58 
ROOM I. 
Antiquities. 
Iliad. The females, who are in attendance, are 
slaves. 
No. £1; A bas-relief, represen ting Bacchus and a 
Faun ; the former holds a thyrsus in his left hand, 
the latter carries a torch in his right hand, and an 
amphora on his left shoulder. 
No. ££. Ditto, representing two Fauns kneel¬ 
ing, one of them playing upon the tambourin, the 
other accompanying him with small musical in¬ 
struments called crotala. Between them is Am- 
pelus, the lower part of whose figure terminates 
in branches of the vine. 
No. £3. Ditto, representing two of the Sea¬ 
sons, Spring and Summer. 
No. £4 Ditto, representing Victory sacrificing 
a bull before a lighted candelabrum, which is used 
as an altar. 
No £5. Ditto, imperfect, representing Per¬ 
seus cutting off the head of Medusa. 
No. ££>. Ditto, representing Victory sacrificing 
a bull before a small altar, which is placed upon a 
tripod table. 
No £7. Ditto, imperfect, representing a fe¬ 
male Bacchante offering a basket of figs to the 
goddess Pudicitia. From the collection of Sir 
Hans Sloane. 
No. £8 Ditto, representing two Fauns gather¬ 
ing grapes into baskets. 
No. £9* Repetition of No. £1. 
No. 30. A bas-relief, representing Bacchus 
leaning on the shoulders of a Faun, At his feet 
is 
