SALOON.] GREEK AND ROMAN SCULPTURES. Ill 
Silenus, in front of a blazing altar, and a branch of ivy between them. 
Pt. 2. PL xl. 
No. 40*. A torso of Hercules : a fragment. 
No. 41. A Greek sepulchral monument. The bas-relief in front 
represents a trophy, on one side of which stands a warrior, and on the 
other a female ligure feeding a serpent that is twined round the trunk of 
a tree on which the trophy is erected. On the right of these figures is 
the fore part of a horse. An inscription on the top of this monument 
contains a list of names, probably of those who fell in some engage¬ 
ment. Brought to England by Mr. Topham, in 1725, and presented to 
the British Museum , in 1780, hy the Right Hon. Sir Joseph Banks , 
and the Hon. A. C. Fraser. Pt. 2. PL xli. 
No. 42. A terminal head of Periander: formerly in the Villa 
Montalto. Pt. 2. PL xlii. 
No. 43. A repetition of No. 33. Pt. 2. PL xliii. 
No. 44. An unknown terminal head, probably of a Greek poet. It 
was found with the head of Hippocrates, No. 20, near Albano, in 1770. 
Pt. 2. Pl. xliv. 
No. 45. A statue of Actseon attacked by his dogs. It was found 
by Mr. Gavin Hamilton, in 1774, in the ruins of the villa of Antoninus 
Pius, near Civita Lavinia. Pt. 2. PI. xlv. 
No. 46. A terminal head of the young Hercules; it is crowned with 
the leaves of the poplar. This head was found in the year 1777, near 
Gensano, in the grounds belonging to the Cesarini family. Pt. 2. 
Pi. XLVI. 
No. 47. Head of Apollo, from a statue. 
No. 48. Head of Apollo, from a statue formerly in the Grimani 
Palace, at Venice. 
No. 49. Leg or support of an ancient tripod temple, in shape of the 
head and leg of a panther rising out of foliage. 
No. 50. Foro, or support of an ancient tripod table, in shape of the 
head and foot of a lion or panther, in red porphyry. Found, a.d. 1772, 
at a depth of tw 7 enty-five feet, in the forum, under the Palatine Hill. 
No. 51. Statue of a youth in Phrygian attire, wearing a cidaris or 
conical cap on his head, and a tunic, anaxyrides, chlamys, and shoes; 
it has been restored as Paris, holding the apple and shepherd’s crook, 
but is more probably Atys or one of the attendants of the god Mithras. 
Found in 1785, on the banks of the Tiber, at a distance of about five 
miles from the Porta Portese, and supposed to have been intended to 
ornament a villa. 
On a temporary stand, in the centre of this room, are placed 
Bust of Serapis, in green basalt. It was obtained by Sir R. Ainslie 
at Constantinople. 
Bust of Antoninus Pius ; the small head of which is only antique: 
formerly in the Barberini Palace at Rome. 
Recumbent statue of Pan, wearing the nebris, or goat-skin, and 
holding the pedum in his left hand. 
Bust of a boy ; from Rome. 
Bust of Serapis. From the Collection of Sir W. Hamilton. 
Part of a draped female figure seated in a chair. From the Earl of 
Belmore's Collection. 
Bust of an unknown female, commonly called that of Clytie, 
