-SALOON.] 
GREEK SCULPTURES. 
135 
those parts, or in gratitude for cures already received. The part 
of the body which had received a cure has been broken off from 
No. 212; but the inscription implies, that Syntrophus presents it as a 
mark of his gratitude to Jupiter Hypsistos. No. 213 is a prayer injsbe- 
half of Euphrosynus. (247,245,249,252,241,251,248,246,253,250.) 
Nos. 219, 220. Two pieces of the architrave belonging to the 
temple of Erechtheus at Athens. (291, 85.) 
No. 221. A fragment of a boy, holding a bird under his arm, and 
feeding it. (81.) 
No. 222. A sepulchral column, inscribed with the name of Botry- 
chus, son of Euphanus, and a native of Heraclea. (278.) 
No. 223. A Greek inscription, imperfect, engraved in very small 
characters: it is an enumeration of the sacred dresses which belonged 
to some temple. (283.) 
No. 224. A fragment of a bas-relief, representing the fore legs 
and part of the body of a bull. (160.) 
No. 225. Fragment of a Greek inscription ; very imperfect. (180.) 
No. 226. A fragment of a Greek inscription; it is the latter part 
of a decree in honour of a person who had deserved well of some 
particular city. It is directed, as in the inscription No. 203, that the 
decree shall be engraved on marble, and placed in the temple of Neptune 
and Amphitrite. (230.) 
No. 227. A small figure of Telesphorus, completely enveloped in 
a cloak; it wants the head. (78.) 
No. 228. A sepulchral column, with an inscription to the memory 
of Biottus, who was the son of Philoxenus, and a native of Diradium. 
(275.) 
No. 229. A sepulchral stele, with a bas-relief, representing Erasip- 
pus, the son of Callinicus, of the deme Oe, in Attica, clothed in a 
tunic. (212.) 
No. 230. A solid sepulchral urn, with a bas-relief, representing 
five figures, executed in a singularly rude style. The first of these 
figures is a boy carrying a large circular shield, the second is a warrior, 
named Sosippus, joining hands with a third person, who is seated before 
him : the group is completed by the introduction of a child, and of a 
female whose attitude evinces a dejected state of mind. (239.) 
No. 231. The capital of an Ionic column, from the temple of 
Diana, at Daphne. (80.) Cf. Nos. 133, 134, 135. 
No. 232. The upper part of the shaft of a small Ionic column. 
(310.) 
No. 233. The capital of a Corinthian column. (308*.) 
No. 234. A fragment of a Greek inscription; it is too imperfect 
to admit of a full explanation, but it seems to have been in honour of 
a person who had distinguished himself on some occasion by great 
humanity. (170.) 
No. 235. A fragment of a decree made by a society w 7 hich is 
distinguished by a number of epithets, among which are two derived 
from the names of Hadrian and Antoninus. The Society appears to 
have been formed of musicians, and the decree to have been passed 
in honour of Bacchus and the Emperor Antoninus Pius. A patera is 
represented on the upper part of this marble. (161.) 
No. 236. A sepulchral inscription, in six elegiac verses, to a young 
