Page:Archaeological Journal, Volume 29.djvu/526

 1 ! POST.>CKFrT. upper lino, which, if ujicu to the arch.t>uloi:;ists, would be only benefit to them, but they are rigorously excluclod, and it is saul that the new door is to be elosed ag-ain. But this is only one example of what is going on in Home at this moment. Of the list of olyects that I have enumerated as worth preserving, some miglit be saved for a hundred pounds or perhaps less, such as the cellars and caves. Othei"s would require thousands. The site of the Liwacrum of Agripi>ina was sold at seventy francs the square yard, but that was quite an exceptional case, being on the line of a new street. •/