[908] Borlase, Wm., Antiquities of Cornwall, p. 296.
[909] Cliff Castles, p. 33.
[910] Cf. Baring-Gould, Cliff Castles.
[911] Chislehurst is supposed to mean the pebble hurst or wood, but Chislehurst is on chalk and is less pebbly than many places adjacent: at Chislehurst is White Horse Hill: Nantjizzel or jizzle valley, in Cornwall, is close to Carn Voel, alias the Diamond House, and thus, I am inclined to think that Chislehurst was a selhurst or selli’s wood sacred to Chi the great Jehu.
[912] Adams, W. H. A., Famous Caves and Catacombs, p. 90.
[913] Spence L., Myths of Mexico and Peru, p. 293.
[914] In 1867 Mr. Roach Smith published the following description: “The ground plan of the caves was like a six-leaved flower diverging from the central cup which is represented by the shaft. The central cave of each three is about 14 yards long and about 6 yards high. The side caves are smaller, about 7 yards long and 2 yards wide. The section is rather singular: taken from end to end the roof line is horizontal: but the floor rises at the end of the cave so that a sketch of the section from end to end of the two principal caves is like the outline of a boat, the shaft being in the position of the mainmast. The section across the cave is like the outline of an egg made to stand on its broader end. They are all hewn out of the chalk, the tool marks, like those which would be made by a pick, being still visible.”—Archæologia, i., 32.
Dr. Munro states: “They are usually found on the higher ground of the lower reaches of the Thames ... in fact, North Kent and South Essex appear to be studded with them.”—Prehistoric Britain, p. 222.
[915] Nat. Hist., lib. xvii., cap. viii.
[916] Part I.