Saturday 11 September 2021

Shonks

We'll start today's walk in the village of Brent Pelham in Hertfordshire.... 



And this was once the communications hub of the little settlement! I don't know how many people still post letters rather than firing off emails, but they certainly take good care of their post-box, freshly-painted in bright red with the details picked out in gold. The telephone box, however, now houses a defibrillator rather than a telephone since everyone now carries a phone in their pocket.



The remaining cottages have been spruced up for modern living, though they retain their picturesque charm. And there are other reminders of the past...



Here are the stocks and whipping-post, left from a time when justice was handed out more brutally than today.



So lets go for a walk in the surrounding fields, where harvest has been gathered in once again as it has been throughout the centuries, albeit with rather less sweat and toil in these mechanised times.



Even now it's just about possible, from time to time, to glimpse the mystery and magic of this ancient landscape; for this whole area is woven together with myths and legends, the texture of which still shows through in some places, despite our attempts to gloss everything over with our modern preoccupations.



Just over the fields in Anstey there's the legend of the Blind Fiddler, who walked off into a secret tunnel playing his violin. Screams were heard but the fiddler was never seen again. They still call the local pub "The Blind Fiddler".



And a little further afield they speak of Jack O'Legs, a friendly giant who robbed the rich to give to the starving poor. Nearby, Jane Wenham was the last person in the country to be convicted of witchcraft.

(I wrote about Jack O'Legs and Jane Wenham here)



The mystery we were struggling with on this drizzly morning was where exactly the footpaths were; if they weren't plunging us into waist-high vegetation, they were vanishing without trace as they crossed newly-ploughed fields. But we did see a ghostly figure ahead of us at one stage....


....an unusual white pheasant. These occur occasionally as the birds are reared to be released for what some people call "sport". Helpful, I suppose, for very short-sighted marksmen!



We completed our circuit and arrived back at the church. If we go inside we can hear about Piers Shonks, the subject of Brent Pelham's very own legend.



Piers Shonks lived around here back in the eleventh century - you can still find "Shonk's Moat" marked on modern maps. Now, around that time the district was much troubled by the existence of a dragon who lived in a hole in the ground. In 1830 farm labourers engaged in felling an ancient tree found the very lair (or at least that's what they thought). 



The brave Shonks slew the beast only to find that it was the Devil's favourite dragon and Old Nick was naturally displeased with Piers. "I'll have your soul, whether you're buried inside the church or outside", he hissed. When Shonks neared his death he asked if he could have his bow and arrow; wherever the arrow landed was where he was to be buried. The arrow flew through the air, passed through the window of Brent Pelham church and buried itself in the wall.



And there Shonks was buried, in the church wall, neither inside nor outside, and thus cheating the Devil.



The carved stone, which lies in the niche, is richly carved and, whatever the exact details of its history, must have been to commemorate a rich and powerful individual. It's also very old.  What's more it's horrible to photograph, being at an awkward angle and badly lit. I was down to about half a second exposure time.



The enigmatic verse above the stone was added much later. The legend and how it's been added to and re-invented over the centuries is the subject of a book (Hollow Places: An Unusual History of Land and Legend by Christopher Hadley) which attempts to unpick the various strands of story-telling, superstition, misunderstanding and facts.



Whatever the truth behind the story of Piers Shonks it's always interesting to consider how our ancestors' lives differed from ours - and how many similarities there are.


Take care.


27 comments:

  1. An entertaining account from start to finish, John. The mention of the Blind Fiddler for some reason triggered memories of "Treasure Island" which I read, and was entranced by, when I was a young boy. Wasn't it Blind Pew (Pugh?) who delivered the dreaded black spot, and then hurried off, the sound of his cane tapping along the cobbled streets as he hurried away? I remember that the island of Hispaniola featured prominently and I think that was the initial stimulus for a life of travel. I visited the Dominican Republic, one half of Hispaniola before it was a tourist haven, and it was a wild place back then. I have digressed too much! Great post. Really enjoyed it.

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  2. Thank you. I loved this post and found it fascinating. Bad cess to those who consider killing a sport though.

