186 VICTOR STATUES REPRESENTED IN MOTION. 
Museum replicas. A combination of these and other copies gives 
us an excellent idea of the original bronze. In Pl. 23 we give a 
combination of the Vatican torso and the Lancelotti head from a cast 
in Munich.” Perhaps a better combination is that given by Bulle? 
from a cast made up of the delle Terme body, the Lancellotti head, 
the right arm and the diskos from the Casa Buonarroti in Florence, 

Fic. 35.—Statue of the Dzskobolos, after 
Myron. British Museum, London. 
the feet from the British Museum copy and the fingers of the left hand 
being freely restored. . 
The pose of the Lancellotti copy agrees with Lucian’s description of 
the original: “Surely, said I, you do not speak of the quoit-thrower 
who stoops in the attitude of one who is making his cast, turning round 



1H. Stuart Jones, Museo Capitolino Cat., 1912, no. 50, p. 123, and Pl. 21; Helbig, Fuehrer, I, 
788; Guide, 446; Clarac, V, 858 A, 2212. It is 1.48 meters high from lower edge of base to the 
right hand (Jones). 
°B. B., no. 566; von Mach, 64; Gardner, Sculpt., Pl. XI; Gardiner, p. 96, fig. 13 (from a copy of 
the Munich cast in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford). 
‘Pl. no. 97; cf. Gardner, Sculpt., Pl. XII, and Furtw.-Urlichs, Denkmaeler, Pl. XXXIII. 
