439 



[N.B. — This list does not claim to be in any way exhaustive. The Editor 

 appeals to all authors and publishers of pamphlets, books, or views in any 

 way connected with the county to send him copies of their works, and to 

 editors of papers and members of the Society generally to send him 

 copies of articles, views, or portraits, appearing in the newspapers.] 



Memorials of Wilton and other Papers written on 

 various occasions hy the late James Edward 



Nightingale, F.S.A. (of the Mount, Wilton). . . . Edited 

 with some additional notes by Edward Kite . . . Devizes, George 

 Simpson, Gazette Office. (One hundred and fifty copies only, printed 

 for private distribution). 1906. 



Cloth, 9in. X 5^in., pp. xv. + 215, with photo portrait. This well- 

 printed and nicely finished volume has been produced as a deserved 

 memorial of one who gave too little of his wide knowledge to the world. 

 It was fitting that his papers published in various forms should be thus 

 collected together and preserved. Four of the most important of the 

 papers in this volume are reprinted from the Wilts Arch. Mag., " The 

 Succession of the Abbesses of Wilton, with some notices of Wilton 

 Seals"; "Some notice of William Herbert, first Earl of Pembroke of 

 the present creation"; "Some Heraldic Stained Glass at Wulfhall; 

 and the destruction, in 1788, of the Ancient Glass in Salisburj' 

 Cathedral" ; and " Old Church Plate in Wiltshire." Two other papers, 

 " Notes on the Early History of Wilton," and " Some Account of the 

 Objects of Interest in an Excursion from Wilton to Fonthill and 

 Wardour," were read at the 1870 meeting of the Wilts Archaeological 

 Society at Wilton, and were afterwards printed privately in pamphlet 

 form. The " In Memoriam " notice by the Rev. E. H. Goddard is also 

 reprinted from this Magazine. 



Of these papers it is not necessary to say anything further here. 



From the Gentleman's Magazine, Nov. 1854, comes a paper, " On the 

 Architecture and Mosaics of Wilton Church," describing the type of 

 Church of which this is a copj', and the mosaics from Sta. Maria 

 Maggiore, at Rome, now preserved there. 



From the Wilton Parish Magazine, March to July, 1864, comes a 

 paper on "A Walk from Wilton to Stonehenge," a popular account of 

 the antiquities of the neighbourhood. 



"On some Ancient Customs connected with Salisbury," is a paper 

 read at the Salisbury Museum, and deals more especially with the figures 



