This is not the lightest of churches and I wonder how many visitors have stuck their heads through the door, glanced around, written a vacuous “Beautiful” or “Peaceful” in the Visitors Book (to distinguish if from all those riotous and noisy churches they sometimes encounter) and gone to the pub? When I take a group of people church visiting one of my first pieces of advice is “always look up” and never has a parish church so well born out this advice. Yet the light is low and you might still miss what a wonderful thing it is. Binoculars or a long lens are very necessary here.
It is a classic hammerbeam roof with collars. The collars all have pendants as do the hammerbeams themselves. Every other hammerbeam is a carved angel. The angels, in fact, have been defaced but don’t let that worry you. In the spandrels you will see wonderful foliage and animalistic carvings, The pendants have hidden human faces and everywhere you look you are liable to spot something decorative and interesting. The very construction is a thing of fascination. With a good lens you can detect the complexity of all, and the ingenuity of the carpenters.
Above the chancel arch are fragments of a doom painting and there are other such fragments to be seen elsewhere in the church. The font is a fine one, although the subject matter is perhaps rather run-of-the-mill. In the chancel there are fine bench carvings including a really impressive bagpiper. Let’s take a look.
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