By Harold Brakspear, F.S.A. 



253 



remains of a tesselated pavement about two or three feet below 

 the surface of the ground. It appeared to have been part of a 

 large square, and the part now discovered was evidently one of its 

 corners. It had a wide ornamental border of no remarkable beauty." 

 There was no record of this being found in 1881, so that as it 

 was carefully covered with flag-stones it may yet be exposed at 

 some future date. 



Chamber XIX. was only partly excavated at its north end, but 

 no indications of a pavement remained. 



Running along its west side was a culvert 1 f feet wide and 3| 

 feet deep, with a paved bottom, 4£ feet below the level of the floor 

 of chamber XX. At the south side of the chamber the culvert 

 turned at about an angle of 45° in a south-easterly direction and 

 had a right-angle branch, of the same width as the main culvert^ 

 joining it from an easterly direction. 



Chamber XX. was 8 feet from north to south, but of uncertain 

 length, and apparently a passage-way. 



The north wall remained, as far as the culvert, above the floor- 

 level. 



Under the north-west corner the drain already mentioned in 



Capital found built up in foundations. 



