Stonehenge
One of the most famous historical
sites in England is Stonehenge on the Salisbury Plain.
There are monstrous stones in a circle and the question of who
built them goes largely unanswered. Stones
of the oldest inner ring weigh up to 4 tons and are supposed to have come
from Wales, 240 miles away. The
outer stones weigh up to 80 tons and are thought to have been quarried 20
miles away. Site construction
has been credited to many, but the most popular attribution has been to
the Druids. A better story
has Merlin and King Arthur magically bringing the stones from Ireland.
Situated on a vast plain surrounded
by hundreds of mounds, the site is impressive and all the more so the
closer you approach. Since
1978 the viewing public has been prevented from close contact with the
stones. Fortunately I was
allowed to walk through the site and feel the stones with my own personal
guide from the Historic Trust. Some
have said the public was excluded because the markings on the stones are
fading from vandalism, but the guide assured me that the problem was that
the many visitors trampled the ground, which contained burial sites and
artifacts.
The
stones are huge with a kind of limestone feel to them with mosses clinging
to the tops. The guide said
this was due to their age. There
was one rather tall one that seemed to stand out above all the others
called the bloodstone. There
is apparently a legend to go with that particular stone which the guide
could not remember. The
bloodstone had a much rougher texture and it seemed like it would have
been the heaviest to move to that location. The henge stone seemed similar
to most of the others, however, there was a hole right through the stone
big enough for a small animal. She
said that an animal could have lived there at one time but was unsure what
it could have been
Elizabeth Wade