40 
TAXIS. 
key and nails, &c., from find 44. Iron knives, 2. 
Bone pins, 2, from top of E. mound; pieces of 
bone bracelets; pieces of turned bone and wood. 
Burnt clothing. Scarabs 10, including one of 
Amenbotep III., and one in blue glass. 
To Bolton are sent various objects already 
mentioned; and also, in bronze, a mirror OJ in. 
diameter; Horus, in.; Taur ; cat; serpent; 
Isis and Horus, 4^ in.; horns and disc from a 
large Isis; a capital (from find 20); ring with 
bezil; crook of Osiris inlaid with red paste; a 
handle; and nails, 5. In glazed pottery, a 
cartouche-shaped stand with two hollows for ink 
cups; part of a cup with a spout, a couchant lion 
on the brim; part of a small oblong dish ; Bes, 
fine blue, 2J in.; Shu ; Ptah; Bast, a good upper 
part; Isis and Horus, good upper part; Nefertum, 
3 in.; Anubis; Taur ; Horus and serpents ; 
Tahuti; eye and Bes; crocodiles, 2; ram; hawk; 
^gis of Bast, 2; flower pendants, 3 ; snake; papy¬ 
rus sceptre, cowrie; eyes, 6; draughtsman; beads, 
(find 44); terra-cotta head of a boy; limestone 
tablet, with Horus incised, 2f in. Beads various, 
garnets, agate, glass, pottery. Pieces of bone 
fittings (find 85). Bone pins, 3. 
The Liverpool Museum is already so rich, that 
the ordinary small objects are not needed there, 
hence the following objects are such as are not so 
generally met with. Besides the things already 
noted, there was presented in bronze, a lump of nine 
pins, two inches long (pi. xii. 6); needle, 1-j inches 
long, perfect, found by me on the surface south of 
the temple; square buckle (pi. xii. 43); part of a 
vase-handle, with a head; nails, 6; pieces of chain, 
3; oast dumps, unknown use; coin of Tanite nome 
struck under Hadrian; rock crystal cover of an 
eye, finely polished; plaster model of a Ptolemaic 
brass coin, cast from a mould taken from a worn 
coin, use unknown, but a similar model exists in 
the British Museum ; a glass bead and part of a 
dish, together with six glazed figures of gods, and 
pieces of bone fittings from find 35, to show the 
work of that age. In glazed pottery, Kgis of Bast 
from a ring, 2 ; head of Bes (?), a bestial-human 
face with prick ears; hawk; crocodile; frog; 
Bast crowned, upper part, good; sistrum-head; 
head of Bast, a flat piece moulded on both sides, 
fine work; plaques, 2; head of Bast on lotus; 
eyes, 10; beads (find 44); and various beads in 
stone, glass, and pottery. In terra-cotta, four 
heads; part of a decorated bust; moulds for a 
bead and a snake. Schist plaque, two figures, 
scarabs of Ea-men-kheper, and Amenhotep III. 
Pieces of lapis lazuli inlaying. Whetstone. 
To the Museum at York, the greater part of 
find 44, described in the next chapter. Besides 
that, in bronze, arrow-points, 4; Isis and Horus; 
and Osiris from Sueilin. In glazed pottery, 
Ptah, 3 ; Horus and serpents; Tahuti; Shu, 2 ; 
Bes, 2; crocodile; hawk; flower pendants; eyes, 8; 
draughtsman. Terra-cotta female head, good. 
Glass bottle, broken. Whetstone. Mould for 
making eyes. Ten scarabs, various. 
To the Charterhouse School Museum, Godai¬ 
ming, objects already mentioned; bronze Isis and 
Horus; arrow heads, 2; glazed pottery eyes from 
San, 6; eyes from Sueilin, 5; Nefertum, Anubis, 
Shu, Bast, Mut on lotus, Bes, ram, pig, crown, 
papyrus, and draughtsman. 
To Edinburgh Museum, some late amulets 
already mentioned, and twenty scarabs, as follows: 
King and lion, (Assyrianesque) (pi. xii. 34), in dark 
lavender glaze, found in the rubbish taken by 
Mariette out of the sanctuary. Amenhotep III. 
in fine blue glaze (xii. 35). Eamessu in blue- 
green paste, “Ka-mesneb”(xii.31). TahutmesIII. 
(pi. xii. 11), with two animals probably intended 
for Sutekh, as “ nofer ” accompanies them, one 
overcoming a captive, also a hippopotamus below. 
Amenemhat 1. in fawn-coloured schist (xii. 1). 
Sebakhotep in yellow-white glaze (xii. 2). Queen 
Nofertari (xii. 24), a small double scarab. Sheshonk 
IV. (xii. 23); scarabs with “ Ea kheper ” are not 
uncommon, the style is late, and I have seen a 
plaque of Bubastite work, with a king before Bast, 
“Ea kheper” twice in cartouches in the field, 
and “ Sheshonk ” on the reverse. “ Ea men 
kheper” and two urffii; “Ea men kheper” and 
