209 
ROOM XI.] GREEK AND ROMAN SCULPTURES. 
Part of a sepulchral monument, very much defaced ; it appears to 
represent a man holding a bunch of grapes, with a cock at his feet. 
Presented by Dr. Jarvis. 
No. 11. A bas-relief, representing a Faun playing on the double 
pipe. 
A bas-relief, front of a sarcophagus, representing eleven infant genii 
under the character of a bacchanalian procession. 
A bust of a sleeping child, in alto-relievo. 
No. 12. A fragment of a bas-relief, representing three legs; they 
have belonged to two figures in powerful action, one of which appears 
to have been aiming a blow at the other, who is falling. Bequeathed , 
in 1812, by the late Charles Lambert, Esq. 
No. 13. Inscription recording honours conferred on a Lacedaemo¬ 
nian physician by the Gytheatee, from Gythium in Laconia. Presented 
by Col. Leake , 1839. 
A sepulchral monument; a boy sacrificing to Mercury, standing near 
an altar inscribed deo mercvrto. 
A fragment, representing Pan playing upon a lyre, with a Faun play¬ 
ing upon a reed. 
A fragment of a bacchanalian group. 
Painted tile, from iEgium, in Arcadia. Presented by Col. Leake, 
1839. 
No. 14. Mithraic group. Brought from Pome, in 181 5, by Charles 
Standish, Esq., from whom it was purchased by the Trustees in 1826. 
At the back of the pedestal, a bas-relief, representing two persons, 
one abandoning his arms, the other sacrificing at an altar ; beneath, an 
inscription recording the death of a warrior. 
A bas-relief of Mercury, seated upon a heap of stones. 
A sepulchral monument, with a Greek inscription, and a bas-relief 
of a skeleton. 
No. 15. A sepulchral cippus, without any inscription. It is richly 
ornamented on the four sides with festoons of fruit. 
Upon it is a Greek sepulchral urn, solid, and with a bas-relief in 
front; it is inscribed with the names of Pytharatus and Herophilus. 
From the collection of Sir Hans Sloane. 
No. 16. A statue of an intoxicated Faun. 
No. 17. A votive altar, dedicated to Silvanus. 
Upon it is a trophy found on the plains of Marathon. Presented, in 
1802, by John Walker, Esq. 
No. 18. A statue of a Faun, formerly in the collection of the 
Rondinini Palace in the Corso at Rome, and thence called the Ron- 
dinini Faun. Purchased in 1826. 
No. 19. A statue of a Discobolus, who is represented at that precise 
moment of time which immediately precedes the delivery of the discus. 
It is an ancient copy in marble, from the celebrated bronze statue exe¬ 
cuted by Myro. This statue was found in 1791, in the grounds of the 
Conte Fede, in the part of Hadrian’s Villa Tiburtina, supposed to have 
been the Pinacotheca, or Picture Gallery. 
No. 20. A sepulchral cippus, the inscription upon which appears 
to have been erased. This marble formerly stood in the Burioni Villa 
at Rome. 
