By W. Jerome Harrison, F.G.S. 



o 



Anon. 1776. A Description of Stonehenge, Abiry, &c. ■■: the 

 Druids: and Antiquities on Salisbury Plain: 12mo., 100 pp., 

 illustrated ; Collins & Johnson : Salisbury. 



Has five plates of Stonehenge (after Jones and Stukeley), and one of 

 Chesselbury Amphitheatre " Stonehenge, pp. 1 — 39. 



1778. Some few Observations necessary for Strangers 



coming to Salisbury: 12mo., 21pp., with folding plan: London. 



This pamphlet is included in the list of works bequeathed by Gough to the 

 Bodleian Library. " Stonehenge, a very ancient and much admired 

 structure '' (p. 17). 



1780. The Salisbury Guide: Sixth Edition: 12mo., vi., 



80 ; Easton : Salisbury. 

 Stonehenge, pp. 48 — 53. 



c. 1780. Curiosities, Natural and Artificial, of the 



Island of Great Britain ; etc, : 8vo. See vol. iv., Wiltshire : 

 pp. 75 — 131; illustrated ; 11. Snagg: London. 



Stonehenge and its barrows [with page-plate "from the west "J , occupy 

 pp. 90 — 108. "Doubtless they had some method in former da} T s, in 

 foreign countries as well as here, to move heavier weights than we now 

 find practicable." 



[" D. H."] 1788. Picardt's book on Derventer : Gent's 



Mag., LVIIL, i. 195 ; 318—319. 



Picardt's book (1660) is quoted by Keysler (1720). The stones (at Derventer 

 in Friesland) are much "ruder than those of Stonehenge," and are 

 cromlechs. 



1789. Salisbury Guide, Thirteenth Edition : 16mo., 102 



pp. : Easton : Salisbury. 

 Stonehenge, pp. 84 — 89. 



1792. Stone-Henge ; A Poem: 4to., iv., 20 : London and 



Norwich. 



Inscribed to Edward Jerningham, Esq. 



1793. Tour through the South of England, &c., during 



the Summer of 1791: 8vo.,.xxx., 403 ; illustrated: London. 

 Stonehenge, pp. 33 — 38 ; with plan, and four tinted plates. 



1795. A Description of Stonehenge ; extracted, etc. ; 



. viiL, 86 ; J. Easton : Salisbury. 



