by E. F. Benson
‘But what’s the idea?’ I asked.
‘Something clings to it, some curse, some abomination. They think, no doubt, just as the archaeologists do, that the place has been a Druidical temple, where dreadful rites were performed and human sacrifices made. But they are all wrong; this was never a temple at all, it was a Council Chamber, and the very name of it, the “Council of Penruth”, confirms that. No doubt there was a temple somewhere about; dearly should I like to find it.’
It had been hot work climbing up that steep slippery hillside from the village, and we sat down within the circle, leaning our backs against two adjacent stones, and as we sat and rested Frank explained to me the grounds of his belief.
‘If you care to count them,’ he said, ‘you’ll find there are twenty-one of these monoliths, against two of which you and I are leaning, and if you care to measure the distances between them you will find that they are all equal. Each stone, in fact, represents the seat of a member of the council of twenty-one. But if the place had been a temple there would have been a larger gap between two of the stones towards the east, where the gate of the temple was, facing the rising sun, and somewhere within the circle, probably exactly in the middle, there would have been a large, flat stone, which was the stone of sacrifice, where no doubt human victims were offered. Or, if the stone had disappeared, there would have been a depression where it once was. Those are the distinguishing marks of a temple, and this place lacks them. It has always been assumed that it was a temple, and it has been described as such. But I am sure I am right about it.’
‘But there is a temple somewhere about?’ I asked.
‘Certain to be. If any of these prehistoric settlements was large enough to have a council hall, it would certainly have had a temple, though the remains of it have very likely disappeared. When the country was Christianised, the old religion – if you can call it a religion – was reckoned an abomination, and the places of worship were destroyed, just as the Israelites destroyed the groves of Baal. But I mean to explore very thoroughly here: there may be remains in some of those woods down there. This is just the sort of remote place where the temple might have escaped destruction.’
‘And what was the ancient religion?’ I asked.
‘Very little is known about it. It certainly was a religion not of love, but fear. The gods were the blind powers of nature, manifesting themselves in storms and destruction and plague, and had to be propitiated with human sacrifices. And the priests, of course, dealt in magic and sorcery. They were the governing class, and kept their power alive by terror. If you offended them, as likely as not you would be sent for and told that the gods required your eldest son as a blood-offering next midsummer day at sunrise, when the first beams of morning shone through the eastern gate of the temple. It was wise to be a good churchman in those days.’
‘It looks a kindly country nowadays,’ I said. ‘The temples of the old gods are empty.’
‘Yes, but it’s extraordinary how old superstitions linger. It isn’t a year ago that there was a witchcraft trial in Penzance. The cattle belonging to some farmer near here began to pine and die, and he went to an old woman, who said that a spell had been cast on them, and that if he paid her she could remove it. He went on paying and paying, and at last got tired of that and prosecuted her instead.’
He looked at his watch.
‘Let’s take a stroll before dinner,’ he said. ‘Instead of going back the way we came, we might make a ramble down the hillside in front and through the woods. They look rather attractive.’
‘And may conceal a pagan temple,’ said I, getting up.
We skirted the harvest fields, and found a path leading through a big fir-wood that climbed up the hillside. The trees were of no great growth as regards height, and the prevalent wind from the south-west, to which they stood exposed, had combed and pressed their branches landwards. But the foliage of the tree-tops was very dense, making a curious sombre twilight as we penetrated deeper into the wood. There was no undergrowth whatever below them, the ground was spread thick and smooth with fallen pine-needles, and with the tree trunks rising straight and column-like and that thick roof of branches above, the place looked like some great hall of Nature’s building. No whisper of wind moved overhead, and so dark and still was it that you might easily have conceived yourself to be walking up the aisle of some walled-in place. The smell of the firs was thick in the air like incense, and the foot went noiselessly as over spread carpets. No birds flitted between the tree trunks or called to each other; the only noise was the murmurous buzz of flies, which sounded like some long-held organ note.
