By a E. Touting, F.S.d. 23 



are two plain lancets in the middle stage; the buttresses were 

 apparently added and the top stage erected circa 1400. The latter 

 has single light windows in the north and south faces, the original 

 roof does not exist. 



The walls of the north aisle appear to be thirteenth century work, 

 and there are two lancet windows in the south aisle, but as this 

 part of the Church was apparently re-built when the debased 

 Perpendicular windows were put in both aisles, it is impossible to 

 say that they are in their old positions. Much of this work has 

 since been renewed. There is also a lancet window in the east 

 gable of the chapel, but this is also set in a later wall, and has a 

 wooden inside arch. 



No Decorated work is traceable in this Church. 



The nave arcades of three bays each and the roofs of nave and 

 aisles appear to have been constructed at about the middle of the 

 fifteenth century. The arcades have somewhat depressed arches 

 which look later, but the period I name is seen in the moulding of 

 the caps and bases; the columns are octagonal and stand on high 

 plinths ; the east responds are deep, and pierced with openings 

 7ft. 6in. high and 3ft. Sin. wide to clear the coeval squints which 

 exist on either side of the chancel arch, and are splayed in the 

 direction of the high altar. The roof of the nave is a plain one of 

 trussed rafters with tie-beams in three bays; those of the aisles are 

 divided into four bays — the principals and panelled cornice only 

 remain. The west windows of the aisles appear to be coeval with 

 this work, and earlier than those in the side walls. 



The chapel is of unusually small dimensions, and was probably 

 re-erected about 1450 ; the arch between it and the aisle shows that 

 a chapel stood here prior to that date : it is apparently a semicircular 

 arch with flat soffit and small chamfers on the edges ; it extends 

 beyond the north wall of the aisle — the present chapel is 2ft. wider 

 than the aisle. A flat buttress outside, opposite this arch, looks 

 earlier than the rest of the wall and the diagonal north-east buttress. 

 There is a three-light square-head window in the side wall, and the 

 lancet before referred to is built into the east gable. The roof is a 

 good specimen with moulded principals, purlins and ridge-piece; 



