Follow Deng by subway, no longer need to look east and west, happy to let the brain rest. This time I came to the main entrance of the British Museum. If it weren't for another visit, I didn't know what the main entrance was. Although Deng told his classmates that he had been to the Chinese Pavilion, Egypt Pavilion and Greece Pavilion, he didn't say anything, and took us into the Pavilion 17. When he went in, a Greek temple was there. The just right lighting made the temple like a long time ago, sacred, mysterious, and shocking. "Wow, great! Is it Greek?" Deng said, referring to the Nereides monument, also known as the "Sea Fairy Monument", originally in Sansos, southwest Turkey. The Nereides monument is a tombstone, that is, a tomb. Built in the 4th century AD, it was later destroyed by an earthquake, and by 1840 the British dug it out and shipped back to England.