THE ROMAN CAMP.
41
transcendentalism, and fish for breakfast."
THE STRANGER.
A pleasant association, sir, and a liberal and discriminating hospitality. This is an old British camp, I believe, sir.
THE REV. DR. FOLLIOTT.
Roman, sir; Roman: undeniably Roman. The vallum is past controversy. It was not a camp, sir, a castrum, but a castellum, a little camp, or watch-station, to which was attached, on the peak of the adjacent hill, a beacon for transmitting alarms. You will find such here and there, all along the range of chalk hills, which traverses the country from north-east to south-west, and along the base of which runs the ancient Ikenild road, whereof you may descry a portion in that long strait white line.