Recent Wiltshire Books, Pamphlets, and Articles. 181 
Sixpence. Salisbury: published by A. Smee, 48, Silver Street, and R. 
R. Edwards, 4, Castle Street. Wrappers. 8} x 54. Pp. 88. 
The numerous illustrations, most of them very fair full-page re- 
productions of photos, are alone quite worth the money charged for the 
guidebook. They are:—A General View of the City—Sketch Map of 
Salisbury and the Camps—The Close Gate—View of Cathedral from Bridge 
—from N.E.—from West—The Nave—The Screen—The Choir—The 
Chapter House—The Palace—Blue Boar Row—Council House —In- 
firmary—Poultry Cross—County Hotel-St. Thomas’s Church—St. 
Edmund’s Church—St. Martin’s Church—St. Paul’s Church—Congrega- 
tional Church—Stonehenge— Old Sarum—Amesbury Bridge—Amesbury 
Church—Amesbury Village—Wilton Park, WiltonHouse— Wilton Church 
—Longford Castle—Bemerton Church —Bulford Village — Bulford 
Camp, Soldiers’ Home—Parkhouse Camp. 
The letterpress seems to give as much information as the ordinary 
tourist desires, and as regards the Cathedral it enters a good deal into 
detail, especially in the case of the more recent gifts. Altogether a good 
sixpennyworth. 
Noticed, Salisbury Journal, Oct. 3rd, 1903. 
Buffalo Bill’s Wild Waste Show at Zalsbury, August 
the Zix, Nineteen underd and Dree. By Janny Raa; alsoa Nigger 
Dialogue, ‘The Spider and the Fly.” Salisbury; R. R. Edwards, 
Castle Street. [1903.] Pamphlet, 74 x 5. Pp. 20. One of Mr. 
Edward Slow’s sets of dialect verses, not quite up to his usual standard. 

_ Marlborough College Natural History Society, 
| = Report for the year 1902. ‘he preface notes that a 
|= _ collection of Diptera is being formed, and that the collection of Coleoptera 
is being thoroughly re-organised. An account of the field-days at 
& Tideombe, Alleannings, Bagshot, Chilton Foliat, and Broad Hinton is 
: ‘ given, and the reports of the various sections follow. The Botanical 
|= Section reports Marrubium vulgare and Melissa officinalis, both probably 
. recently naturalised, Hesperis matronalis, Silene Gallica, Apium inun- 
my datum, Solidago virgaurea, Borago officinalis, Lycopsis arvensis, and 
j Orchis pyramidalis. Four hundred and nine species of flowers were 
ar observed in bloom. 
The Entomological Section reports excellent work. Ten new species 
of Lepidoptera have been added to the list, which now numbers eleven 
hundred and thirty-four, whilst the list of Coleoptera numbers eight 
hundred and seventeen. 
In the way of birds, a ring ouzel’s nest was found in the forest, and 
two bitterns are noted as having been shot at Chilton. Amongst the 
illustrations are “Pool in Savernake Forest,” and ‘‘ The Kennet above 
Preshute.” 
A short History of Marlborough Grammar School by Rev. Christopher 
Wordsworth, which appeared in the Marlborough Times, is reprinted 
