A note from the administrator.
I have had to close the forum to new members. Registration is shut. I'm sorry for it - but I can no longer vouch for who comes through the door.
You may also find that certain older topics are no longer where you left them. I have, with great reluctance, removed a small number of threads and posts from this forum. I did so at the written request of a firm of solicitors acting for the landowner, who hold that the material touched on matters they would prefer were not aired in public.
I have complied, because I am one man and they are not. I want it set down plainly, here, that I did so under protest, and that I do not accept the grounds. Nothing removed was untrue. Nothing removed was anyone's business to suppress.
But I will not delete this board. What is left here stays, and you may read it for as long as I can keep the lights on. I have locked the doors; I have not burned the house. I have kept copies of everything. I would ask, gently, that those of you who hold anything of your own do the same.
E. Selwood
I have had to close the forum to new members. Registration is shut. I'm sorry for it - but I can no longer vouch for who comes through the door.
You may also find that certain older topics are no longer where you left them. I have, with great reluctance, removed a small number of threads and posts from this forum. I did so at the written request of a firm of solicitors acting for the landowner, who hold that the material touched on matters they would prefer were not aired in public.
I have complied, because I am one man and they are not. I want it set down plainly, here, that I did so under protest, and that I do not accept the grounds. Nothing removed was untrue. Nothing removed was anyone's business to suppress.
But I will not delete this board. What is left here stays, and you may read it for as long as I can keep the lights on. I have locked the doors; I have not burned the house. I have kept copies of everything. I would ask, gently, that those of you who hold anything of your own do the same.
E. Selwood
The Hangman's Stone and how it got its name
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Aldbourne_Annie
- Posts: 17
- Joined: Tue May 22, 2012 10:58 pm
The Hangman's Stone and how it got its name
A small grim one for the collection. There are stones and spots all about the downs with dark names, and the Hangman's Stone is a favourite of mine, because the story is the same wherever you find it, and there are several. A sheep-stealer, walking home in the dark with a stolen sheep tied round his neck by its legs, sits down to rest against a standing stone. The sheep, slung over the stone, struggles, slips, and hangs down the far side, and its weight throttles the thief against the stone, and there the pair of them are found in the morning. The stone is named for it ever after. Pure morality tale, of course, the stolen sheep made the death of the man who took it, you can hear the pulpit in it. But I love that the landscape itself is made to do the hanging, the old stone as judge and gallows both. The downs are full of these little courts.
Ask me about the old stories, Ive got hundreds 
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Avebury_Bran
- Posts: 16
- Joined: Fri Jun 22, 2012 1:10 am
That is a good one, Annie, and the shape of it, the thief killed by the very thing he stole, is older than Christianity by a long way, though the Church was glad enough to borrow it. The standing stone as judge is the interesting part to me. Long after people had stopped knowing what the stone was for, they knew it was not to be trifled with, and a story like this keeps that respect alive in a form a Christian county could go on telling. Fear the stone, but for a nice safe moral reason. The old dread, smuggled down the centuries in a cautionary tale about sheep.
The old straight track is still there, for those who care to walk it. (after A.
Watkins)