A few days ago I mentioned a book I had been given and promised that, when I came to the appropriate part, I would disclose the whereabouts of the Golden Calf buried on the South Downs.  I have now reached that part and hasten to fulfill my promise.  But I must confess, most of the following script has been shamelessly copied from another web site. 
Dozing quietly on the soft underbelly of Britain is the county of West Sussex. There are some modern nondescript conurbations in the north west of the county on the London to Brighton spine that divides it from East Sussex, but the county town of this peaceful area is Chichester in the south west, a cathedral city of Roman origin that retains its function as a market town for the surrounding villages and farmland.
Travelling north from Chichester on the A286 towards Midhurst, the road soon rises gently into the foothills of the South Downs. After passing the small village of West Dean and the walls of West Dean College, you see sloping up from the road on the right an extraordinary collection of ancient buildings. This is the Downland Museum,
 a place where old buildings and their neighbours from around the county
 have been brought to live out their dotage among their peers. It is a 
meadow of peace, where buildings are restored and rebuilt, nurtured and 
repaired, and are then mercilessly exposed to public view. If time 
permits, and should you have any interest in how life was lived in the 
past, a diversionary visit to the museum is recommended. Although the 
mixing of periods is a little confusing, and there is little in the way 
of 'entertainment' - the museum is about the buildings and not the 
inhabitants - there is much here to make you think that life might be 
better if it were simpler. Immediately after the museum, turn right up a
 country lane, just as the main road turns left into the village of 
Singleton. In these villages, and increasingly so if you stay on the 
road to Midhurst, you will see many Sussex flint cottages, some with the
 mustard-coloured doors and windows that signify ownership by the 
polo-centred Cowdrey Estate. 
The
 lane rises, with woodland and West Dean College walls to your right and
 mini-vistas of rolling Downs to your left. Quite soon you'll find 
yourself with a view of Goodwood Racecourse. Horse races are held here 
regularly, and have been since 1802. The most important meeting is at 
the end of July/early August, known as Glorious Goodwood, a title that 
could not be more apt on a bright sunny summer's day. If you catch such a
 day, with cotton wool clouds scudding in a blue sky, the sight of the 
green track with its spectacular grandstand and associated buildings, 
sat isolated and splendid atop the Downs, is one you will never forget. 
On
 very few days of the year, the sky is the colour of the cornflowers 
that, along with red poppies, once peppered the wheat and barley fields 
in summertime... not so very many pre-weedkiller years ago. There is 
even a Cornflower Day held locally, celebrated during Chichester's 
annual fair in early July. Cornflowers are distributed among the people 
by the girls of the town clutching armfuls of them. Sadly, they are now 
imported, and probably cultivated. 
As
 you come up the lane, with the racecourse spread out below on your 
left, you soon approach the main grandstand. Before you do so, on the 
right, there is a spectator's enclosure. Park in front of it and take a 
muddy track up through the woods on the far side. The track stays close 
to the enclosure fence and can be a little strenuous. Suddenly the beech
 woods end, and you see a steepish hill in front of you and the 
beginning of a spectacular view to your left. 
The
 enclosure fence ends and you are left with a short upward trek. Ignore 
the views if you can, avoid the rabbit holes, and clamber up, down and 
up over the remains of the iron age ramparts that ring the top of the 
hill. Ahead you will see a small concrete pillar, erected by the 
Ordnance Survey as a mapping aid, marking the highest point. As you 
reach it, atop this hill, called 'The Trundle'
 for no discernible reason, allow yourself, at last, to take in the 
views. The coastal plain stretches out below you, a real-life map. To 
the south is Chichester, the cathedral spire an obvious landmark, and 
beyond it the inverted 'V' coastline, at the peak of which is Selsey 
Bill. Down to your left, in leafless winter, you might glimpse stately 
Goodwood House and the car racing circuit. Further east, in the 
distance, is a smudge that is Brighton. To the west, Portsmouth
 and the Isle of Wight are clearly visible on a bright day. Between 
Chichester and Portsmouth are the many inlets of Chichester, Langstone 
and Portsmouth Harbours, visited by Romans, Saxons and Vikings and 
protected from Napoleon only by the untested forts clearly visible in 
the Solent. Turning around to face north, you have the racecourse and 
the rolling South Downs, with the North Downs of Surrey rising in the 
distance. Now is the time to select a picnic site and unpack the hamper 
you have laboured to bring this far (you didn't forget the hamper, did 
you?). You are only some 677 feet high, but you feel well and truly on 
top of the world.
Somewhere among at least four prehistoric forts is supposed to be buried a Golden Calf, the calf that Aaron had made for the Israelites. You might dig, but should you so much as catch a glimpse of gold, he will immediately move the treasure. ('He' in Sussex refers to the Devil.)
This is 
England, and the weather is changeable. Up here you are very exposed 
and, facing south-west, there is nothing between you and the Caribbean 
save the often stormy Atlantic. Here there are hail showers in June, and
 biting winds in July. Here the clouds come down in spring and autumn to
 cover this once fortified and populated hill-top with fog. A night trip
 in such a fog might be blood-chillingly spooky, but also, even in gentle Sussex, dangerous.
A view of the Trundle:
Non-italicized words borrowed from a long forgotten page of the BBC web site, picture from English Heritage.
Dozing quietly on the soft underbelly of Britain is the county of West Sussex. There are some modern nondescript conurbations in the north west of the county on the London to Brighton spine that divides it from East Sussex, but the county town of this peaceful area is Chichester in the south west, a cathedral city of Roman origin that retains its function as a market town for the surrounding villages and farmland.
Somewhere among at least four prehistoric forts is supposed to be buried a Golden Calf, the calf that Aaron had made for the Israelites. You might dig, but should you so much as catch a glimpse of gold, he will immediately move the treasure. ('He' in Sussex refers to the Devil.)
A view of the Trundle:
Non-italicized words borrowed from a long forgotten page of the BBC web site, picture from English Heritage.

 
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