It had been hot enough outside in the fresh draught off the sea, but here, where no breeze winnowed the air, it was stiflingly close, and as we plunged deeper into the dimness I was conscious of some gathering oppression of the spirit. It was an uncomfortable place, it seemed thick with unseen presences. And the same notion must have struck Frank as well.
‘I feel as if we were being watched,’ he said. ‘There are eyes peeping at us from behind the trunks, and they don’t like us. Now what makes so silly an idea enter my head?’
‘A grove of Baal, is it?’ I suggested. ‘One that has escaped destruction and is full of the spirits of murderous priests.’
‘I wish it was,’ he said. ‘Then we could inquire the way to the temple.’
Suddenly he pointed ahead.
‘Hullo, what’s that?’ he said.
I followed the direction of his finger, and for one half-second thought I saw the glimmer of something white moving among the trees. But before I could focus it, it was gone. Somehow, the heat and the oppression had got on my nerves.
‘Well, it’s not our wood,’ I said. ‘I suppose other people have just as much right to walk here. But I’ve had enough of tree trunks; I should like to have done with the wood.’
Even as I spoke I saw it was getting lighter in front of us; glimmers of day began to show between the thick-set trunks, and presently we found ourselves threading the last row of the trees. The light of day poured in again and the stir of the sea breeze; it was like coming out of some crowded and airless building into the open air.
We emerged into a delectable place; a broad stretch of downland turf was spread in front of us, smooth and ancient turf like that in the circle, jewelled with thyme and centaury and bugloss. The path we had been following lay straight across this, and dipping down over the edge of it we came suddenly on the most enchanting little house, low and two-storeyed, standing in a small enclosure of lawn and garden-beds. The hill behind it had evidently once been quarried, but long ago, for now the sheer sides of it were overgrown with a tangle of ivy and bryony, and at their base lay a pool of water. Beyond and bordering the lawn was a copse of birches and hornbeams, which half encircled the clearing in which stood house and garden. The house itself, smothered in honeysuckle and climbing fuchsia, seemed unoccupied, for the chimneys were smokeless and the blinds drawn down over the windows. As we turned the corner of its low fence and came on to the front of it, the impression was verified, for there by the gate was a notice proclaiming that it was to be let furnished, and directing that application should be made to a house-agent in St Caradoc’s.
‘But it’s a pocket Paradise,’ said I. ‘Why shouldn’t we – ’
Frank interrupted me.
‘Of course there’s no reason why we shouldn’t,’ he said. ‘In fact, there’s every reason why we should. The manager at the hotel told me they were filling up next week and wanted to know for how long we should stop. We’ll make inquiries tomorrow morning, and find the agent and the keys.’
The keys next morning revealed a charm within that came up to the promise of what we had seen without, and, what was as wonderful, the agent could provide our staff as well. This consisted of a rotund and capable Cornishwoman who, with her daughter to help her, would arrive early every mo
rning, and remain till she had served our dinner, and then go back to her cottage in St Caradoc’s. If that would suffice us, she was ready to be in charge as soon as we settled to take the little house; it must be understood, however, that she would not sleep there. Without making any further inquiries, the assurance that she was a clean and capable cook and competent in every way was enough, and two days afterwards we entered into possession. The rent asked was extraordinarily low, and my suspicious mind, as we went through the house, visualised an absence of water-supply, or a kitchen range that, while getting red hot, left its ovens as in the chill of an Arctic night. But no such dispiriting discoveries awaited us; Mrs Fennell turned taps and manipulated dampers, and, scouring capably through the house, pronounced on her solemn guarantee that we should be very comfortable. ‘But I go back to my own house at night, gentlemen,’ she said, ‘and I promise you the water will be hot and your breakfast ready for you by eight in the morning.’
