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Gentleman's Magazine 1849 part 2 p.586
Guisnes and his wife Christian, who were grantees of the
Crown, but subject to a pension of 33s. 4d.
payable to the said abbey. It appears to have become
subsequently vested in Joan de Coupland, as by an
inquisition taken in 49 Edw. II. after her death, it was
found that she held by grant of the king during her life the
advowson of Wynandermere, then valued at 100s. The
patronage afterwards reverted to and continued in the Crown
till the seventh year of Queen Elizabeth, when it was
granted to William Herbert and John Jenkins, to hold of the
queen in free socage by fealty as of the manor of East
Greenwich. After several mesne conveyances it was in the
last century purchased by Sir William Fleming, of Rydal,
bart. who devised it to his four daughters, from who it has
descended to the Rev. Sir Richard Fleming, of Grasmere,
baronet.
The church consist of an embattled square tower, carrying a
peal of three bells, into which a low recessed arched
doorway, not now used, gives access to the western front. A
vestry, of modern addition, at the west end of the north
aisle, whose original integrity of form it totally mars. A
nave, with north and south aisles. A porch, at the south
side, through which is the principal entrance into the
church. A narrow arched door is near the east end of the
same aisle, and a door of like design near the west end of
the north aisle. The south aisle is lighted on the flank
wall by four square stone-mullioned windows of four
round-headed lights each, while the windows in the wall of
the north aisle are five in number with three lights only.
At the west end of the south aisle and east end of both
aisles there are larger windows of similar form of four
lights each, in some of which a few remnants of ancient
coloured glass are observable. Besides these windows
additional light is admitted from six clerestory windows on
each side of three lights each; but that which contributes
most to illuminate the interior is the large
semicircular-headed east window, which is of great size, of
the latest and most debased Perpendicular, and divided by
plain stone mullions into seven lights.
On entering I found myself within a large structure devoid
of any particular architectural distinction, but interesting
from its antiquated and hallowed character. The arches
dividing the nave from the aisles are pointed and
square-edged, and spring from square multangular piers that
are without imposts or mouldings. So much however are they
enveloped with the defilement of plaster and whitewash, that
their original form or ornamental details, if of the latter
they ever had any, cannot be defined.
Like many of the old churches and chapels in this part of
the country, it has once, in obedience to the directions of
the eighty-second canon, been profusely embellished with
texts of Scripture painted on the walls, and towards the
west end of the flank wall of the north aisle sentences from
Colossians, c.iii. v.5, and James, c.iv. v.7,8, are still
legible. The date of these admonitory texts, which are all
that have escaped the hands of the whitewasher, are about
Edward VI. or Elizabeth's reign. They are rubricated, and
each is enclosed within an ornamental scroll or border
crowned with the winged heads "of rudely painted Cherubim."
Formerly the spaces between the windows in both aisles were
covered with similar chosen quotations, or, as an eminent
poet has called them,
"Scrolls that teach thee to live and die,"
but through want of care some were obiterated, while others
were broken to make room for modern monumental tablets.
Close to the door, near the east end of the south aisle,
there had been on the wall an ancient painting, either on
parchment or leather, my informant could not recollect
which. That not long since was also removed and carelessly
thrown by in the vestry, in order to afford space for other
displays of mundane ostentation.
The disfigurement of pews and seats of all shapes and sizes
are also to be seen; and a gallery has been introduced into
this part of the church. A mean wooden altar-piece, painted
light blue, on which the Lord's Prayer, Creed, and
Commandments are inscribed, occupies the space underneath
the great window, and hides the lower portion of it from
observation.
The roof, which is open to the framing, is of oak, black
through age, and
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