230 
GALLERY OF ANTIQUITIES. 
[bronze 
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 M. Falterona; Aurora bearing off Memnon ; votive 
head ; Hercules, from the same place ; 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 M. Falterona. 
Case 73. Large statue of a youth, apparently a portrait; from the 
lake of M. Falterona. 
Case 74. Cases for holding mirrors for the toilet, having subjects 
in toreutic bas-relief; the double Minerva; from Toscanella; Thetis 
bringing the armour of Achilles; Bacchus embracing 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 
Tyndareus; on two mirrors; Heos, or Aurora; Achilles killing 
Penthesilea; Zeus, Semele, and a Satyr; two Lasas, or Victories; 
Hercules arrested by Minerva, winged, killing the Lernean hydra, 
with their names; the Dioscuri; the three goddesses preparing for 
the judgment of Paris; three females bathing; the celebrated Town- 
lean 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, 
and Diomed ; wreaths, &c., in centre; handle, in the shape of the 
stem of a tree ; three Etruscan figures, inscribed with names in Etrus¬ 
can ; the Dioscuri, Clytemnestra, and Helen ; two with the judgment 
of Paris; Eros nursing Aphrodite, on her chair her dove; Venus, 
Cupid, and Victory, umbo of a shield, on which is also in outline 
Rome seated, surrounded by trophies. 
Case 77. Greek and Roman divinities, in bronze ; Hecate, bear¬ 
ing a torch and pomegranate; Cybele, sacrificing over an altar, and 
winged, with herself, forming the twelve gods, in silver; Asiatic prisoner; 
Cupid bearing a ram’s head; four figures of Atys, one holding 
cymbals and pedum ; Saturn devouring his children, in silver ; nine¬ 
teen statues of Jupiter in different attitudes, one holding an eagle on 
his arm, and hurling his thunderbolt; three found at Paramvthia, dis¬ 
tinguished for the exquisite beauty of their workmanship; one in silver, 
with the goat Amaltheia at his side ; two busts of Jupiter. 
Case 78. Atlas holding up the heaven; busts of Serapis; three 
figures of Isis; mediaeval bronze of Ganymede and the eagle; one 
