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



69 



Holland, Dr. Philemon [1552—1637]: Translator. 



1610. Tkanslation of Camden's "Britannia"; fol. : London. 



1637. Second Edition. 

 Hooker, Sir J. D. [b, 1817] : late Director, Kew Gardens. 



1855. Himalayan Journals ; two vols., 8vo. ; xxviii., 408 ; and 

 xii., 487 ; illustrated : London. 



Describes the stone monuments erected by the tribes now living in the 

 Khasia Hills. They are monuments to the dead. [See Vol. II., pp. 

 273—316; with coloured plate facing p. 277.] A cut facing p. 313 shows 

 a tree surrounded by what look like cromlechs ; and with a row of tall 

 upright stones behind them. 



Howard, Jno. E. [1807 — 1883]: Chemist and qidnologist. 

 1880. The Druids and their Eeligion. Trans. Victoria Inst., 

 xiv., 87 — 124 ; with two woodcuts. 

 Also in pamphlet form ; 8vo., 48 pp. : London. 



For Stonehenge see pp. 10 — 14 ; 33 ; and 35. It is regarded as a circular 

 temple. The blue-stones are of older date than the rest. " The peculiar 

 sanctity of the place may have attached to these [the " blue-stones "], and 

 the more majestic trilithons may have been erected afterwards as a 

 memory " of the massacre there by the Saxons. Thus Stonehenge may 

 be both pre-Eoman and post-Eoman. 



Howard, Sir Robt. [1626—1698]: Poet; brother-in-law of 

 Dryden. 



1663. Poem [Verses prefixed to Charle ton's "Chorea Gigan turn"]. 

 " To my worthy Friend, Dr. Charleton, on his clear Discovery of Stone-Heng 



to have been a Danish Court-Eoyal, for the election of Kings, and not a 



Roman Temple, as supposed by Mr. Inigo Jones." 



Huddesford, William [1732— 1772]: Keeper of the Ashmolean 

 Library. 



1*172. Lives of Leland; Hearne; and Wood; two vols., 8 vo., 

 pp. 400, and 466 ; eleven plates : Oxford. 

 Includes a portrait of each of the three authors named. 



Hudleston, W. H. [b. 1828] : Geologist. 

 1883. Eeport of Stonehenge Excursion. Proc. Geol. Assoc., 

 VII, 134—142. 



This excursion to " Salisbury, Stonehenge, and the Vale of Wardour" took 

 place at Easter, 1881. Dr. Phene and Dr. H. P. Blackmore were the 

 " directors," or leaders. Prof. N. S. Maskelyne's paper on the Petrology 

 of Stonehenge is summarized for the Eeport by Mr. Hudleston. 



