11 
oval form, with wo upright double handle?, which room ii. 
spring from the necks of swans. The body of 
vase in front is emiched with a group of Baccha¬ 
nalians. 
No. 10. A fountain ornamented with ivy and olive 
branches. The water was conveyed through a per¬ 
foration on the back part of this monument to a ser¬ 
pent’s head, in which a leaden pipe wiis introduced, 
part of which still remains in the mouth. 
No. 11. A colossal head of Hercules,' dug up at 
the foot of Mount Vesuvius, where it had been bu¬ 
ried by the lava of that volcano. From the collec¬ 
tion of Sir JVillmm Hamilton. 
No. 12. A colossal head of Hercules, in a very 
ancient style of Greek sculpture. 
No.. 13. A fragment of one of the three supports 
of a tripod basin, composed of the head and neck of ‘ 
a lion. On the forehead are the horns of a goat- 
No. 14. The capital or upper division of a votive 
cippus. 
No. 15. The key-stone of a triumphal arch, or¬ 
namented with a figure of Victory elaborately hol¬ 
lowed out between the two volutes. This fragment 
is inserted in a modern pedestal. 
No. 16. A colossal head of Minerva, a specimen 
of very early Greek work. 
No. 17. A statue of Cupid bending his bow. 
Purchased at the sale of the late Right Hon. Ed- 
Qmind Burhes marbles. 
THIRD 
