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



95 



Morgan, Thos. 1873. Odinism in . . . Great Britain 

 etc. Journ. British Archceol. Assoc., XXIX., 138 — 172. 

 Stonehenge, pp. 170 — 172. " If the Wael memorial of Stonehenge were 

 restored as such, by heaping up the earth outside the external stones to 

 give it the appearance of a mound, we should have perhaps the conventional 

 shape of the Ting-Val in the palmiest days of Anglo-Saxon Odinism." 

 The monument would thus be both a burying-place and a temple or place 

 of assembly. For Abury see page 170. 



1880. Eeview of the Congress at Devizes. Journ. 



Brit. Archceol Assoc., XXXVI., 453—457. 



Suggests that Stonehenge may have originally been covered by a mound of 

 earth. 



1881. Derivation of the Name "Stonehenge." Journ. 



Brit. Archceol. Assoc., XXXVII., 167. 



" From the Saxon stane-ing, a field of stones ; and nothing would be more 

 appropriate, standing, as it did, in the midst of a necropolis of some three 

 hundred barrows." 



Morley Prof. Hen. [1822 — 1894] : Author and lecturer. 

 1864 — 7. English Writers ; three vols., 8vo. : London. 

 1887 — 95. New Edition in eleven vols., 8vo., c. 400 pp. each : 

 London. 



Vol. I. (introductory) has valuable chapters on the "Forming of the People " ; 

 " Old Literature of the Gael," and of the " Cymry," etc. See pp. 140 — 150 

 for the Hyperboreans and Stonehenge. - > 



Vol. II., p. 66, describes the " partial revival of the paganism of the Cymry 

 which is described as Neo-Druidism " ; and of which it has been suggested 

 that Stonehenge was the outcome. The succeeding volumes include full 

 and careful notices of the early writers — from Henry of Huntingdon 

 onwards — who have alluded to Stonehenge. 



1873. First Sketch of English Literature ; 8vo. : 



London. 



1877, Fifth Edition; 8vo., viii., 914. 1889, Fourteenth Edition. 



A useful introduction, including brief sketches of the various early writers 

 —as Gildas, Nennius, etc. — to Geoffrey — and thence to Aubrey, etc. 



Mountain, Anne. 1862. Stonehenge, etc. [a Poem] 

 Wiltshire Ballads; 12mo. : Salisbury. 



Ten verses, described as " Lines on visiting Stonehenge, at Twilight." 



