"I don't see what my religious views have to do with you, or anyone else" I said. "But, yes".
"And your brother is a priest?" I just grunted.
"So coming from a religious background, does this make you qualified to claim that The Devil has visited a small North Devon village?"
I began to get angry. "I have never said anything of the sort" I said. The silly bint began to get all self-righteous. "You have been writing about the night the Devil went down to Woolsery".
"For God's sake", I grunted. "It's a joke! Haven't you ever heard of the Charlie Daniels Band?"
Obviously not
So, just for the record, before the people who seem to like to take a potshot at me every time that I put my head above the parapet, read whatever is printed about us with glee:
1. The Devil did NOT come to Woolsery last weekend
2. Nobody in the CFZ has ever intimated that He did
3. I am not some weirdo fundamentalist who is claiming Demonic intervention for some peculiar reason of my own
4. The footprints found last week are of perfectly natural origin (as were the more famous ones of 1855) but we don't know what caused them just yet.
5. It is interesting that so many different explanations have been mooted for the Woolsery footprints in the week since they were photographed.
6. If we can find out conclusively what caused the Woolsery prints of 2009, we will have a pretty good idea what caused the South Devon ones of 1855, and we can put an enduring mystery to bed.
7. And, by the way, we did not put out a press release about these prints. The newspapers concerned read about the mystery online and telephoned us (that will scotch the inevitable "Jon Downes is a shameless self-publicist" rumours")
but above all (for the sake of tabloid journalists who may be reading this:
I do not know what made the footprints, but it was NOT the Hornéd One. Capisce?
1 comment:
Jon, the thought occurs to me that the weather leading up to the footprints may be important, in that the footprints look like they are the result of partial melting of the snow.
Do you know if there are any fairly local temperature and weather records for near Woolsery that can easily be obtained? If not, never to worry (I don't know yet if I can get my hands on records for 1855, though I think I can) but seeing if a partial snow melt happened in both instances might be enlightening.
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