
By C. E. Ponting, FSA. 285 
to light the gallery. There were probably corresponding insertions 
on the north, and the western one destroyed in the re-building 
above referred to. The other retains part of its original glass— 
the subject of the Crucifixion and the figure of a bishop are nearly 
intact. A three-light window of Elizabethan type was replaced 
in the part of the south wall rebuilt in 1781. 
The stair-turret for the rood-loft projected outside the north 
wall, and has been destroyed with the exception of the two door- 
ways, the upper of which now serves as a window. 
The font is probably coeval with the features first described, and 
is a very fine specimen. It has a circular bow] 2 feet 9 inches in 
diameter; around the lower part is an arcade of interlaced arches 
with fluted pilasters, the caps of which bear a facial appearance. 
The marks of the hinges and fastening of a former cover are evident, 
the present cover is of 17th century work. 
The roofs of both nave and chancel (the latter has been re- 
- constructed to a lower pitch) are of the Early English trussed-and- 
braced rafter type—the weather mould on the east face of the 
tower shows that the roof of the nave also was of steeper pitch at 
the time of the erection of the tower, the apex coming nearly up 
to the belfry windows. 
The tower is one of the comparatively rare examples of 13th 
century western towers. It is of three stages in height, a string- 
course coming below the belfry windows; the lower stage has a 
fine arch opening from the nave of two orders of small chamfers 
carried down the jambs, and in the west wall a good lancet window, 
with an old wrought iron grille on the outside, projecting beyond 
the face of the wall. There are curious buttresses at the S.W. and 
N.W. angles; they were, apparently, intended to stop at the height 
of about 7 feet from the ground (as indeed they do on their north 
and south faces) but a change of plan carried them up on the west 
face, and, to obtain the desired width, they are corbelled over in 
four set-offs. 
In the middle stage there is a lancet window in the west wall 
and, in the north and south walls respectively, there is a small 
opening, circular on the outside with a diameter of 14 inches, but 
