The church stands on a slope, and the floor of the nave rises from west to east.
At the top of the tower is a battlemented parapet, each of the eight merlons being surmounted by a pinnacle, and a pyramidal roof.
The south porch has stone side walls, each containing a three-light window, and a timber-framed gable.
The stained glass in the east window, dated 1869, is by Frederick Preedy, and depicts subjects relating to Saint Edith.
On the north side of the chancel is a four-light window, unveiled 1938, in memory of Alan Bertram Hanbury-Sparrow and his son Brian (killed in World War I), featuring figures of St George and St Francis and his son's regimental badge and Military Cross decoration, by A. K. Nicholson workshops.
[5] In the north chancel wall is a tomb recess under a canopy decorated with ballflowers.
The two oldest were cast in 1615 and 1622 by William Clibury, and the third by Mears and Stainbank of the Whitechapel Bell Foundry in 1869.
This lies on a moulded stone cap, which is carried on a square pedestal on three round steps.