A Wodehouse Miscellany Articles & Stories
A WODEHOUSE MISCELLANY Articles & Stories By P. G. WODEHOUSE [Transcriber's note: This collection of early Wodehouse writings was assembled for Project Gutenberg. Original publication dates for the stories are shown in square brackets in the Table of Contents. CONTENTS
and other articles placed there from time to time by
relatives.
STONE GRAVES OR CISTS
These are of considerable interest, not only from their somewhat rare
occurrence, except in certain localities, but from the manifest care
taken by the survivors to provide for the dead what they considered a
suitable resting place. In their construction they resemble somewhat, in
the care that is taken to prevent the earth touching the corpse, the
class of graves previously described.
A number of cists have been found in Tennessee, and are thus described
by Moses Fiske[14]
There are many burying grounds in West Tennessee with
regular graves. They dug them 12 or 18 inches deep, placed
slabs at the bottom ends and sides, forming a kind of stone
coffin, and, after laying in the body, covered it over with
earth.
It may be added that, in 1873, the writer assisted at the opening of a
number of graves of men of the reindeer period, near Solutre, in France,
and they were almost identical in construction with those described by
Mr. Fiske, with the exception that the latter were deeper, this,
A WODEHOUSE MISCELLANY Articles & Stories By P. G. WODEHOUSE [Transcriber's note: This collection of early Wodehouse writings was assembled for Project Gutenberg. Original publication dates for the stories are shown in square brackets in the Table of Contents. CONTENTS