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use at Apostoli. _d._ San Simeon Grande. PLATE X. _e._ Restored house on Grand Canal. Three of the old arches left. vol. II. _f._ Upper arcade, Ducal Palace. _g._ Windows of third order, central shaft, Ducal Palace. _h._ Windows of third order, lateral shaft, Ducal Palace. _i._ Ducal Palace, main shafts. _k._ Piazzetta shafts. 3. _a._ St. Mark's Nave. _b, c._ Lily capitals, St. Mark's. 4. _a._ Fondaco de' Turchi, central shaft, upper arcade. _b._ Murano, upper arcade. _c._ Murano, lower arcade. _d._ Tomb of St. Isidore. _e._ General late Gothic profile. The last two sections are convex in effect, though not in reality; the bulging lines being carved into bold flower-work. The capitals belonging to the groups 1 and 2, in the Byzantine times, have already been illustrated in Plate VIII. Vol. II.; we have yet to trace their succession in the Gothic times. This is done in Plate II. of this volume, which we will now examine carefully. The following are the capitals represented in that plate: 1. Small shafts of St. Mark's Pulpit. 2. From the transitional house in the Calle di Rimedio (conf. Vol. II.). 3. General simplest form of the middle Gothic capital. 4. Nave of San Giacomo de Lorio. 5. Casa Falier. 6. Early Gothic house in Campo Sta. M^a. Mater Domini. PLATE II. 7. House at the Apostoli. Vol. III. 8. Piazzetta shafts. 9. Ducal Palace, upper arcade. 10. Palace of Marco Querini. 11. Fondaco de' Turchi. 12. Gothic palaces in Campo San Polo. 13. Windows of fourth order, Plate XVI. Vol. II. 14. Nave of Church of San Stefano. 15. Late Gothic Palace at the Miracoli. The two lateral columns form a consecutive series: the central column is a group of exceptional character, running parallel with both. We will take the lateral ones first. 1. Capital of pulpit of St. Mark's (representative of the simplest concave forms of the Byzantine period). Look back to Plate VIII. Vol. II., and observe that while all the forms in that plate are contemporaneous, we are now going to follow a series _consecutive_ in time, which begins from fig. 1, either in that plate or in this; that is to say, with the simplest possible condition to be found at the time; and whic
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