By C. E. Pouting, F.S.A. 



429 



square- headed window of the fifteenth century — the cusping of 

 the western window on the north side and of all on the south has 

 been cut away. Both arcades are much out of the vertical and in 

 need of being made secure. The nave has a barrel-vaulted roof 

 supported on wall shafts coming well down on to good corbels 

 carved to represent bishops and kings alternately ; the plastering 

 in the panels is obviously modern and conceals part of tlie 

 mouldings on the ribs. The north aisle is ceiled, the south aisle 

 has an open-timbered lean-to roof. 



The chancel arch is a fifteenth century one of two orders of 

 mouldings, the inner order supported on corbels, probably of the 

 fourteenth century. The rood-stair is on the south side and its 

 wall splayed off as if for a niche. On the east respond of the 

 north aisle is a complete hour-glass in iron frame and below this 

 a stone corbel. 



■Hi f h«^ 



Cuiui.t.Mi I'.assill. ll-iir -la» on pillai- ikmi- i-iilpit 



The town- arch (ii<>\v hhu-kcd up) is uf t we ..rdci s of li..llo\vs. 

 i over it can be seen ihc wcalhcr-mMuld ..f an earlier n>nf sprin-ing 



