[95] Lincoln Cathedral Statutes, vol. ii. p. 447.
[96] According to Gough (Camden’s Britannia) the stained glass of the church was taken out in 1737 to save the vicar wearing spectacles!
[97] Chancel Screens, A. Welby Pugin, p. 14.
[98] Pugin, p. 22.
[99] See plan and view in Gally Knight.
[100] Published by J. D. of Kidwelly, MDCLXXII.
[101] York Fabric Rolls (Surtees Society), p. 300-1.
[102] Archæological Journal, vol. xlv. p. 429.
[103] In the Lincoln Diocesan Magazine, 1895.
[104] In this respect resembling Chaucer’s Wife of Bath’s third husband, who “lith y grave under the rode-beme,” and an Alderman H. Philyp, who wished “to be buried in the Church of Seynt Petres, in the Baylly of Oxford, under the Rode.”—A. Gibbons, Early Lincoln Wills, pp. 87-8.