Original Documents.
The following document, extracted from the accounts of the bursars of Merton, has been communicated by the Rev. E. Hobhouse. Numerous evidences of this nature are doubtless to be found not only in the repositories of collegiate or chapter muniments, but amongst neglected parochial accounts, which might repay the trouble of research. They supply authentic information regarding portions of the fabric, and original terms of art, which are highly useful as contributions to the vocabulary, hitherto very imperfect, of appropriate ancient appellations of various parts of buildings, or their accessory ornaments.
No remains exist of the rood-loft constructed according to this agreement. It may deserve notice, that Oxford, in the times of Henry VII., could not produce a joiner competent to the work, which appears to have been very advisedly undertaken, after the model of rood-lofts existing at Magdalene College and in the church of St. Mildred, in the Poultry, London. The frame-work, or coarser parts of the construction, appears to have been formed of English timber, but the more ornamented portions were fashioned with "wainscots, Estrichborde," as deals of oak imported from the Baltic are termed in other documents.
- ↑ A screen. "Spere or scuw. Scrineum, ventifuga." Prompt. Parv. Amongst the miscellaneous Records of the Queen's Remembrancer, 5 Ed. I. occur payments, "Steph. le Joinure pro j. spoere, ad opus Regine—pro j. spure in camera Cancellar'. ivs." See also Churchwardens' Acc., p. 118; Hist. of Hengrave, p. 42.