ROOM.] GREEK AND ROMAN ANTIQUITIES. 231 
of the Dioscuri; Apollo, with his bow and arrow: Apollo Lycius, 
leaning on a column, playing on the lyre ; Terpsichore, Clio; two 
figures of Serapis standing, one of silver, gilt; Serapis seated; 
another on a throne, at his side an eagle; two busts of Juno; two 
Tritons; head of Triton, or Neptune, with crab’s claws, face turning into 
sea-weed; two heads of Apollo; exquisite Apollo from Paramythia; tw r o 
figures, Salus, or Hygeia ; Artemis, or Diana, holding a torch; Cerbe¬ 
rus ; two statues of Diana, one on a globe; Diana, in silver, holding a 
crescent; Rhea, holding Jupiter ; Neptune, his foot on prow T of a 
vessel, and holding a trident; Thetis, her head terminating in crabs’ 
claw's ; Thetis, or a Nereid, probably mediaeval; three statues of Ceres ; 
or Juno, seated; Dionysos, Hygeia, and a Maenad (?). 
Case 79. Head, from a figure of Hecate, or the Artemis triformis ; 
Hecate, or the Artemis triformis, holding a dog, torch, &c.; head of Diana; 
a bust of Diana; four Dianas, one silver ; bust of Diana ; two figures 
of Vulcan ; Minerva Promachos; Minerva, probably holding an acros- 
tolium, in bronze ; the same, holding the owl, her emblem ; twelve 
figures of Minerva, some holding lances and bucklers; figure of one of 
the Dioscuri, from Paramythia. 
Cases 80—82. Various portions of phalerse, or Roman horse trap¬ 
pings. 
Case 83. Four busts of Minerva, one with Corinthian helmet, sur¬ 
mounted by a sphinx, and with rams’ heads on the cheek-plates; seven 
figures of Mars, one completely armed, and another resembling the 
so-called Pyrrhus of the Museum of the Capitol; an emperor riding ; 
two gladiators. 
Case 84. Twenty-one figures of Mercury, one of which is perhaps 
the most exquisite bronze in Europe; it has a gold torquis, or collar, 
round its neck, as found; four figures of Mercury, in silver; before 
one are the casts emblematic of the palaestra or athletic games over 
w T hich Mercury presided; bust, leg, and arms for statues of Mercury; 
three busts; Mercury flying, mounted on the eagle of Jupiter; 
twenty-eight small figures of Aphrodite, or Venus, represented in 
different characters; as anadyomene, or just rising from the sea, 
and arranging her hair, holding a mirror, or covering her face w T hen 
risen from the bath, in the attitudes of the Venus de Medici, and 
the Venus of the Capitol; adjusting her sandal; one represents her 
with two Cupids holding her mirrors and conch shells, and with various 
pantheistic emblems ; another holding her dove, or riding on a swan, 
the former is the mutilated Venus from Paramythea; three busts of 
Venus. 
Case 85. Thirty-five small figures of Cupids, in various attitudes, 
running, holding a fillet or crown, the conch shell, and lecythus with 
which he anoints Venus at the bath, holding the pugillares or love- 
letter, rejoicing, dancing, crying, intoxicated, feeding a rabbit or hare 
wdth grapes, and playing with a goose or swan ; the silver figure was 
found at Alexandria in Egypt; a dwarf. 
Case 86. Various glass studs or buttons, combs, spoons, and other 
objects, principally from the sepulchres of Etruria ; pair of bronze 
sandals from Armentum. 
Case 87. Four fragments of the chasings which covered an ancient 
chariot, found at Perugia, representing an antifixal ornament, a warrior 
