82: 
EOOM IX. 
Anti2uities. 
No. 18. A small Egyptian figure with a 
beard, a short apron, and a terrific aspect. He is 
standing upright, but holding his arms down¬ 
wards, a little apart from the body. The orna¬ 
ment upon the head is peculiar to the representa¬ 
tion of this figure. From the collection of Charles 
Towneley , Esq . 
No. 19. A head of an Egyptian sphinx. 
From the collection of Charles Towneley, Esq . 
No. 20. A small Egyptian figure kneeling 
upon a square plinth, and supporting with his 
hands a kind of altar, in front of which, within 
a sunk tablet, is a figure of Osiris. Presented 
hy Matthew Duane , Esq. 
Nos. 21-22. Fragments of an Egyptian Deity, 
similar to No. 10. 
No. 23. The Rosetta stone, containing three 
inscriptions of the same import, one in hiero¬ 
glyphics, another in the ancient vernacular lan¬ 
guage of Egypt, and another in the Greek lan¬ 
guage. These inscriptions record the services 
which Ptolemy the Vth. had rendered his country, 
and were engraved by order of the High Priests, 
when they were assembled at Memphis for the 
purpose of investing him with the royal preroga¬ 
tive. This stone was found near Rosetta. 
No. 24. A colossal head of Jupiter Ammon, 
who was represented by the Egyptians with the 
head of a ram. No. 25, 
