ANTIQUITIES OF SELBORNE. 
333 
buried on the south side, which is become such a mass of mor- 
tality that no person can be there interred without disturbing or 
displacing the bones of his ancestors. There is reason to sud- 
pose that it once was larger, and extended to what is now the 
vicarage court and garden; because many human bones have 
been dug up in those parts several yards without the present 
limits. At the east end are a few graves ; yet none till very lately 
on the north side ; but, as two or three families of best repute 
have begun to bury in that quarter, prejudice may wear out by 
degrees,* and their example be followed by the rest of the neigh- 
bourhood. 
In speaking of the church, I have all along talked of the east 
and west end, as if the chancel stood exactly true to those points 
of the compass ; but this is by no means the case, for the fabric 
bears so much to the north of the east that the four corners of 
the tower, and not the four sides, stand to the four cardinal 
points. The best method of accounting for this deviation seems 
to be, that the workmen, who probably were employed in the 
longest days, endeavoured to set the chancels to the rising of 
the sun. 
Close by the church, at the west end, stands the vicarage- 
house ; an old, but roomy and convenient edifice. It faces very 
agreeably to the morning sun, and is divided from the village by 
a neat and cheerful court. According to the manner of old times, 
the hall was open to the roof ; and so continued, probably, till 
the vicars became family-men, and began to want more conveni- 
ences ; when they flung a floor across, and, by partitions, divided 
the space into chambers. In this hall we remember a date, some 
time in the reign of Elizabeth ; it was over the door that leads 
to the stairs. 
Behind the house is a garden of an irregular shape, but well 
laid out ; whose terrace commands so romantic and picturesque 
a prospect, that the first master in landscape might contemplate 
it with pleasure, and deem it an object well worthy of his pencil. 
LETTER V. 
In the church-yard of this village is a yew-tree, whose aspect 
• The prejudice seems to have worn out. The objection to bury behind the church is bv ao 
moans confined to a Hampshire village. In several towns in the north of England, the same 
foolish scruple exists. — D. 
