ni 
No. 56. A large square tablet, of breccia, 
covered with hieroglyphics. It appears to have 
been used as a mill-stone for grinding corn. 
Presented , in 1805, by Earl Spencer . 
TENTH ROOM. 
GREEK AND ROMAN SCULPTURES. 
No. 1. A head of Juno, crowned with a broad 
indented diadem. 
No. 2. An upright narrow piece of marble, 
ornamented with branches of the olive and the 
vine. 
No. 3. A head apparently of a trumpeter. 
No. 4. An unknown female head. The sock¬ 
ets of the eyes are hollow, and have been origin¬ 
ally filled with coloured stones, or some other 
material. 
No. 5. A torso of a small statue of Venus. 
No. 6. An unknown female head, with a broad 
fillet across the forehead. 
No. 7. A head of a goat. 
No. 8. Cupid sleeping upon a lion’s skin. 
No. 9. An epitaph on a dog. From the collec¬ 
tion of Sir Hans Sloane. 
No. 10. An unknown head. 
No. 11. A head of Apollo. 
No. 12. A head of a lion, being a fragment 
of a large sarcophagus. 
No. 13. An oblong square basin of granite, 
similar to such as were used in the temples, to 
contain 
ROOM IX. 
Antiquities. 
ROOM X. 
Antiquities. 
