n 
room. Vi. ealla, was ordered to be erased from every inserip- 
Antiquities, tion throughout the empire. 
No. 65. A bust of Caracalla ; the head only 
is antique. 
No. 66 . A fragment of a colossal toe. 
No. 67 . A votive altar, sacred to Bacchus. 
On the front, Silenus is represented riding upon 
a panther. 
No. 68 . A group of two dogs, one of which 
is biting the ear of the other in play. 
No. 69 . A bust of Marcellus, dressed in the 
Roman toga. 
No. 70 . An unknown female head, with a 
broad fillet across the forehead. 
No. 7 ** A fragment of a colossal foot. 
No. A small statue of a Muse, sitting on 
a rock, and holding a lyre in her left hand. 
No. 73. Asmall statue of Cupid bending his bow. 
No. 73.^ A bas-relief, representing a female 
Bacchante, dressed in thin floating drapery, 
through which the beautiful forms of her body are 
perfectly apparent. With one hand, which is 
held somewhat above her head, she holds a knife, 
and at the same time secures a portion of her robe, 
which is blown behind her. With the other, 
which is held downward, she carries the hind 
quarters of a kid. This piece of sculpture was 
anciently one of the ornamental figures on the 
triangular base of a candelabrum. 
