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Finally, as you leave the church, please admire the 15th century South Porch. It is considered by many to be a Gothic masterpiece, and was de­scribed by John Betjeman as 'the most lovely in all England'.

The interior contains a complex lierne vault supporting the upper floor, with Christ's head in glory in the centre and other heads as boss­es. There are three narrow windows on either wall with eight corbel brackets between - these probably supported statues removed during the Reformation.

The corbels are carved with gro­tesques, now mutilated and defaced, but a green man can be discerned, together with a cat playing a fiddle to three rats (thought to be a reference to a mid-15th century political satire).

The upper chamber or parvis (not open to the public) was originally intended as quarters for a priest. It is well fitted, with a fireplace with recess at the back that could be used as a bread oven, and a niche used to keep salt dry. On either side of the fire­place are two stone candle brackets and, on the opposite wall, a narrow bench and a cupboard recess. The flue for the fireplace was cleverly con­cealed in the central finial on the west face of the porch.

The graffiti of names on the walls and window jambs suggests that the chamber was used as a school room in the 18th and 19th centuries.

The south front of the porch is open, with a multi ordered archway with a crocketed ogee hoodmould swooping up to the base of the first of two canopied statue niches - the lower containing a statue of Our Lady with the Holy Child, and the upper containing God the Father from the Holy Trinity. The statues are badly eroded, but it is little less than a mira­cle that they survived the iconoclasm of the 15th and 16th centuries.

The string courses and facade on all three elevations contain small stat­uettes and grotesque heads, together with numerous repeating Tudor rose emblems. All have suffered badly from erosion; some are now almost unrecognisable whilst others, in more sheltered positions on the east face, are better preserved.

Original text by the late W C Fallows and the late Mrs Selina Balance; revised and extended by Stephen Ashby FRICS and Simon Wills

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