Page:Medieval Military Architecture in England (volume 1).djvu/504

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458 MedicEval Military Architecture, into garderobes, mural chambers, and an oratory, all contained in the north-eastern, or queen's tower. Eleanor, the queen of Edward L, is said to have made use of this chamber. From the queen's chamber, at the same level, a wooden passage, a sort of balcony, affixed to the north wall of the lesser hall, led to the kitchen lobby and the kitchen. Lines of corbels, and doors at either end, show the position and length of this gallery. Below the queen's apartment a passage leads to a doorway in the curtain, which opens upon the east platform, and was the only postern in the casde. It is shoulder-headed and closed with a door only. But, as at the main gate, the curtain is furnished with a line of bold corbels, forming machicolations for the defence of the wall and gateway. Passages open right and left in the sides of the door- way, and carry staircases in the wall up to the first floor of the king's and queen's towers. The platform upon which this postern opens is called the queen's bower. It is larger than the western platform. Like it, it has three half-round turrets and a parapet, and in its north end is a doorway from which a steep and narrow- and parapeted staircase formerly descended to the water's edge. This staircase was removed when the suspension-bridge was built. The towers now remain to be described. They are all of one type, and even their details are closely alike. Each has a basement, the floor of which is considerably above the exterior ground level, though below that of the court within. These chambers can only have been reached by ladders from the floors above. They are ventilated by small air-holes high up, but the probability is that they were put to no regular use, though they may have served for prisons. The first floor of each tower is entered from the court, and from that level a well-staircase ascends to the second or upper floor, and so on to the roof Here, in the four western towers, it stops. In the four eastern towers it is carried on, forming a small round turret, 14 or 15 feet high above the roof. None of these floors are vaulted, all have fireplaces in the first and second floors, and all open at the second floor level upon the rampart walk. All also are well pro- vided with garderobes. The battlements of the towers remain uninjured. The parapets are about 10 feet high, and divided into twelve merlons and as many flat-sided plain embrasures. Each merlon is pierced by a loop, and at the base of each, at the allure level, is a hole ending in a gurgoyle, for the discharge of the rain water. Two of the towers are furnished with ovens, built in the old fashion, with a flue outside and above the oven door. In the queen's tower the second floor has an oratory in the east wall. This is a deep and bold recess, divided into nine bays or compartments, three on each side, and three forming an apex. In each bay is a sedile, and above, in the apse, are three lancet windows. The slender shafts between the bays are vaulting shafts, and expand above in fan tracery of a Decorated character. On each side of the