[107] Folk-Memory, 1908, p. 139 et seqq.

[108] Sir G. L. Gomme, Prim. Folk-Moots, pp. 108-9, 129-30, 192, 227-33; H. N. Hutchinson, Prehist. Man and Beast, 1896, p. 258; R. W. Eyton, A Key to Domesday, 1878, p. 143. Cf. T. Cato Worsfold, The French Stonehenge, n.d. p. 40. Some curious information, to be read critically, will be found in W. Charleton’s Chorea Gigantum, or Stone-Heng restored to the Danes, 1663, pp. 42-50.

[109] Folk-Memory, pp. 144-5, 336.

[110] The stone is fully described by C. Warne, Anc. Dorset, 1872, pp. 137-9.

[111] Bede, Eccles. Hist. L. iii. c. 7.

[112] A. G. Langdon, Old Cornish Crosses, 1896, passim; W. Crossing, Anc. Stone Crosses of Dartmoor, 1887, passim.

[113] See F. W. Harmer, in Geology in the Field, ed. H. W. Monckton and R. S. Herries, 1901, Pt i. pp. 110-113.

[114] Vict. Hist. of Cornwall, I. pp. 407, 415, etc.

[115] Ibid.

[116] Z. de Rouzic, Les Monuments Mégalithiques, 1901, pp. 29-30, 34; T. Cato Worsfold, The French Stonehenge, n.d., pp. 15-16; G. Allen, Evol. of the Idea of God, 1903, p. 147.