[Afoot in England by W.H. Hudson]@TWC D-Link bookAfoot in England CHAPTER Twenty-One: Stonehenge 9/16
I was seldom challenged, and the sentinels I came across were very mild-mannered men; they never ordered me away; they only said, or hinted, that the place I was in was not supposed to be free to the public. I come across many persons who lament the recent great change on Salisbury Plain.
It is hateful to them; the sight of the camp and troops marching and drilling, of men in khaki scattered about everywhere over a hundred square leagues of plain; the smoke of firing and everlasting booming of guns.
It is a desecration; the wild ancient charm of the land has been destroyed in their case, and it saddens and angers them.
I was pretty free from these uncomfortable feelings. It is said that one of the notions the Japanese have about the fox--a semi-sacred animal with them--is that, if you chance to see one crossing your path in the morning, all that comes before your vision on that day will be illusion.
As an illustration of this belief it is related that a Japanese who witnessed the eruption of Krakatoa, when the heavens were covered with blackness and kindled with intermitting flashes and the earth shaken by the detonations, and when all others, thinking the end of the world had come, were swooning with extreme fear, viewed it without a tremor as a very sublime but illusory spectacle.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|