35 Metaphors for chapels

This small chapel was dedicated to the Virgin soon after the terrible plague of 1848 had ceased, as it was believed, by her intercession; so that this municipal chapel was at once an expression of thanksgiving, and a memorial of death, of suffering, of bereavement, and of hope in the resurrection.

This chapel was once the scene of a gruesome ceremony.

The rooms for students seemed very commodious, and Dr. Johnson said, the chapel was the neatest place of worship he had seen.

The chapel in the White Tower is a remarkable specimen of early Norman architecture.

Of the former, the chapels of Savoy and St. Eloy are the chief; but the large sacristy is more extensive than either.

This chapel is an exact parallelogram and the frescoes which cover the four walls are thus arranged above the wainscot, which rises about eight feet from the ground.

Lune-street chapel is the fashionable Wesleyan tabernacle of Preston; the better end of those whose minds have been touched, through either tradition or actual conviction, with the beauties of Methodism, frequent it.

This chapel is the master's, if chapel the heretical box can be called, and yonder bell was bought wid his money; and the rope is his; and the hands that mane to pull it, is his; and so there's little use in talking ag'in rocks, and ag'in minds that's made up even harder than rocks, and to spare.

The Hamlet of Hampton Wick has been since made a District for Ecclesiastical purposes, whereby the Chapel has become the Church of that District.

The Chapel of St. Anne, half-a-league distant from the village, was a charming object for a walk.

It was in this building that the first annual sermon of the London Missionary Society was preached by Dr. Haweis, and for over a hundred years Spa Fields Chapel was a centre of light and help and healing for that part of London.

Think that yesterday, the 18th of April, the chapel of Longchamps became a dependancean extra dead-houseof the ambulances of the Press, so numerous were that day's dead.

The chapel founded by Richard Beauchamp was a plain, substantial edifice.

Wesley Chapel is the older of the two, and, therefore, must be first mentioned.

St. Catherine's Chapel on the hill above the sea is an erection in a situation similar to that of the far older building on St. Aldhelm's Head.

This chapel is the successor, in a direct line, of the first building ever erected in the Orchard.

A chapel on the south was once the property of the abbey and is called the Abbot's Chapel, this has a fine tomb of the first and second Earls and first Countess of Southampton.

The palace of the archbishop was gutted, the chapel and the robing-room of the kings were cellars filled with rubbish.

Brother Stowe's Chapel, as the place was sometimes called, soon became a great institution in that region.

The chapel was a building illustrative of the straight line and plane.

The suggestion may have been that the Sistine Chapel should become a Museum of Italian art, where all painters of eminence could deposit proofs of their ability, until each square foot of wall was covered with competing masterpieces.

The chapel is a plain, small, humble-looking buildinga rather respectably developed cottage, with only one apartmentand we should think that those who attend it must be in earnest.

The restoration was made as much as possible in conformity with the style of the old fortress, and the interior is a good example of modern Gothic art, the new chapel being an interesting example of this.

The whole chapel is a marvel of workmanship and beauty.

The chapel is a very ordinary looking building, having a plain brick front, with sides of similar material, and a roof of Welsh slate, which would look monotonous if it were not relieved on the western side by 19 bricks and two stones, and on the eastern by four stones, one brick, and a piece of rod-iron tacked on to keep a contiguous chimney straight.

35 Metaphors for  chapels