Page:Medieval Military Architecture in England (volume 1).djvu/12

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

Vlll Mediceval Militajy A^^chitecture. woodcuts with which he so Hberally embelHshed the original in his " Old London." To Mr. Freeman my obligations are of a different and less personal character. Other historians have visited the scenes of events which they were about to describe, but no one has shown himself so familiar with the ancient divisions, civil, ecclesiastical, and military, of English ground, and with the buildings connected with them. His accomplishments as a topographer and as a master of mediaeval architecture are peculiar to himself among historians, and materials which in their original form are dry and uninstructive give, in his hands, weight and substance to some of his most brilliant sketches. As a collector of some of these materials, I have often felt surprise and delight at the use to which they have been applied ; and, although my work has been rather that of a quarryman or brickmaker, I am sometimes led almost to regard myself as sharing in the glory of the architect.