80 Wilts Books, Pamphlets, Articles, &c. 
Cranborne Chase. An article by “a Lady Traveller,” in Daily Telegraph, 
Aug. 18th, 1896, describing Gen. Pitt Rivers’ Peasant Museum at Farnham, 
his experiments in the acclimatisation and crossing of animals, and King 
John’s House at Tollard. 
Fishing at Salisbury. Article by “ Heron,” in Fishing Gazette, Nov. 21st, 
1896, pp. 367-8. 
Mr. Bennet Stanford’s Coach through Downton and Salisbury is the 
subject of an article by a Lady Passenger in the Daily Telegraph, Aug. 
25th, 1896. 
The Badminton Pack, by Hon. F. Lawley. One of a series of articles in 
Daily Telegraph (reprinted in Devizes Gazette, Aug. 20th, 1896), on 
“ Historic Packs of Hounds.” 
Mummers. Rev. R. H. Clutterbuck discourses on Christmas Plays, and gives 
the words as used in Hampshire, with some variations in use at Cranborne, 
Dorset, in Salisbury Journal, July 4th, and Aug. Ist, 1896. Another 
note on same subject, Aug. 8th. 
Political Letters and Speeches of George XIIIth Earl of Pembroke 
and Montgomery, now first collected for private circulation— 
with Portraits. Two vols., cloth, 8vo. London: Richard Bentley & Son, 
1896. These two well-got-up volumes contain letters to the Times and 
speeches on various subjects by the late Lord Pembroke. The principal 
subjects dealt with are :—National Defence, the Navy and Volunteers— 
General Politics—Socialism, Liberty, and Property—The Land Question— 
The House of Lords —Ireland—also a number of letters to Wiltshire papers, 
and speeches delivered in Wiltshire. There are two good photo-process 
portraits of the late Earl. In a review of the book the Wilts County 
Mirror, June 6th, 1896, says :—‘ Never impassioned, never rhetorical, 
Lord Pembroke was not a speaker who could rouse an audience to en- 
thusiasm, but he was a speaker to be listened to with deep attention, who 
reasoned weightily and closely and made his hearers reason too. Perhaps 
his addresses had sometimes too much likeness to spoken essays . . 
they make excellent reading.” Notice, Daily Telegraph, Nov. 6th, anda 
long article entitled “A Lost Leader” in British Review, Nov. 7th, 1896. 
Rev. A. P. Morres. Amongst the Birds on the Farne Islands, May 
26th, 1896. Salisbury: Brown & Co. Price Sixpence. An 8v0 
pamphlet of 35 pp., describing a visit to the Farne Islands, off the coast of 
Northumberland, whereon twelve species of sea birds nest every year in 
countless thousands. Mr. Morres dwells on the scene with an enthusiasm 
which will make every bird-lover who reads his story long to be off next 
June to visit the Puffins, and the Guillemots and the Eiders on the “‘ Outer” 
and the “ Inner” Farnes. 
Rev. Henry Arnold Olivier. ‘Our Lord Jesus Christ made known 
through the Church, from Advent to Trinity, set forth in Verse. — 
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