The Archaeological Magazine of Bristol, Bath, South-Wales, and the South-western Counties, Zväzok 1Cunningham & Mortimer, 1843 |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 5 z 15.
Strana 17
... seats behind the low heavy Norman arches , it is almost impossible to catch a syllable from the reading - desk or pulpit . St. James's church possesses few monuments of interest . The first to be mentioned is one beneath an arch ...
... seats behind the low heavy Norman arches , it is almost impossible to catch a syllable from the reading - desk or pulpit . St. James's church possesses few monuments of interest . The first to be mentioned is one beneath an arch ...
Strana 23
... seat themselves in order according as they enter , so that none presume through arrogance to claim the place of another , and let none presume to excuse himself , unless on account of more than ordinary infirmity , and let all keep ...
... seat themselves in order according as they enter , so that none presume through arrogance to claim the place of another , and let none presume to excuse himself , unless on account of more than ordinary infirmity , and let all keep ...
Strana 27
... seats are in three gradations . The chancel arch is Perpendicular , with continuous mouldings ; the chancel on a level with the nave . There are no windows on the north side of the nave ; on the south , a door has been converted into ...
... seats are in three gradations . The chancel arch is Perpendicular , with continuous mouldings ; the chancel on a level with the nave . There are no windows on the north side of the nave ; on the south , a door has been converted into ...
Strana 28
... seats in gradation , whilst the heads are of equal height . It should be observed that the window towards the west in this south wall , as well as that at the south - west corner of the chancel , is what is now known commonly as a ...
... seats in gradation , whilst the heads are of equal height . It should be observed that the window towards the west in this south wall , as well as that at the south - west corner of the chancel , is what is now known commonly as a ...
Strana 46
... seat all round the church , so that the capitals of the Norman columns might be visible . The whole area of the church ought also to be divested of those ugly deal boxes , yclept pews ; and oak benches ( not simply open pews , like ...
... seat all round the church , so that the capitals of the Norman columns might be visible . The whole area of the church ought also to be divested of those ugly deal boxes , yclept pews ; and oak benches ( not simply open pews , like ...
Iné vydania - Zobraziť všetky
The Archaeological Magazine of Bristol, Bath, South-Wales, and the ..., Zväzok 1 Úplné zobrazenie - 1843 |
Časté výrazy a frázy
abbey ancient angles antiquities appear arch Archæological Archæological Magazine architects beautiful bell beneath Bishop Boyton Bristol and West Bristol Architectural Society building built buttresses Cambridge Camden Society canopy castle cathedral chancel character church of St clerestory Clevedon consists corbels cross Decorated door doorway drip Dubricius Early English east end ecclesiastical Ecclesiologist edifice effigy England Architectural erected Exeter Society exterior feet font former gallery Gloucester Gothic Gothic architecture Gothic art holy Hospital of St inches inscription interesting interior Kewstoke LOSCOMBE manor modern monuments moulding mullions nave Norman north aisle north side notice object observed original ornaments Oudoceus parapet parish Perpendicular window pews piers pinnacles piscina plain porch present principles probably quatrefoiled Redcliff remains restored roof round sedilia shafts Somersetshire south aisle south side square-headed stone style Teilo three-light Tickenham tower tracery transepts trefoiled turret two-light wall west end West of England western
Populárne pasáže
Strana 88 - The door for the middle chamber was in the right side of the house: and they went up with winding stairs into the middle chamber, and out of the middle into the third.
Strana 76 - On one side of the house machicolated parapets, embrasures, bastions, and all the show of strong defence, and round the corner of the building a conservatory leading to the principal rooms, through which a whole company of horsemen might penetrate at one smash into the heart of the mansion ! - for who would hammer against nailed portals when he could kick his way through the greenhouse ?' are summed up in the two principles of Gothic or Christian architecture which he delivered to the world.
Strana 114 - Basil noteth*: manifest notwithstanding it is, that the very majesty and holiness of the place where God is worshipped hath, in regard of us, great virtue, force, and efficacy, for that it serveth as a sensible help to stir up devotion, and in that respect no doubt bettereth even our holiest and best actions in this kind.
Strana 117 - Book looking toward the east, or upper end of the chancel. And very reasonable was this usage ; for when the people were spoken to, it was fit to look towards them ; but when God was spoken to, it was fit to turn from the people.
Strana 117 - What the font is, every body knows, but not why it is so called. The rites of baptism in the first times were performed in " fountains" and " rivers," both because their converts were many and because those ages were unprovided of othei baptisteries.
Strana 77 - But the exterior is not the least inconsistent portion of the edifices, for we find guard-rooms without either weapons or guards; sally-ports, out of which nobody passes but the servants, and where a military man never did go out; donjon keeps, which are nothing but drawing-rooms, boudoirs, and elegant apartments; watch-towers, where the housemaids sleep, and a bastion in which the butler cleans his plate: all is a mere mask, and the whole building an ill-conceived lie.
Strana 25 - St. Katherine, near Bristol, in the diocese of Bath and Wells, which I henceforth profess as ordained by the holy fathers, as much as is consistent with the said rule, or hereafter shall be consistent for me to observe, and I will lead my life according to regular discipline.
Strana 38 - ... hands, out of reverence towards so great treasure and the whole country, into three basons before the altar of Peter the apostle, and the holy confessors Dubricius, Teilo, and Oudoceus; immediately, by the touch of the holy relics, the water bubbled on all sides in a marvellous manner, as if a great red hot stone had been thrown into it And they did not only wonder, being amazed at the various ebullitions throughout the whole bason, but also because they perceived the water to be very hot. Not...
Strana 117 - ... baptisteries. We have no other remainder of this rite but the name: for hence it is that we call our baptisteries " Fonts," which, when religion found peace, were built and consecrated for the more reverence and respect of the sacrament. These were placed at first at some distance from the church ; afterwards in the church porch, and that significantly, because baptism is the entrance into the Church mystical, as the porch of the temple.
Strana 88 - The nethermost chamber was five cubits broad, and the middle was six cubits broad, and the third was seven cubits broad: for without in the wall of the house he made narrowed rests round about, that the beams should not be fastened in the walls of the house.