Exeter Cathedral ([1845?])
Newman & CompanyRepository | Library | Shelf |
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Devon | West Country Studies | S SC0837 |
SC0837
CD 14 DVD 2
Publication Details
Knights excursion companion. Exeter and the south-eastern coast of Devonshire [London: C. Knight, 1851?] NO. XIII. p. 6.But the CATHEDRAL is, of course, the chief object of attraction, and indeed, is the only really attractive building in the city. [
]. Though erected in the golden age of English ecclesiastical architecture, and with the exception of the massive Norman towers tolerably uniform in style, the exterior is heavy, and comparatively unimposing in its general effect. The unusual position of the towers only renders the want of some grand and lofty central feature the more apparent: and the want is equally felt, whether the building is viewed from the Cathedral yard or the suburbs of the city. Until within these few years the Cathedral was a good deal hidden by mean buildings; these have in a great measure been removed, and the exterior can now be tolerably well seen.[Text may be taken from a different source or edition than that listed as the source by Somers Cocks.]
Steel l.engr vign
Exterior
1845