Amid the enigma and bewilderment that enshrouds a small part of Salisbury in Englands green and pleasant land, I stood in awe to witness one of the great wonders of the world.
Before me stood five thousand years of history, a mystery dating back to the ancient Druids and cultures long since lost to the passages of time.
Silhouetted against the pre-dawn sky, Stonehenge stood proud in the gloom, its pillars united as one structure, forged from the hand of man five millennia ago.
If only it could speak and expose its inner secrets, tell us tales of joy and sorrow, heroes and villains.
But for now it just sat and waited for the dawn of a new day, a new experience to add to the catalogues of history.
And then the sun peered its head above the horizon and the sky became a blend of reds, oranges and yellows.
From the darkness came shadows cast from the giant stone sentinels racing away across the grassy fields.
Suddenly the countryside was alive, awakened from its slumber and welcoming the early morning sun.
Daybreak was greeted by birds, dancing from stone to stone, playing atop this formation which dominates the local...