68 
ROOM III. 
Antiquities. 
No. 22. A statue of Venus. 
No. 23. A head of one of the Homeric heroes 
It is highly animated, and is looking upwards, ap¬ 
parently in great agitation. 
No. 24. A statue of a Faun. 
No. 25. A terminal head of Homer, represent¬ 
ed in an advanced age, with a sublime and digni¬ 
fied character. 
No. 26. A bust of Sophocles. 
No. 27. A terminal head of the bearded Bac¬ 
chus. 
No. 28. A statue of a nymph of Diana rest¬ 
ing herself after the fatigues of the chace. 
No. 29. An entire terminus of the bearded 
Bacchus, six feet high. 
No. 30. A terminal head of the bearded Bac¬ 
chus. 
No. 31. A statue of a youth holding with both 
hands a part of an arm which he is biting. This 
statue belonged to a group, originally composed of 
two boys who had quarrelled at the game of 
Tali, as appears by one of those bones called tali , 
remaining in the hand of the figure which is lost. 
No. 32. A terminal head of Pericles, helmeted, 
and inscribed with his name. 
No. 33 A statue of a Faun, inscribed with 
the name of the artist. 
No. 34. A terminal head of Epicurus. 
No. 35. A terminal statue of Pan playing upon 
a pipe. 
No. 36. 
