no 
ROOM VI. (Jles at the neck, and terminates in a point at the 
Antiquities, bottom, like an amphora. It was found in the 
Baths of Titus, with above seventy others of the 
same sort; all of them contained the fine xlfrican 
sand, with which, when mixed with oil, the Ath- 
letae rubbed their bodies before they exercised. 
No. sn. A votive foot covered with a sandal, 
and having a serpent twined round it in the 
same manner as is described at No. 82. 
No. 82^. A colossal hand. 
No. 83^. A mask of Bacchus. 
No. 84. A sphinx, which anciently formed 
part of the base of a superb candelabrum. 
No. 84^. An unknown head. Purchased m 1818, 
No. 85. A head of Sabina. 
No. 86. A small figure of a recumbent Satyr. 
No. 87. A sepulchral cippus, witliout an in¬ 
scription. It is richly ornamented on the four 
sides with festoons of fruit. 
No. 88. An Egyptian tumbler, practising his 
art on the back of a tame crocodile. 
No. 89. A sepulchral cippus, with an inscrip¬ 
tion to M. Coelius Superstes. 
No. 90. An unknown bust of a middle-aged 
man. The hair of the head and beard is short 
and bushy ; the left shoulder is covered with 
part of the chlamys ; the right shoulder and 
breast are uncovered. On the plinth is an in¬ 
scription, signifying thatL. ^milius Fortunatus 
dedicates the bust to his friend. 
No. 91. 
