364 Wiltshire Boohs, Famphlets, and Articles. 



The House of Lords : a Defence, by Henry Hull. Published by J. E. 

 Watmough, of Idle. 3c?. Pamphlet. Apx^eared origiually as a series of 

 articles in a Yorkshire paper. Noticed, North Wilts Herald, 21st June, 

 1895. The author is a native of Wilts. 



" The Tintometer." An article in Chambers's Journal, March, 1896. An 

 extremely valuable instrument for measurement of colour. Invented by J. 

 W. Lovibond, of Salisbury. Largely used in commerce and science and 

 medicine, as for testing flour, water, vision, colour-blindness, changes in the 

 blood of hospital patients, etc., etc. Notice, Salisbury Journal, March 21st, 

 1896. 



A Brave Sui'render, one vol., Walter Scott, 1895, price 5*., is a story by 

 Emily Grace Harding (daughter of the late Dr. Harding, Vicar of Martin), 

 the scene of which is laid principally in Salisbury and on the Plain. 



The Grrave in the Vale, from Williams' " Poems in Pink," has been set to 

 music by Mr. Domingo Merry del Val. Dedicated to our hunting Friends in 

 Wilts, and published by Hopwood & Crew, London. 



The Eelation of the Christian Revelation to Experience. A paper by 

 Emma Marie Caillard in Contem;porary Bevieto, Jan., 1896. 



The Intellectual Position of Christians. By E. M. Caillard. Five papers 

 in Parents' Heview, Jan. — May, 1896. 



Original Poems printed in the Wilts County Mirror. On the Retirement 

 of the Duke of Cambridge, by J. T. Roe, Nov. 15th, 1895 ; on Approach of 

 Winter, by Edwin Young, Nov. 22nd, 1895 ; Quidhampton, by Mary Dennant, 

 Dec. 6th, 1895 ; England's Latest Heroes, by J. E. R., April 25th, 1896. 



Catalogue of Pictures and Objects of Art exhibited at The Larmer 

 Grounds from September 2nd to September 9th, 1895. London. 

 (1896.) Pamphlet. 8vo. pp. 21. 



This — as the preface by Gen. Pitt-Rivers tells us — is a record subsequently 

 issued of a collection of objects of art aud interest lent by himself and other 

 residents in the neighbourhood, many of them with local associations, which 

 was opened to the public during the week of the Larmer Sports in 1895. It 

 is an eloquent testimony to the value of the efforts so lavishly made by the 

 General for the education of the people in artistic and historical matters, that 

 — although few places can be more " in the depth of the country " than Larmer 

 — no less than seven thousand nine hundred and thirty-one people visited the 

 exhibition during the week ! 



The Rushmore-Larmer Grolf Links. 8vo. pp.14. (1896). This pamphlet 

 contains a map of Gen. Pitt-Rivers' latest addition to the attractions of Larmer, 

 with the rules under which the links are available for the public, and the rules 

 of the game. 



