165 
No. 127 — ISO. Four pieces of the frieze from Room xv. 
the temple of Erechtheus at Athens; they are Antiquities. 
enriched with flowers and other ornaments, 
which are designed with the most perfect taste, 
and are chiseled with a degree of sharpness and 
precision truly admirable. 
No. 131—147. Fragments of figures, many 
of which have belonged to the metopes of the 
Parthenon. 
No. 148. A cinerary urn, ornamented in front 
with four standing figures; two of these, in the 
centre, are joining hands, the other two are in a 
pensive attitude. The names of all the figures 
were originally inscribed on the urn ; the first 
name is not legible ; the others are Philia, Me- 
trodora, and Meles. 
No. 149. A sepulchral column of Thalia, the 
daughter of Callistratus, of Aexone. 
No. 150. A fragment of a sepulchral stele; 
the inscription is very imperfect, but records the 
name of Musonia. The summit is ornamented 
with the figure of a butterfly on some fruit. 
No. 151. A fragment of a statue covered with 
drapery. 
No. 152. A sepulchral Greek inscription in 
ten verses, of which the first two and the last 
two are in the elegiac measure, and the rest are 
hexameters. The inscription is in memory of a 
young lady of extraordinary beauty, named Try- 
phera, who died at the early age of 25 years. 
No. 153. A sepulchral Greek inscription, en¬ 
graved 
