Page:The ecclesiastical architecture of Scotland ( Volume 3).djvu/639

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Anno 1656." The entrance doorway to the wing, which contained a tomb below and a gallery above, is in the east side. Over the flat lintelled door is the quotation, "Keep thy foot when thou goest to the House of God, and be more ready to hear than to give the sacrifice of fools.—Ecclesiastes, chapter V., verse 1." The tomb and gallery are now removed, and the space thrown into the church. In the pavement on the site is inscribed "In memory of John Allain, Esq., of Elsrickle." The quaint dormer window, shown in Fig. 1609, was taken down during the repairs made on the church a few years ago.


WEEM CHURCH, Perthshire.[1]

The ruined church of Weem stands in the village of that name, near the entrance to Castle Menzies, at a short distance from Aberfeldy. It is still in a fair state of preservation, the walls being entire, although greatly overgrown with ivy, and the roof being still intact, with the belfry on the west gable. The building has been abandoned for many years. According to Mr. A. H. Millar[A] the Church of Weem is mentioned about 1296 in the oldest charter at Castle Menzies, and references in charters are continuous till, in 1510, the Barony of Menzies was erected by charter from James IV., when "the patronage of the Kirk of Weem was specially included in the gift."

Fig. 1610.—Weem Church. Inscription over East Doorway.

The existing building, however, appears to be of a later date, since over the eastmost doorway there are the impaled arms of Sir Alexander Menzies and his wife, Margaret Campbell, with their initials, and the date 1600, together with the inscription shown in Fig. 1610.[2]

The church (Fig. 1611) is an oblong building, measuring internally about 62 feet 5 inches from east to west by about 19 feet wide, and has a north transept projecting 21 feet by 17 feet in width. It is ceiled and plastered at the roof ties. There are two doors and three windows on the south side, all of which are square headed. In each gable, high up near the ceiling, there is a window of a pointed form. All the windows and doors have large bead mouldings. In the inside of the south wall there

  1. The Historical Castles and Mansions of Scotland, p. 60.
  2. We are indebted for this sketch to Mr. A. H. Millar.