now much defaced; and the window itself has been so extensively damaged,
that the compartments containing the figures of the prince and of Sir Reginald
Bray, one of the knights, are all that remain in tolerable preservation. Even
these have received some damage and loss in the ornaments and border, and
some of the pieces of glass have been placed the wrong way upwards by the
hands of ignorant workmen. Enough, however, is left to allow- of an accurate
restoration of these two compartments. In the latter part of the last century
these windows were so much neglected, as to be allowed to serve as a mark
for the boys who played in the churchyard to aim stones at -the different
figures represented in them.
The figure below is taken from a manuscript of the . end of the'fifteenth
or beginning of the sixteenth century, in the Royal Library at Paris,; fonds
Lavalliere, No. 44.
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