[12]. For three years, or such shorter period as may have elapsed since the date of the College testimonial.

[13]. It is recommended that the party giving the title be not one of the subscribers.

[14]. The bishop in whose diocese the curacy conferring the title is situate.

[15]. See 76th sect. of 1 & 2 Victoria, c. 106.

[16]. The concluding part of the nomination, within inverted commas, is not to be used, except in the nomination to serve as a title for orders.

[17]. It is not usual to confer priest’s orders till the candidate has been a deacon one whole year.

[18]. Mr. Sharpe, in his work on “Decorated Window Tracery,” goes back one step, to the occurrence of a round window in the apex of a semi-Norman façade, over two round head-lights. If we were in search of what might suggest tracery, we might go back still further, to the panels often occurring, even in early Norman triforium arcades, as at Rochester; and sometimes, as at Peterborough, in groups of three or four, and deeply sunk.

[19]. See Sharpe’s “Decorated Window Tracery,” p. 93.

[20]. Garbet’s “Rudimentary Treatise;” a work well worth much study.