is attached to each Uræus, and this device is repeated on innumerable monuments.

According to another device the Two Eyes are represented within the Winged Disk (see e.g., Leemans, Mon., III, M., Pl. XVI).

“He of the Pair of Eyes” is always Osiris. But Osiris is a god “of many names,” as the Pyramid Texts show no less than the Book of the Dead, where in the seventeenth chapter he is identified with Tmu, Rā, the Bennu, Amsu and Horus, not to mention others, and where in the Scholia the Two Feathers, the Two Uræi, the Two Eyes and the Two Kites[[115]] are identified with the Sister pair Isis and Nephthys. And wherever these symbols occur in pairs Isis and Nephthys are meant, one for the right or northern side and the other for the left or southern. The same idea is conveyed under such forms as

,

, or

, and many others. Dr. Birch long ago (Zeitschr., 1877, p. 33) mentioned