166 
ROOM III. 
Antiquities. 
ROOM IV. 
Antiquities. 
relief in front represents a trophy, on one side of 
which stands a warrior, and on the other a female figure 
feeding a serpent that is twined round the trunk of a 
tree on which the trophy is erected. On the right of 
these figures is the fore-part of a horse. An inscrip¬ 
tion on the top of this monument contains a list of 
names, probably of those who fell in some engagement. 
Brought to England by Mr. Topham , in 17 25, and 
presented to the British Museum , in 1780, by the Right 
Hon. Sir Joseph Banks, and the Hon. A. C. Fraser. 
Pt. 2. PL xli. 
No. 42. A terminal head of Periander. Pt. 2. 
PL xlii. 
No. 43. A repetition of No. 33. Pt. 2. PL xliii. 
No. 44. An unknown terminal head, probably of a 
Greek poet. Pt. 2. PL xliv. 
No. 45. A statue of Actseon attacked by his dogs. 
Pt. 2. PL xlv. 
No. 46. A terminal head of the young Hercules; 
it is crowned with the leaves of the poplar. Pt, 2. PL 
xlvi. 
FOURTH ROOM. 
GREEK AND ROMAN SCULPTURES. 
No. 1. A bust of Trajan, with the breast naked. 
Pt. 3. PL i. 
No. 2. A statue of Apollo, of very early Greek 
work. Purchased , in 1818, at the sale of the Comte de 
Choiseul- Goiff er's Antiquities . 
No. 3. A head of Apollo, of very early Greek 
w r ork. Pt. 3. PL iv. 
No. 4. A head, supposed to be that of Arminius. 
Pt. 3. PL vi. 
No. 5. A statue of Thalia, found at Ostia, in the 
maritime baths of the Emperor Claudius. Pt. 3. Pi. v. 
No. 6. A colossal head of Marcus Aurelius, repre¬ 
sented in the character of one of the Fratres Arvales. 
Pt. 3. PL ix. 
No. 7. A colossal bust of Lucius Verus, covered 
with the imperial paludamentum. Pt. 3. PL x. 
No. 8. 
