GREEK SCULPTURES. 
115 
SALOON.] 
in a tunic and is seated; the second is a warrior standing up and join¬ 
ing hands with the former; and the third is a boy carrying a large cir¬ 
cular shield. (228.) 
No. 196. A fragment of a bas-relief, representing a female figure 
seated in a chair, with a child standing by her side; the upper part of 
the woman is wanting. This fragment is probably part of a sepulchral 
monument. (162.) 
No. 197. A bas-relief, imperfect, representing a charioteer driving 
four horses at full speed; a figure of Victory is flying towards him with 
a crown. (236.) 
No. 198. A fragment of a bas-relief, representing part of the body 
and legs of a boy. (109.) 
No. 199. A cinerary urn, ornamented in front w 7 ith four standing 
figures ; tw 7 o of these in the centre, are joining hands, the other tw ? o are 
in a pensive attitude. The names of all the figures w 7 ere originally in¬ 
scribed on the urn ; the first name is not legible ; the others are Philia, 
Metrodora, and Meles. (148.) 
No. 199*. A bronze urn, very richly wrought. It w T as found in¬ 
closed w ithin the marble vase in which it now stands, in a tumulus on 
the road that leads from Port Piraeus to the Salaminian ferry and 
Eleusis. At the time of its discovery, this beautiful urn contained a 
quantity of burnt bones, a small vase of alabaster, and a wreath of myrtle 
in gold. (300.) 
No. 199**. A large marble vase ; it is of an oval form, and within 
it was found the bronze urn described in the preceding number. 
(301.) 
No. 199***. A circular votive altar, ornamented with the heads of 
bulls, from which festoons are suspended. The inscription, in Greek, 
near the bottom, is a prayer for the prosperity and health of a person 
named Casiniax. (91.) 
No. 200. A small female figure, covered with drapery ; it is without 
a head. (90.) 
No. 201. A sepulchral column of Thalia, the daughter of Callistratus, 
of Aexone. (149.) 
On shelf 2 are— 
I. 35. Elegant ornament from a cornice. 
I. 26. Portion of a volute of a Corinthian capital inside the Par¬ 
thenon. 
I. 25. Fragment of mseander ornament over the frieze of the inner 
peristyle of the Parthenon. 
I. 37. Fragment of a stele having O AHM02 in a wreath, found on 
the acropolis of Athens. 
I. 31. Fragment of leaf moulding, from the temple of Erectheus at 
Athens. 
I. 28. Egg ornament from the same place. 
I. 34. Volute found near the north front of the Acropolis. 
Underneath this shelf are— 
I. 24. One of the eaves, tiles, or antefixal ornaments of the roof of 
the Parthenon. 
Fragment of a stele, with an elegant acroterium. 
I. 32. Volute of a capital, from the temple of the Nike Apteros. 
I. 20. Fragment of a stele, inscribed Eucleia. 