We entered that afternoon; our luggage had been sent up an hour before, and when we arrived the portmanteaux were already unpacked and clothes bestowed in their drawers, and tea ready in the sitting-room. It and its adjoining dining-room, with a small parqueted hall, formed the ground floor accommodation. Beyond the dining-room was the kitchen, the convenience of which had already satisfied Mrs Fennell. Upstairs there were two good bedrooms, and above the kitchen two smaller servants’ rooms, which, by our arrangement, would be unoccupied. There was a bathroom between the two bedrooms with a door into it from each; for two friends occupying the house nothing could have been more exactly what was wanted with nothing to spare. Mrs Fennell gave us an admirable plain dinner, and by nine o’clock she had locked the outer kitchen door and left us.
Before going to bed we wandered out into the garden, marvelling at our luck. The hotel, as the manager had told us, was already beginning to fill up, the dining-room tonight would have been a cackle of voices, the sitting-room crowded, and surely it was a wonderfully good exchange to be housed in this commodious little tranquillity of a place, with our own unobtrusive establishment that came at dawn and left at night. It remained only to see if this paragon who was so proficient in her kitchen would be as punctual in the morning.
‘But I wonder why she and her daughter would not establish themselves here,’ said Frank. ‘They live alone down in the village. You’d have thought that they would have shut their cottage up, and saved themselves a morning and evening tramp.’
‘Gregariousness,’ said I. ‘They like to know that there are people, just people, close at hand and to right and left. I like to know that there are not. I like – ’
As I spoke we turned at the garden gate, where the notice that the house was to let had been, and my eyes, quite idly, travelled across the space of open downland to the black fringe of the wood that stood above it, and for a moment, bright, and then quenched again like the line of fire made by a match that has been struck and has not flared, I saw a light there. It was only for a second that it was visible, but it must have been somewhere inside the wood, for against that luminous streak I saw the shape of the fir trunks.
‘Did you see that?’ I said to Frank.
‘A light in the wood?’ he asked. ‘Yes, it has appeared there several times. Just for a moment and then disappearing again. Some farmer, perhaps, finding his way home.’
That was a very sensible conclusion, and, for some reason that I did not trouble to probe, my mind hastened to adopt it. After all, who was more likely to be passing through the wood than men from the upland farms going home at closing time from the Red Lion at St Caradoc’s?
I was roused next morning out of very deep sleep by the entry of Mrs Fennell with hot water; it was a struggle to join myself up with the waking world again. I had the impression of having dreamed very vividly of things dark and dim, and of perilous places, and though I had certainly slept for something like eight hours at a stretch I felt curiously unrefreshed. At breakfast Frank was more silent than his wont, but presently we were making plans for the day. He proposed to explore the wood again, while I was busy with my work; in the afternoon a round of golf would bring us to tea-time. Before he started and I settled down, we strolled about the garden that dozed tranquilly in the hot morning sun, and again congratulated ourselves on our exchange from the hotel. We went down to the pool below the quarried cliff, and there I left him to return to the house, while he, in order to start exploring at once, followed an overgrown path that led into the copse of birch and hornbeam of which I have spoken. But I had not crossed the lawn before I heard myself called.
‘Come here a minute,’ he shouted; ‘I’ve found something interesting.’ I retraced my steps, and pushing through the trees found him standing by a tall, black granite stone that pushed its moss-green head above the undergrowth.
‘It’s a monolith,’ he said excitedly. ‘It’s like one of those stones in the circle. Perhaps there has been another circle here, or perhaps it’s a stone of the temple. It’s deep in the earth; it looks as if it was in place. Let’s see if we can find another in this copse.’
He pushed on into the thick-growing trees to the right of the path, and I, infected with his enthusiasm, made an exploration to the left. Before long I came upon another stone of the same character as the first, and my shout of discovery was echoed by his. Yet another rewarded his hunting, and as I emerged from the copse on the edge of the quarry pool I found a fifth, standing but fallen forward in a bed of rushes that fringed the water.
