Page:Greek Buildings Represented by Fragments in the British Museum (1908).djvu/153

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THE PARTHENON AND ITS SCULPTURES.
137

rests. The indications suggest that the left shoulder and side were bare. The figure on the left of the Kertsch vase recalls this one, and I suggest that it derives from it. There the upper part of the body is wholly uncovered. Carrey's sketch is inconclusive as to the pediment figure, and a rough note of Cell's is against the uncovering of the side. (Fig. 141.)

An image should appear at this position in the text.
Fig. 138.—Cecrop's Wife: Restoration;
B, C, D, Mantle; a, Serpent's Tail.

XII. As before said, the so-called "Victory," for long assigned to the east front, now takes its place just in advance of Poseidon's charioteer. It was a winged figure, as is shown by the strong mortice holes in the shoulders, and it is best called Iris.

This figure shows in a high degree a characteristic which is shared by other figures of this pediment. A gust of wind seems to sweep through the composition from the centre of action.