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THE ANCIENT GLASS IN YORK MINSTER. 
X. First from East. Two Lights. 
Torre gives at top a niched saint in blue, leaning his head 
downwards. Below are silver-winged angels, the first and fourth 
robed in white, the second in murry pink, and the third in white. 
The two lights are each filled with a large canopied figure of an 
old man in a blue and white habit, and having a scroll over his 
head. Underneath, in each light, is St. Edward robed in purple, 
silver, and blue, wearing a golden crown, and holding a sceptre in 
his hand. Over his head is a scroll inscribed “ j$tus lEtiinartuis 
Eci.” After the fire the window seems to have only had plain 
glass. 
The six panels in this window were taken out of St. Cuthbert's 
window and were inserted here in 1887. They are arranged in 
three rows. 
Wolveden (Treasurer). 
Figure. 
School. 
St. Catherine. 
Barber-Surgeon’s shop. 
Lady leaving a ship. 
The first depicts Bobert Wolveden, treasurer of the minster, 
invoking the aid of St. William of York. He is kneeling at a 
desk on which lies an open book, from his hands issues a scroll 
inscribed “ j$ce. OTtUme ora p(ro am(mta) Hofje(tti').'’ In the ad¬ 
joining panel is shown St. Catherine crowned and with a wheel in 
her left hand. 
The middle row shows a man with red tippet and cap, and 
wearing a beard, seated and expounding, the other panel repre¬ 
sents the interior of a Barber-Surgeon's shop. 
The lower row has 16th century panels, one depicting a man 
and woman teaching a boy to read, and the other shows a lady 
leaving a ship and being greeted by a friend. A boy is in charge 
of the plank along which she has crossed from the ship to land. 
Clerestory. North Side. Lady Chapel. 
XI. Fourth from East. Five Lights. 
SS. Peter, Andrew , John , James the Greater and St. Thomas. 
The canopies partake of the character of octagon towers over a 
niche resting on slender side shafts. The tower base is two storied 
with windows, above is a receding story also with windows and at 
