132 
BOOM XV. 
Antiquities. 
No. 201. The base on which a statue has 
stood ; the feet which still remain, are very wide 
apart, and show that the figure must havfe been in 
powerful action. 
No 202 A torso of a male figure, probably 
that of Esculapius. 
No 203. A sepulchral column to the memory 
of Callis, who was the daughter of Strato, and 
a native of the city of Gargettus. 
No. 204. A base of a column, brought from 
the plains of Troy. 
No. 205. A colossal statue of Bacchus, from 
the choragic monument of Thrasyllus at Athens. 
It is a sitting figure, covered with the skin of a 
lion, and with a broad belt round the waist ; it - 
was originally placed on the summit of the edifice, 
at a height rather exceeding twenty-seven feet. 
No. 20 6 . A capital of a Doric column, from 
the Propyleea, at Athens. 
No. 207. A piece of the shaft of one of the 
Doric columns of the Parthenon. 
No. 208. A small statue of a Muse, without a 
head ; it was probably intended to represent Poly= 
by m nia. 
No. 209. A sepulchral column, inscribed with 
the name of Callimachus, who was a native of the 
city of Aexone, and the son of Callistratus. 
No, 210. Abase of a column, brought from 
the plains of Troy. 
No. 211. An amphora. 
No. 212- 
