Head To Head
Log In
Register
The Modern Antiquarian Forum »
Spirit of Place
Log In to post a reply

204 messages
Topic View: Flat | Threaded
morfe
morfe
2992 posts

insecurity
Jun 29, 2003, 13:23
it's true, I have been through a mental process time and again trying to explain why this place (Wychbury Hill) had such an effect on me, all the other hillforts I've been to have nothing in common with that feeling of 'otherness' I described. It's long been my belief that the hillfort in question is of far more significance, historically and for want of a better word 'sacredly' than we have archaelogical evidence for. Ritual objects where pulled out of a round hill on a SW slope in the late 19th C. The hill is called 'roundhill' which looks a lot like a burial mound, but no proof exists. I had vision in my twenties, in the form of an extremely lucid dream; the round hill was cleft open, a woman in white was lying in there, asleep. On the rise above the hill, before the current Obelisk, there was a guardian, warrior figure, male, in the ground, above his head was a white swan, not lying, but superimposed on the sky in resful profile, this mutated int a treetop, the 's' shape very distinct. The following Wednesday, walked their with Granma Morfe, who lived nearby the Hill. I located the exact viewpoint of the dream, and followed the path of the swan to the corner of the copse I saw in the dream, and hidden at the top corner, was that distinct swan's neck in the tree, just one, very distinctive, in the SAME place? I was thrilled right through, but what does it mean? Coincidence? Bonkers? When this Hill was threatened (still is) by the Western Orbital Motorway, I campaigned long and hard, knocking on all the local residents doors to gather support for blocking thedecision. I heard many anecdotes and stories of quite impassioned response-feelings about the place. Unusually high levels of stories about ghosts, feelings, 'darkness', yet most of all a magical otherness that is hard to pinpoint It's a mystery to me still, but I know for certain that it's 'more' than just a hillfort, it holds some sacred connection to the old God/esses. My mother saw Ogma there, the little language deity of celtic lore, but my dad says it was the tablets ;-) She was very young, but she swears she saw 'a little brown man'. Scott's Worcestershire, has quotes about sprites and nymphs and dryads etc, being especially prevalent in the 'dingle' area around Wychbury. I don't believe it will give up it's secrets easily, but I do know that it's more than just an old hillfort, what was done there before the Iron Age? Any clues anyone?
Topic Outline:

The Modern Antiquarian Forum Index