Caterpillars and cocoons, sea serpents, a seahorse and a mermaid
On the south face of the western arch, on the right side as you look at it, is a pair of sculptures that is recognisable, referring to metamorphosis: that change from one form into another, like a maggot into a fly, a caterpillar into a butterfly, from an egg via a cocoon. A pair of five-petalled flowers, not a butterfly, is juxtaposed.
Three jobs to be done at Ross last Sunday
Whether it rained or not, my mind was made up to do three things:
1. To dig around the bases of headstones in the burial ground, looking for the stonemason’s signature, particularly Dan Herbert’s.
2. To site the first St John’s Church, using a photograph in Hawley Stancombe’s booklet on the Parish of Ross.
3. Knock on the door of the cottage that is purported to have belonged to Dan Herbert at 2 Badajos St, to determine if my memory of the back yard with sheds was correct.