TEEGONNING HILL AND ITS STTRROUNDINGS. 363 



A Latin cross of rude design stood in Chystoddon Farm. It 

 was seven feet six inches high, and its base squared as for 

 insertion in a socket. Its arms are very thick and mishapen, one 

 of them specially presenting a very hunch-backed appearance. 

 In the centre of the transverse section are four sunken roundels 

 arranged in the form of a Greek cross. As it was used as a gate- 

 post, and as at any moment it might have an iron staple driven 

 into it, I was reluctantly compelled to remove it with the 

 pecuniary assistance of the Penzance Antiquarian Society, to the 

 churchyard of Godolphin, where it stands in the angle of the 

 south porch, a visible proof of the connection between the church 

 of to-day, and that of long centuries ago. 



A headless cross, i.e. the rounded shaft and two arms, has 

 been used as a stop-gap in the hedge at Sparnow Cross. It is 

 said to mark the spot where a Jew was buried, whose ghost 

 haunts the place. 



In conclusion, I should like to point out that I have refused 

 to make any conjectures upon any of the subjects that have 

 been described in this paper. I have also not done more than 

 simply refer to discoveries that have been already made known 

 by other persons. I have, however, been much assisted by the 

 energy of two gentlemen, to whom, since they will not allow me 

 to do it otherwise, I make this sincere tender of my thanks. 



