[ 203 3 
that communicated with the church, was made up 
with lath and plaifter ; and before it, in the church, 
are the feats D, raifed one higher than another ; fo 
that the floor of the feats next the wall was half up 
the door-way ; confequently the vacuity under the 
feats lay open to the bellfrey. 
About the middle of the weftermoft fide, at a , 
one of the paving- ftones, about i foot fquare, and 
i 4- inch thick, was thrown up, and a hole pierced 
into the wall, rather below the level of the pavement, 
into which one might put three fingers. On the 
oppofite fide, the fouth-weft angle of the middle 
buttrefs at b had a ftone taken out even with the 
ground, and a hole continued in to the buttrefs ; fo 
that there is great appearance of its reaching thro' 
both wall and buttrefs, which together is 8 feet; 
but the hole was too rugged and crooked to put any 
thing thro’. Befides this hole, this wall was pierced 
in feveral places, and the plaifler thrown off both 
within and without. One place within, about 4 feet 
above the floor, right over c, was a hole of about 14 
inches fquare pierced 6 inches in the wall ; and fo 
near fquare, that I inquired, whether it had not been 
made by art ; but was afliired of the contrary. 
The north and fouth doors of the tower were both 
blown out, and broke in many pieces. Many of the 
arch-ftones over both doors were disjointed and dis- 
placed : two of the' ftones making the jamb of the 
fouth door at g were forced quite out, and one of 
them broke. 
The vaulting of the eaft door-way C was plaiftered 
underneath : the plaifter was fprung from the ftone 
in 3 o or 40 places, like as if a fmall bar of iron had 
D d 2 been 
