ae 
By the Rev. W. H. Jones. 213 
centre of the whole arrangement being a large oil painting of the 
last supper by a native artist, that testified more to his devotedness 
than his skill. The painting has been removed to the vestry of 
the Church, and the window, after a complete restoration of the 
stone-work, has been filled with stained glass, executed by Messrs. 
O’Connor, of London. The subjects of the various paintings are 
(1.) The Nativity,—(2.) The Baptism,—(3.) The Crucifixion, —(4.) 
The Entombment,—(5.) The Resurrection; and underneath are in- 
scribed the following words from the Litany :—“ By thy birth,— 
By thy baptism,—By ‘thy precious death,—By thy burial,—By 
thy glorious resurrection,—Good Lord, deliver us.” The tracery 
at the head of the window contains emblems of the ‘Holy Trinity,’ 
in honour of whom the Church is dedicated. 
The window on the north-east side of the Chancel consists of two 
lights. The tracery is semi-continuous. At the head of the win- 
dow is a trefoil with double cusping. Possibly a window of 
similar design or character was at one time on the south-east side 
of the Chancel. If so, it must have been removed, and its place 
supplied by the larger one of four lights which is by no means a 
bad example of the Perpendicular style. 
Recessep Tomes.—There are in the Chancel a considerable number 
of monumental memorials. For the present we will only speak of the 
two oldest and most interesting of them,—the recessed tombs,—one 
of which is on the north, and the other on the south side. They are 
formed in the body of the wall of the Church, and extend to within 
some eight or ten feet of what would seem to have been the original 
eastern termination of the Chancel. Judging from the style of 
architecture, the extension of the Chancel and the erection of these 
two tombs would appear to have been the work of much the 
same period. 
Of the two recessed tombs, the one on the north side of the 
Chancel is perhaps the more ancient, though there is no long in- 
terval between them. Originally, like the one on the south side, 
it was surmounted by a canopy; portions of the original label, and 
of some of the crocketting of the pediment, having been discovered 
amonf the débris, whilst clearing away a large monumental tablet, 
