Page:Archaeological Journal, Volume 4.djvu/346

 323 LOW SIDE WINDOWS. semicircular arch of a doorway in the same chm'ch, and of the same date as this window, is another inscription, " ©rate pro antmo WcW WittijtxaV For this notice and a few others we are indebted to the manuscript notes of the late Mr. Rickman, now in the pos- session of the Oxford Architectural Society. We are also indebted to that Society for the use of the woodcuts of Buck- nell, Elsfield, and Garsington, which were engraved for their " Guide to the Neighbourhood of Oxford." The most remarkable specimen of these openings is that at Othery, near Bridgewater, Somersetshire. It is not a separate ,i.rWPW^ ^Ji|' wii^ jitejji'ii'^if „. Low ^iilf ivindnw OH the.ioMlh Mile, il» sill lieinj 1 ft. 6 in Above the bnse innuWinjr. i. Low side window on the norlli itiile, new stopped. r Squint from noulli triin«epi. tl. Openinjr through rhn bnttre>ii.