66 
ROOM III. 
Antiquities. 
THIRD ROOM. 
GREEK AND ROMAN SCULPTURES . 
No. 1. A bas-relief, representing an old Faun 
struggling with a nymph. 
No. 2. A bas-relief, representing a candela¬ 
brum. 
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 
Eurystheus, he had pursued a whole year in the 
forests of Arcadia. 
No. 8. Blank. 
No. 9. A bas-relief, divided into three com¬ 
partments. 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 marine bull by the horns; and in the 
lower division, is a company of hunters returning 
home with their spoil. 
No. 10. Ditto, representing a festoon of vine 
branches supported by th$ skulls of bulls. In the 
eentre, 
