Page:The ecclesiastical architecture of Scotland ( Volume 3).djvu/226

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Advocates' Library.[1] The steeple shown in this view is said to have been built in 1762.[2] It resembles somewhat the old steeple of Glasgow College,[3] and is much more likely to have been built, as the latter was, in the seventeenth century than in the eighteenth. The tower was probably repaired at the latter date, when, as we are informed, the church itself was so treated. The walls of the tower, where they have been left unrestored, and the staircase turret adjoining are undoubtedly older than the eighteenth century.

The eastern portion of the choir (Fig. 1129) has stood for centuries in a roofless and ruinous condition. It has originally been vaulted, probably with a pointed barrel vault supporting a stone roof. As much

Fig. 1127.—The Collegiate Church of Dalkeith. Plan.

of the vault remains (Fig. 1130) as is self-supporting, and has on the surface and in the angles of the apse moulded ribs at intervals springing from corbels. The east end terminates in an apse of three bays, in each of which, and in the bays of the south wall, are windows of three lights, filled with plain looped tracery. The windows of the apse have been partially built up (see Fig. 1129). The apse windows are built at the same level as the other windows, thus leaving a great height of plain wall above them. This height of wall over the windows was

  1. We have to thank the Curators for permission to publish this illustration.
  2. Collegiate Churches of Mid-Lothian, Bannatyne Club, p. xci.
  3. See The Castellated and Domestic Architecture of Scotland, Vol. IV. p. 160.