the 
market-place of Winchester. 
A striking object hanging at one end of the hall is the top of the reputed 
Round Table of King Arthur, painted in radiating white and green 
sections, with a portrait of the famous king inset, crowned and robed, 
and the Tudor rose in the centre, while around the circumference are 
the names of the knights in old black-letter characters. Doubtful though 
it is that the table is the actual one that figures in the Arthurian legends, 
yet it is certainly of great antiquity, and has been frequently referred to 
by more than one writer of mediaeval days. It has been conjectured that 
it may be nothing more than the wheel of fortune which Henry III 
commanded to be made for the castle. In later years another palace was 
started here by Charles II, the only portion that was completed being 
now used as barracks. 
Beyond the West Gate is an obelisk, set up in commemoration of a 
visitation of the Plague in 1669, when the country people brought their 
produce and left it outside the gate to be taken in by the city dwellers, 
who deposited the money for the goods in bowls of vinegar, whence it 
was abstracted by pincers, to avoid infection. The stone on which the 
exchanges were made is incorporated in the base of the obelisk. 
The West Gate is the only one that remains of the principal entrances to
the city, as King's Gate, with the little church of St. Swithun perched on 
top, was of secondary importance. This West Gate escaped the fate that 
has overtaken so many of our old city gates owing to its having been 
used for some time as a smoking room for the adjacent hotel. This 
apartment above the crown of the gateway arch is, like that over the 
West Gate of Canterbury, used for the purposes of a museum, wherein 
are deposited such interesting relics as the Winchester bushel, cloth 
measures, and ancient instruments of punishment. At one time the room 
was used as a prison, and the walls are covered with names or marks 
made by those who were incarcerated here. 
The gate is of fourteenth-century date, the two panels with armorial 
bearings seen on the western side of the archway being later insertions. 
Through the gateway a delightful view is obtained of the picturesque 
High Street, with many a high-pitched gable rising above the masses of 
irregular architecture; while an ancient clock on a wooden bracket juts 
out from the old Queen Anne Guildhall, which has a statue of Her 
Majesty over the entrance, the Curfew Tower rising on one side of the 
building. A new Guildhall of greater architectural pretensions has been 
erected in the Broadway, the original one being now used as a shop. 
[Illustration: THE BUTTER CROSS] 
From the West Gate the High Street slopes down to the Itchen. On the 
right stands the old Butter Cross, in rather a cramped position. Two 
reasons have been given for its name: one, that during Lent, those 
wishing to eat butter could do so by consuming it by the cross; the 
other, and more probable, explanation is that here came farmers 
wishing to dispose of their butter, which they exposed for sale on the 
steps of the cross. The structure is of fifteenth-century date, but has 
been much restored, the only original figure on it being that of St. 
Amphibalus. Just beside the cross is the interesting little opening that 
leads into the Close, and in which is the entrance to St. Lawrence 
Church, of which nothing is visible from this point but the doorway, 
and the tower rising above the surrounding houses. This church has 
been said to be the Mother Church of the diocese of Winchester, an 
idea that may have owed its origin to the fact that before proceeding to 
the Cathedral to be enthroned the bishops designate enter this ancient 
church to robe and "ring themselves in". Only the other day, May 6, 
1911, Dr. Talbot followed this old custom, and the people listened
eagerly for the number of rings, as these are supposed to denote the 
number of years the bishop will be at the head of the diocese. It may be 
of interest to chronicle that Dr. Talbot rang nine times. 
Near the church at one time was an open space called the Square, 
where were situated the Pillory and Whipping Post. The palace of 
William I is said to have occupied this site, and St. Lawrence's Church 
may possibly have been the private chapel of the royal residence. A 
fragment of Norman masonry gives a certain amount of probability to 
the supposition, while at the beginning of last century some workmen 
excavating in Market Street came across the foundations of an ancient 
tower, of great    
    
		
	
	
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