l 8 THE ANCIENT GLASS IN YORK MINSTER. 
dreamt he was living, and a horseman was despatched to Gloucester 
for men, who came and dug out William who was found to be 
alive. 
Another story relates that the walls of a house at Winchester 
fell on a boy named Godfrey, who was sleeping in a cradle. The 
mother invoked the aid of St. Thomas of Canterbury. The boy 
is dug out unhurt, and is offered by his mother at the shrine of 
St. Thomas. 
Fig. 13. Chapter House. II. N. Second and Fourth Lights. 
The middle light is ornamented with the stem, branches and 
leaves of the Thorn, and has a border composed of the stem and 
leaves of the Ivy. The adjacent lights (fig. 13) have a background 
formed of the Oak, and borders having a repeated curved device, 
enclosing a maple leaf downwards. The outer lights depict the 
Maple, whilst the borders have Oak leaves on a ruby ground with 
an inserted heraldic border in the base consisting of the white rose 
on a red ground similar to one in the north aisle of nave. 
III. The North-east Window. 
In the tracery are the arms ol :— 
Plantagenet (Edward I.)—Each side of shield point has azure a 
fleur-de-lys or (France). 
