English: Plate 14 from:
Rickman, Thomas (1817年) 《 An attempt to discriminate the styles of English architecture, from the Conquest to the Reformation》、倫敦: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown
A Perpendicular porch set against the aisles of a
building, of which part of two windows are seen.
This porch has buttresses of three stages, set square,
and leaving a corner, on which is placed a battlemented
pinnacle. The buttresses have moulded set-offs. The
door-way has an arch within a square, the spandrels
pannelled and flowered, and the dripstone running as a
tablet, but not round the buttresses. The inner door-
way plain-arched, and a plain dripstone. Over the
door are two heights of pannelling up to the gable, in
seven lights, with a battlemented transom, and a line
of square quatrefoils. The parapet pannels consist of
round quatrefoils, in squares ; the capping crocketed,
and running up to flank a cross, of which the pedestal
appears springing from the cornice. The cornice is
plain. The base mouldings consist of three tablets.
a, Section of the architrave mouldings of a door in
the ruins of Birkenhead priory, in Cheshire, a singularly
varied and very beautiful specimen of Decorated
mouldings.
b, One variety of the Tudor flower.
c, Part of the pier mouldings of St. Michael's, at
Coventry ;— a specimen of Perpendicular mouldings.