St Vitus' Cathedral
The crown of all the terraced glory on the Prague Hradčany
is the great cathedral. A square massive tower stands up out of
the body of the church. A purist may find fault with the mixture
of styles this tower incorporates.
The bulk of its structure is Gothic; at the base of the superstructure
appears a nondescript medley of styles (nondescript at least in
the eyes of a dilettante) out of which arises a concern of domes
and cupolas one above the other, supported at each corner by little
pinnacles crowned with onion-shaped tops.
The copper coating of these domes and cupolas gives a distinctive
touch of colour to the whole edifice of warm grey stone; this
note of green you will find repeated elsewhere on the churches
and other buildings of Prague, a piquant note but alien to the
spirit of Prague both ancient and modern.
There has been talk of removing the superstructure from the
main tower of the cathedral and replacing it by a Gothic spire
such as adorn the towers that flank the west front of the building,
spires that gleam like lacework when standing out sunlit against
dark banks of cloud.
It were best to leave the superstructure of the main tower as
it is; it marks an epoch and serves as reminder of a tyranny now
overpast. The highest point of the main tower is not adorned with
a usual emblem of our faith, a cross or a cock, but flaunts instead
the "Lion of Bohemia" in all his rampant pride of a
double tail.
This crest swings over the sacred fane where rest the remains
of St. Wenceslas, over the cradle of Bohemia's religious life.
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