|  | Gentleman's Magazine 1851 part 2 p.387 list, and the eighth cohort of the Britons. Hunnum is the  
next station, under the modern name of Halton-Chesters. It  
has suffered perhaps more than any. The walls have been  
entirely destroyed, and, a few years since, a systematic  
search was made for the stones of which the temples and  
villas which covered the area now occupied by a lonely hut,  
built, as the farmhouses of the neighbourhood are, with  
stones cut by the hands of Roman masons. Pottery strews the  
surface of the ground; but the general aspect of the site is 
uninviting, so completely have the modern rural Vandals  
ransacked the ground. Here the Notitia places the  
Ala Savinia or Sabiniana, a body of troops to  
whom this appellation had probably been given by Hadrian in  
compliment to his empress, Sabina. Camden found here an  
inscription to a soldier of this ala, and a slab  
recording the operations of the second legion, also dug up  
on the same spot, is now preserved at Alnwick Castle. Mr.  
Bruce speaks of busts of Emperors and Empresses from Hunnum  
in the house and grounds at Matfen, a place we did not see,  
and of some interesting discoveries made a few years ago to  
the north of the turnpike road, in a section of the station  
now known by the significant name of "Brunt-Ha'penny Field." 
He also mentions an aqueduct, traced for three-qtrs of a  
mile. Our tour has added to these and other records a new  
feature of much interest in a very perfect aqueduct, which  
carried the water of a rivulet under the great wall which  
passed through the station, and which, as before observed,  
has been converted into the present high road. It still  
serves its original purpose, and is in excellent  
preservation.
 It is after leaving this station for some distance, that the 
traveller for the first time forms a clear notion of all the 
parts of the great fortification. The land now opens on each 
side, and he perceives before him all the world stretching  
out and converging towards the horizon in bold and clear  
outline. Straight before him is the road with the two rows  
of facing-stones of the wall; on the northern side is the  
deep ditch, and the vallum or mound with its wide trench. As 
he advances he will descry the mile-castles, and at longer  
intervals the great stations. "I climbed over a stone wall," 
says Hutton, "to examine the wonder; measured the whole in  
every direction; surveyed them with surprise, with delight;  
was fascinated and unable to proceed; forgot I was upon a  
wild common, a stranger, and the evening approaching. Even  
hunger and fatigue were lost in the grandeur before me. If a 
man writes a book upon a turnpike road, he cannot be  
expected to move quick; but, lost in astonishment, I was not 
able to move at all." Advancing, we find at Plane-tree field 
a fragment of the wall nearly forty yards in length, with  
five courses of the facing stones, and a little below, at  
Brunton, is another fragment seven feet high, with nine  
courses of facing stones; against it rests an altar, the  
sides of which have been sculptured with foliage and other  
ornaments, but the inscription has perished, and no wonder,  
for the altar in former times served for a gate post. The  
turn-pike road here leaves the wall and crosses the North  
Tyne at Chollerford, a little above Chesters (Cilurnum),  
which in the time of the Romans was reached by a bridge in  
the strait course of the wall. It is here the antiquary  
commences the most delightful part of his journey.  
Interested more and more as he has gradually seen the great  
fortification developing itself in all its parts and  
accessories, he has hitherto drawn on his imagination for  
the fillings-in of the picture. At Chesters he approaches  
the walls of Cilurnum; he enters, and is in the midst of  
dwelling-houses, roofless and dilapidated, but still  
sufficiently perfect for him to form a good notion of their  
arrangement, the distribution and peculiarities of the  
apartments, and indeed the general plan of the castrum,  
although it is but partially excavated. He crosses  
thresholds worn by the tread of Roman feet, and as he walks  
through room after room upon the strong flagged pavements,  
built as if to last for ever, he revolves in his mind the  
revolutions of empires and the courses and vicissitudes of  
human affairs. A city lies buried before him. During a brief 
period in the world's age the scene around him was full of  
life, enterprise, and hope; a dense population has spread  
along the hills from the Tyne to the Solway; camps, villas,  
and towns marked its growth; some few centuries later nature
 
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