On Urns and Antiquities of the Cheviot Hills. 293 



he did not arrive in time. There is inserted some mistaken in- 

 telligence about them at the place quoted. The Council of the 

 Society of Antiquaries of Scotland have favoured the Club with 

 electros of their cuts, affording front and back views of these 

 curious articles. They are 5 inches in length — see Tigs. 16, 17. 



Fig. 16. 



Kg. 17. 



KlDLAND. 



I have been alone or in company with Mr James Thomson over 

 the greater part of Kidland, or the remote and desolate moor- 

 lands about the head of the Coquet, and all along the peaty, 

 swampy, and broken ground from the Hanging Stone to Chew 

 Green, and southward to the line of the Western Watling Street 

 at the Outer Golden Pot and the head of Cottenshope, and across 

 behind Thirlmoor and Philip and Blinclburn, and questioned the 

 shepherds wherever they were met, without eliciting much in- 

 formation on the subject of this inquiry. 



There are two classes of hut-dwellings in the sheltered ravines 



