80 
ROOM II. 
Antiquities. 
ROOM III. 
Antiquities. 
lowed out between the two volutes. This frasTment 
O 
is inserted in a modern pedestal. 
No. 21. A colossal head of Minerva, a specimen 
of very early Greek work. 
THIRD ROOM. 
GREEK AND ROMAN SCULPTURES. 
No. 1. A bas-relief, representing an old Faun 
struggling with a Nymph. 
No. 2. Ditto, representing a candelabrum. 
No. 3. Ditto, representing a funeral column, 
near which is a statue of the god of Lampsacus. 
No. 4. Ditto, representing Bacchus received as 
a guest by Icarus. 
No. 5. Ditto, representing warriors consulting 
the oracle of Apollo. 
No. 6. Ditto, in the flat early style of Grecian 
sculpture. It represents Castor managing a horse. 
No. 7. Ditto, representing Hercules securing 
the Maenalian stag, which, at the command of Eu- 
rystheus, he had pursued a whole year in the forests 
of A.rcadia. 
No. 8. Blank, 
No. 9. A bas-relief, divided into three compart- 
ments. In the upper division, the infant Bacchus 
is represented riding on a goat; in the middle, a 
Triton, in attendance on Venus, is seizing a ma¬ 
rine bull by the horns; and in the lower division 
is 
