Reverse Index
Referencing “Lantern-Ringers”
Every codex entry that links to Lantern-Ringers. 10 entries.
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Canterbury
The cathedral that refused to become a bureau
Canterbury is the British Crown's cathedral-seat: old, armed, bell-ridden, unaudited, and infuriatingly functional beyond Strasbourg's forms.
Codex Ref. II.0.01-201

Cathedral Ships
Britain built churches that sail, shoot, and refuse to explain themselves
British Cathedral Ships carry chapel, bell-tower, artillery, and reliquary-keel across the Channel; the Synod depends on them and resents every plank.
Codex Ref. X.1.03-001

Channel
The water between two prides, and wiser than both
The Channel is the Synod's western salt wound: Calais to Dover, bells to fog, British pride to Synod arithmetic, and drowned things below.
Codex Ref. II.1.04-201

Dover
The white cliff that answers Calais with bells, chains, and refusal
Dover is the British Crown's white-cliff answer to Calais: port, bell-lane, Chainworks throat, pilgrim gate, and polished refusal.
Codex Ref. II.0.09-201

Dover Chainworks
Where British iron crosses the Channel and Synod dignity pays the toll
The Dover Chainworks forge the chains, cordage, and blessed rope that keep British convoys moving and Synod pride properly invoiced.
Codex Ref. II.4.09-009

English Channel
The wet treaty between stamped arrogance and ringing arrogance
The English Channel is Calais facing Dover: one day's water in clean weather, a century's insult in politics, and a fog-bank with clerical ambitions.
Codex Ref. II.1.04-202

Lantern Gate, Gibraltar
The British fist at the Mediterranean mouth, politely denying it is a hand on our throat
The Lantern Gate at Gibraltar is Britain's southern naval knuckle: bell towers, chapel guns, anti-piracy patrols, and leverage disguised as maritime courtesy.
Codex Ref. II.4.09-010

Royal Fleet
The island's parliament of hull, bell, chapel, and gun
Britain's Royal Fleet keeps the Channel, Gibraltar, grain, pilgrims, and Synod pride afloat; Strasbourg counts the hulls and calls dependence cooperation.
Codex Ref. X.1.05-001

Table of Nine
The oak that refuses inspection and still moves ships
Britain's Table of Nine withholds its charters, argues before Aldric, commands ports and Wardens, and teaches Strasbourg the agony of useful illegibility.
Codex Ref. X.1.02-201

The Lantern Way
Britain's armed faith, ringing without permission and working without forms
Britain's Lantern Way is armed, parochial, naval, and intolerably effective: a faith of bells, Wardens, walling, chapel ships, and local vows.
Codex Ref. X.1.04-001
