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The Icknield Way

Chapter 4: NOTE
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About This Book

The narrative follows an ancient track across the countryside, blending day-by-day walking notes with historical, archaeological, and folkloric reflections on prehistoric routes and local landmarks. Practical route descriptions and vivid landscape observation are interwoven with essays on roads, footpaths, and tradition, showing how earthworks, field patterns, and village features preserve traces of the past. Illustrated plates punctuate the itinerary, and contemplative passages consider the road as both a material route and a symbolic experience of movement, memory, and the enduring presence of the landscape.

NOTE

I have to acknowledge the very great kindness of Mr. Hilaire Belloc, Mr. Harold T. E. Peake, and Mr. R. Hippisley Cox while I was writing this book, though I do so with some hesitation, because I may seem to make them responsible for some of my possible mistakes and certain shortcomings. A man could hardly have three better guides than Mr. Belloc for his grasp and sympathy with roads, Mr. Peake for his caution and curiosity, and “documents, documents!” and Mr. Cox for his ardour and familiarity with trodden turf; and I must add my testimony to that of my betters to the merits of Mr. Belloc’s Old Road, Mr. Peake’s chapter on prehistoric roads in Memorials of Old Leicestershire, and Mr. Cox’s Avebury. To Mr. Peake I am indebted not only for suggestions that were invaluable to me, notably in the matter of the Ridgeway and the Bishop of Cloyne’s pernicious theory, but for the use of his copies of the greater part of the materials of my second chapter. I have also had great kindness from the Rev. E. H. Goddard and Mr. W. Gough.

EDWARD THOMAS.

Llaugharne,
Caermarthenshire.