Hi all,
I am looking for references to ancient sites in literature, anyone got any suggestions? Poetry as well as fiction would be nice.
Hi all,
I am looking for references to ancient sites in literature, anyone got any suggestions? Poetry as well as fiction would be nice.
Here's one by HG Wells that has Stobehenge and Avebury
http://www.pagebypagebooks.com/H_G_Herbert_George_Wells/The_Secret_Places_of_the_Heart/
I think someone posted that very one up recently.
The tendency of poetry regarding the ancient landscape centres around the art of storytelling, weaving myth and legend into the whole. One of the greatest (sadly missed) writers keeping the British Mystical tradition alive was Alan Garner. Notably the Weirdstone of Brisingamen (Alderley Edge) and The Owl Service (Wales). I remember watching the owl service as a boy (it was televised) brooding, humming weirdness, a million miles away from Harry Potter. If I remember correctly it wove the legend of the Mabinogion and hence Bloduewedd (of the flowers) into a modern children's story, the 'Service' being a set of old plates whose design was comprised of owls. I remember a holed stone playing an important part in the story/series. And, bizzarely, the ghost of Lawrence of Arabia? Or did i imagine that???
Sorry I couldn't be more help right now regarding specific sites, but the above tales are essential to British Folklore in that the landscape is an inherent and super-tangible part of the tapestry.
morfe
http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba18/ba18int.html
"It is, perhaps, surprising that so few poets have written about our feelings for the past...
...Philip Gross is one of the few poets to tackle these dark areas, and his latest collection, A Cast of Stones, is a set of meditations on Stonehenge and Avebury."
http://www.wiltshire.gov.uk/community/literary_search.php
A few more books that may fit the bill regarding Avebury in lit. I haven't read any tho so can't recommend.
Thomas Hardy's 'Mayor of Casterbridge' has Maumbury Rings in it as a meeting place. 'Tess of the Durbervilles' has Stonehenge. I'm sure his other books, being based in 'Wessex' have other sites in them (but I haven't read any others)
William Mayne's 'Earthfasts' books have standing stones in them (but I don't think they're any real ones in particular). I don't know if you'd include him if you want classic 'literature' but he's a longstanding and respected children's author.
Here are some more suggestions:<blockquote>First Light - Peter Ackroyd
Sarum - Edward Rutherford
Duncton Wood - William Horwood</blockquote>I can't vouch for them, except the last one, which I suspect is very poor (but my Mum loved it).
:-)#
K x
Bernard Cornwell (of Sharpe fame) wrote that 'Stonehenge' book. It was quite an enjoyable take on what might have happened actually albeit with a somewhat compressed timeframe...
Thanks everyone, thats a great help.
Hope I can be of some help..
Botterel and Hunt both wrote tales of folklore and legend in the early 1800's. In the mid 1800's Wilkie Collins visited the area and wrote "Rambles beyond Railways" about his travels, including a visit to Trethevy Quoit. From information gained during these trips he wrote the novel "Basil", it is based in West Penwith and the finale takes place on the coast at Porthcurno and at Treen Castle. I haven't been able to read the book yet (has anybody out there?).
I have read RM Ballantyne's "Deep Down", published in 1869. It mainly concerns mining in the St Just area but it has great discriptions of wandering over the wildmoor where the old stones sit.
I am currently ploughing my way through several novels by Sir Arthur Quiller Couch (grandson of Dr Jonathon Couch, naturalist and amateur archeoligist, he was responsible for early excavations on the barrows at Pelynt). Quiller-Couch, or Q as he was known, was writting the novel "Castle Dore" when he died, Daphne du Maurier kindly finished it. I am sure I will find refferences to ancient sites in the other books as he also likes to write about wild moorland and tales from the past.
Du Maurier of course wrote Jamaica Inn, I have only read one of her books. "The House on the Strand" which is about 13th century monks and mind altering drugs so I don't know if she features ancient sites in any of the others.
The Cornish poet, John Harris, was born on the side of Carn Brea above Redruth. His poems give great discriptions of graggy tors and ancient stones.
Sorry if I have not really tracked down any specific sites but give me a day or two and I will see what I can do.
Peter Ackroyd's Hawksmoor has Stonehenge in it. It's a cheerful tale of the circularity of time & permanence of evil, and Stonehenge (& a number of London churches, located on the sites of previous pagan temples) features as a sort of centre for murder, a place that's thirsty for blood. An excellent book, if you can handle the seventeenth century language.
William Blake's full of almost-references to stones - "Ancient Albion's rocky druid shore", that type of thing. I don't think he mentions any specific sites, though.
Lord of the Rings has standing stones, stone circles and a barrow (complete with terrifying wight) in it. They're not real sites, this being Middle Earth, but beautifully described nevertheless. It's in the TomBombadil section of the book.
I remember reading a Stephen Lawhead book many years ago that was all about Greenmen in Edinburgh restaurants, walking round barrows anticlockwise and finding portals back through time......sorry can't remember the name!
Silbury Hill
O Thou, to whom in the olden times was raised
Yon ample Mound, not fashion'd to display
An artful structure, but with better skill
Piled massive, to endure through many an age,
How simple, how majestic is thy tomb!
When temples and when palaces shall fall,
And mighty cities moulder into dust,
When to their deep foundations Time shall shake
The strong-based pyramids, shall thine remain
Amid the general ruin unsubdued,
Uninjured as the everlasting hills,
And mock the feeble power of storms and Time.
William Crowe, 1745-1829
let no rude hand disturb this hallowed sod,
Or move stones sacred to the Briton's god
-- Avenging spirits o'er the place preside,
And bold profaners evil will betide.
Sons of the soil,--with faithful watch and ward,
This holy precinct be it your's to guard.
Rev. F. Kilvert
Stanton Drew by Ursula A. Fanthorpe
First you dismantle the landscape.
Take away everything you first
Thought of. Trees must go,
Roads, of course, the church,
Houses, hedges, livestock, a wire
Fence. The river can stay,
But loses its stubby fringe
Of willows. What do you
See now? Grass, the circling
Mendip rim, with its notches
Fresh, like carving. A sky
Like ours, but empty along
Its lower levels. And earth
Stripped of its future, tilted
Into meaning by these stones,
Pitted and umemphatic. Re-create them.
They are the most permanent
Presences here, but cattle, weather,
Archaeologists have rubbed against them.
Still in season they will
Hold the winter sun poised
Over Maes Knoll's white cheek,
Chain the moon's footsteps to
The pattern of their dance.
Stand inside the circle. Put
Your hand on stone. Listen
To the past's long pulse.
I've not read all of this thread (so little time!), so apologies if someone else has already posted this link:
I think Hardy's Tess Of The D'urbervilles uses Stonehenge as a location towards the end of the book (been an age since I read it).
Harry Harrison wrote a fantasy book called 'Stonehenge' set during the supposed building of it.
"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