Country diary: the way through the woods leads to a mysterious grotto
by Susie White from Environment | The Guardian on (#3BNWC)
Hartburn, Northumberland Carved into the cliff is a narrow entrance, like a grotesque mask
Our footsteps are quieted by fallen leaves as we enter Hartburn Glebe, a curve of ancient semi-natural woodland hugging the steep sides of the Hart Burn. There is something of Kipling's poem The Way Through the Woods about it, a past glimpsed beneath the undergrowth. There was "once a road through the wood". The Devil's Causeway, a Roman road that ran north-east to the Tweed, passed through here, seen now as a holloway under woodrush and conifers.
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