[117] Folk-Memory, pp. 133-6, and authorities quoted. This view is also taken by J. Romilly Allen in Celtic Art in Pagan and Christian Times, 1905, p. 186. Cf. A. G. Langdon, op. cit. pp. 4-7; W. Henderson, Folk-Lore of Northern Counties, 1879, p. 3, notices several Scottish examples.

[118] Antiquary, n.s. VI. 1910, pp. 21-26, illustration given.

[119] A description of the ruins will be found in Harlyn Bay, pp. 69-70; Vict. Hist. of Kent, 1908, I. p. 320; South-Eastern Naturalist, 1904, p. 32. For discussion of the word “sarsen” see Folk-Memory, pp. 260-2.

[120] South-Eastern Naturalist, loc. cit. See also A. E. Salter, in Trans. Herts. Nat. Hist. Soc. 1911, XIV. pp. 135-142.

[121] Proc. Geol. Assoc., 1906, XIX. p. 317.

[122] Notes and Queries, 8th Ser., VIII. p. 365. Cf. 8th Ser., VII. p. 485; VIII. p. 431; and Pliny, Nat. Hist., L. xxvi. c. 29; L. xxix. c. 13.

[123] Antiquary, N.S. II., 1906, p. 120.

[124] Harlyn Bay, pp. 69-71.

[125] Vict. Hist. of Cornwall, 1906, I. p. 379.

[126] Vict. Hist. of Yorkshire, 1907, I. p. 369; Lore and Legend of the Eng. Church, pp. 24-5; P. Royston, Rudstone, a sketch of its History and Antiquities, 1873, pp. 43-83.