| By C. E. Ponting, F.S.A. 77 
Bona purlins, also intermediate principals—all moulded. As above 
" mentioned, earlier corbels were re-used for the trusses with the ex- 
ception of the two against the east wall, which are coeval with the 
— roof. 
_ There is a two-light pointed window at the east end of each 
aisle, that of the north being sharp in pitch. The south aisle 
“retains its original Decorated doorway and diagonal buttresses at 
the south-east angle, but the windows are insertions of a debased 
type of Perpendicular—one of two lights eastward, and a two-light 
one westward of the door. It is doubtful if there were any windows, 
originally, on the north side of the Church, for that wall of the 
chancel is still blank (with the exception of a modern door), and 
the aisle has only a debased two-light window and a modern one. 
The chancel has two three-light original windows, one in the east 
wall and one in the south, the latter of somewhat peculiar flowing 
type with the mullions carried through the tracery. This only, of 
the two, has a label-mould. There are diagonal buttresses at the 
angles, and a priests’ door westward of the south window. The 
small window near the chancel arch is a modern insertion. In the 
recess of the south window of the chancel is the stone altar-tomb of 
Thomas Jay son of a former Rector, dated 1623. In the pier 
between this and the priests’ door is a stone corbel, the use of which 
is not obvious, and there is a small arched recess (not, apparently, 
a piscina,) south of the sanctuary. 
The tower and spire are beautiful features; they form a refreshing 
object in a spireless locality, and will repay a detailed study. The 
tower is three stages in height with square buttresses at the outer 
angles, carried up with 3 set-offs to about one-third of the height 
of the middle stage. The stages of the tower have very pronounced 
set-offs, particularly at the lower string-course; the walls are of 
good flint work, the dressings and the spire of green sand-stone. 
_ The belfry stage has a single-light window in each face with trefoil 
head, the middle stage a similar one only on the west; the lower 
stage has a two-light window in the west wall, and beneath it a 
dwarf buttress which has evidently been cut down so that, either 
the window is an insertion, or its sill has been lowered. On the 
