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Lefturn wrote:
There is a famous exchange involved with one of his books. When published Cox had a long running row with the editor of the local newspaper. A Devizes paper I think. Anyway, it went on for weeks and got very nasty, the length of the exchanages were extraordinary and ran to great detail. The editor won out of course as it was his paper!
That is fascinating! The only other book I can find by him is "The Green Roads Of England" mentioned above. One wonders what he said to get the editor's knickers in such a twist. Any more info would be welcome.

Moss
He quotes a Mr. Cosworth of York re the Sun's shadow..."it is remarkable that the daily gauge of the shadows of both the Great Pyramid and Silbury is almost exactly four feet". What the hell does that mean?
Jim.

[quote="jimit
Moss
He quotes a Mr. Cosworth of York re the Sun's shadow..."it is remarkable that the daily gauge of the shadows of both the Great Pyramid and Silbury is almost exactly four feet". What the hell does that mean?
Jim.[/quote]

Well just type gnomon/Silbury Hill, and you come up with H.G.Wells and The Secrets of the Heart..... I expect with egyptology at that time seeing Silbury as a gnomon was fashionable. As for the four feet would that be something to do with the sun overhead and post?

http://www.worldwideschool.org/library/books/lit/romance/TheSecretPlacesoftheHeart/chap20.html

My memory of this is weak but I think the editor strongly disagreed with folk from outside telling locals what was in their backyard, that and 'fancy' theories. You might recall that after Jefferies there was a bit of a gap in local writing of this sort until the new wave came in with Massingham and Cox, , England and the Octopus etc. Then CPRE of course. All of which of course was the ground for the classic English Journey by Priestley

Fittingly on that note the newspaper library is right by Colindal tube station on the northern line, or there is a complete run of local newspapers in a local museum, I don't know if that is Devizes or Marlborough. Use the date of the book as a guide keeping in mind the editor may have had an advance copy.