74 
ROOM I. 
Antiquities. 
the right hand, and a celestial globe in the left 
hand. It is three feet ten inches high, and is one of 
the largest statues which has been found of terracotta. 
No. 39. An Amphora. From the collection of 
Sir Haas Sloane. 
No. 40. A statue of a IMuse, resting her left 
arm upon a pile of writing' tablets, which are placed 
upon a square column. The right arm is raised 
towards the neck. The figure, in its present state, 
is three feet four inches high; the head is lost. 
No. 41. An Amphora. From the collection of 
Sir Hans Sloane. 
No. 42. A bas-relief, representing a short naked 
human figure, with a beard; he holds in each hand 
the stem of a plant. On each side of this figure is 
seated a quadruped, whose head is that of an elderly 
man, and whose tail terminates in a dower. 
No. 43. Ditto, representing Cupids supporting 
festoons of fruit. 
No. 44. Ditto, representing a Faun and a Bac¬ 
chante dancing, and holding between them the in¬ 
fant Bacchus in a basket used for winnov/ing corn. 
No. 45. Ditto, representing the head of Pan, 
on each side of which is the head of a Satyr; one 
qf the Satyrs is crowned with branches of pine, and 
the other with branches of ivy. 
No. 46. Repetition of No. 45. 
No. 4/. A bas-relief, representing the Indian 
Bacchus received as a guest by Icarus. 
No. 48. 
