Chambered cairn (cromlech) at Dyffryn Ardudwy, Gwynedd, Wales |
"Among the rocks and stones, methinks I see
More than the heedless impress that belongs
To lonely nature's casual work: they bear
A semblance strange of power intelligent,
And of design not wholly worn away."
- The Excursion - WORDSWORTH
More than the heedless impress that belongs
To lonely nature's casual work: they bear
A semblance strange of power intelligent,
And of design not wholly worn away."
- The Excursion - WORDSWORTH
The Brythonic word "Cromlech" (bent slab) is usually applied to megalithic structures, oftenly known in English as "Dolmens", though it is also employed by French and Spanish to describe stone circles, and even more complex examples such as the Cromlech of the Almendres overlooking the civil parish of Nossa Senhora de Guadalupe.
The distribution of the Cromlech of the Almendres |
IT is a common belief amongst the peasantry over every part
of Cornwall, that no human power can remove any of those stones which have
been rendered sacred to them by traditionary romance. Many a time have I been
told that certain stones had been removed by day, but that they always
returned by night to their original positions, and that the parties who had
dared to tamper with those sacred stones were punished in some way. When the
rash commander of a revenue cutter landed with a party of his men and
overturned the Logan Rock, to prove the folly of the prevalent superstition,
he did but little service in dispelling an old belief; but proved himself to
be a fool for his pains.
I could desire, for the preservation of many of our Celtic
remains, that we could impress the educated classes with a similar reverence
for the few relics which are left to us of an ancient and a peculiar people,
of whose history we know so little, and from whose remains we might, by
careful study, learn so much. Those poised stones and perforated rocks must be
of high antiquity, for we find the Anglo-Saxons making laws to prevent the
British people from pursuing their old pagan practices. [a]
The geologist, looking upon the Logan stones and other
curiously-formed rock masses, dismisses at once from his mind the idea of
their having been formed by the hand of man, and hastily sets aside the
tradition that the Druid ever employed them, or that the old Celt ever
regarded them with reverence. There cannot be a doubt but that many huge
masses of granite are, by atmospheric causes, now slowly passing into the
condition required for the formation of a Logan rock. It is possible
that in some cases the "weathering" may have gone on so uniformly around the
stone, as to poise it so exactly that the thrust of a child will shake a mass
many tons in weight.
The result, however, of my own observations, made with much
curiosity and considerable care, has been to convince me, that in by far the
greatest number of instances the disintegration, though general around the
line of a "bed-way" or horizontal joint, has gone on rapidly on the side
exposed to the beat of the weather, while the opposite extremity has been but
slightly worn; consequently, the stones have a tendency to be depressed on the
sheltered side. With a little labour man could correct this natural defect,
and with a little skill make a poised stone. We have incontrovertible evidence
that certain poised stones have been regarded, through long periods of time,
as of a sacred character. Whether these stones were used by the Druids, or
merely that the ignorant people supposed them to have some peculiar virtue, I
care not. The earliest inhabitants of Cornwall, probably Celts, [b] were
possessed with some idea that these stones were connected with the mysteries
of existence; and from father to son, for centuries, notwithstanding the
introduction of Christianity, these stones have maintained their sacred
character. Therefore, may we not infer that the leaders of the people availed
themselves of this feeling; and finding many rocks of a gigantic size, upon
which nature had begun the work, they completed them, and used the mighty
moving masses to impress with terror--the principle by which they ruled--the
untaught, but poetically constituted, minds of the people. Dr Borlase has been
laughed at for finding rock-basins, the works of the Druids, in every granitic
mass. At the same time, those who laugh have failed to examine those
rock-masses with unprejudiced care, and hence they have erred as wildly as did
the Cornish antiquary, but in a contrary direction. Hundreds of depressions
are being formed by the winds and rains upon the faces of the granite rocks.
With these no Druid ever perplexed himself or his people. But there are
numerous hollows to be found in large flat rocks which have unmistakably been
formed, if not entirely, partly by the hands of man. The Sacrificing Rock, or
Cam Brea, is a remarkable example. The larger hollows on the Men-rock, in
Constantine, several basins in the Logan Rock group, and at Cam Boscawen, may
be referred to as other examples. With these remarks, I proceed to notice a
few of the most remarkable rock-masses with which tradition has associated
some tale.
[a] "Perforated stones must once have been
common in England, and probably in Scotland also, as the Anglo-Saxon laws
repeatedly denounce similar superstitious practices."--The Archaeology and
Prehistoric Annals of Scotland, p. 97. DANIEL WILSON.
[b] "A Celtic race, however, continues
to occupy the primeval districts of Cornwall, and preserved, almost to our own
day, a distinct dialect of the Celtic tongue."--Prehistoric Annals a
Scotland, p. 195 DANIEL WILSON. See Appendix N, 'in, Celts.
2 comments:
this is really interesting Eliseo, I find them a magickal subject, so much mystery surrounds them, blessings to you, Alison
Thanx for the compliments kind Alison - Quite true!... There is a lot of symbolism and energy comprised on each and every sacred stone circle and cromlech!... Bright belssings to you too kind sister in light ☼
Post a Comment