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images, the Egyptians principally used obelisks, and the use of them appears to have been primarily, to serve as a sort of a representation of the solar ray. Those who are learned in the ancient worship of images are well aware that stone pillars, and stones of every kind, were objects of the first importance among most nations."

"The very form of an obelisk favours my opinion, being such as to present a likeness of a solar ray."

Knox, in writing upon this particular Monolith, says: "This is the tallest of all Briton's ancient pillars; like the pointed. obelisks in Egypt, it would seem erected for the same purpose of thankfulness to the sun (the chief deity of all people on both continents in earliest times) for benefits bestowed upon them; in this particular case, for a copious and permanent issue of water at the foot of the hill on which the pillar stands, having run a subterranean rill for nine or ten miles through the valley Westward." In the poems of Ossian, is the following:

"Oozy daughter of the streams!

O Stone! that now art rear'd on high
Speak to futurity

After Selma's race hath fail'd."

--

It must be borne in mind that the Pagan religion was founded on the movement of the heavenly bodies, and that when the Christian missionaries began to propound the glorious doctrines of Christianity to the Neophytes they were careful not to offend their prejudices. It was the custom with the heathen to lay the foundation stone of any, or rather every, temple at the Northeast corner. Their reason for doing so was that the Egyptian astronomers taught that at the creation of the world, the sun rose in Leo, and admitting this notion was got up when the constellation was situated in the North-east at the rising of the sun, this circumstance would, naturally, in accordance with the Egyptian mode of worship induce the custom of commencing magnificent edifices at the North-east corner, in imitation of that glorious luminary believed by the Egyptians to be the supreme architect of the world.

In reference to the Pointer stone, at Stonehenge, I am credibly informed that, on the 21st June, a group, more or less in number, assemble on Salisbury Plain, to watch for the rising of the sun, at 3-0 a.m. As the hour draws nigh they congregate in

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the centre of those wondrous megalithic remains, from which, looking North-east, a block of stone some distance from the main group is so seen that its top coincides with the lines of the horizon; and if no fog, mist, or cloud prevent, the sun, as it rises on this the morning of the longest day in the year, will be seen coming up exactly over the centre of this stone, known, from this circumstance, as the "Pointer."

In tracing out the history of this Rudston pillar, we now come back to a period posterior to that of which we have been speaking, viz., the Druidical. From the remains scattered throughout the country,

there is abundant proof that they mark a period in which the occupations of the people were principally of the pastoral kind, and in which their religious ceremonies were performed in the open air, in the vicinity of stone circles and massy pillars.

Perhaps the most advisable course to adopt, instead of attempting any description of my own, in reference to the "Temples" of the Druids, will be to give Stukely's description

*Stonehenge, Ambresbury, Gurnsey, &c., &c.

of Stonehenge. He says: "The ruins of of this temple are on a slight elevation, about two miles Westward of Ambresbury. It consisted of one circle of vast stones, sixty cubits in diameter, within this was a concentric circle of smaller stones, leaving a noble circular promenade of three yards. wide, and a circumference of more than one hundred yards; within this second circle, at a still greater distance, was an ellipsis formed of five Trilithons, that is, a pair of uprights and a cross-stone at the top. The uprights of these were from seventeen to eighteen feet and a half high; the middle trilithon, or that farthest from the eye, being the highest. Within the ellipsis, leaving a moderate space between it and the trilithons, was a concentric ellipsis of single stones or pillars, about half as high as the trilithons. The pillars forming the concentric circle was also half the height of the colonnade which enclosed it; the external uprights were bound together by a circular coping or cornice, of heavy stones, well fastened together by mortices and tenons; within the adytum, and facing the the entrance, was a large stone of hard blue marble, sixteen feet long, four broad, and

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twenty inches thick. sixty cubits from the outer circle was a trench on one side to the opposite exterior of the trench, thirty cubits in width, so that the whole diameter of the temple from the outside of the trench on one side to the opposite exterior of the trench, was two hundred and forty cubits. The outer trench or boundary, with which these structures were frequently surrounded, seems to have been. an imitation of what Moses did at Sinai, by the Divine command, and possibly repeated on other occasions, and probably for the same purpose, viz., that of limiting the peoples' approach to these consecrated places; the command to Moses was "Set bounds about the mount and sanctify it." (Exodus xix. 23).

From what I have said previously my readers will perceive that I believe this Monolith in the Church yard, standing as does at its North-east corner, to be thus in its secondary purpose, a Druidical remain. That it formed one upright of a Trilithite, or Druidical shrine, through which the priest of those ancient people passed. The space between the two upright pillars in these trilithons being only just sufficient for

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