124 Becent Wiltshire Bools, Articles, &c. 



" Trilithons," &c. ; Stonehenge from the East, &c. ; The Neolithic Men 

 who built Stonehenge . . . moving heavy weights ... by means 

 of manual labour ; The Slaughter Stone, &c. ; The Rise of the Sun at 

 Midsummer upon Stonehenge, &c. 



Stonehenge. in " Quaint Talks about Long Walks," by A. N. Cooper, 

 of Christ Church, Oxford ; London: A. Brown & Sons [1904J, pp. 207— 

 215 are on " The Wonder of England " (Stonehenge), with an illustration. 



"The Builders of Stonehenge" is the title of an article in the Globe 



of March 23rd, reprinted in Salisbunj Journal of March 25th, 1905, 

 discoursing on the manner of life of the Neolithic men, and giving some 

 of the results of Dr. Gowland's investigations. 



The Home and Haunts of Richard Jeiferies, by Darby 



Statibrd, an article in the English Illusf rated Magazine, February, 1905, 

 pp. 431 — 437, dealing with Jefferies' love for his home and his constant 

 references to it in all his writings, illustrated with eight good process 

 views of aspects of the house and surroundings that have not as a rule 

 been otherwise illustrated. They are : — " Coate House ; birthplace of 

 Richard Jefferies " ; " Coate House from the back, showing the older 

 portion of the homestead " : " Labourers' Cottages at Coate " : " The 

 Garden Door of Coate " ; " Entrance to Farmyard, Coate " ; " The Mere 

 at Coate, Boathouse corner"; "The Island"; "The Meadow and 

 Brook, the Mere lies beyond the high bank in the background." 



Richard Jefferies in London, article by A.L.S. in The Academy,, 

 10th June, 1905, pp. 613—614. 



The Spectator and Richard Jefferies. a letter by 



Henry S. Salt (on the subject of Jefferies' " conversion,") in the Literary 

 Guide for June, 1905. Reprinted by author in leaflet form. 



Clouds, the residence of the Hon. Mrs. Percy Wynd- 



ham. A slight article by W. S. Blunt, connecting thirteen excellent 

 photos, in Country Life, November 19th, 1904 : — The East Front ; From 

 Mrs. VVyndham's Dressing-Room ; The South Lawn ; Under the Pergola ; 

 The West Front ; Garden enclosed by Chalk Walls ; A Portion of the 

 West Front ; From the Pergola Garden ; The S.E. Corner ; The North 

 End of the Corridor ; On the North Front ; The Morning-Room ; Part 

 of the Drawing-Room ; Staircase Descent, West Corridor ; The Hall ; 

 The Drawing-Room. The writer speaks of the house as " The most 

 interesting of our great modern dwellings." It was built by Philip 

 Webb, and "it is beyond a doubt that it is on the recognition of its super 

 excellence as a type of the best Victorian architecture that his ultimate 

 fame will rest." The architect was wholly occupied with the building 

 of the house for six years, and in May, 1885, the fifth year of the building, 

 a mysterious lady dressed in black came to the house and on entering 

 the hall said " this house will be burnt down, and in less than three 

 years." The house was burnt January 6th, 1889, and was re-built in 

 three years on the exact plan of the original. 



