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Recent Wiltshire Books, Pamphlets, and Articles, 81 
ee enary Cathedral, “Notes on some Armorial Glass in,” by 
Rey. E. EK. Dorling. The Ancestor, No. 4, December, 1902, pp. 120—126, 
with two coloured and four plain reproductions of water-colour illustrations 
by the author and a genealogical table. The glass treated of is the series 
of six thirteenth century shields at the base of the west window in the 
Cathedral. The writer, following Mr. Winston’s article on the Cathedral 
glass in the Salisbury volume of Proceedings of the Archeological In- 
stitute, assigns these shields to Henry III.; his wife, Eleanor of Provence; 
St. Louis of France; Richard of Cornwall, King of the Romans; Gilbert 
de Clare, Earl of Gloucester ; and Roger le Bigod, Earl of Norfolk. He 
shows that these personages were not remotely connected by marriage, 
and considers that the date of the glass is within a few years of 1268, 
and that the shields are probably a memorial of the eighth crusade. 
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Salisbury Cathedral Chant Book. A new selection of about 
two hundred chants chosen by Precentor Carpenter and Mr. South, the 
organist. Specially printed for use only in the Cathedral. 1902. 
Salisbury, Grayling Fishing near. Article by“ Red Quill” 
in The Field. Reprinted in Wilts County Mirror, March 18th, 1908. 
Ce 
Salisbury Cathedral, The Weathercock on the Spire, 
A note on this, lately re-constructed, in Devizes Gazette, Dec. 11th, 1902. 
Up the Avon to Salisbury in the Seventeenth Century. The 
Water Poet’s Discovery.’’ Article in Salisbury Journal, 11th April, 
1903, reprinting ‘‘A Discovery by Sea from London to Salisbury,” by 
John Taylor. 
Bishop Richard Poore and the See of Durham. 
A series of notes derived from different authorities on Bishop Poore as 
Bishop of Durham is reprinted in the Wilts County Mirror, Dec. 12th, 
1902, from papers by J. W. Fawcett in the Durham County Advertiser. 
It is noted that he was translated from Sarum to Durham at the demand 
of the convent, who had already, years before, when he was Dean of 
_ Sarum, elected him to the bishopric, when he was rejected by the Pope. 
He died at Tarrant (Dorset), April 15th, 1237, his heart being buried 
there, and his body at Durham. 
Mere Church, Notes of, &c., January, 1903, by John A. Lloyd, 
 Viear, is a little oblong book (7 x 4) of 21 pages of notes, printed only 
on one side of the paper, calling attention to, and giving particulars and 
exact dates of, all matters of interest connected with the Church. 
