Still moving through the gloom of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre we came to a small
chapel, hewn out of the rock--a place which has been known as "The Prison of Our Lord" for many centuries.
Rushworth, "we are coming to the
chapel, which properly we ought to enter from above, and look down upon; but as we are quite among friends, I will take you in this way, if you will excuse me."
The little
chapel situated opposite the marble table was selected for the scene of the grinning match.
There was such an affluence of military and other people that up to the place of the sepulture, which was a little
chapel on the plain, the road from the city was filled with horsemen and pedestrians in mourning.
Then we stowed our fire- works in the
chapel, locked up the place, and went home to bed.
Two yards from the door, at the head of this stair, is an opening nearly east, accessible by treading on the ledge of the wall, which diminishes eight inches each story ; and this last opening leads into a room or
chapel ten feet by twelve, and fifteen or sixteen high, arched with free-stone, and supported by small circular columns of the same, the capitals and arches Saxon.
And so they whiled away the time until morning
chapel.
It consisted of a high street in which were the shops, the bank, the doctor's house, and the houses of two or three coalship owners; round the little harbor were shabby streets in which lived fishermen and poor people; but since they went to
chapel they were of no account.
At last, a gossip of Mrs Nubbles's, who had accompanied her to
chapel on one or two occasions when a comfortable cup of tea had preceded her devotions, furnished the needful information, which Kit had no sooner obtained than he started off again.
In this same New Bedford there stands a Whaleman's
Chapel, and few are the moody fishermen, shortly bound for the Indian Ocean or Pacific, who fail to make a Sunday visit to the spot.
Near the altar of the church at Bald Hills there was a
chapel over the tomb of the little princess, and in this
chapel was a marble monument brought from Italy, representing an angel with outspread wings ready to fly upwards.
I STOOD on the rocky eminence in front of the ruins of Saint Anthony's
Chapel, and looked on the magnificent view of Edinburgh and of the old Palace of Holyrood, bathed in the light of the full moon.