The Palace and Park by Phillips, Forbes, Latham, Owen, Scharf, and Shenton

6. The wall adjoining the Ala, and forming part of the Atrium, has been

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.