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LOCAL EXAMINATIONS.

EXAMINATION PAPERS,

for various years, with the Regulations for the Examination. Demy Octavo. 25. each, or by Post 25. 2d.

(The Regulations for the Examination in 1875 are contained in the Volume for 1874 now ready.)

CLASS LISTS FOR VARIOUS YEARS.
6d. each, by Post 7d.

ANNUAL REPORTS OF THE SYNDICATE, With Supplementary Tables showing the success and failure of the Candidates.

25. each, by Post 2s. 2d.

HIGHER LOCAL EXAMINATIONS. EXAMINATION PAPERS FOR 1875, to which are added the Regulations for 1876. Demy Octavo. 25. each, by Post 2s. 2d. REPORTS OF THE SYNDICATE. Demy Octavo. Is., by Post Is. Id.

CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY REPORTER.

Published by Authority.

Containing all the Official Notices of the University, Reports of Discussions in the Schools, and Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical, Antiquarian, and Philological Societies. 3d. weekly.

CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY EXAMINATION
PAPERS.

These Papers are published in occasional numbers every Term, and in volumes for the Academical year.

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UNIVERSITY LOCAL EXAMINATIONS

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THE ANABASIS OF XENOPHON, BOOK IV. With English Notes by ALFRED PRETOR, M.A., Fellow of St Catharine's College, Cambridge; Editor of Persius and Cicero ad Atticum Book I. with Notes, for the use of Schools.

extra fcap. 8vo. Price 2s.

BOOK III. By the same Editor.

Cloth,

[Nearly ready.

II. LATIN.

P. VERGILI MARONIS AENEIDOS LIBER XII. Edited with Notes by A. SIDGWICK, M.A. (late Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, Assistant Master in Rugby School). Cloth, extra fcap. 8vo. Price 1s. 6d.

M. T. CICERONIS ORATIO PRO TITO ANNIO MILONE, with a Translation of Asconius' Introduction, Marginal Analysis and English Notes. Edited by the Rev. JOHN SMYTH PURTON, B.D., late President and Tutor of St Catharine's College. Cloth, small crown 8vo. Price 2s. 6d.

M. ANNAEI LUCANI PHARSALIAE LIBER PRIMUS, edited with English Introduction and Notes by W. E. HEITLAND, M.A. and C. E. HASKINS, M. A., Fellows and Lecturers of St John's College, Cambridge. [Nearly ready.

London Warehouse, 17 Paternoster Row.

PITT PRESS SERIES (continued.)

III. FRENCH.

LA MÉTROMANIE, A Comedy, by PIRON, with a Biographical Memoir, and Grammatical, Literary and Historical Notes, by GUSTAVE MASSON, B.A. Univ. Gallic., Assistant Master and Librarian, Harrow School. Cloth, extra fcap. 8vo. Price 25.

LASCARIS, OU LES GRECS DU XVE. SIÈCLE, Nouvelle Historique, par A. F. VILLEMAIN, Secrétaire Perpétuel de l'Académie Française, with a Biographical Sketch of the Author, a Selection of Poems on Greece, and Notes Historical and Philological. By GUSTAVE MASSON, B.A. Univ. Gallic., Assistant Master and Librarian of Harrow School. Cloth, extra fcap. 8vo. Price 25.

IV. GERMAN.

Das Jahr 1813 (THE YEAR 1813), by F. KOHLRAUSCH. With English Notes by WILHELM Wagner, Ph. D., Professor at the Johanneum, Hamburg. Cloth, extra fcap. 8vo. Price 25.

V. ENGLISH.

THE TWO NOBLE KINSMEN, edited with Introduction and Notes by the Rev. W. W. SKEAT, M.A., formerly Fellow of Christ's College, Cambridge. [Nearly ready.

London:

CAMBRIDGE WAREHOUSE, 17 PATERNOSTER ROW. Cambridge: DEIGHTON, BELL AND CO.

THE CAMBRIDGE PARAGRAPH BIBLE

OF THE AUTHORIZED ENGLISH VERSION, with the Text Revised by a Collation of its Early and other Principal Editions, the Use of the Italic Type made uniform, the Marginal References remodelled, and a Critical Introduction prefixed, by the Rev. F. H. SCRIVENER, M.A., LL.D., Editor of the Greek Testament, Codex Augiensis, &c., and one of the Revisers of the Authorized Version. Crown Quarto, cloth, gilt, 215.

From the Times.

"Students of the Bible should be particularly grateful to (the Cambridge University Press) for having produced, with the able assistance of Dr Scrivener, a complete critical edition of the Authorized Version of the English Bible, an edition such as, to use the words of the Editor, 'would have been executed long ago had this version been nothing more than the greatest and best known of English classics.' Falling at a time when the formal revision of this version has been undertaken by a distinguished company of scholars and divines, the publication of this edition must be considered most opportune.

For a full account of the method and plan of the volume and of the general results of the investigations connected with it we must refer the reader to the editor's Introduction, which contains a mass of valuable information about the various editions of the Authorized Version."

From the Athenæum.

