ROOM XI.] GREEK AND ROMAN SCULPTURES. 227 
No. 38. Sepulchral monument to Hermodorus, son 
of Aristomenes. 
No. 39. Blank . 
No. 40. An alto-relievo, representing five of the la¬ 
bours of Hercules. Presented by the Executors of the 
late 0. S. Brereton . 
No. 41. Blank. 
No. 42. Small statue of Ceres. Presented by <7. S. 
Gaskoin, Esq ., 1836. 
No. 43. A shelf, containing 
An unknown bust of a boy. 
A bust of iElius Caesar. 
An unknown bust. All bequeathed by the late R . P. 
K?iight , Esq . 
Underneath, a sun-dial. Purchased in 1821. 
No. 44. 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. 45. A Mithraic group. 
Between this and the next No. a colossal votive foot. 
No. 46. A head of Demosthenes. Purchased in 1818. 
No. 47. The front of a tomb, from Delos. Formerly 
belonging to Col . Rooke , and presented , in 1825, by A . 
E. Impey, Esq . 
No. 48. An unknown head. Purchased in 1818. 
Between this and the next No., a bas-relief represent¬ 
ing three nymphs standing between Jupiter and Pan. 
No. 49. A recumbent female, resting her left arm 
upon an urn: her head encircled by a diadem. 
No. 50. A Greek inscription, being a decree of the 
people of Athens and of the Piraeeus, in honour of 
Callidamas. Presented , in 1785, by the Dilettanti So¬ 
ciety. 
No. 51. A shelf, containing 
A head of Tiberius. 
A bust, inscribed to the memory of CL Olympias, by 
Epithymetus, her freed-man. 
A head of Augustus. All purchased , in 1812, at the 
sale of the late Right Hon. Edmund Burke’s Marbles. 
A Greek inscription, originally placed under a statue 
of Jupiter Urius, which stood within a temple erected 
