By C. E. Ponting, F.S.A. 189 
spandrels being filled with rubble-work. On the inside the three 
lights have richly-moulded arches with labels, springing from 
detached shafts with moulded caps and bases. 
On the south are three single lancets, all of which originally had 
plain two-centred heads, and the westernmost one retains this form, 
but the other two appear to have been worked to an imitation of 
_ the trefoil form within recent years. There is a similar window, 
but with original trefoil head, north of the sanctuary. All these 
windows have curtain arches. The sills of two of the windows 
have been cut down in the recent restoration, for sedilia and 
credence. There is a charming piscina on the south of the 
sanctuary, having a sharply-pointed arch with triple-filleted roll 
mould carried round from the bowl; the latter is supported by a 
shaft with moulded cap, the base has gone. There is a square 
| aumbry in the north wall. It will be noticed that none of the 
chancel windows have outside labels, and that there are no buttresses. 
The chancel arch is a beautiful specimen of thirteenth century 
work. The mouldings of the arch are particularly rich. The 
_ jambs have attached shafts with moulded caps and bases. The 
squint northward of this is modern. 
The nave followed shortly after the chancel, and the pretty 
three-light window westward of the porch, with its narrow moulded 
lights with trefoil heads, bears evidence of the dawn of “ Decorated” 
feeling which set in at the end of the reign of Henry III. There 
is a dwarf buttress at the south-east angle, and a similar one at the 
original north-east angle of the original nave (now inside the aisle, 
at the east end), which was not removed when the aisle was added. 
The buttress at the south-west angle is a later addition and peculiar; 
it is a diagonal one, the face of which does not project beyond the 
‘quoin of the wall over. 
The greater part of the south wall eastward of the porch was 
‘re-built in the restoration by Mr. Butterfield, when the two new 
three-light windows were inserted; but the piscina in this wall, 
ery near to its east end, is an original one of the thirteenth 
century. 
_ The picturesque turret over the east end of the nave is also coeval 
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