The Pre-RefoTTYiation Churches of Berwickshire. 109 



" Regarding the east end of the building little requires to be said. 

 In arrangement, style, and detail, it agrees very closely with the portion 

 already described. The wall is nearly entire, and is flanked by square 

 turrets, with cylindrical shafts sunk in their angles. The bases of the 

 turrets are moulded, and their heads have sloping roofs, after the 

 manner of set-offs, which give to these adjuncts much of the appearance 

 of ponderous buttresses. In the north one, each of the two stages, 









Fig. 5. 



