138 
ROO»^v. capital of an Ionic column, from 
Antiquities, the temple of Diana, at Daphne. 
No. 81. A fragment of a boy, holding a bird 
under his arm, and.feeding it. 
No. 82. A bas-relief, representing a young man 
standing between two goddesses, Vesta and Minerva, 
who are crowning him. 
No. 83. A Greek inscription in the Doric dialect; 
it is a dedication to Bacchus, by Alexas the son of 
Nicon, and Cephisodorus the son of Aglaophaedas, 
who had both been victorious in the choruses of men. 
No. 84. A fragment of a bas-relief, representing 
an elderly man before one of the gods, probably Bac- 
' chus, who appears to hold a vase in his right hand. 
No. 85. A piece of the architrave of the Erec- 
theum, at Athens. 
No. 86. A votive Greek inscription of Anti- 
sthenes, the priest of Pandion: he was the son of An- 
tiphates, and belonged to the tribe of Pandionis. 
No. 88. A Greek inscription from Athens, sig¬ 
nifying that certain gifts, which are specified, had 
been consecrated to some goddess, probably Venus, 
by a female who held the office of lighter of the 
lamps, and interpreter of dreams, in the temple of 
< the goddess. The name of this female, which was 
no doubt inserted at the beginning of the inscrip¬ 
tion, is now lost. 
^ No. 89. A fragment of a bas-relief, representing 
Minerva placing a crown upon a person’s head. 
No. 90. 
