By W. Jerome Harrison, F.G.S. 119 



1766. Second Edition by Hen. Owen ; 4to., xvi., 357 ; illustrated : 

 London. 



Suggests inclined planes (mounds) of earth, as the means used for the 

 erection of such monuments as Stonehenge. The stones were levered up 

 the sides of the " aggeres" or earth-mounds; one end (of each stone intended 

 for an upright) lowered into holes dug in the mound ; the top-stones put 

 on ; and finally the mound of earth was cleared away. 



Rowley, Wm. [1585—1642] : Dramatist. [;See Middleton]. 



Ruskin, Jno. [1819—1900] : Atithor. 

 1869. Queen of the Air ; 8vo. : Orpington. 

 Later editions in 1887, etc. 



Writes of the glories of the sun ; and of the naturalness of sun worship 

 [tee p. 13, ed. of 1887]. 



1843 — 60. Modern Painters; five vols., 4to. : Orpington. 



1888. Ee-issue ; six vols. ; 8vo. : Orpington. 



Edition of 1888 : see Vol. I., p. 256, in which the original sketch of Stone- 

 henge by Turner is described as " perhaps the standard of storm-drawing." 

 Vol. v., p. 147, contrasts Turner's drawings of Salisbury Cathedral and 

 of Stonehenge. The engravers have been quite unable to do justice to 

 Turner's original drawings. 



Sale, Col. M. T. 1872. Stone Monuments ; Nature, VI., 127 ; 



with one woodcut. 



Describes the recent etection of three menhirs by the natives of the Khasia 

 Hills. 



Salmon, Thomas Stokes : 0/ Brasenosc College. 

 1823. English Verse Prize Poem on Stonehenge; 12mo., 

 6 pp. : Oxford. 



1826. Prize Poems ; 7th edition ; 12mo. : Oxford (pp. 213—216). 

 Eecited in the Theatre, Oxford, 12th June, 1823. Reprinted in Long's 

 " Stonehenge," pp. 189—90. 



Sammes, Aylett [ 1636—1679] : Antiqicarij. 

 1676. Britannia Antiqua Illustrata. Vol. I. (all published), 

 X., 582 ; with index ; fol. : London. 

 Ascribes Stonehenge to the Phoenicians ; see pp. 389 — 402. 



Saxo G-rammaticus [1145 — 1220]: DanisJi historian. 

 1514. Danorum Regum Historic. 1576. Historite Danicce: 

 Francfurt. 



