The Legend
This Story is based on the legend called 'The
Witches Stone' or 'The Rolling Stone of Gittisham
Common'.
It is set on Gittisham Common,
which is approx. 2 miles from our school and the
stone can be seen outside the Hare and Hounds
pub at Putts Corner.
The Weird Witches
One
foggy night, during a full moon, werewolves howled
to call the witches for their special hour. This
meeting was held at midnight, the witching hour.
For miles around, up
in the open, cloudless sky there were swarms of
witches flooding towards the extraordinary, mystical
stone that stood in the middle of heathland at
a cross roads in East Devon. Tuna, Sweetcorn
and Peanut Butter were the three head witches
at the meeting. They carried staves each with
lights on the end and when these lights touched
together the other wacky witches cackled while
they brewed the most evil potions and spells on
earth.
Once they had finished brewing
and chanting, Peanut Butter, Tuna and Sweetcorn
poured the evil smelling potion into a hole in
the top of the stone. With a loud explosion it
instantly broke open and formed a thirty metre
tall witch. She was the most powerful witch of
all time and immediately ordered the others to
kill all those people who stayed out after midnight.The
witches cheered, danced and celebrated. Meanwhile,
little did they know that nearby a young man was
hiding behind a tree.
During the day he had been
wandering across the common when it began to rain
and he had decided to shelter under the branches
of a huge oak tree. He was so tired that eventually
he dropped off to sleep. The noise of the exploding
stone stirred him from his slumbers. Unfortunately
he gave his hiding place away by sneezing loudly.
The witches questioned him as to what he had seen.
The boy said nothing so
they turned him into a witch and he was used as
a slave for the head witch.
It
was three o'clock and the witches took to the
sky and returned to their castle. The powerful
witch stayed behind and beheaded the young man
and turned him into a smaller stone which was
placed beside the "Witches stone." The
enormous witches stone then rolled down the hill
to the River Sid where it washed itself clean
of all the blood and poison and then made its
way back up the hill to its resting place before
dawn broke.
If you ever visit Gittisham common
at 3 o'clock in the morning perhaps you will see
the stone move.
Retold by Year 5 and
Year 6 at Farway Primary School.
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