Page:Rude Stone Monuments.djvu/148

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122
ENGLAND.
Chap. IV.

novel of 'Kenilworth.' The third is as remarkable as either, but still wants its poet. The annexed woodcut will give a fair idea of its nature and extent.[1] It does not pretend to be minutely accurate, and this in the present instance is fortunately of no great

Rude Stone Monuments 0148.png

28.
The Sarsen Stones at Ashdown. From a drawing by A. L. Lewis, Esq.

consequence. All the stones are overthrown: some lie flat on the ground, some on their edges, and it is only the smallest that can be said to be standing. The consequence is, that we cannot feel sure that we know exactly where any of them stood, nor whether they were arranged in lines, like those at Carnac; nor if so, in


  1. This woodcut is copied literally from one by Mr. Lewis published in the 'Norwich Volume of the International Prehistoric Congress,' and the figures and facts I am about to quote are mostly taken from the paper that accompanied it. The inferences, however, are widely different.