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History and Description of
Carlisle Cathedral
Book review.
Architectural Illustrations. - History and Description of
Carlisle Cathedral. By R. W. Billings, 4to. 1840.
An attempt to define the Geometric proportions of Gothic
Architecture, as illustrated by the Cathedrals of Carlisle
and Worcester. By R. W. Billings.
MR. BILLINGS' very excellent series of illustrations of the
unfinished, mutilated, and decayed cathedral of Carlisle, is
now brought to a conclusion, and completed by the addition
of a letter-press description of the plates. The
representations of the church are most copious. In the words
of the author, "the comparatively unknown church of St. Mary
at Carlisle has now a more extended architectural survey
published than any other cathedral in Britain; by which
means the whole mass of the building might be rebuilt." This
cathedral boasts a choir, which, in point of architectural
effect, is perhaps unrivalled in this country. The eastern
window is probably the most beautiful example of the flowing
tracery of the 14th century in existence. The author has
drawn a very minute and accurate comparison between this
splendid example and the celebrated west window of York
Minster. The dates of the two are nearly coeval; - that at
Carlisle being erected shortly after 1292, and the York
specimen between 1291 and 1330. Although the Carlisle window
is, so far as respects a great portion of the interior face
of the tracery, in an unfinished state, it is manifestly
superior in point of design to its better known and more
admired contemporary. The laborious investigation which Mr.
Billings made of this window is evinced by his elevation of
the tracery, in which the stones and their joints are
distinctly marked out and numbered.
The plates of the choir exhibit a display of architecture so
beautiful, that the spectator cannot help viewing it with a
feeling of regret when he finds that it is the only portion
of the structure which has been completed in this exquisite
style; and of indignation when he sees that the legal
guardians of the pile are so blind to its merits as to
suffer it to fall into ruin by almost total neglect. The
gable over the principal eastern window was almost unique in
its ornaments. The parapet in its original state was
crocketed and ornamented with no less than nine crosses, of
which one was placed on the apex, and the other eight on the
side of the raking parapet. All the crosses have been
destroyed; more, perhaps, from the effects of time than the
hands of fanaticism; but one is preserved in the cathedral,
and from which Mr. Billings is enabled to make an elevation
in a restored state.
The stalls and woodwork of the
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