31 Reminiscence of 

 m)c UiU 3^c\). C UL I). Dicker, B.D., 



(With Plates), 



^nt\ some Obserliations on tSJoxiuortl) 

 Cl)urcl^ 



By the Rev. 0. PICKARD-CAMBRIDGE, M.A., F.R.S. 



CANNOT suppose that the following few lines 

 will be otherwise than acceptable to the 

 members of our Field Club, the more 

 especially as thej^ relate to, probably, the 

 last that our lamented member, the 

 Rev. C. W. H. Dicker, ever did or wrote 

 in connection with any work on our behalf. 

 In order to make this intelligible to you, 

 I must premise that Mr. Dicker (in his paper on " The Normans 

 of Dorset," Dors. Field Club Proceedings, Vol. XXXI., 1910, 

 p. 125) mentions that " Norman Porches are very rare ; I 

 only know of three in Dorset — Sherborne, Bloxworth, and 

 Belchalwell." I Avrote at once to Mr. Dicker that this was 

 evidently a mistake so far as Bloxworth was concerned, where 

 the church porch certainly was not Norman. In the short 



