PYTHAGORAS AND MYRON. 185 
villa, is in the British Museum (Fig. 35).1 Here the head, although 
antique, belongs to another copy, and has been set upon the torso 
wrongly, in such a way that the throat has two Adam’s apples. It 
looks straight to the ground and not upward as in the Lancelotti copy. 
There is’ a better replica of the torso in the Capitoline Museum, which 

Fic. 34.—Statue of the Dzskobolos, after Myron. 
Vatican Museum, Rome. 
formerly belonged to the French sculptor Etienne Mounot (1658- 
1733), who wrongly restored it as a falling warrior. It agrees in 
accuracy with the Lancelotti copy, though it is dry and lifeless, and 
is a better guide to the original than either the Vatican or British 
re ae ek ese oe ee eee 
1B, M. Sculpt., 1, no. 250; von Mach. 61; Specimens, I, PI. XXIX; Museum Marbles, XI, 
Pl. XLIV; Marbles and Bronzes of the British Museum, Pl. XLVI; F. W., 452; Reinach, 
Rép., I, 525, 5; Clarac, V, 860, 2194 B. It is 5 feet 5 inches tall (Smith). 
