It was built in 1332, and was very small--only thirty-two feet
six inches in internal diameter. The remains of it have been carefully
preserved on the ground, and are visible to the passers-by. The
Deanery I have mentioned, but we shall have more about it hereafter.
The open space before the West Front was claimed by the citizens,
as well as the east side; not, like that, for a folkmote, but for
military parade. The arms were kept in the adjoining Baynard's Castle.
[Footnote 1: In old times the name Ludgate Hill was given to that part
which ran up from the Fleet to the City Gate. Inside the Gate the
street was called "Bowyer Row," from the trade carried on in it. But
it was also frequently called "Paul's." Ludgate was pulled down in
1760, and then Ludgate Hill became the name of the whole street.]
* * * * *
CHAPTER III.
THE INTERIOR OF OLD ST. PAUL'S.
_Fine_ coup d'oeil _on entering the Nave_--"_Paul's Walk_"--
_Monuments in Nave_--_Sir John Montacute_--_Bishop Kempe_--_Sir
John Beauchamp, wrongly called afterwards Duke Humphrey's_--_The
Choir_--_Shrine of St.
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