By Harold Brakspear, F.8.A. 



223 



Outside, in the north wall of the chapter-house where it projects 

 beyond the range, is a weathering for a pentice over the continuation 

 of this passage, and across the range wall and first buttress from 

 the south is a diagonal cut in the masonry showing the pitch of 

 the roof. How this passage was arranged beyond the east face of 

 the chapter-house is impossible to say, as the north-east angle of 

 the latter seems to have been repaired, and all indications of an 

 abutting building destroyed. There is little doubt, however, it 

 led eastward to the infirmary. 1 



Scale ° ' " g * ^ Fe S r 



Fig. 5, 



Book Cupboards, &c, east walk of Cloister. 



1 At Burnham there was no structural passage through the eastern range 

 to the infirmary, which occupied the same position as at Lacock, the only 

 apparent access thereto from the cloister being through the warming-house. 



