|  | Page 111:- canopies, and ornamented with quatrefoils and shields of  
arms. The Howards are more gorgeously decorated with all the 
insignia of armorial blazonry. Unfortunately little care has 
been taken of these splendid tombs; the long dank grass, and 
weeds and moss, are fast defacing these proud memorials of  
the haughty barons, once lords of this beautiful domain.
 The cloisters run parallel with the south side of the  
conventual church, and have been connected with it. The  
groining is early English, with cross springers diverging  
from a row of piers running up the middle, and from  
pilasters on the sides. The dormitory which was above, is  
now a garden, so that there is a constant dropping and  
dampness below. There are some Roman antiquities which have  
been found in the neighbourhood, preserved here. Of the  
remainder of the conventual buildings, we may observe a  
square tower, with square mullioned windows, three stories  
in height, which was erected, or at least considerably  
repaired, in the sixteenth century, by the bastard Dacre for 
his residence. Another tower, with the Tudor flower in the  
cornice, forms part of the residence of the present aged  
curate of Lanercost. In the church-yard is the recumbent  
effigy of a knight, having the hands clasped on the breast.
 This Abbey forms fine pictures from the grounds of Naworth  
and the surrounding woods. The best near view is from the  
corner of the area in which it stands, under the  
wide-spreading elms; hence the
 
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