< Page:Archaeological Journal, Volume 3.djvu
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VESSELS, AND APPLIANCES OF SACRED USE. 135

foot of the chalice, denounces an anathema on any one who should abstract it fi-oni the church of Rheims. A singular instance is here to l)e noticed of the heedlessness of the arti- ficer, who, having erroneously repeated the word invadiave- RiT, instead of efiacing the blunder, drew a single line through the letters, and corrected it by engraving the right word above the line. A similar reluctance to make any erasion appears frequently in medieval MSS. The fine preservation of this chalice is very remarkable, especially as it lay for some time in the river Seine, having been part of the plunder abstracted from the Cabinet of Medals, a few years since. At the time when the author was permitted (in 1839) to make the drawing from which the annexed representation has been executed, there were still adherent to the fihgree small stones and sand from the bed of the Seine. In the beautiful ])ublications by Mr. Shaw, the Specimens of Ancient Church Plate, the Illustrations of the History of jMedieval Art, by Du Sommerard, and other similar works, representations of many beautiful chalices may be found. Those which are preserved at Oxford, namely, one from St. Alban's Abbey, ])resented to Trinity College by Sir Tliomas Pope, and the founder's chalice at Corpus Christi College^, well deserve attention. Amongst the choice collec- tions in Mr. jNlagniac's possession there is a beautiful specimen of Italian work- manship, of the fourteenth century, decorated with enamels, and inscribed ►J( ANDRCA PCTRUCI DC SeNIS COe FeCIT- corpus cbnvaLr..Beu:.ford Mr. Shaw has given another, of similar character, bearing the name of another artificer of Sienna' ; and Italian chalices, of great beauty, may be seen in the De Bruges, and other collec- tions, at Paris. An interesting example of the form of the chalice in our own country, towards the close of the fifteenth century, is supphed by one in Lord Hatherton's possession, at Teddesley, discovered a few years since, concealed in tlie walls of the old Hall of Pillaton, near Penkridge. The prevalent i^ Shaw's Specimens of ancient i'uniiture, clialiccs existing at Comb Pyne, Devon, pi. Ixix. Specimensof ancient church plate and Leominster. (by the Rev. W. Lukis.) In the last publi- ^ Dresses and Decorations, by Henry cation arc ^ivcn representations of ancient Shaw.

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