拍品專文
The choice of labours depicted on this pyxis from the available twelve canonical Labours must have been influenced by limitations of shape but also by which scenes allowed for a smooth repetition of composition, aiding the unified flow of the figured decoration. Despite the simple repetition of figures and poses, details specific to each Labour are present: no weapon could defeat the Nemean Lion, forcing Herakles to abandon his characteristic bow and club and fight the beast with his bare hands; the hanging drapery next to the Erymanthian boar may represent the hero's cloak or the net with which he caught the beast; the bucranium symbolises Herakles' successful capture of the Cretan Bull. A fourth Labour alluded to on the lid required Herakles to steal the girdle of the Amazon queen, Hippolyta.