CHAPTER VIII. 
Lady Chapel (Four Eastern Bays) 1361 to 1400. 
The windows are of three lights, above are six traceried openings, 
surmounted by two quatrefoils and a sixfoil compartment in the 
apex. The easternmost windows are of two-lights. The Lady 
Chapel and Choir were much damaged by the fire in 1829. 
I. South Aisle (fourth from east). Three Lights. 
Christ, St. Paul, St. Edmund, St. Thomas a Bechet. 
The tracery was executed in 1906 by Mr. J. W. Knowles. The 
general tone is white, relieved with a little blue and red. 
Archbishop at Mass. 
Descent of the 
Holy Spirit. 
Confused. 
Lower part of a 
St. Christopher. 
Martyrdom of 
St. Edmund. 
Ascension. 
Two Ecclesiastics 
at prayer. 
Mutilated. 
Derision of Christ 
before Pilate. 
Martyrdom of 
St. Paul before Nero. 
Lamplugh. 
Archbishop at Mass. 
Murder of 
St. Thomas a Becket. 
Jesus marched from 
Annas to Caiphas. 
Jesus in Prison. 
Jesus before Pilate. 
The window may have been similar to the others, with three 
large figures under canopies, part of a large St. Christopher 
remains. 
In the first light the archbishop wears a crimson vestment and 
a white pall. His mitre is on the altar. The reredos shows 
Christ crowned with thorns rising from a blue tomb. The 
altar has side curtains striped blue and green, and diapered. A 
deacon and a sub-deacon assist the archbishop. A person in red 
and another in blue, wearing a red hat with cords and tassels 
and bearing a golden staff, are in attendance. Below remains 
