192 



Magazine Articles, 



The CloSOS Of Salisbury and Wells, in the Magazine of An r for May, 

 1895, is both written and illustrated by Mr. Alexander Ansted. The two Closes 

 and their buildings are compared and contrasted. There are six charming 

 drawings of Salisbury :— the Cathedral from the south-west, the Palace from 

 the south-east, Choristers' Green, the King's House, the Wardrobe, and St. 

 Anne's Gate. 



Salisbury Cathedral, in the Sunday Magazine for April, by the Very Rev. 

 Dean Boyle, is again illustrated by drawings from Mr. Ansted's prolific pen, 

 of the North Porch, the Longespe Tomb, a Turret of the West Front, the Lady 

 Chapel, the Cloisters and South Transept, Carving in the Chapter House, the 

 Interior of the Chapter House, and a view of the Cathedral from the meadows. 

 The article is a short historical sketch of the erection of the building by Bishop 

 Poore and of its reduction to a condition of " cleanness and neatness " by 

 Wyatt in 1790. 



The May number has the concluding paper with the following illustrations : — 

 General View from north-east, Audrey Chantry, Great Transept, Inverted Arch, 

 South Aisle, Facade, Looking through Grill to Bridport Tomb, Consecration 

 Cross in Chapter House. 



A Family Connexion of the Codrington Family in the Seventeenth 

 Century, by the Eev. R. H. Codrington, D.D., is a paper of eight 



pages, with two good plates of arms, in the Bristol and Gloucestershire 

 Archaeological Society'' s Transactions, Fourteen shields of arms now in a 

 window at Castle House, Calne — evidently of the same date, and evidently not 

 now in their original position — form the subject of the paper. The arms 

 mostly belong to Gloucestershire families, but they are conjectured by the 

 writer to have come from the manor-house of Berwick Bassett, in which 

 Edward Goddard— whose arms appear in one of the shields — is known to have 

 lived. There seems, however, to be no evidence of their having come from 

 Berwick. The families whose arms appear are Codrington, Wyrrell, Scrope, 

 Borlase, Baldwin, Smith, Browning, Goddard, Dennys, Speke, Stocker, 

 Still, Guise, Parker, Lucy, Marmion, Stokes, Snell, Roberts, Langley, and 

 Stephens. 



" Wiltshire : Evening,' ' by W. S. Senior, is a short poem in The New 

 Review for May, 1895, with nothing about Wiltshire in it. 



"The Names of the Prebendal Stalls in Cathedrals of the old 

 Foundation — Salisbury." An article in Church Bells, March 15th, 1895. 



" A Famous Training Establishment/' in the Pall Mall Budget of 

 March 28th, deals with Manton House, and has portraits of Alec Taylors 

 sons, Alec, Junr., and Tom. 



Market Lavington. The Gardener's Magazine for February, 1895, contains 

 an article on the method of culture adopted by Mr. Lye, of Market Lavington, 

 in the growth of fuchsias — for which he is famous — with an illustration of 

 some of the plants grown by him. 



