31 22 No 4. VERONA DUOMO under the fine red marble base (a b c in fig 3) but, seen far off they are harsh and mean in the singular vertical divisions of the two red plinths. I forgot to note a most curious excrescential ornament; the boss, like Ball flowers a long closed ball, or in some cases like a pine apple, which is set up on the members of the vaulting: On the pier arch there are 5: 3 are seen in fig 1: six on the nave sub arches; four on the aisle sub-arches: and 10 on each vaulting rib of both nave and aisle: (5 on each side) the crossing of the ribs having shields (Q contemporary) Nothing can possibly be worst that the effect of those scattered dots, they look like holes left for scaffolding. The light is admitted only by small circular windows above each pier arch: and at the ends of nave and aisles Yesterday, Sunday, they drew the curtains over these lights during the preaching and made the church as dark as a cave: gleams of lightning being caused by the lifting of the curtain at the entrance Round arch No 4. Jamb of a most beautiful circular arch in a house near Duomo. Alternate 5 bricks and white stone: 4 of the bricks voussoirs on each side, one white stone in centre: form double dentils to each white or red voissoir, but note that the dentils are cut into the brick: the surface of the wall being perdectly level: as seen in section a. The arch is of brick: the support- ing abacus of paler red marble; the jamb of yellow marble. Its masonry The dotted line cntinuing the section where the grey block is narrowest. 30 21 VERONA DUOMO as in duomo front, as early as the ninth century, of the classic wreath to Gothic mouldings, (and again at Palaz: Minischalchi etc) the same members on the other side of the pie[o]r carrying the aisle vaulting, sub arch and rib; and the remaining half shaft carrying the pier arch: The sub arches pier arch are all equally wide, the pier arch of the section fig 6 a Venetian double dentile - very bold and fine - b cable: the sub- arches have no dentils and are only of about the depth c d; carried by the semi-octagonal capital head marked by dotted line: In both the capitals of vaulting shafts and piers, there are three successive rows of heavy leaf[n]age; and below all a plain rolt following outline of shaft; the vaulting sub arches of the aisle are supported by abominably ugly baskets, having four rows of flowers and one budding flower at the bottom: The abacus of pier capital is octagonal of section fig 5 The whole though systematic is excessively rude and ugly, the flat section of the architrave, a b fig 6 is too narrow for the arch and the way it abuts against the vaulting shaft is most akward and disjointed: the cut paper like capitals have been noted before: the shaft section is perhaps the Bases worst of all; its useless truncations making it meagre without the lead boldness: its base fig 3 (true section at the outside of red colour) is bold and fine seen here, especially owing to the great flat grey octagonal block which is roughly set
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