[14]Reliquiæ Wottonianæ, p. 208.
[15]Dibdin's Literary Reminiscences, Vol. I. xii.
[16]Huber, History of English Universities.
[17]Huber, II. p. 304.
[18]Bristed, Five Years at an English University.
[19]Huber, History of the English Universities. Newman's Translation.
[20]See Bristed, Five Years in an English University. New York, 1852.
[21]Wordsworth.
[22]Fuller.
[23]Connected with Stonehenge are an avenue and a cursus. The avenue is a narrow road of raised earth, extending 594 yards in a straight line from the grand entrance, then dividing into two branches, which lead, severally, to a row of barrows: and to the cursus,--an artificially formed flat tract of ground. This is half a mile northeast from Stonehenge, bounded by banks and ditches, 3,036 yards long, by 110 broad.