446 Report of Meetings for 1889. By Dr. J. Hardy. 



base, as if about to burst and fall away. The font is dated 

 March 11th, 1662, and bears as one of its devices, the Percy and 

 Vere symbols. The two British Urns found on Koseden Edge, 

 and described and figured in the Club's Hist , see Vol. xi., 

 Plate v., were on view in the church. For an account of the 

 church, I beg to refer to Mr F. E. Wilson's " Churches of 

 Lindisfarne," pp. 92, 93. It has a much fuller history, but 

 there is no room for it at present. In the churchyard is the 

 grave of Mrs. Allgood and her two sons, who were killed in a 

 sad railway accident at Abbot's Eippon, January 21st, 1876. 

 The tomb is a rough fragment of a porphyritic rock, on which 

 she was accustomed to sit when resting from a favourite walk on 

 the upper part of the Breamish. 



There is no village. All that now represents it is the farm- 

 house and steading. A fuller account of the place may be 

 found in the Hist, of the Club, Vol. iv., pp. 239-240. Ingram 

 farm is notable for its excellent grazings and the breed of 

 Cheviot stock ; and is tenanted by one of our members, Mr 

 David Hall. 



The hill-sides now become more abrupt, and on the right are 

 roughened with scattered weathered crags, where the interstices 

 are filled up with short herbage, which, coming early in spring, 

 and owing to its sweetness, is at that period very attractive to 

 the sheep. It belongs to Eeaveley. Blue or purple glitters 

 break out in lengthened drifts occasionally from the wasted 

 rocks. For this site the Parsley Fern shows a preference. A 

 few Hawthorns and Mountain Ashes are sprinkled among these 

 glitters, farther up the glen, where the steeps swell into two 

 prominent eminences, like a couple of opposing capes. The one 

 on the right is Eeaveley Hill : along its verdant hollow winding 

 side there are handsome clumps of branchy scattered trees. The 

 great hill on the left, with abrupt scaurs and fine barren scaurs, 

 and the margin of a British camp that occupies the summit, just 

 visible, is Brugh Law. Breamish leaves the road here, and 

 wheels behind a lower hill, Meagrim, on whose end is the broken 

 porphyry crag, where materials for tombstones can be procured. 

 Thin patches of dwarf trees are seen flanking the windings of 

 the river as one looks upward, backed by extensive steep pastoral 

 slopes. About Brugh Law, on the hill-sides, there were 

 numerous Ants' hills of Formica umbrata, previously found in 

 Langleyford Vale, and afterwards in Kidland on the Alwen. 



