By the Right Rev. the Lord Bishop of Salishiry. 181 



a visitor to our house, and she immediately acknowledged the cir- 

 cumstance, though she could not recollect it. Her Majesty being 

 at the time an infant in arms, could not recollect being at the palace, 

 but she at once remembered that the incident had occurred. She 

 knew the date and circumstances of her visit (December 20 — 23, 

 1819), which was paid when the Duke and Duchess of Kent were 

 going to Sidmouth, a journey from which the Duke did not return 

 alive. 



Notes on tfje Architectural ©fetoqi of tfjc palace. 



By Mr. Joseph Aethue Reeve. 

 [Reprinted by kind permission of the Author.] 



Although within certain limits it is not difficult to decide the 

 various times at which the greater portion of Salisbury Palace was 

 built, it is nevertheless hard to assign its exact limits at any definite 

 period. 



We know that it was begun by Bishop Richard Poore, the founder 

 of New Sarum, about the year 1221, and perhaps it is easier to 

 settle the approximate form and extent of the building as it was 

 designed by him than at any future date until the time of Bishop 

 Seth Ward, who restored the palace after the Great Rebellion. 



Of this thirteenth century work the undercroft beneath the great 

 hall or "aula " remains intact, although as now restored it does not 

 present exactly the same appearance as it did originally ; in the first 

 place the embrasure at the north end of the western aisle now oc- 

 cupied by a two-light window was formerly a doorway which 

 possibly gave access, as suggested in the foregoing lecture by Bishop 

 Wordsworth, to the larder, above which on the the level of the great 

 hall may have occurred the sewery; this seems a not improbable 

 arrangement, for by this means the larder or buttery would have 

 been placed on the level of the kitchen, and at no great distance 

 from it, while the sewery would have been within easy access of the 

 hall by means of a small doorway which may well have occurred in 

 the north wall. 



The side windows of the undercroft were also rather different in 



