(Croxall's trans.)
XLIV
Fauns and satyrs have been favorite subjects in art and especially in sculpture. The most famous are the Faun of Praxiteles (Vatican, copy); the Dancing Faun (Lateran, Rome); Dancing Faun, Sleeping Faun, Drunken Faun, and Faun and Bacchus (National Museum, Naples); Sleeping Satyr, or the Barberini Faun (Glyptotek, Munich).
The use of the Faun in literature is best known in Hawthorne's "The Marble Faun."
Reference is made to fauns and naiads in Milton's "Lycidas." Robert Buchanan has two poems entitled "The Satyr" and "The Naiad."
XLV
Poems:—
| Hymn to Pan | John Keats |
| The Dead Pan | Elizabeth B. Browning |
| Hymn of Pan | Percy B. Shelley |
| Cupid and Pan | Walter S. Landor |
| Pan | Robert Buchanan |
| Pan and Luna | Robert Browning |
| Song of the Priest of Pan and Song of Pan in "The Faithful Shepherdess" | Fletcher |
XLVI
Keats in "Endymion" alludes to Dryope thus:—