After Chatsworth we drove on a couple more hours, skirting the Peaks District, over-nighting at a lay by at Chunal Hill. From there we drove on the next morning, now skirting the Lake District--too crowded this time of year, even the northern bit that we saw in 2009--and headed for Carlisle, the last of our north-bound English destinations. The cathedral there is attractive, despite being more chopped-up than most. One enters the south transept, looks admiringly at the choir, ambulates around the ambulatory, takes in the elevation, the great east window, the organ...wait a second, aren't these things a bit askew? And then, back at the crossing...wait a second, where is the nave?
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Squared-off east facade, nice window |
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South-side chancel |
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Nicely-carved choir |
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Elevation, two aisles, small gallery, small clerestory, painted
barrel-vault wooden roof |
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Nice to look at |
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East window...altar a little off center? |
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Organ..way off center? And not just the organ, the arches too... |
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Artsy shot of lancet windows |
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Back in the crossing, one of the older bits, with Romanesque arches and the
zig-zag stone work that makes you think the builders maybe had been to the
Holy Land or at least to Moorish country |
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Ditto; note the huge piers |
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The usual bronze model helps: it started out as an abbey church, 11th century,
then Carlisle became a cathedral city, 12th century, and it became a cathedral,
and then the Reformation came along, and later the Dissolution, and then
Cromwell and the Civil War...oddly, the Parliamentarians amputated the nave--
the peoples' part of the church--and left the priests' part intact; oh well |
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Fortunately they left the feline gargoyles intact |
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South-west view, showing the sawed-off nave; the red stone throughout--and
throughout Carlisle--is strikingly beautiful |
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