80 
room vr. No. 07. A votive statue of a fisherman, who is 
antiquities, carrying a round leathern bucketsuspended from 
his left arm. The head is covered with a mari¬ 
ner’s bonnet, and a dolphin serves as a support to 
the figure. 
No. 5 8. A sepulchral cippus, without an in¬ 
scription. On the front, beneath a festoon which 
is composed of fruits and foliage, and is suspended 
from the skulls of bulls, are two birds perched 
on the edge of a vase, out of which they are 
drinking. 
No. 59. A Greek sepulchral urn, solid, and with 
a bas-relief in front; it is inscribed with the names 
of Pytharatus and Herophilus. From the collection 
of Sir Hans Sloane . 
No. 60. A Grecian altar. Presented by Sir 
William Hamilton . 
No. 61. A head of Augustus. Purchased at 
the, sale of the late Fight Hon . Edmund Burke’s 
Marbles . 
No. 62. A Greek funeral monument of De- 
modes, the son of Democles, with a bas-relief, 
and an inscription in eight elegiac verses. It was 
brought from Smyrna. Presented by Matthew 
Duane , Esq, and Thomas Tyrwhitt, Esq , 
No. 63. A statue of Bacchus, represented as 
a boy about five years old. The head is crowned 
with a wreath of ivy, and the body is partly co¬ 
vered with the skin of a goat. 
No. 64. The front of a votive altar, with an 
inscription for the safe return of Septimius Severus 
and 
