In my search for what I have been assured was a paganistic
cult, I’ve had to dig into some weird stuff. My main contact has been the
priest I mentioned in the previous update, but I’ve also had to consult some
books at the local library. Yeah, when was the last time you looked something
up in a book?
I had it on good authority that there had been a trend going
around the region with vague shamanistic at the time of the culvert-cult, but I
had no idea that anyone had taken it to such a literal idea. A magazine article
I found referenced a group of bohemians living by “Four Branches.” At first I
thought it might be a place, but some more digging made me think it might have
referred to the Four Branches of the Mabinogi. That’s a collection of written
Welsh mythology, by the way.
I didn’t make the connection at first, as the only thing to
guide me was the fact that the area around here was used for druidic worship in
the time before the Anglo-Saxons. It is a “well-known fact” that druidic cults
operated until the 1600s, even if I haven’t found any confirmation of this.
However, once I looked up cult activity in newspaper reports from the 1920s, I
found something. A group of people that moved from all over Britain to the
region following the first world war gathered in a group of worshippers that
referred to itself as “nifer o cyhyraeth”. I haven’t quite managed to figure
out what it’s supposed to mean, but apparently Cyhyraeth Cyhyraeth Cyhyraeth
Cyhyraeth is a being from Welsh mythology. It’s a large but thin, skeletal,
wraith-like spirit that stalks people who are about to suffer a horrible fate.
Why anyone would want to associate with such a being is
beyond me. Maybe they saw some form of divinatory power in its ability to
predict death, or maybe there is some other ability that I didn’t read about
that is appealing. Or maybe it’s just a misspelling of a completely different
word. Unfortunately, Iany of the members from 1923 are alive today. However
there are no later stories about that group of worshippers, which means that it
is not impossible that some sort of religious tradition survived for some 65
years, manifesting in the culvert-cult.
So that’s my theory on who the people causing disturbances
around the culvert were. I would have liked to be able to say something more
definitive, especially as I’ve spent weeks researching this, but until I manage
to get a hold of someone close to
the cult, or even a member of it, this will have to do.
I hope you guys have enjoyed the culverthalf as
much as I have!
Hi Graham. I'm Tom Ferron, and I'm the guy you've been borrowing posts from for months. I don't know who you are, but I would truly appreciate it if you stopped and deleted the things you have stolen from my website. I would recommend you try to build your blog on content you've made yourself. If there is anything, you can reach me at tomjferron@gmail.com
ReplyDelete