212 OLD AND NEW EDINBURGH, [Manor Place
veins, and k placed on a pedestal of three steps;
the basin, which is supported by four red marble
columns, shows in carved panels round its sides
the ark, dove, fishes, and a floriated cross.
The cathedraL before its comDletion, was opened
streets. In attendance .upon the bishop were the
Lord Provost, Lord Teignnlouth, and others,
The senior and junior chaplains of the cathedral,
together with the clerk of works, ascended the
spire to place the stone and cross in position with
for service on ;he 25th of JaAuary, 1879, by the I certain religious rites-from its vast height a some-
ST. MARY?S CATHEDRAL, EXTERIOR VIEW.
Right Rev. Henry Cotterill, Episcopal bishop of
Edinburgh, in presence of a great congregafion
assembled in the nave, and consecrated 30th
October, 1879.
On the 9th of June, 1879, the copestone and
finial cross of the great central spire were placed
in position with befitting ceremony, in presence
of a vast assemblage of ladies and gentlemen in
the cathedral grounds, and even in the adjacent
what perilous and difficult task for these gentlemen
to undertake. They spread the mortar, and the
copestone and cross, which were fifteen feet in
height and about a ton in weight, were lowered
into position by tackle; the Rev. Mr. Meredith
tapped them with a niallet and declared them to
have been duly laid ?in the name of the Slessed
Trinity.? The company aloft then joined in the
doxology.
Manor Place.] HAYMARKET STATION. 213
A shot fired from the belfry apprised the multi-
&de far down below of the close of the ceremony,
and immediately the choir, along with other officials
of ?the church in surplices stationed in the garden,
sung the hymn ?Praise ye the Lord, ye Heavens
in the nave and clerestory bear the arms of many
ancient Scottish families,
Away to the westward of the quarter we have
described, at the delta of the old Glasgow and
Dalry roads, where for several generations stood
ST. MAPY7S CATHEDRAL, INTERIOR VIEW. (Fpom a Phofosrnph by G. W. Wikm ad Co., ACrdem.)
by the Lord Provost.
Sir Gilbert Scott did not live to see the completion
of this cathedral, which is one of the many
lasting monuments of his skill as an architect.
Among the gifts to the cathedral are a peal of ten
bells presented by Dean Montgomery ; the great
from Glasgow by wings upon the two roads, formed
a junction and halted, while the officers had breakfast
or dinner before pushing on to the Castle by
the Lang Dykes and latterly by Princes Street and ,
the Earthern Mound-is the Haymarket Railway
Station, the first or original terminus of the Edin