GREEK AND ROMAN ANTIQUITIES. 69 



3. Statuette of Harpokrates, holding his right forefinger 

 to his mouth and having an asp coiled round his left arm. 

 From Egypt. Work of the Ptolemaic period. Burlington 

 Fine Arts Clwh, 1904, p. 36, No. 2, pi. XLII. 



4. Statuette of a fisherman, seated on a rock with a basket 

 on his left arm. From Egypt. Burlington Fine Arts Club, 

 1904, p. 44, No. 31, pi. LI. 



5. Mirror-handle, with figure of Eros seated between two 

 tree-trunks. Perhaps from Campania. Burlington Fine 

 Arts Club, 1904, p. 53, No. 62, pi. LVII. 



6. Attachment of a girdle decorated with incised palmettes. 

 Burlington Fine Arts Club, 1904, p. 60, No. 94, pi. LXV. 



7. Handle of vase terminating in busts of Asklepios and 

 Hygieia. From Egypt. Burlington Fine Arts Club, 1904, 

 p. 63, No. 103, pi. LXVIII. 



8. Statuette of a Satyr, on an Ionic capital ; has formed 

 part of a lamp of which the handle terminates in a panther's 

 head. Formerly in the collection of Prince Ibrahim. 

 Burlington Fine Arts Club, 1904, p. 48, No. 42, pi. LI. 



9. Archaic statuette of the so-called " Apollo " type. It 

 is of minute size and careful workmanship. From Trapezia 

 in Arcadia. 



10. Archaic statuette of a warrior, wearing cuirass, greaves, 

 and a helmet with tall spikes. The figure, which is clumsy 

 and ill-proportioned, is an example of an early art, native to 

 Sardinia. See Perrot et Chipiez, Histoire de V Art, vol. IV., 

 pp. 64 f. 



11. Statuette of the Gaulish Jupiter, wearing long-sleeved 

 tunic, trousers, and brogues. Gallo-Roman art. 



12. Left leg of a statuette, broken at the knee. Good 

 Greek work of the 4th century B.C. 



13. Archaic figure of a horse in very rude style. 



14. Similar figure, fastened to a plate, of which the under 

 side is engraved with a design, which could be used as a 

 stamp. It represents two men resting their hands on spears ; 

 their bodies are joined. From near Phigaleia in Arcadia. 



15. Statuette of a bearded god standing on two lions. 

 He wears a high headdress, decorated with animals in relief. 

 Perhaps Herakles Sandan. From Elis. 



16. Pair of hands with the fingers spread ; the palms are 

 joined by a hinge and the wrists socketed to receive wooden 

 handles. 



17. Lamp with two nozzles. The filling-hole has a cover 

 decorated with a rosette. From Tripolitza in Arcadia. 



18. Model of a throne with a high back. The legs are 

 decorated with rosettes, volutes, and palmettee. 



F 2 



