127 
No. 151. A fragment of a statue covered with 
drapery. 
No. 152. A sepulchral Greek inscription, in 
ten verses, of which the two first and the two 
last are in the elegiac measure, and the rest are 
hexameters. The inscription is in memory of a 
young lady of extraordinary beauty, named 
Tryphera, who died at the early age of 25 years. 
No. 153. A sepulchral Greek inscription, en¬ 
graved on a piece of entablature. It consists of 
two lines in prose, and sixteen in pentameter verse. 
The name of the deceased was Publius Phaedrus, 
a native of Sunium, the son of Theophilus and 
Cecropia, and grandson of Pistoteles* The in¬ 
scription states that he was of noble family, and 
that his death was followed by the universal regret 
of the Athenians, on account of his youth, learn¬ 
ing, wisdom, and personal accomplishments. 
No. 154. A piece of Doric entablature, origi¬ 
nally painted. 
No. 155. The upper part of a sepulchral 
stele, inscribed with the name of Euphrosynus. 
No. 156. A fragment of a colossal female 
statue, from one of the pediments of the Parthe¬ 
non ; it has belonged to a sitting figure, of which 
the only remaining part is a left thigh, covered 
with drapery. 
No. 157. A fragment of a decree ; the begin¬ 
ning is wanting, and what remains is much mutila¬ 
ted. At the conclusion of the decree, it is ordained 
that 
room xv. 
ANTiyvmK*. 
