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coach crossover purse Christmas Eve, 1585, Mary, Queen of Scots was taken before being moved to Fotheringay for execution on February 8, 1586.And, in the summer of 2006, a striking Crop Circle was found in a field directly next to the old castle.Not only that, as we clambered down a steep, grassy embankment towards the formation, and made our careful way through thick brambles, lush bushes and a barbwire fence, we could not fail to see something highly strange strewn around the fringes of the Crop Circle: namely, a not inconsiderable pile of large and spectacularly colorful peacock feathers that were laid out in the form of a five pointed star.And what was the deal with all those peacock feathers? And what was a wild peacock doing in England anyway? After all, the creature is hardly indigenous to the British Isles! One person I spoke with asserted she knew all too well. Before I get to her story, however, it is vital I first point out that the peacock has a highly intriguing place in both history and mythology.The 1898 edition of the book The Dictionary of Phrase and Fable recorded that: peacock tail is the emblem of an Evil Eye, or an ever vigilant traitor. The tale is this: Argus was the chief Minister of Osiris, King of Egypt. When the king started on his Indian expedition, he left his queen, Isis, regent, and Argus was to be her chief adviser. Argus, with one hundred spies (called eyes), soon made himself so powerful