UG OX THE ARRANGEMENT OF CHAPELS EAST OF TRANSEPTS.
aisles, uliich form cliapcls only in a ritual sense. At Buiklwas Abbey, Shropshire, or Bayhani Abbey, Sussex, this can harJly be said to be the case. The chapels at a a Builihvas Abbey Church, a Nave, n (Jhoir. c Presbytery. D D Transepts, e Tower. do not form a I'cgular aisle ; yet neither do they stand out boldly as distinct cliapels. At Bayham, care is taken to mark this, for, though the arches leading into tliem are fpiitc of the same cliaracter as tliose of a regular arcade — a feature, which, it may be remarked, is nowhere to be found in tlie cliui-cli- — yet tliey are carefully divided by a mass of wall with attached responds, instead of a distinct j)illar. Tlic wlmh' arrangements of liayham Abbey are worthy of the most attentive study. The ap.sidal termination, the traiis('])ts thrust east of the choir, tlu^ absence of arcades t(» ilir I'lLtcr. and tlu! nave cntii-cly witlitnil aislis, fcirm a groiniij-plaii w InCli, as far as my c.j»ci-ience goes, is altogether uni<|iH'. Tm my miii'l, by fir the most satislacloi-y way of treating these appendages, in any stylo latci- than Xormaii, is that ibllowcd at ljlli(igt(»n, in I'x'ik.shirc The luutli ti-anse])t lias two, and the soiilli transept one, ol' tlicsc siii.il! (•lia,])els attached to it, willi lii'jh gables anil stone roofs. Tlies(> pro-