Of the once extensive structures connected with the Abbey of Melrose there now only remain the ruins of the church.
The domestic buildings and cloister, including the hall of Abbot Matthew above mentioned, were situated, somewhat contrary to the usual practice, on the north side of the church. The course of the Tweed has altered since the thirteenth century; and possibly this arrangement of the plan may have had some connection with facilities for water service in the then course of the river. A mill-lade still flows along what would formerly be the north side of the monastery; but
Fig. 763.—Melrose Abbey. Plan.
the domestic structures have now entirely disappeared, leaving only a portion of the cloister to indicate their position on the north side of the nave. A door at a high level in the north transept shows the access of the monks to the church from the dormitory, which lay to the north. A similar high door, leading from the dormitory to the church by a straight stair, still exists at Pluscardine Priory, and there is a corresponding doorway at Dryburgh Abbey; but in these convents the monastic buildings lay on the south side of the church.
The church is cruciform, and the Plan ([Fig. 763]) has this peculiarity, that the choir is unusually short and the nave is unusually long. The choir extends, with aisles, only two bays eastwards from the crossing, beyond which point the presbytery is carried one bay further, without aisles, and is lighted by large windows on the north and south sides, as well as by the great eastern window.