278 THE SHRINE OF ST. PATRICK'S BELL.
eral
design. The illustration which we offer our readers is that of the
front of the shrine, showing also a portion of the side. The framework
is of bronze fastened at the corners with copper fluting, and the gold
and silver work is fixed to this foundation by means of rivets. The
front is divided into thirty-one compartments, several of which have
lost their ornamentations. A central decoration comprises an oval
crystal while a little lower down appears another and a larger crystal.
This latter object has been unaccountably introduced by some ignorant
person, for it is manifestly out of place. It occurred to the present
writer when inspecting the shrine last summer that it belonged to the
center of a neighboring shrine with which its setting agrees, and where
its shape would enable it to fit exactly. On the side, below the knot
and ring by which it is suspended, there v are eight of
those quaint Irish serpents, whose elegant tails curve and infold each
other so intricately that it is almost as difficult to make