She was a tall venerable figure, her head was crowned with wheat sheaves, and a long robe in graceful folds covered her form. […] Philomela soon wrought upon the cloth the figure of herself, and of Tereus cutting out her tongue. […] The chief ornament of the table was an old pitcher of red pottery, stained black in sundry figures, not ungraceful. […] There was a temple to Jupiter and in it the figure of a ram, with large horns; and so he was sometimes called “horned Ammon.” […] The art of making these figures is sculpture.