88 PAPERS, ETC. 
just where the arch stops and the jamb begins. In the 
furniture of the chancel there is nothing remarkable, 
There is a piscina, with a trefoiled orifice and no shelf, 
but of poor workmanship. On the North side is one good 
decorated window, with a square head. On the South side 
there are two windows, the one square-headed, and corres- 
ponding with that on the North side ; the other a small 
one of two lights, and of plain Decorated character. The 
wall in which this window is inserted, projects six inches 
beyond the face of the other portion of the wall, and may 
have been a part of the old Norman building. The 
width of this window is only two feet nine inches to the 
outer edge of each splay, and the height is four feet nine 
inches also to the edge of the splay, which splay (wide, 
not deep,) is about nine inches all round. The keystone 
has apparently dropped, which makes it appear as if it 
were a round-headed arch. This window I consider to be 
very eurious ; I know not what to make of it, nor what 
was its use. 
The Piers which support the tower towards the chancel, 
are Norman, but they do not correspond, singular to say, 
the one with the other. That on the north side, is 
adorned with three shafts, while the pier on the south, has 
only two. The capitals of the principal shafts, are rather 
more ornamented than the other, but all of them may be 
described as plain. The third shaft on the north side 
therefore, stands out from the wall at present, supporting 
nothing. As to whether or not the wall was originally 
thicker and cut away, together with the shaft on the South 
side, I will not undertake to decide; but this appears to me 
the most probable solution of the matter, from the eircum- 
stance that the arch which both piers support, is pointed ; 
and there is on the south side, close to the pier, a doorway 
