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to their main cusps, all within a moulded frame. 

 The two-leaved door of the screen reproduces this 

 panelling in its lower, solid portion, but with two 

 panels in each leaf, and has open lights with tracery 

 above the middle moulding. 



The screen of the south chapel is very much 

 richer. It has two openings of two lights each on 

 either side of a central doorway nearly equal in 

 width to two of the openings. In each compartment 

 the two lights are almost round-headed, containing 

 cusped and foliated trefoils, the foliations being three- 

 and four-petalled flowers with berry centres. The 

 lights have a quatrefoil above and are continued 

 into an ogee with florid crockets and a finial, with 

 tracery of two cinquefoiled lights and a quatrefoil 

 on either side. This scheme is bounded above by a 

 very narrow embattled moulding, on which stands an 

 arcade of three traceried two-light arches separated 

 by extremely slender pinnacled and crocketed but- 

 tresses, and crowned by double ogee canopies with 

 carved groining, each ogee being continued into a 

 tall pinnacle heavily crocketed, with a third pinnacle 

 of similar pattern between each pair, all reaching to 

 the level of the lowest moulding of the cornice. 

 The solid portion of the screen below the middle 

 moulding consists in each compartment of a panel 

 divided into two by a moulded frame, having in each 

 subsidiary panel an ogee containing a re-cusped 

 trefoil with foliated main cusps. The ogees have 

 small cusps and nuials, and there is tracery in the 



When the double doors in the centre compartment 

 are closed their appearance is almost exactly that of 

 two compartments of the screen. The four-centred 

 head of the opening slightly interrupts the line of the 

 two ogees, and there are two panels, instead of one, 

 in the solid portion of each leaf of the door ; while 

 above the embattled moulding the small arcade 

 consists of five traceried lights, instead of six, the 

 centre one being slightly wider than the rest. 



The compartments of the screen are separated by 

 slender pinnacled and crocketed buttresses with 

 moulded bases, which run from the ground to the 

 level of the lowest moulding of the cornice. This 

 cornice has a very wide shallow moulding containing 

 a beautiful frieze of twelve angels, with intercrossed 

 wings, issuing from clouds and holding emblems of 

 the Passion, except those on the north and south, 

 which carry shields. Above them is a simple 

 moulding. 



There is a small space on the south side between 

 the southernmost buttress of the screen and the shaft 

 of the arch, but this contains no tracery. 



In both chapels the arches towards the aisles are of 

 two orders with shafted jambs, and the hood moulds 

 have mask stops. 



The arrangement of the windows in the south 

 chapel is like that of the north chapel, except that 

 the east window has only four lights. Towards the 

 east end of the south wall, between the first and second 

 windows, is a small doorway. 



The nave is of four bays ; the i ^.th-century two- 

 centred arches with drop mouldings are of two 

 chamfered orders, on octagonal columns with moulded 

 capitals. Over the east respond of the north arcade 

 is a blocked doorway, which formerly led to the 

 rood loft, now destroyed, and over the chancel arch 

 is a window of five lights. The 15th-century 



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clearstory has on each side five windows of three 

 lights. The roof is ot 15th-century date, much 

 repaired, and has moulded principals, tie-beams, wall 

 plates, &c. Its wall-pieces rest on moulded corbels 

 sculptured with figures of angels, all of modern 

 workmanship. 



The north aisle has four three-light windows with 

 tracery, and one on the west, all of the I 5th century, 

 inserted in the 14th-century wall. The north door- 

 way is of the same date as the wall and is of two 

 chamfered orders. It leads to the north porch, 

 which is of two stories, the upper story being reached 

 by a polygonal stair turret which opens into the aisle 

 by a four-centred door, The exterior entrance 

 door of the porch is two centred, of two moulded 

 orders. The lower story has two three-light windows, 

 one on the east and one on the west, and the 

 window in the north wall of the upper story is also 

 of two lights. There are the remains of a stoup in 

 a pointed recess in this porch. 



The roof of this aisle, at the western end, is of the 

 1 5th century, of the same type as, but plainer than, 

 those already described ; but that of the eastern end 

 is a very fine flat roof of 14th-century work; its 

 dimensions tend to show that it was originally the 

 roof of the 14th-century chancel, and was moved 

 here during the general reconstruction of the 15th 



The south aisle corresponds exactly in all its 

 arrangement to the north aisle, except for a trifling 

 difference in width, and the south door is of 15th- 

 century date, contemporary with the south porch, 

 the upper story of which is approached by an octagonal 

 stair turret at the north-east angle. The doorway 

 to the porch still retains its contemporary door with 

 cusped panelling, but its pointed head has been sawn 

 off and fixed. 



The south porch Is of two stories. The entrance 

 arch is of two shafted orders, an arch inclosed in a 

 square, with tracery inclosing foliate sculpture in the 

 spandrels. On either side of the entrance is a deep 

 shafted and cusped niche with a pedestal, and below 

 them are cusped panels inclosing shields, one with a 

 merchant's mark and another with a coat of arms. 

 Small shafts with capitals at the same level as those 

 of the entrance, but without bases, meet the frame- 

 moulding of the lower compartments of the scheme. 

 On the east and west sides are traceried three-light 

 windows, having an exterior hood mould with a mask 

 stop at the southern extremity, and dying into a 

 buttress on the northern. The ceiling of the entrance 

 story is elaborately groined, and the interior walls 

 are panelled below the windows. A string-course 

 all round the three sides of the porch marks the 

 level of the upper story, which is plain on the east 

 and west, and lighted by a small three-light window 

 on the south, with identical blind lights below, to 

 the level of the string-course. On either side of 

 these are pairs of niches with shafts and capitals sup- 

 porting square heads inclosing pointed arches, with 

 foliation in the spandrels. Moulded pedestals stand 

 in the niches on low plinths rising from the sloping 

 upper surface of the string-course. The whole 

 scheme of windows and niches is inclosed in a square 

 frame supported on six slender shafts with capitals 

 and bases resting on similar plinths. Above is 

 another string running round the three sides of the 

 porch, with grotesques at the south-east and south-west 



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