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  3. This is a great post and I love to hear the old folklore tales that you find on your explorations.
    And even today, legends and lies, conspiracies and wild tales, live on - enabled by technology and social media!

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  4. I always look forward tto your posts too John as you wander through such interesting countryside.

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  5. How interesting to read of some of the tales of yore, and see that burial stone with it's beautiful engravings well captured by your patient camera. Mob mentality can sometimes become fearful with superstitions, but also bring people peace as those Americans of 9/12/21 found.

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  6. I love that story!
    The first picture makes me ache with a kind of nostalgia, but more than that. It just makes me sad what the little phones have done to our lives. Even mine who uses it very minimally. And we can't seem to go back. The whole idea of people wanting to be "available" every minute is beyond me.
    The footpath with "waist-high vegetation" reminds me of Jean and Lionel in As Time Goes By trying to find the first place they ever stayed together.

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  7. I love the long winding walks you take, the sights you see, and the stories you tell.
    It surprised me to read that the old phone booth now has a defibrillator in it. Interesting idea.

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  8. Another great post. It is so interesting to wonder how myths start and become embellished through the ages. Could the weird conspiracy stories of today become future myths? I hope not.

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  9. Wonderful post. You always find such interesting places.

    Poor pheasant!

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  10. A place of many legends. Your photos are wonderful, especially of the white pheasant:)

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  11. Quite an interesting legend (or was it a legend??), to be buried in the church wall, neither inside nor outside. A brilliant way to cheat the Devil!

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  12. I love your wanderings along with the narrative. So very interesting. Your 5th photo of the tall tree is my favorite.

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  13. Wonderful post! Old legends are always interesting! I always adore red telephone boxes and I was wondering what will happen to them in the times of mobile phones. I'm happy to hear they are homes of defibrillators.

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  14. It would take all day for me to comment on all...I have always love the red phone booths. I am glad they have a new use.

    I LOVE the 6th photo..not that I don't like the others. Just it really appeals to me.

    The church is beautiful...interesting story too.

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  15. Sounds like a legend-filled countryside you're walking through. Beautiful old church too, also filled with legends. Great walk!

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  16. What a wonderful story and super photos. I have to disagree about calling the killing of birds and animals "sporting." Mankind can be really horrible. However, I think the old phone booth is being used wisely. I rather miss the old phones. You have a wonderful day, hugs, Edna B.

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  17. What great stories you find to show and tell us.

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  18. What an enjoyable post--you know how I love such stories. I had heard about the "blind fiddler" story, although the version I read put the location as Grantchester or near there?

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    1. There's a very similar story from Blakeney in Norfolk, which I've included in this blog. I've never heard the story associated with Grantchester, though there was a legend about the Manor House being connected to Kings College in Cambridge by a secret tunnel. A tunnel has been found leading from the Manor House but it's thought to be part of a sewer carrying waste down to the river. It's easy to see how someone might escape down the sewer then travel by boat to Kings. It could then become abbreviated to "escaped down tunnel to Kings College", giving rise to such a story.

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  19. belles découvertes et à propos de la cabine téléphonique classique dans votre pays : des imitations un peu partout ici et par exemple au square Agricol Perdiguier à Avignon.

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  20. A fascinating tale you've shared today. The red phone booth with the defibrillator was something we saw on the Cotswolds walk we took in 2014. It was quite a surprise! Around here the phone booths have just disappeared. I noticed this weekend on our mini vacation to Maine that overnight accommodations don't have telephones in the rooms any more either.

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  21. Really interesting story about Piers Shonks and to have him actually buried in the church wall is incredible.Lovely views of the countryside. Excellent idea to use the old phone boxes for defibrillators.

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  22. Fascinating, John. When I read your header I wondered Shonkw were but now I know it was a person. Lovely that the phone booth is now repurposed to hold the defibrillator.

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  23. What a wonderful story of Piers Shonks.

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  24. An entertaining post, John, about the Blind Fiddler and O. Piers Shonks and to have been able to show us the church interior and burial place too.

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  25. Stunning area John, and what an interesting history Brent Pelham has - I'd love to visit one day. Thanks so much for photographing that amazingly carved stone ... so fascinating and beautiful area - cheers Hilary

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