Recent Wiltshire Booh and Articles. 



349 



Calne. The Monumental Inscriptions in the Church, communicated 

 by A. Schomberg, begin in The Genealogist, N.S., XIV., July, 1897, p. 37, 

 and are concluded p. 90. 



Charles Lord Stourton ; Mervyn Lord Audley, Earl of Castlehaven ; 

 and Philip Earl of Pembroke figure amongst " Titled Criminals " in 

 The Ludgate Magazine, June, 1897, p. 122. A portrait of the Earl of 

 Castlehaven accompanies the paper. 



Lord Ludlow of Heywood. The Saturday Review, Sept. 11th, 1897, 

 contains an article signed "X," criticising very severely the genealogical, 

 details given by Lord Ludlow of Heywood, in a letter to the papers, in 

 which he stated his reasons for assuming that title. This is followed by a 

 copy of verses by Arthur Charles, in which " The Judges' Pedigree " is 

 again unkindly handled. 



Hill Deverill Church. An account of this Church, and of the works of repair 

 recently executed, is given in the Warminster Journal, quoted in Devizes 

 Gazette, Oct. 7th, 1897. 



Wiltshire Workhouses. An amateur tramp describes his experiences at 

 Corsham, Melksham, Devizes and Swindon Workhouses in the Pall Mall 

 Gazette, quoted in Devizes Gazette, Oct. 21st, 1897. 



Wiltshire Water-finders. On the so-called Divining-Rod, or Virgula 

 Divina, by Professor W. F. Barrett, Book I., being part xxxii., vol. xiii., 

 July, 1897, of Proceedings of Society for Psychical Research. Plans 

 and illustrations. 282 pages, 3s. 6d. This Book I. contains the water- 

 finding part of the investigations. The illustrations relating to Wilts 

 are :— The late Mr. J. Mullins, Mullins' Divining Rods, Mr. H. W. Mullins, 

 Mr. B. Tompkins, Mr. Tompkins dowsing in South Africa. 



" Salisbury Cathedral and its Picturesque Surroundings," by Alex. 

 Ansted. Illust. Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly, Aug., 1896, p. 196. 



"The Fossils of the Warminster Greensand," by A. J. Jukes-Browne. 

 Geological Magazine, June, 1896, p. 261. 



Poem on Richard Jefferies, by W. Gibson. Great Thoughts, Aug., 



1896, p. 279. 



" Afoot in Quiet Places," by W. H. Hudson, Sunday Magazine, July, 



1897, pp. 436 — 442, has an account of a " most charming " Wiltshire village* 

 where there was no public-house, but everyone brewed at home, and was 

 prosperous, well-conducted, and happy. 



S. Boniface College, at Home and Abroad. This is a uow publication. 



\'OL. XXIX. NO. LXXXVT1I. 2 B 



