154 
ROOM XV. ’vvest end the subjects are nearly complete on 
Antiquities, each piece of marble. The western frieze is 
likewise distinguished from those of the two 
sides of the temple, by the comparatively few 
figures introduced into it. 
The frieze at the west end of the temple ori¬ 
ginally consisted of fifteen slabs, of which there 
is a perfect set of plaster casts preserved in this 
collection. See Room XIV. (No. 74—88.) 
No. 40—62. A portion of the same frieze, 
namely, that portion which enriched the south 
side of the temple. It represents a procession 
of victims, charioteers, and horsemen, and is 
very similar, in its general character and appear¬ 
ance, to the frieze on the opposite or north side. 
With respect to the victims, w^e do not possess 
any that were on the north side of the temple 
but that they formed a part of the procession on 
that side, as well as on the south, cannot be 
doubted, since Stuart,, in his celebrated work on 
Athens, has engraved a fragment of one of them. 
No. 63. A group of two of the Fates, from 
the east pediment of the Parthenon, on which 
was represented the birth of Minerva. Another 
figure in this collection (No. 67) is supposed to 
have been one of the Fates, and to have formed 
a part of the same group. 
No. 64. The upper part of the torso of Nep¬ 
tune, one of the principal figures in the west 
pediment of the Parthenon. The subject of the 
sculptures 
