By W. Jerome Harrison, F.GX 9 



Anon. 185:'.. Visit to Stonehexge. Lcisim; Hour; 11., 6^7 — 

 661 : with one woodcut (Stoiiehenge from the S.). 



1855. Stonehexge, its Situatiox axd Ouigix; with 



various Conjectures : 8vo., 80 pp. : Piper & Co. : London. 

 Frontispiece (vignette), '-Stonehenge from the West." Gives the views of 



nineteen authors, from Jeffrey of Monmouth to the Rev. E. Duke. 



1856. Muuhay's Haxdbook for Wilts, etc. Edited by 



T. C. Paris: 12uio., c. 240 pp.: London. 

 1859. Second Edition : [T. C. Paris], c. 312 pp. 

 1869. Third „ [Canon Venables], c. 504 pp. 



1882. Fourth „ [Canon Venables], c. 560 pp. 



1899. Fifth „ [Prof. Windle], 759 pp. 



- 1858. (Jld Stoxes. Chnmhcrss JovrnaI,\\\\.,lVo — 115: 



(22 Aug., 1857.) 



A pleasant description — by a lady — of a " long day " spent at Salisbury and 

 Stonehenge. 



1858. Wiltshire. Qvrtrt. Rev., QUI., 108—138. 



" Stonehenge and Avebury are to Britain, what the Pyramids are to Egypt 

 or the cave-temples to India, the mighty and mysterious monuments of 

 an unknown antiquity. They have no parallel in any other part of the 

 island" (p. 110). 



— '■ — [Jas. FergUSSOn.] 1860. Stoxehexge. Quart. Rev., 

 CVIIL, 200—225. 



" Pending some more systematic investigation, we may rest content with 

 the approximate certainty that all the great stone monuments of this 

 country belong to the period that elapsed between the departure of the 

 Romans and the conquest of the country by the Danes and Saxons — to 

 that great Arthurian period to which we owe all that we know of the 

 poetry and of the mythology of the Celtic race, and which seems to have 

 been their culminating point in the early form of their civilization." 



[" Struthio"=H. W. Estridge.] 1860. Origix of 



Stoxehexge : 8vo., l;i pp. ; Harnier : Cirencester. 

 1894. Reprint. 



A fable (written as a jeu d'esprit for a charitable purpose) describing 

 Stonehenge as "the last relic of the long lost kingdom of Atlantis." Has 

 cut of Stonehenge from the west, on cover. 



