CHAPTER V. 
BY TWILIGHT. 
4 
= icj4, INDING our way from the comme- 
morative Rufus Stone to the high 
ground at Stoney Cross, we shall, 
a) eS by taking a position facing due 
north, obtain a beautiful view of 
the sweep of forest, in the hollow 
of which—with uplands all around—lies 
the place around which linger historical 
associations of so much interest. We 
follow a line northwards from the level of the 
Stoney Cross Road, dipping first into the vale 
below, through brake, and gorse, and heather. 
The sun has set and the day is rapidly waning ; 
but the air is filled with the notes of the loudest 
warblers of the wood. On our way down the 