"Apart from its religious importance, the English Bible has the glory, which but few sister versions indeed can claim, of being the chief classic of the language, of having, in conjunction with Shakspeare, and in an immeasurable degree more than he, fixed the language beyond any possibility of important change. Thus the recent contributions to the literature of the subject, by such workers as Mr Francis Fry and Canon Westcott, appeal to a wide range of sympathies; and to these may now be added Dr Scrivener, well known for his labours in the cause of the Greek Testament criticisin, who has brought out, for the Syndics of the Cambridge University Press, an edition of the English Bible, according to the text of 1611, revised by a comparison with later issues on principles stated by him in his Introduction. Here he enters at length into

the history of the chief editions of the version, and of such features as the marginal notes, the use of italic type, and the changes of orthography, as well as into the most interesting question as to the original texts from which our translation is produced.

Dr Scrivener may be congratulated on a work which will mark an important epoch in the history of the English Bible, and which is the result of probably the most searching examination the text has yet received.

From Notes and Queries.

"The Syndics of the University Press deserve great credit for this attempt to supply biblical students and general readers with a copy of the Bible, which presents the arrangement of an unbroken text in paragraphs accommodated to the sense (the numerals, indicating the chapters and verses, being removed to the margin); with the broad distinction between the prose and poetical portions of Scripture duly maintained, and with such passages of the Old Testament as are quoted in the New being marked by the use of open type."

From the Spectator.

"Mr. Scrivener has carefully collated the text of our modern Bibles with that of the first edition of 1611, restoring the original reading in most places, and marking every place where an obvious correction has been made; he has made the spelling as uniform as possible; revised the punctuation (punctuation, as those who cry out for the Bible without note or comment should remember, is a continuous commentary on the text); carried out consistently the plan of marking with italics all words not found in the original, and carefully examined the marginal references. The name of Mr. Scrivener, the learned editor of the Codex Augiensis,' guarantees the quality of the work."

THE STUDENT'S EDITION of the above, on good writing paper, with one column of print and wide margin to each page for MS. notes. This edition will be found of great use to those who are engaged in the task of Biblical criticism. Two Vols. Crown Quarto, cloth, gilt, 31s. 6d.

London Warehouse, 17 Paternoster Row.

THE UNIVERSITY OF

CAMBRIDGE

FROM

THE EARLIEST TIMES TO THE ROYAL INJUNCTIONS OF 1535,

by JAMES BASS MULLINGER, M.A.

"We have hitherto had no satisfactory book in English on the subject.... The fourth chapter contains a most interesting account of "Student Life in the Middle Ages," but an abstract of it would take up so much space that we must refer our readers to the book itself. Our difficulty throughout has been to give any adequate account of a book in which so much interesting information is condensed, and we must for the present give up any hope of describing the chapters on "Cambridge at the Revival of Classical Learning" and "Cambridge at the Reformation," though a better account nowhere exists of one of the most eventful periods of our history.... We trust Mr Mullinger will yet continue his history and bring it down to our own day."

Academy.

Demy 8vo. cloth (734 pp.), 18s.

"Any book which throws light on the origin and early history of our Universities will always be gladly welcomed by those who are interested in education, especially a book which is so full of varied information as Mr. Mullinger's History of Cambridge. He has brought together a mass of instructive details respecting the rise and progress, not only of his own University, but of all the principal Universities of the Middle Ages...... We hope some day that he may continue his labours, and give us a history of the University during the troublous times of the Reformation and the Civil War."-Athenæum.

"Mr Mullinger's work is one of great learning and research, which can hardly fail to become a standard book of reference on the subject.... We can most strongly recommend this book to our readers."-Spectator.

HISTORY OF THE COLLEGE OF ST JOHN THE EVANGELIST,

by THOMAS BAKER, B.D., Ejected Fellow. Edited by JOHN E. B. MAYOR, M.A., Fellow of St John's. Two Vols. Demy 8vo. 245.

"It may be doubted whether there is any MS. in existence which Cambridge men have been more anxious to see committed to the press, under competent editorship, than the History of St John's by that Socius Ejectus Thomas Baker, whose life Walpole desired to write. It is perhaps well for Baker's reputation.. that it was reserved for so peculiarly competent an editor as Mr Mayor to give this history to the world... If it be highly to the credit of the Syndics of the Pitt Press to have printed the book, the manner in which he has edited it reflects no less credit upon Mr Mayor."-Notes and Queries.

"To antiquaries the book will be a source of almost inexhaustible amusement, by historians it will be found a work of considerable service on questions respecting our social progress in past times; and the care and thoroughness with which Mr Mayor has discharged his editorial functions are creditable to his learning and industry."-Athenæum.

"The work displays very wide reading,

and it will be of great use to members of the college and of the university, and, perhaps, of still greater use to students of English history, ecclesiastical, political, social, literary and academical, who have hitherto had to be content with Dyer.'"-Academy.

"It may be thought that the history of a college cannot be particularly attractive. The two volumes before us, however, have something more than a mere special interest for those who have been in any way connected with St John's College, Cambridge; they contain much which will be read with pleasure by a far wider circle. Many of the facts brought under our notice are of considerable value to the general historical student. Every member of this ancient foundation will recognize the worth of Mr Mayor's labours, which, as it will appear, have been by no means confined to mere ordinary editorial work. The index with which Mr Mayor has furnished this useful work leaves nothing to be desired."-Spectator.

London Warehouse, 17 Paternoster Row.

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