163 
ROOM VI.3 GREEK AND ROMAN SCULPTURES. 
her right shoulder, and a bunch of grapes in her left hand; 
"at her feet is a panther. 
No. 41. A head of Atys. 
No. 42. A head of an unknown female, the hair 
elegantly bound with broad fillets. 
No. 43. A statue of Ceres, crowned in the manner of 
Isis. 
No. 44. A head of Nero. 
No. 45. A sepulchral cippus, without an inscription. 
On the front, beneath a festoon which is composed of 
fruits and foliage, and is suspended from the skulls of 
bulls, are two birds perched on the edge of a vase, out 
of which they are drinking. 
Upon it, a votive statue of a fisherman, who is carrying 
a round leathern bucket suspended from his left arm. 
The head is covered with a mariner’s bonnet, and a 
dolphin serves as a support to the figure. 
No. 46. A small scenic figure, sitting on a square 
plinth. The face is covered with a comic mask. 
No. 47* A head of one of the Homeric heroes. It is 
highly animated, and is looking upwards, apparently in 
great agitation. Pt. 2. PI. xxiii. 
No. 48. A small statue of Jupiter sitting. He is re¬ 
presented in his twofold capacity, as king of the upper 
and lower regions. 
No. 49. A Greek funeral monument of Dernocles, 
the son of Dernocles, with a bas-relief and an inscription 
in eight elegiac verses. It was brought from Smyrna. 
Presented^ in 1772, hy Mattheuo Duane, Esq., and 
Thomas Tyrvohitt, Esq. 
No. 50. A votive altar sacred to Bacchus. On the 
front, Silenus is represented riding on a panther. 
Upon it, a votive statue of a fisherman, holding a 
basket of fish in his left hand. 
No. 51. A bust of Caracalla; the head only is antique. 
No. 52. A group of two dogs, one of which is biting 
the ear of the other in play. 
No. 53. An unknown bust, dressed in the Roman toga. 
No, 54. A bas-relief, representing Priam in the act 
of supplicating Achilles to deliver to him the body of his 
son Hector. 
H 3 
