232 
GALLERY OF ANTIQUITIES. [ROOM XII. 
A large votive patera, with a bas-relief on each side, 
one representing Silenus, and the other a Satyr. From 
the collection of Sir William Hamilton. 
A small fragment of a figure holding a bird. 
The left hand of a child holding a fragment. 
A torso of a male figure, the arms of which appear to 
have been raised above the head. 
A small mutilated figure. The right breast is naked ; 
the other parts are entirely covered with drapery. It 
has a necklace, from which a scarabaeus is suspended. 
A head of an eagle, which appears to have served as 
the hilt of a sword. From the collection of Sir William 
Hamilton . 
A votive patera, with a bas-relief on each side, one 
representing a mask of the bearded Bacchus, and the 
other a panther. From the collection of Sir William 
Hamilton . 
A fragment of a serpent. 
A torso of a faun. Presented , in 1833, by the Rev . 
Henry Crotve. 
On No. 13:—A head of a Muse, crowned with a 
wreath of laurel. 
A draped portion of a female statue ; the upper part 
has been naked, and sculptured from a separate block 
of marble. 
A head of one of the Dioscuri. 
No. 14. A head of Apollo. 
No. 15. A head of Cybele. 
No. 16. A head of a iion, which w r as a part of the 
same sarcophagus from which No. 5 was taken. 
Underneath, a cistern of green basalt, originally used 
as a bath. On the sides are carved two rings in 
imitation of handles, in the centre of which is a leaf of 
ivy. 
No. 17. A head of Minerva. 
No. 18. A colossal head of Antinous in the character 
of Bacchus ; it is crowned with a wreath of ivy. 
No. 19. A shelf containing 
A head, apparently of a trumpeter. 
A head of Diana, the hair of which is drawn up from 
the sides, and tied in a knot at the top of the head. 
From the collection of Sir William Hamilton . 
A head of a goat. 
