SALOON.] GREEK SCULPTURES. 3 JJA 225 
No. 97. A group of the three Fates. (67, 63.) 
No. 98. The head of one of the horses belonging to the chariot of 
Night, which was represented plunging into the ocean on the right 
angle of the east pediment, that is to say, the right angle in reference 
to the spectator. The car of Day has been already described, (Nos. 
91, 92,) as it was represented rising out of the waters on the opposite 
angle of the same pediment. (68.) 
No. 99. A recumbent statue, supposed to be of the river-god Ilis- 
sus. The nissus was a small stream that ran along the south side of 
the plain of Athens. This figure, which, with the exception of the 
Theseus, is the finest in the collection, occupied the left angle of the 
west pediment. (70.) 
No. 100. The torso of a male figure, supposed to be that of Ce- 
crops, the founder of Athens. (76.) 
No. 101. The upper part of the head of Minerva. (See the fol¬ 
lowing No.) This head was originally covered with a bronze helmet, 
as appears from the holes by which it was fastened to the marble : and 
the sockets of the eyes, which were originally filled with metal or 
coloured stones, are now hollow. (118.) 
No. 102. A fragment of the statue of Minerva, one of the prin¬ 
cipal figures in the west pediment, and of nearly the same proportions 
as the torso of Neptune, from the same pediment. (No. 103.) This 
fragment consists of a portion only of the chest of the goddess, which 
is covered, as usual, with the aegis. The angles of the aegis appear to 
have been ornamented with bronze serpents, and the centre of it to 
have been studded with the head of Medusa, of the same metal; the 
holes in which these ornaments were fastened to the marble are plainly 
visible. The upper part of the head of this statue, the feet, and a por¬ 
tion of the Erichthonian serpent, are preserved in the collection. See 
Nos. 101, 256, and 104. (75.) 
No. 103. The upper part of the torso of Neptune, one of the princi¬ 
pal figures in the west pediment. (64.) 
No. 104. See No. 102. (271.) 
No. 105. The torso of Victoria Apteros, or Victory without wings, 
who was represented in this manner by the Athenians to intimate that 
they held her gifts in perpetuity, and that she could not desert them. 
This goddess was represented driving the car of Minerva, on the west 
pediment; the car approached Minerva, as if to receive her into it, after 
her successful contest with Neptune. (69.) 
No. 106. A fragment of a group which originally consisted of La- 
tona with her two children, Apollo and Diana. This group was placed 
on the right side of the west pediment. All that remains in the fragment 
before us, is the lap of Latona, with a small portion of the figure of the 
infant Apollo. (73.) 
No. 107. The celebrated Sigean inscription, first published by 
Chishull, in his “ Antiquitates Asiatic®,” and afterwards more cor¬ 
rectly by Chandler in his “ Inscriptions Antiquse. ” It is written in 
the most ancient Greek characters, and in the bustrophedon manner, 
that is to say, the lines follow each other in the same direction as the 
ox passes from one furrow to another in ploughing. The purport of 
the inscription is to record the presentation of three vessels, namely, a 
cup, a saucer or stand, and a strainer, for the use of the Prytaneum, or 
