90 
ROOM II. No. 11. A vase, three feet high, with upright 
Antiquities, massive handles , it is of an oval form, and is or¬ 
namented all round with Bacchanalian figures. 
No. 12. A bronze statue of Hercules carrying 
away the apples from the garden of the Hespe- 
rides. 
No. 12^. Mithraic group. Brought from 
Rome^ In 1815, hy Charles Standisli^ Esq, from 
whom it was purchased hy the Trustees in 
1826, 
No. IS. One of the feet, or supports, of an 
ancient tripod table. 
No. 14, A statue of Venus, naked to the 
waist, and covered with drapery from thence 
downwards. It was found in the maritime 
baths of Claudius, at Ostia. 
No. 15. A bronze statue of Apollo. 
No, 16. One of the feet, or supports, of an 
ancient tripod table, executed in porphyry. It 
represents the head and leg of a panther. 
No. 17. A vase two feet eight inches high, of 
an oval form, with two upright double handles, 
which spring from the necks of swans. The 
body of the vase in front is enriched with a group 
of Bacchanalians. 
No, 18. A fountain ornamented with ivy and 
olive branches. The water was conveyed through 
a perforation on the back part of this monument 
to a serpent’s head, in which a leaden pipe was 
introduced, part of which still remains in the 
mouth. 
No. 19. 
