Recent Wiltshire Books, Pamphlets, and Articles. 259 
Warminster, Barrow near. Dr. Charles White, in a lecture to 
the Members of the Camera Club, quoted in Wilts County Mirror, Nov. 
30th, 1900, stated that he had analysed the tartar on the teeth of skulls 
found in a barrow near Warminster. ‘‘ He found the tartar composed 
of dissolved white flour, and mingled with it grains of what appeared to 
be sand. He also identified fruit pulp, presumably apples. He 
discovered minute particles of the teeth of small fish. He polarised the 
sand, and found that some of it was flint and some quartz, etc., 
doubtless from the stones used for grinding.” 
Reflections on the Character and Doings of the 
Sir Roger de Coverley of Addison. [By the Rev. R. 
KE. H. Duke.] London: Elliot Stock, 1900. Pamphlet, 8vo, pp. 12. An 
attempt to identify Sir Roger with Richard Duke, of Bulford House, who 
must have been well known to Addison when a boy at Milston, close by. 
It is claimed that the scanty references to the neighbourhood of the 
Coverley home fit in well with the surroundings of Bulford. 
Zam & Zue’s Visit to tha ‘“‘Girt Wheel.” [By Edward 
Slow, 1900.] R. R. Edwards, 4, Castle Street, Salisbury. Pamphlet, 
er. 8vo, pp. 6. Price 2d. A story in rhyme in the author’s well-known 
Wiltshire dialect. 
“A Wiltshire Industry,” by Mrs. Helen C. Black. Article in 
Womanhood, July, 1900, on Miss Lovibond’s intreduction of the spinning 
wheel and loom into cottages near Lake. 
_ “Excavations in Cranborne Chase, 1893—1896, by Lieut.- 
Gen. Pitt-Rivers,” article on, by E. Sidney Hartland, in Polk Lore, 
March, 1899, p. 87. 
Salisbury Avon. “A Day amongst the Grayling,” by Shirley Fox. 
_ Article on a day’s fishing on the upper reaches of the river. Reprinted 
in Fishing Gazette, 17th Nov., 1900, p. 375, from Thames Angling Neus. 
Saxon Churches in Wilts. An article on Saxon Churches in 
The Builder, by Professor Baldwin Brown, is quoted in Wilts County 
Mirror, Oct. 26th, 1900, with notices of Saxon work at Britford, 
Bradford-on-Avon, Netheravon, Avebury, Bremhill, Broad Hinton, and 
Somerford Keynes. The writer says that the apsidal Church at 
Manningford Bruce is clearly of Norman, not Saxon date. Devizes 
Gazette, 25th Oct. 
‘What I Remember of my Schooldays.” By Clement 
_ Seott (Reminiscences of Marlborough College, 1852—59), in Pearson's 
_ Weekly, 13th October, 1900, p. 216. 
