pattern. Indeed, some early scholars believed that the
arrangements of these megaliths were entirely natural and not deliberately
placed by the ancient inhabitants of these islands.”
The lecture reminded Lizzie of a story that
her grandmother had told her regarding a collection of sarsen stones in a
neighbouring village. Lizzie had never visited the site in question, but it was
said that nobody knew how many stones there were as all attempts to count them
resulted in different numbers.
“I’ll go and count the stones,” Lizzie
thought to herself as she left the theatre, and before making her way to the site
she stopped at a craft shop to buy several dozen wooden blocks and a marker
pen.
Each stone bore the remains of markings added
by previous visitors, and similarly, Lizzie numbered the blocks in turn and
placed them on the stones. There were thirty-two in total.
Lizzie returned three
days in a row and, like those before her, she recorded a different number each
time. On her fourth visit, she left thirty-six blocks in place. When she
returned the following morning, she was pleased to see that the blocks were
still there, her scribbled numbers clearly visible. Triumphant, she collected
her blocks and was about to leave when she saw two more stones. On each was a
wooden block, bearing numbers that had been burned on, and the imprints of two
cloven hooves.
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