Mitchell's Fold
A ring of standing stones, an open border hill
The sky a brightly turning dome of air that’s never still
You can see the Marches spread below,
Feel them breathing soft and slow
Hawk circles above – the ring turns
There’s a sudden shining thrill
And just for a second a door is opened
Inside are seven stars
Four seasons, one universe
And then the moment’s passed
How old’s this hill, how old the valley - when did this landscape form
Precambrian, the dawn of time, born out of fire and storm
Out of chaos this hill rose high,
Linked horizon, land and sky
The infant world, this landscape now – a unity is born
And just for a second a door is opened
Inside are seven stars
Four seasons, one universe
And then the moment’s passed
How many further ages passed before a man embraced
With a ring of granite stones this awesome dreadful place
Who changed the stark horizon and the sky’s tremendous roll
Who understood this place so well he dared to make a whole
Whose timelessness can reach to the bottom of my soul
Lie down at the centre here and stare up at the sky
Watch the endless turning of the hawk above so high
Circles circles simply feel
The turning of the ageless wheel
Echoes above, echoes below that speak the reason why
And just for a second a door is opened
Inside are seven stars
Four seasons, one universe
And then the moment’s passed
At Mitchells Fold alone at peace in perfect summer weather
My soul can sing the music with the spinning wheels together
But always in a moment the harmony has gone
I turn back to my old sad song
How to catch that turn, how to hold on tight
And move with it for ever
And then in the heavens the door will be open
Inside are seven stars
Four seasons, one universe
And a moment never passed
See Aubrey Burl's 'The Stone Circles of the British Isles' pp264 - 267 for the full lowdown on the five stone circles of the Corndon group. Only Mitchell's Fold and Mr Booth's Hoarstones at Black Marsh are visible now -
"..it has been speculated that these hills
could have been, in the prehistoric mind, places of magical import within whose ambience a stone circle would become the more powerful."
Call my mind prehistoric if you will, but the magical import of these hills is still very real to me.