The Cromlech Du Tus

Martin Farquhar Tupper

Hoary relic, stern and old,—
Heaving huge above the mould
Like some mammoth, lull’d to sleep
By the magic-murmuring deep,
Till those grey gigantic bones
Gorgon-time hath frown’d to stones,—
Who shall tell thine awful tale,
Massy Cromlech at “The Vale?"

Ruthless altar, hungry tomb!
Superstition’s throne of gloom,
Where in black sepulchral state
High the. hooded Spectre sate
Terrible and throng’d by fears
Brooding for a thousand years
As a thunder-cloud above
All that wretched men may love,-

Is there no grim witness near
That shall whisper words of fear,
Every brother’s heart to thrill,
Every brother’s blood to chill,
While thy records are revealed
And thy mysteries unsealed ?
Lift with Titan toil and pain,
Lift the lid by might and main,—
Lift the lid and look within
On—this charnel house of Sin!
O twin brethren, how and when
Dwelt ye in this rocky den!
Rise dread martyrs! for your bones
Chronicle these cromlech-stones!
Rise, ye grisly, ghastly pair,
—Skeletons! how came ye there—
Kneeling starkly side by side
More like life than those who died?
More like life?—O what a spell
Of horror cowers in that cell!
More like life!—Alive they went
Into that stone tenement,
Bound as in religious ease
Meekly kneeling on their knees,
And the cruel thongs confin’d
All but the distracted mind
That with terror raved to see _
Woe how slow such death would be:

Woe! how slow and full of dread:
Pining, dying, but not dead,—
Pining, dying, in the tomb
Drown‘d in gulfs of starving gloom,
With corruption, hideous fear,
Creeping noiselessly more near,
While the victims slowly died
Link'd together side by side
Till in manacled mad strife
Both had struggled out of life!

Yea: some idol claim’d the price
Of this living sacrifice:
Some grim demnon's dark high priest
Bound these slaves for Odin’s feast,
Offering up with rites of hell
Human pangs to Thor or Bell!

Christians ponder on these bones;
Kneel around the Cromlech-stones,
Kneel and thank our God above
That His name, His heart is Love;
That his thirst is—not for blood,
But—for joy and gratitude;
That he bids no soul be sad,
But is glad to make us glad;
That he loves not man's despair,
But delights to bless his pray'r!

Cromlech is a word describing a stone age burial chamber or dolmen. This poem is about the Dehus Dolmen at Vale on the Island of Guernsey in the Channel Islands. William Farquhar Tupper was a keen archaeologist who also excavated (and wrote a poem about) the roman villa at Farley Heath in Surrey.


Main Location:

Dehus Dolmen, Vale, Guernsey, Channel Islands

Inside the mysterious Dehus Dolmen on the Island of Guernsey

Image by Unukorno. Licensed under Creative Commons.