Page:The castellated and domestic architecture of Scotland from the twelfth to the eighteenth century (1887) - Volume 1.djvu/511

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LINLITHGOW PALACE _ 491 THIRD PERIOD passage exactly resembles the clerestory passage of a church, and has the same effect as seen from the hall. The plan of the second floor shows this gallery with its wide openings into the hall, and the niches which adorned the hall on the piers between. On the opposite side are seen the lofty windows (Fig. 41 6), with deep external bays, which lighted the hall. This side also had a row of niches and statues between the windows on the inside. FIG. 422. Linlitligow Palace. Interior of Chapel. The south side of the quadrangle contains, on the first floor (Fig. 419), the chapel and a large anteroom adjoining, with a wide door between.