ROOM XV* 
Antiquities. 
120 
This group was in the east pediment of the Par¬ 
thenon. 
No. 78. A small figure of Telesphorus, com¬ 
pletely enveloped in a cloak ; it wants the head. 
No. 79» The chest of a female figure, covered 
with drapery ; it has probably belonged to One of 
the Metopes of the Parthenon. 
No. 80. The capital of an Ionic column, from 
the temple of Diana, at Daphne. 
No. 81. A fragment of a boy, holding a bird 
under his arm, and feeding iL 
No. 82. A bas-relief, representing a young mail 
standing between two goddesses, Vesta and Mu 
nerva, who are crowning him. 
No. 83. A Greek inscription in the Doric dia¬ 
lect ; it is a dedication to Bacchus, by Alexas- the 
son'of Nicon, and Cephisodorus, the son of Aglao- 
phaedas, who had both been victorious in the 
chorusses of men. 
No. 84. A fragment of a bas-relief, represent¬ 
ing an elderly man before one of the gods, proba¬ 
bly Bacchus, who appears to hold a vase in hii 
right hand. 
No. 85. A piece of the architrave of the 
Erectheum, at Athens. 
No. 86. A votive Greek inscription of Antis- 
thenes, the priest of Pandion ; he was the son of 
Antiphates, and belonged to the tribe of Pandionis. 
No. 87 . Torso of a young male figure, the size 
of life, found at Epidaurus ; it has a curious belt, 
which 
