very gracefully decorated. It is occupied by a highly finished picture
of Bacchus enthroned. The god of wine in the bloom of youth and beauty
is crowned with the vine; a fawn’s skin--the nebris--is tied across his
chest; in his right hand he holds the cantharus--a two-handled cup
sacred to Bacchus--and with the other he grasps the thyrsus. His
sandalled feet rest on a square foot-stool, and a leopard sits on the
ground to the right of the throne; a drum or tympanum is placed at the
opposite side. The main ground of this composition is blue, the
architecture of the shrine or canopy around the figure green,
yellowish-brown and red. The central group is engraved in the Mus. Bor.,
vol. vi., tav. 53. The dado coloured rich deep red. From the House of
Ceres.