ADDENDA. 451 



Harlyn Bronze Dagger or Knife (p. 206). Besides those mentioned, 

 one of a similar class (with two rivet-holes for haft) was 

 found in Par-Moor, St. Ewe, in 1757. (Borl. Antiq. 2nd 

 Ed. p. 311, PI. xxv.) It is now in the Ashmolean Museum 

 at Oxford. 



Harlyn Tamarisk. It is interesting to observe with regard to the 

 rocky and sandy district of the Harlyn coast, where 

 scarcely a tree or bush except Tamarisk will grow, that 

 this shrub is one of the earliest named in the Bible, the 

 passage, Genesis xxi, 33, which mentions " grove, or 

 tree," in the authorized version, being rendered in the 

 new translation thus: — "Abraham planted a tamarisk 

 tree in Beer-Sheba." 



Roman Fibulce, Sfc. (pp. 222-3). Another bronze fibula, with pin, 

 from Lanivet, and another tinner's oaken shovel, dug up 

 at Boscarne, Bodmin, are in the Museum at Truro, and 

 will be figured in Plate T. 



Roman relics at Padstow (p. 259). I am endeavouring to obtain, 

 locally, further illustrations of these. 



Licinius's Stone at Tintagel (pp. 261-2), Constantine' 's at St. Hilary, 

 and the Stone at Hayle : — My full account of these, after 

 repeated inspections, I have yet to give. The lettering 

 on the Tintagel stone is quite clear. Mr. Haverfield has 

 lately communicated to the Archaeological Journal, and to 

 the Antiquary, my discovery and reading of it, and has 

 confirmed my assertion as to its age and character. In 

 his hurried visit to the stone, however, he found himself 

 unable to decipher the third line of the inscription, his 

 own record is therefore, in that respect, defective. 



A constant pressure of professional duties and, (I regret to 

 add), many unavoidable interruptions of my leisure, must be my 

 apology for having inserted merely the supplemental note, above, 

 with 6 Plates, (which I have drawn anastatically), referring to 

 Part I of my paper, instead of supplying the conclusion — 

 which must be a little longer deferred. 



W.I. 



