4. Lodging.
5. Inner Lodging.
6. Winter Parlour.
7. Buttery.
8. Survaying Place.
9. Back Stairs.
10. Kitchen.
11. Larder.
12. Court.
In the next example (Fig. [223]) the idea of the entrance hall is further developed. The front door opens into a passage off which the hall is approached, but without a dividing wall. There is no daïs, and the parlour is entered from the passage instead of from the upper end of the hall. The latter apartment is still central, and divides the family rooms from those of the servants. There are fresh designations bestowed upon some of them: the parlour and the lodgings we know, but in addition to these there is a "closset" and a "wth," or withdrawing room. The buttery is as near to its old position as the new arrangement allows, and beyond it is the familiar kitchen, with the larder, the pastry, and the bolting-house leading out of the latter. The elevation is again perfectly simple, and calls for no remark beyond pointing out the alternative methods shown of roofing the two central turrets. The sketch plan and elevation should be noticed, jotted down at the side of the main subject, and embodying a smaller version of a somewhat similar idea.