1901-1902.] 37 



decorated flamboyant south window. The east wall of this 

 transept has three arches of different sizes. There is a small 

 narrow window high up in the west wall of the south aisle 

 and there was a large one below, now built up. The mould- 

 ings on the pillars of the arches are small and finely cut, not 

 deep and bold. The transept and its accessories are puzzling 

 in some ways, and must have been altered at different times. 

 It is lighted by a well-proportioned three-light south window, 

 the wall underneath, as I have mentioned, being arched by 

 three deep roughly-built recesses, the centre one bing flat- 

 tened on the arch for the window, which may have had some 

 ecclesiastical use, as well as affording additional strength to 

 the gable. The east wall of the transept was originally triple- 

 arched in an unusual manner, and evidently lighted for three 

 altars, the centre arch being opened up at a later date, and 

 the chapel built. On the south wall of this chapel there is a 

 very fine double piscina of a late date still in perfect preser- 

 vation, which bears out the idea that this chapel was specially 

 built by a benefactor. In the same chapel is a square-headed 

 two-light south window with external rose ornament, and a 

 large east window with two corbels on the north side of it 

 projecting into the chapel. In the jamb of the adjoining 

 arch in the transept is another piscina with the unusual 

 feature of two openings to the front and one into the side of 

 the arch. The work of the whole is plainer, however, than 

 that in the chapel. In the nave is a three-light west window 

 over the door, the latter being rather small but deeply splayed, 

 the thickness of the wall, 3 feet 6 inches, and the outside 

 batter allowing of this. It is pointed outside with heavy 

 cover moulding and flat headed masonry inside. In the north 

 jamb, on the inside, let into the wall, there is a double arched 

 holy water stoup, one arch into the nave and one into the 

 jamb of the door. There was a narrow pointed south door 

 opening direct into the nave- — ^the aisle not extending the full 

 length of the nave — close to the west wall and now built up 

 flat inside, but the arch is still to be seen on the outside. Two 

 double-light flat arched windows (one now built up) light the 



