* By W. Jerome Harrison, F.G.S. 69 



Holland, Dr. Philemon [1552—1637]: Translator. 

 1610. Translation of Camden's "Britannia"; fol. : London. 

 1637. Second Edition. 

 Hooker, Sir J. D. [b. 1817] : late Director, Kew Gardens. 

 1855. Himalayan Journals ; two vols., 8vo. ; xxviii., 408 ; and 

 xii., 487 ; illustrated : London. 



Describes the stone monuments erected by the tribes now living in the 

 Khasia Hills. They are monuments to the dead. [-See Vol. 11., pp. 

 273—316; with coloured plate facing p. 277.J A cut facing p. 318 shows 

 a tree surrounded by what look like cromlechs ; and with a row of tall 

 upright stones behind them. 



Howard, Jno. E. [1807 — 1883] : Chemist and (piinologist. 

 1880. The Druids and their Eeligion. Trans. Victoria Inst., 

 xiv., 87 — 124 ; with two woodcuts. 

 Also in pamphlet form ; 8vo., 48 pp. : London. 

 For Stonehenge see pp. 10 — 14; 33; and 35. It is regarded as a cii'cular 

 temple. The blue-stones are of older date than the rest. " The peculiar 

 sanctity of the place may have attached to these [the " blue-stones "], and 

 the more majestic trilitJions may have been erected afterwards as a 

 memory " of the massacre there by the Saxons. Thus Stonehenge may 

 be both pre-Eoman and post-Eoman. 



Howard, Sir Robt. [1626—1698]: Pod; hrother-in-law of 

 Dryden. 

 1663. Poem [Verses prefixed to Charleton's "Chorea Gigantum"]. 



" To my worthy Friend, Dr. Charleton, on his clear Discovery of Stone-Heng 

 to have been a Danish Court-Eoyal, for the election of Kings, and not a 

 Eoman Temple, as supposed by Mr. Inigo Jones." 



Huddesford, William [1732 — 1172]: Keeper of the Ashmolean 

 Library. 



1772. Lives of Leland ; Hearne ; and Wood ; two vols., 8vo., 

 pp. 400, and 466 ; eleven plates : Oxford. 

 Includes a portrait of each of the three authors named. 



Hudleston, W. H. [b. 1828] : Geologist. 

 1883. Report of Stonehenge Excursion. Proc. Geol. Assoc, 

 VII., 134—142. 



This excursion to " Salisbury, Stonehenge, and the Vale of Wardour " took 

 place at Easter, 1881. Dr. Phene and Dr. H. P. Blackmore were the 

 "directors," or leaders. Prof. N. S. Maskelyne's paper on the Petrology 

 of Stonehenge is summarized for the Eeport by Mr. Hudleston. 



