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I don't know if you will be able to get a copy but John Harris wrote a poem called "Luda - A lay of the Druids" published in 1868. Part of it is produced in the book "Voices from West Barbary - an anthology of Anglo-Cornish poetry 1549-1928" ISBN 0 9532388 8 1

I will include a few lines here to give you some idea of the "Victoriana" way of looking at the subject...

Adown the glen on palfrey white
And aged druid comes into sight
His long beard on his brest is spread
And oaken leaves adorn his head
A sash does round his body meet
And shoes of wood are on his feet
......
And figures on his vest appear
A serpent's head and crescent clear
Six different badges mark his store
The King could only wear one more

...and so on.

Anybody got any idea about the 6 badges?

He also wrote a poem called "Destruction of a Cornish Tolmen" about the Constantine Tolmen or Maen Rock. This was blown up by miners in 1869 but before then Borlase had done a drawing of it which shows a large egg shaped stone sitting atop 2 stone supports. It is said the stone was over 30ft in lenght but weather man made or not is not known.

I think it was Borlase that said that the Cheesewring rock formation on Bodmin Moor was the work of the Druids, so....

Ive just come across another poem about Maen Rock in the same book i mentioned above, this time by someone called Jas Roberts, looks like it is from a private collection held at the Morrab Library in Penzance.

http://meiszen.net/family/rogues/photos/helston_rock.jpg

love

Moth

On a coach to Stonehenge they come,
wearing trainers and chewing gum.
Carrying sickles, wearing robes of white,
say they're Druids, but its all shite.

Kozmik Ken 2004