"Glossary of Architecture," instead of borrowing from it, he would have been, less open to the charge of appearing in borrowed plumes. The number of his original cuts would have been sufficient to give his work a very respectable appearance, some of them being as good as any in the other works before us; for instance, the Norman arcade at St. Peter's, Northampton, which we have borrowed at p. 379; the Early English corbel-table at Beverley (see p. 391); the Decorated pinnacle at Howden (see p. 384); and the Perpendicular tower at Dundry.
Note.—In the "Notices of the Priory of Southwick," p. 222 of this volume, the seal of the prior of Chertsey was accidentally inserted instead of the Southwick seal, which will be given in a future number.