161 
ROOM XI.] GREEK AND ROMAN SCULPTURES. 
No. 24. A bronze statue of Hercules, carrying away 
the apples from the garden of the Hesperides. Pt. 3> 
PL ii. 
Beneath, is one of the feet, or supports, of an ancient 
tripod table. Pt. 3. PI. hi. 
No. 25. A large sepulchral cippus, with an inscrip¬ 
tion to M. Clodius Herma, Annius Felix, and Tyran- 
nus. 
Upon it is a circular sepulchral vessel of stone, in¬ 
scribed with the name of Phaenariste, the wife of Philo- 
phanus. 
No. 26. A Greek inscription, being a decree of the 
people of Athens and of the Pirseeus, in honour of Cal- 
lidamas. Presented , in 1785, by the Dilettanti Society . 
No. 27* Blank . 
No. 28. A shelf, containing 
An unknown bust, the head perfectly bald. 
An unknown bust of a female. 
A bust of Diogenes the Cynic. All bequeathed by the 
late R. P . Knight , Esq . 
Underneath, a fragment of a bas-relief, bearing a 
figure of a youthful Hercules. 
No. 29. A chair, after the model of an invalid’s 
chair : found in the Antonine Baths. 
No. 30, A cinerary urn of marble ; on the cover is a 
recumbent female figure. On the front is a bas-relief, 
representing a female dragged by the hair from her 
chariot by a warrior armed with a drawn sword. 
No. 31. An alto-relievo, representing five of the 
labours of Hercules. Presented by the Executors of the 
late O. S, Brereton. 
No. 32. A cinerary urn of marble ; on the cover is 
a recumbent female figure ; on the front is a bas-relief, 
representing a boar hunt; at each end is a vase. 
No. 33. A sepulchral cippus, with an inscription to 
T. Claudius Epictetus. 
No. 34. A shelf, containing 
A bust of Hercules. 
A bust, supposed to have been intended for Achilles. 
A bust of a Faun. All bequeathed by the late R . P. 
Knight , Esq . 
Underneath, a sepulchral monument to Sotnikes, who 
