94 ROMAN ANTIQUITIES. [ROOM II. 
Clytie. It is gracefully terminated by the flower of the Nymphsea 
lotus, on which it appears to rest. Purchased at Naples in 1772. 
No. 49. Leg or support of an ancient tripod table, having the 
shape of the head and leg of a panther rising out of foliage. 
No. 6. Bas-relief, in the flat early style of Greek sculpture. It 
represents Castor managing a horse. Found in the ruins of Hadrian’s 
Villa, about the year 1769. Pt. *2. PI. vi. 
A bas-relief, representing Bacchus received as a guest by Icarus. 
The base of an ancient fountain. 
No. 4B. Bust, supposed to be that of one of the Homeric heroes. 
No. 50. Leg or support of an ancient tripod table, having the 
shape of the head and foot of a lion or panther, in red porphyry. 
Found a.d. 1772, at a depth of twenty-five feet, in the Forum, under 
the Palatine Hill. 
No. 4*. Colossal bust of Lucius Verus, clad in the paludamentum. 
Formerly in the Mattei collection. 
Statue of an Emperor, apparently Caracalla. From Alexandria. 
Presented by King George III. 
No. 15. A bust of Hadrian, wdth the breast naked. Formerly in 
the Villa Montalto. 
Cast of the sarcophagus in which the Portland Vase w T as discovered. 
Presented by T. Windus, Esq. 
A bust of Jupiter Serapis. Presented by J ’. T. Barber Beaumont , 
Esq., 1836. 
A bust of Trajan, with the breast naked. Found in an excavation 
made in the Campagna di Roma, a.d. 1776. 
Statue of Marcus Aurelius, wearing the toga. 
Bust of Charles Towneley, Esq. 
Bust of Antinous, in the character of Bacchus. 
Statue of a sleeping youth, wearing a petasus , and draped in a chla- 
mys, shod with endromides; supposed to be Mercury, but more probably 
Endymion. 
Statue, restored as of a drunken Satyr or Silenus, but which is sup¬ 
posed to have formed part of a group of a Silenus and Nymph. 
Bust of Hadrian, clad in the paludamentum. 
No. 20. Bust of Hippocrates, found near Albano, amongst remains 
supposed to be those of a Villa of Marcus Varro. Pt. 2. PI. xx. 
No. 4. Statue of a Canephora. It was one of the Caryatides 
which supported the portico of a small temple dedicated to Bacchus. 
It was found during the pontificate of Sixtus V., among some ancient 
ruins in the Villa Strozzi, situated upon the Appian Road. Pt. L 
PI. IV. 
Bust of Adonis, wearing the cidaris, or Phrygian cap. From the 
Villa Montalto. 
A colossal head of Hercules, dug up at the foot of Mount Vesuvius, 
where it had been buried by the lava of that volcano. From the collec¬ 
tion of Sir William Hamilton. Pt. 1. PL xi. 
A colossal head of Hercules, found by Mr. Gavin Hamilton in 1769, 
at the Pantanella in Hadrian’s Villa. 
