102 VICTOR STATUES REPRESENTED AT REST. 
has been taken in two examples from Mount Ptoion (Fig. 13), in 
which the arms from the shoulders down are free from the bodies.1 
The bridges shown on the photograph in the figure to the left, which 
connect the forearms with the thighs, are of plaster, being added at 
the time the statue was set up in Athens.2. The figure to the night 

Fic. 10.—Statue of so-called Fic. 11.—Statue of so-called 4 pollo, 
A pollo of Orchomenos. National from Mount Ptoion, Beeotia. 
Museum, Athens. National Museum, Athens. 
is smaller and clearly discloses Aeginetan influence. ‘The audacity 
of the sculptor in entirely freeing the arms in both examples was 
rewarded by the arms being broken off. Similarly, in the Strang- 
ford Apollo of the British Museum (Fig. 14),? the arms, which 
1Left: torso found in 1885: B. C. H., XI, 1887, Pl. VIII, and pp. 185 f.(Holleaux); Collignon, 
I, p. 198, fig. 49; Richardson, p. 41, fig. 9 (without the head); head found in 1903: B. C. H., 
XXXI, 1907, Pls. XVII-XVIII; entire figure, zbid., Pl. XIX; text, pp. 187 f. (Mendel); 
Kabbadias, 12; Stais, Marbres et Bronzes, p. 9 and fig.; Deonna, p. 156, no. 30. Right: Stais, 
pp. 12-13, no. 20; Deonna, no. 35; Collignon, I, p. 315 and fig. 157 (two views); B. C. H., XI, 
1887, Pls. XIII and XIV, and pp. 275 f., and X, 1886, fig. VI (without head) and pp. 269 f.; 
von Mach, 15b (right); Gardner, Hdk., p. 169, fig. 31; Richardson, p. 42, fig. 10 (two views); 
Reinach, Rép., II, 1, 77, 4 (without head); cf. II, 1, 18, 4 and 5. 
*See Holleaux, B. C. H., XI, p. 186, n. 1. Richardson, p. 41, wrongly thought that they 
were of marble, explaining the preservation of the arms by their presence; the arms, how- 
ever, were formerly broken off and have since been readjusted to the statue. 
3B. M. Sculpt., 1, no. 206; Mon. d. I., 1X, 1869-73, Pl. XLI; Annali, XLIV, 1872, pp. 181 f.; 
B. B.,51;von Mach, 16; Overbeck, I, p. 237, fig. 61; F. W., 89; Reinach, Rép., II, 1, 81, 6. It is 
3 feet 4inches in height. 
