252 GALLERY OF ANTIQUITIES. [BRONZE 
one carved with the nebris ; archaic figure of Aphrodite, dedicated by 
Aristomaehe to Lucina; Apollo, or Pan, holding an apple; Aurora 
bearing off Tithonus Cephalus, or Memnon ; Apollo, holding a vase, and 
a discobolos, or quoit-hurler; human-headed bull, probably a river god, 
recumbent; three heads, from similar figures of the same ; Hercules; 
Victory, or Aurora, from a patera; at base of pedestal, two dol¬ 
phins ; Siren or Harpy ; at foot of pedestal, Ariadne playing on the lyre. 
Case 67. Two little affixes; contest of Hercules and Hera at 
Pylos; Hercules slaying the Msenalian stag, which is protected by 
Diana; head of Hercules; Mars standing, apparently a copy of that 
in the Gallery at Florence; eight figures, probably of Apollo, two 
Mars, one with the helmet over his face; part of a group of Ajax 
bearing off Achilles ; three naked figures of a divinity hurling a lance, 
perhaps Mars; Apollo; cenochoos or wine bearer, perhaps Ganymede; 
two youths with disks, perhaps Hyacinthus, or Apollo; man standing, 
apparently a portrait; exquisite figure of a man standing, with pointed 
shoes; Minerva. 
Case 68. Nine mirrors, and mirror handles, plain. 
Case 69. Ten plain mirrors; six circular mirrors and mirror boxes, 
of a late period; one mirror has received a modern polish to show the 
effect of it. 
Cases 69—70. Various kinds of fibulae, some Etruscan, and others 
Roman. 
Case 71. Exquisite statue of Mars, of Etruscan style; found in 
draining the lake of Monte Falterona; Aurora bearing off Memnon ; 
votive head; Hercules; end of the pole of a chariot in shape of a 
gryphon, from Vulci; top of a candelabrum, representing a Satyr 
and a Bacchante, from Orvieto. 
Case 72. Votive leg and arm ; from Monte Falterona . 
Case 73. Large statue of a youth, apparently a portrait; from the 
lake of Monte Falterona. 
Case 74. Cases for holding mirrors for the toilet, having subjects 
in chased bas-relief; the double Minerva; from Toscanella; Thetis 
bringing the armour of Achilles; Bacchus epibracing Ariadne, and 
Neoptolemus killed at Delphi by Orestes and the Pythia. Mirrors, the 
subjects of which have been engraved in outline on the side held from 
the face ; Mars killing a giant; Jupiter and Hermes; Hercules bring¬ 
ing the Erymanthian boar to Eurystheus ; Orion running on the waves 
of the sea; the family of Leda. 
Case 75. Mirrors continued; Tyndareus, Helen, and the Dioscuri; 
Bacchus, Ariadne, Semele, and the Satyr, Simos; Minerva before 
Paris; Achilles, arming in the presence of Thetis ; Apollo Hyacin- 
thinus, winged; two Lasas, or Victories; Helen, the Dioscuri and 
1'yndareus ; on two mirrors ; Heos, or Aurora; Achilles killing Pen- 
thesilea; Zeus, Semele,and a Satyr; two Lasas, or Victories ; Hercules 
and Minerva, winged, killing the Lernean Hydra, inscribed with their 
names ; the Dioscuri; the three goddesses preparing for the judgment 
of Paris ; three females, probably the rival goddesses, bathing; the cele¬ 
brated Townleyan mirror, in bas-relief; Hercules bearing off a female; 
Dionysos and a Satyr; two females united under the same peplus. 
Case 76. Mirrors, one with handle, in shape of Venus holding a 
dove; the Dioscuri; two goddesses, and a youth; Dolon, Ulysses, 
