104 
ROOM VI. bling, in the disposition of the hair, and in the 
Antiquities, character of the face, the head of a Muse. 
No, 19. A Greek inscription, being a decree 
of the people of Athens and of the Pir^us, in 
honour of Callidamas. Presented^ in 1785, by 
the Dilettanti Society. 
No. 20. A votive statue of Diana Triformis, 
with a dedicatory inscription round the plinth. 
No, 21. An altar of Roman work, ornamented 
with Egyptian figures. 
No. 22. A bust, inscribed to the memory of 
Cl. Olympias, by Epithymetus, her freed-man. 
Purchased^ in 1812, at the sale of the late Right 
Hon. Edmund Burke's Marbles. 
No. 23. A funeral monument of Xanthippus, 
who is represented sitting in a chair, and hold¬ 
ing a human foot in his right hand. 
No. 24. A statue of a satyr. 
No. 25. An altar, on which various Egyptian 
figures are represented. It is of Roman work. 
No. 26. A head of an Amazon, in the early 
style of Greek sculpture. 
No. 27. A Greek sepulchral monument, with 
a bas-relief, and an inscription to Mousis, who 
was a native of Miletus, and daughter of Argaeus. 
Presented^ in 1785, by the Dilettanti Society. 
No. 28. A figure of Victory sacrificing a bull. 
No. 29. A bust of Hadrian with the imperial 
paludamentum. 
No. 30. A statue of Diana Lucifera, of which 
the 