In the excitement of this find, my planned studiousness was, of course, abandoned; so, too, when we had eaten a hearty lunch, was the projected game of golf, and before evening we had arrived at a rough scheme of the entire place. Most of the stones were in the belt of copse that half encircled the house, and with a tape-measure we found that these were set at uniform intervals from each other except that exactly twice that interval separated the two stones that lay due east of the circle. In the bank that lay to the south of the house several were missing, but in each case, by digging at the proper intervals, we found fragments of granite grassed over in the soil, which indicated that these stones had been broken up and used, probably, for building materials, and this conjecture of Frank’s was confirmed by the discovery of pieces of granite built into the walls of the house we occupied.
He had jotted down the approximate position of the stones, and passed over to me the paper on which he had drawn his plan.
‘Without doubt it’s a temple,’ he said; ‘there’s the double interval at the east, which I told you about, and which was the gate into it.’
I looked at what he had drawn.
‘Then our house stands just in the centre of it,’ I said.
‘Yes. What vandals they were to build it just there!’ said he. ‘Probably the stone of sacrifice lies somewhere below it. Good Lord, dinner ready, Mrs Fennell? I had no idea it was so late.’
The sky had clouded over during the afternoon, and while we sat at dinner, a windless and heavy rain began to fall and thunder to mutter over the sea. Mrs Fennell came in to inquire into our tastes for tomorrow, and as there was every appearance of a violent storm approaching, I asked her whether she and her girl would not stop here for the night and save themselves a wetting.
‘No, I’ll be off now, sir, thank you,’ she said. ‘We don’t mind a wetting in Cornwall.’
‘But not very good for your rheumatism,’ I said. She had mentioned that she was a sufferer in this respect.
A blink of lightning flashed rather vividly across the uncurtained windows, and the rain hissed more heavily.
‘No, I’ll be off now,’ she said, ‘for it’s late already. Good night, gentlemen.’
We heard her turn the key in the kitchen door, and presently the figures of herself and her girl passed the window.
‘Not even umbrellas,’ said Frank. ‘They’ll be drenched before they get down.’
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nbsp; ‘I wonder why they wouldn’t stop,’ said I.
Frank was soon employed on preparations for a plan to scale that he was meaning to make tomorrow, and he began putting in the house, which he had ascertained stood just in the centre of the temple. The size of the ground plan of it was all he required on the scale he intended for the complete plan, and after measuring the sitting-room, passage, and dining-room, he went through into the kitchen. Meanwhile, I had settled down to the work I had intended to do this morning, and proposed to get a couple of solid hours at it before I went to bed. It was rather hard to get the thread of it again, and for some time I floundered with false starts and erased sentences, but before long I got into better form, and was already happily absorbed in it when he called me from the kitchen.
‘Oh, I can’t come,’ I said; ‘I’m busy.’
‘Just a moment, please,’ he shouted.
I laid down my pen and went to him. He had moved the kitchen table aside and turned up the drugget that covered the floor.
‘Look there!’ he said.
The floor was paved with stone of the district, very likely from the quarry just outside. But in the centre was an oblong slab of granite, some six feet by four in dimensions.
‘That’s a whacking big stone,’ I said. ‘Odd of them to have been at the trouble of putting that there.’
‘They didn’t,’ said he. ‘I’ll bet it was there when they laid the floor!’
Then I understood.
‘The stone of sacrifice?’ I asked.
‘Rather. Granite, and just in the centre of the temple. It can’t be anything else.’
Some sudden thrill of horror seized me. It was on that stone that young boys and maidens, torn from their mother’s arms and bound hand and foot, were laid, while the priest, with one hand over the victim’s eyes, plunged the flint knife into the smooth, white throat, sawing through the tissue till the blood spurted from the severed artery . . . In the flickering light of the candle Frank carried the stone seemed wet and darkly glistening, and was that noise only the rain volleying on the roof, or the beating of drums to drown the cries of the victim? . . .