Furze the Cruel
Almost everywhere on Dartmoor are Furze, Heather, and Granite. The Furze seems to suggest Cruelty, the Heather Endurance, and the Granite Strength. The Furze is destroyed by fire, but grows again; the Heather is torn by winds, but blossoms again; the Granite is worn away imperceptibly by the rain. This work is the first of a proposed trilogy, which the author hopes to continue and complete with Heather and Granite.
CONTENTS
The river of Tavy is a great mountain-carver. From its mud-holes of Cranmere to the walls of Tavistock it is a hewer of rocks. Thenceforth it becomes a gardener, raising flowers and herbs; it becomes idyllic. It goes into Arcadia. And at last it floats ships of war.
There is a story in Hebrew literature of a king called Solomon, a man reputed wise, although a fool with women, who desired to build a temple to his God. There was a tradition which forbade the use of hammer or chisel in the erection of a place of worship, because, according to the Mischna, Iron is used to shorten life, the altar to prolong it. The stones were not to be hewn. The temple was to be built noiselessly. The narrative suggests that Solomon had the stones cut and shaped at some distance from the building site, which was a decidedly Jesuitical way of solving the problem. Myth suggests that the king sought the aid of Asmodeus, chief of the devils, who told him where he could discover a worm which would split the toughest rock. The introduction of the devil to assist in the building of the temple was no doubt of Persian origin, since Persian thought influenced Hebrew literature just as Grecian thought was later to influence that of Rome. The idea of noiseless building, of an altar created by supernatural powers, of burrowing for minerals and metals without tools, is common to the literature of every country. It is one of the stock tales of folk-lore found everywhere. In one place it is a worm which shatters the mountains; in another a black stone; and in another a herb, such as the innocent forget-me-not, and the various saxifrages of the cottage garden. All the stories agree upon three points: the name of the rock-shatterer signifies irresistible force; it is invariably a small and insignificant object; and it is brought to mankind by a bird. That bird is the cloud; and the worm, pebble, or herb, which shatters mountains is the raindrop.
John Trevena
FURZE THE CRUEL
JOHN TREVENA
FURZE THE CRUEL
ABOUT RAINDROPS
ABOUT THE TAVY FAMILY
ABOUT BRIGHTLY
ABOUT PASTOR AND MASTER
ABOUT BEETLES
ABOUT THOMASINE
ABOUT VOCAL AND INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC
ABOUT FAIRYLAND
ABOUT ATMOSPHERE
ABOUT THE VIGIL OF ST. GOOSE
ABOUT THE FEAST OF ST. GOOSE
ABOUT THE OCTAVE OF ST. GOOSE
ABOUT VARIOUS EMOTIONS
ABOUT A STRUGGLE AT THE GATE OF FAIRYLAND
ABOUT JUSTICE
ABOUT PASTIMES
ABOUT AUTUMN IN FAIRYLAND
ABOUT THE GOOD RIGHT HAND OF FELLOWSHIP
ABOUT THE PASSOVER OF THE BRUTE
ABOUT WINTER IN REAL LIFE
ABOUT THE PINCH
ABOUT A HOUSE ON THE HIDDEN LANES
ABOUT BANKRUPTS
ABOUT SWALING-FIRES
ABOUT 'DUPPENCE'
ABOUT REGENERATION AND RENUNCIATION