MISCELLANEOUS OBJECTS. 



No. of 

 Case. 



No. of 

 Object. 



xiii. b. 



Br. 214. 



Br. 215. 



xiii. 



Br. 216. 



xiii. b. 



Br. 217. 



Locality, &c. 



in the middle. Round this and at the 

 outer edge is a fillet. Part of the nearly 

 flat handle remains. It is of curved outline, 

 artistically blending with the circle of the 

 top or cover into an ogee. Along the 

 edges it is adorned with a shallow outer 

 and deeper inner groove, leaving a fillet 

 between them. The patina of the bowl is 

 curious, showing patches of madder brown, 

 with green about their edges. 



Dorchester (?). 



A hook 2^in. long, but it has been 

 longer. It is lin. across. This seems too 

 large for a fish-hook, at all events for river 

 use, and the absence of a barb is against 

 its being for that purpose. On the other 

 hand its shape and sharp point give it the 

 appearance of a fish-hook. 



Dorchester (?). 



A spout 2^in. long over all. It seems to 

 have been cast, and then roughly worked, 

 partly with a file, into a rude dog's head, 

 with the actual spout in the mouth. 



Roman Well, Winterborne Kingston. 



Six thin fragments of bronze of uncertain 

 use. One of them, marked A, seems to 

 be mediaeval, having on it a repousse F, 

 apparently of that epoch. 



Fifehead Neville. 



Fragment, 4^in. long, of a curved rim of 

 possibly a wooden shield. It has three 

 rivet holes. With it is a little bit of bronze 

 bent round. It may have been a handle. 



How procured. 



With the 



General 



Collection. 



Do. 



Given by 

 J. C. Mansel- 

 Pleydell, Esq. 



Given by 

 C. Coimop, Esq. 



