134 Bibliography of Stonchenge and Avehury. 



Taylor, Capt. Meadows [1808—1876] : Indian officer. 

 1853. Cromlechs, etc., in Sorapur. Journ. Roy. Asiatic Sac. : 

 Bombay and London. 



1862. Cairns, etc., in the Dekhan. Trans. Boy. Irish 



Acad., XXIV., 329—362 ; illustrated : Dublin. 

 Comparisons are made with Stonehenge, Abury, Carnac, etc. The re- 

 semblance (to Carnac, Abury, etc.) is so close in some cases, that the 

 author considers that these Indian stone monuments were erected by 

 aboriginal tribes who pgssessed the Druidical religion, and who were, in 

 fact, tribes of Eastern Celts. 



Teall, J. J. H. [b. 1849]: Geologist. 



1893. Notes on Stonehenge Eocks. TFilts Mag., XXVII., 



66—68. 



The " foreign " rocks include diabases, felsites, schists, etc. Similar rocks, 

 in situ, should be carefully looked for in the West of England. 



Teasdale, W. : of Leeds ; Lecturer and scientist. 

 1899. Age and Origin of Stonehenge ; Astronomical Theories- 

 I'rans. Leeds Astron. Soc, No. 7. [Reprint, 8 pp., with " Axial 

 View," and " View of Friar's Heel. "] See also Yorkshire Weeldy 

 Post for Nov. 4th ; and English Mechanic for Nov. 17th. 

 An able review of the subject. 



Ten Brink, Rich. 1887—96. English Literature; three 

 vols., 8vo. (c. 350 pp. each) : London. 



Vol. I. includes Bede ; Geoffrey of Monmouth, etc. ; Vol. II., Chaucer ; 

 Vol. III., Caxton ; Polydore Vergil, etc. Geoffrey of Monmouth's famous 

 book — the Historia Britonum — is unhesitatingly described by Ten Brink 

 as a " monument of stupendous delusion," and even as " a tissue of lies." 



Tennant, Prof Jas. [1808—1881]. 

 Stonehenge [" Foreign "] Eocks. [See Long's Stonehenge, p. 73.] 

 With four exceptions they are of syenite, being composed of quartz, felspar, 

 and hornblende. One of the exceptions is silicious schist ; and the other 

 three greenstone. . . . The altar-stone is a fine-grained micaceous sand- 

 stone." They bear a strong resemblance to the rocks of the Channel Islands. 



Tenniel, Sir Jno. [b. 1820] : Artist. 

 1872. A Dream of Stonehenge. Punch, 14 Sept., p. 109. 

 The " Arch-Druid " is depicted as interviewing Mr. Cardwell (Secretary for 

 War). The cartoon is apparently an allusion to the selection of Salisbury 

 Plain as a site for the military manoeuvres. 



