216 
THE MONUMENTAL BRASSES OF WARWICKSHIRE. 
Beneath this are figures of 18 children, not arranged 
under their respective mothers as is usually the case, but in 
three groups, viz., four sons, eleven daughters, a son and two 
daughters. There is an illustration of the brass in Part I. of 
the “ Warwickshire Antiquarian Magazine.” 
II. — William Hawes , w. Ursula , and 8 chil., 1610. 
This brass, not mentioned by Haines, is in a tablet with 
moulded border, at the east end of the north aisle. It is 
about 2ft. by 19in. William Hawes has close-cropped hair, 
moustache and beard, ruff, and gown with false sleeves (com¬ 
pare the brasses at Chadshunt and Barton). He kneels upon 
a cushion at a prayer-desk, upon which is an open book. 
Opposite to him is his wife in a Paris hood, ruff, and dress 
with plaited stomacher. Upon the tiled pavement behind the 
father kneel four sons in cloaks, doublets, and knee-breeches; 
on the opposite side are four daughters dressed like the 
mother, but without hoods. 
Above the husband’s head is a shield with these arms : 
sa., a chevron arg., betw. three leopards’ heads or. for Hawes, 
and this inscription : 1610 Willi" Hawes ^tatis 80. Over 
the wife’s head is this shield : gu., a chevron arg., pellettee, 
charged with two bars gemel of the field, betw. three lions’ 
heads erased or. for Colles, and the inscr. 1610 Vrsvla Colles 
/etatis 70. Between the shields, within a double-rayed nimbus, 
are the words “ Jehouah god.” At the bottom of the plate are 
these lines— 
Here Willm Hawes and Vrsvla his wife 
Ther bodies lie ther sovles w th Christ in life 
Whose holy spirit did so direct ther wayes 
That in his feare they lived to aged dayes 
In endles joye they now w th Christ remaine 
By whose blood all salvation doe obtaine. 
Below this monument hangs a tablet of wood, upon which, 
between two trees, the one bearing hips and the other haws, 
are two epitaphs, one of fifteen verses in Latin, the initial 
letters spelling “gvlielmvs havves,” the other of thirty verses 
in English. Both will be found in the “ Warwickshire 
Antiquarian Magazine,” Part I., p. 26. 
On the wall .of the north transept are the following 
inscriptions upon brass plates:— 
III. —Here lyeth the body of Anne Averell | wife of 
George Averell gent: aged | 92 yeares, bvried the 9th day 
of I December 1633. 
