INDEX

LONDON: WEST, NEWMAN AND CO., HATTON GARDEN.


FOOTNOTES


[1]. See letter to the Editor dated June 14, 1900, p. 304.

[2]. Figs. C. and D. (pp. [160] and [162]) are borrowed from Yarrell’s British Birds by permission of Messrs. Gurney & Jackson.

[3]. About that period it was the practice for men who became leading architects to undergo a thorough classical training, including a lengthened course of practical study on the continent of Europe—the results of which are in evidence in so many public buildings then erected in London.

[4]. See George Ormerod’s Strigulensia, Archæological Memoirs relating to the district adjacent to the confluence of the Severn and Wye (1861).