[ x 99 ] 
walls of the turret were made of rough ftones and 
mortar ; and part of what is beaten down has fallen 
upon the leads of the tower underneath, and part up- 
on the roof of the church, which is greatly damaged. 
The flair- cafe alfo, which leads up to the turret, is fo 
full of the flones and mortar, that it is with great 
difficulty and fome hazard that any one can go up it. 
From a leaden fpout at this Well end of the church, 
which only comes down to near the top of the Weft 
window, the plafter is beaten off the wall for fome 
inches in breadth quite to the window ; and at the 
bottom of the upright iron bars of this window fe- 
veral of the ftones are cracked, and the wall is chipped 
here and there from thence to the ground. The fame 
is obfervable in the ftones at the bottom of the upright 
iron bars in the Eaft window, which is alfo near a 
leaden fpout that comes down from the roof over the 
chancel, the end of which refts upon a buttrefs, and 
does not reach the ground by feveral feet; which 
buttrefs is cracked, as well as the adjoining wall. On 
the infide of this wall, within the church, there is a 
large wooden frame, which holds the command- 
ments. This frame at the left hand corner is fup- 
ported by an iron holdfaft driven into the wall, 
which was mentioned above as being cracked on the 
outfide under the leaden fpout. The plafter of the 
wall, for three or four inches all round this holdfaft, 
within the church, is beaten off; and to the left hand 
there is a fpace, Hunting from the holdfaft toward the 
ground, five or fix inches wide and three or four feet 
long, from which all the mortar is forced away. 
1 hat part of the wooden frame, where the holdfaft is 
fixed, is fhattered. The canvas, upon which the 
com- 
