140 GALLERY OF ANTIQUITIES. [ROOM V, 
ants, are Furies. An Etruscan inscription is painted in 
red letters on the upper part of this urn ; on the cover is 
a recumbent female figure. From the collection of Sir 
William Hamilton. 
No. 35. A sarcophagus, on the front of which various 
figures of Cupid and Psyche are represented. 
No. 36. A sepulchral urn, with an inscription to D. 
Albiccus Licinus. 
No. 37. Ditto, w T ith an inscription to Flavia Eunya. 
No. 37*. A sepulchral vase, in yellow alabaster. 
No. 38. A monumental inscription to Dasumia 3o- 
teris. 
No. 39. A sepulchral vase, in alabaster. From the 
collection of Sir William Hamilton. 
No. 40. A sepulchral urn, with an inscription to 
Isochryses. 
No. 41. An earthen olla, similar to those described 
at No. 6. The monumental inscription, placed in front 
of it, records the name of Apuleia Tychen. 
No. 42. A funeral inscription to Flavia Provincia. 
No. 43. A sepulchral urn, with an inscription to 
Pilia Philtata. From the collection of Sir William Ha¬ 
milton. 
No. 44. A funeral inscription to Isidorus. Presented , 
in 1757, by Thomas Hollis , Esq. 
No. 45. A mosaic pavement, discovered in digging the 
foundation for the new buildings at the Bank of Eng¬ 
land. Presented , in 1806, by the Directors of the Bank. 
In a temporary Building, opposite the Fifth 
Room, is placed the large and valuable collection of 
casts, chiefly architectural, which belonged to the late 
Sir Thomas Lawrence. They were bequeathed by him, 
on payment of a sum much inferior to their real value, 
to the Royal Academy, by whom they were presented to 
the British Museum. 
On the left hand, next the floor, are five plaster casts 
of the very remarkable sculptured Metopes discovered 
at Selinus in Sicily by Mr. Harris and Mr. Angell, in 
the year 1823. Presented to the Museum by Samuel 
Angell , Esq. 
The fragments of mosaic pavement w r ere found at 
