Visited by the Society im 1889. 29 
an expedient, and put in the corbel by the side of the window, 
twisting the grotesque round and across it sufficiently far to catch 
the bottom of the brace, altogether ignoring the fact that by such 
means its practical value is lost. 
The north porch formerly had a room over it, with a turret 
staircase for access, the upper and lower doors of which remain. 
The floor has been removed and the roof (which is the original one) 
brought down below the top of the doorway. This was probably a 
watching chamber, and the opening through the aisle wall can be 
traced. On the outside there is also evidence of the lowering of 
the walls and roof, but the niche in the gable has not been disturbed 
In the chancel there are two recessed altar tombs in the north 
wall, which were originally flush with the face of it, there being a 
projection on the outside to admit of the depth of the recess; the 
easternmost one appears to have been converted into a canopied 
tomb at a later date, but the sides of the added portion look as 
though they were not worked for their present position. This 
contains two figures, supposed to represent John and Margaret de 
Ereleigh, 1380—1400. The other has a single female figure, put 
at 1860—1370, probably one of their daughters. 'The brass in the 
floor commemorates John St. Maur and his wife Elizabeth, 1485. 
There are two sedilia and a piscina with shelf in the south wall of 
the sanctuary. The roof and east window are modern. ‘The re- 
mains of the Norman chancel, to which I referred, are distinctly 
traceable in the herring-bone masonry near the floor and part of a 
window over it, cut into when the archway into the chapel was 
formed. 
The chapel on the south side of the chancel appears to have been 
added late in the fifteenth century, and part of an earlier buttress 
weathering is seen in the angle. . It is chiefly remarkable for the 
large extent of window surface, the east window being of four lights 
and the south window of six lights. There is a rude niche, formed 
of rough masonry, also the remains of an aumbry, in the east wall 
and a doorway exists in the south wall; the roof is a poor one of 
the seventeeth century. The brass in the floor is to John and Edith 
Compton, the former of whom died in 1515, and might have been 
