to him along with his fee. After such a fashion this cope could have easily found its way, through Dr. Graunt, from Warwickshire to Middlesex. At the beginning of Elizabeth's reign it went along with the nuns as they wandered in an unbroken body through Flanders, France, and Portugal, where they halted. About sixty years ago it came back again from Lisbon to England, and has found a lasting home in the South Kensington Museum.
197.
Web for Orphreys; ground, crimson silk; design, the Assumption, in yellow silk and gold thread. Florentine, 15th century. 2 feet 2-1/2 inches by 1 foot 2-3/4 inches.
The same sort of stuff frequently occurs in this collection, and the
present specimen, which consists of two breadths sewed together, is the
same as the one fully described in No. 4059. In its present shape
it may have served as a back hanging to a little praying-desk in a bed-*room.
198.
A Crimson Velvet Stole, with crosses and fringes of green silk. Spanish, 16th century. 6 feet 8 inches by 2-1/2 inches, and 5-1/2 inches.
The pieces of crimson velvet out of which this stole was made, not
so many years ago, are of a deep warm tone of colour, and soft rich
pile; both so peculiar to the looms of Spain. The velvet must have
been in use for church purposes before this stole was made out of it.
1207.
A Crimson Velvet Stole, with crosses of poor gold lace, and fringes of crimson silk. Spanish, 16th century. 7 feet 7 inches by 3 inches, and 8 inches.
Like the foregoing stole in quality of velvet.