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ional merit. FIG. 27.--AT FARNBOROUGH. "To Elizabeth Stow, died 1744, aged 75 years." [Illustration: FIG. 25. TEDDINGTON.] [Illustration: FIG. 26. FINCHLEY.] [Illustration: FIG. 27. FARNBOROUGH.] [Illustration: FIG. 28. CHISELHURST.] [Illustration: FIG. 29. HARTLEY.] [Illustration: FIG. 30. WEST WICKHAM.] [Illustration: FIG. 31. HORNSEY.] A few others of the skull pattern with various additaments may conclude this chapter. The cup in the Chiselhurst case is somewhat uncommon. FIG. 28.--AT CHISELHURST. Name obliterated; date Nov. 1786. The conventional symbols in the next example are clearly to be read. FIG. 29.--AT HARTLEY. "To Eliza Andersen, died 1771, aged 70 years." The West Wickham specimen has its prototype in the old churchyard at Hackney, and in other places. FIG. 30.--AT WEST WICKHAM. "To Richard Whiffen, died 1732, aged 3 years." In Fig. 31, from Hornsey, the two skulls present the appearance of having been pitched up from the grave. FIG. 31.--AT HORNSEY. "To William Fleetwood, died Jan. 30, 1750, aged 15 months." CHAPTER III. ARTISTIC GRAVESTONES. In the later half of the eighteenth century greater pains and finer workmanship appear to have been bestowed upon the symbolic figurement of the gravestone, and the more elaborate allegorical representations of which a few sketches have been given came into vogue and grew in popular favour until the century's end. Nor did the opening of a new century altogether abolish the fashion; perhaps it can hardly be said to have been abolished even now at the century's close, but the evidences extant combine to shew that the flourishing period of the pictorial headstone lay well within the twenty-five years preceding Anno Domini 1800. For the sake of comparison one with another, I have taken, in addition to the sketch at page 1 (Fig. 1), three examples of the device which seems most frequently to typify the resurrection of the dead. In two of these the illustration is accompanied by a quotation explanatory of its subject, but the words are not the same in both cases. The stone at Horton Kirby, near Dartford, depicted in Fig. 32, shews the inscription clearly. FIG. 32.--AT HORTON KIRBY. "To John Davidge. died April 22, 1775, aged 75 years." [Illustration: FIG. 32. HORTON KIRBY.] [Illustration: FIG. 33. CLIFFE.] In the second instance, at Cliffe, the i
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