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room in. No. 20. A head cf Hippocrates. 
Antiquities. No. 21. A head of Mercury. Purchased at 
the sale of William Chinnery, Esq. 
No. 22. A statue of Venus. 
No. 23. An unknown head, supposed to be 
that of a Titan. It is highly animated, and is 
looking upwards, apparently in great agitation. 
No. 24. A statue of a Faun. 
No. 25. A terminal head of Homer, repre- 
sented in an advanced age, with a sublime and 
dignified character. 
No. 26. A bust of Sophocles* 
No. 27. A terminal head of the bearded Bac- 
chus. 
No. 28. A recumbent figure of Diana, rest- 
ing on her left hand, and advancing her right 
hand. Upon the plinth is her bow, the extremi- 
ties of which are decorated with the heads of 
Griffins. 
No. 29. An entire terminus of the bearded 
Bacchus, six feet high. 
No. 30. A terminal head of the bearded Bac- 
chus. 
No. 31. A statue of a youth holding with 
both hands a part of an arm, which he is 
biting. This statue belonged to a group, origi- 
nally composed of two boys who had quarrelled 
at the game of the Talus, as appears by one of 
those 
