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Transactions. 3 
spond respectively in design to that of the two small windows 
opposite in the north wall, otherwise the arrangement of the 
tracery has in no two windows been alike. 
Internally a much more correct idea of the Church can be 
formed now than was possible before the carrying out of the 
recent excavations. Entering at the west end, the plinth or 
lowest stone of the west respond or half pier of the Arcade is 
found remaining attached to the foundation of the west wall. 
The east respond, attached to the west wall of the Chancel, 
remains entire ; and in the floor, which is of pavement, are three 
blanks where three pillars, no part of which now remains, have 
stood. The Arcade has been of four bays, its pillars shafted and 
placed diagonally, the capital of the east respond being moulded 
only, while that of the west respond, which has now been 
recovered, is richly floriated ; its arches have been segmental, as 
indicated by a small portion of the eastmost one remaining, and 
it has extended across the front of the southern projection, which 
is therefore not properly a Transept, but a side Chapel. The side 
Chapel and the Aisle have been vaulted over at a uniform 
height, with groined and ribbed vaulting, and there has been an 
apartment over the Chapel, probably a Domus Jnclosi, lighted by 
a small double window in the top of the gable, and approached 
by a newel stair within a projection at the angle formed by the 
Chapel and the Chancel. 
Upon the walls of the Aisle and side Chapel remain part of 
the moulded ribs of the vaulting, supported on shafts with flori- 
ated caps and sculptured corbels. A little of the vaulting itself 
also remains, and it has been constructed of rag-work, that is, 
small flat bedded stones, in this case half an inch to three inches 
in thickness, and entirely unhewn, set in thick beds of mortar. 
An etching by Storer, published in 1805, represents a portion of 
the vaulting or vaulting ribs as continuing at that time to span 
the Chapel. 
The Chapel is provided with a Piscina in the south wall, 
where the priest emptied the water in which he washed his hands; 
on its east wall is a carved image bracket ; and there is evident 
provision for an altar in the circumstance that the sill of the 
east window, before which it would stand, is at a higher level 
than that of the south one. ; 
Separating the Nave from the Chancel is the Rood Screen, in 
this instance of stone, and over it the Rood Loft and the Chancel 
