94 
room hi. This statue belonged to a group, originally com- 
Antiquities. posed of twoboys who had quarrelled at the game 
of Tali, as appears by one of those bones called 
tali remaining in the hand of the figure which is 
lost. 
No, 32. A terminal head of Pericles, helmeted, 
and inscribed with his name. 
No. 33. A statue of a Faun, inscribed with 
the name of the artist. 
No. 34. A terminal head of Epicurus. 
No. 35. A terminal statue of Pan playing 
upon a pipe. 
No. 36. A Greek inscription upon a circular 
shield, containing the names of the Ephebi of 
Athens under Alcamenes, when he held the 
office of Cosmetes. 
No. 37. A terminal statue, supposed to be 
that of Venus Architis. 
No. 38. A circular votive patera. 
No. 39. An unknown bronze head, supposed 
to be that of Pindar. Presented , in 1760, by the 
Earl of Exeter. 
No. 4t>. A circular votive patera, with a head 
of Pan in very high relief. 
No. 40*. A torso of Hercules. 
No. 41. A Greek sepulchral monument. The 
bas-relief in front represents a trophy, on one 
side of which stands a warrior, and on the other 
a female figure feeding a serpent that is twined 
round the trunk of a tree on which the trophy is 
erected. On the right of these figures is the fore 
part 
