I 



362 



The Royal winged Son of Stonehenge and Avebury. 

 Lost Key of Mythology Restored by Morien O. 



HHorgan, Pontyprid : printed at the Glamorgan Free Press Office. 

 London publishers, Whittaker & Co. Cloth. 8vo. [1900?] Thirty 

 Illustrations. Pp. 307. Price 7s. 6d. 



Of these 307 closely-printed pages of " Kimmerian Revelations " it is 

 probably safe to assert that not one is wholly intelligible to the mere 

 educated Saxon. Egyptian, Roman, Greek, and Welsh mythology, the 

 Old and New Testaments, the Talmud, the works of the Christian Fathers, 

 are copiously drawn upon and commingled impartially — but it is best, 

 perhaps, to let the author speak for himself. In his prospectus he says : 

 "In the Kimmerian Revelations now compiled and printed are given 

 complete and clear explanations of all those questions which had hitherto 

 baffled enquiry. The hidden meanings of Stonehenge, Avebury and 

 Silbury Hill, Wiltshire, are brought forth to the light of day. Arthur's 

 Seat and Edin are placed in the light of truth." 



One of the most startling confirmations of his discoveries he finds in 

 the arms of Wilton (of which he gives a woodcut on the title page), as 

 will appear from the following lucid description of them : " This is the 

 sacred ark of which Stonehenge is another symbol. A Chapel Royal 

 (Nave) is shown within the Sacred Oval, Baris, or Arkite Shrine. Over 

 the Roof is the figure of the Winged Sun, as a Winged Child (Taliesun 

 or Arthur, Royal Boy), son of Uthr Ben (Head), the old Sun of the 

 preceding year. At the lower end of the Baris is the figure of a dead 

 person ascending from the Crypt or hold, of the Nave or Baris . . . 

 Thus we have the Druidic import of Stonehenge preserved in the arms 

 of the town after which Wiltshire derived its name. At each end of the 

 Chapel Royal, inside the Baris — on its deck — is a spire like Boaz and 

 Jachin near the great stone on Mount Zion (I. Kings, vii., 21). They 

 were symbols of the testes of Ccelus cut off by Saturn." " In the arms 

 of Wilton, we have pictured the Infant Sun ascending from Stonehenge 

 symbolically, as the symbol of the ' peaceful ' Bulwark, prepared by 

 Cariadwen Queen of Heaven, for the Sun's accommodation, on the 

 Ocean — As a substance the Sun (Taliesun, Tegid, &c.) is the joint Son of 

 the Essence of her Galley and the Seminal element of the Word of the 

 Highest ; and now the Christos (Iu-Pater) is Himself, as body and soul 

 (Holy Spirit) in him." After this the student will be more pleased than 

 surprised to learn that the writer has discovered traces of the Druidic 

 Trinity in the British House of Commons, where — as is fitting — " the 

 old British arrangement is preserved to this day. There the Speaker, 

 seated high, is supposed to inspire the three clerks in front of him " — 



