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apparatus of prolegomena, notes, and excursus; and for the use of veteran scholars it probably leaves nothing to be desired."—Pall Mall GAZETTE,

Potts (Alex. W., M.A. HINTS TOWARDS LATIN PROSE COMPOSITION. BY ALEX. W. POTTS, M.A., late Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge; Assistant Master in Rugby School; and Head Master of the Fettes College, Edinburgh. New Edition, enlarged Extra fcap. 8vo. cloth. 3s.

An attempt is here made to give students, after they have mastered ordinary syntactical rules, some idea of the characteristics of Latin Prose and the means to be employed to reproduce them. Some notion of the treatment of the subject may be gathered from the Contents.' CHAP. I.— Characteristics of Classical Latin, Hints on turning English into Latin; CHAP. II.-Arrangement of Words in a Sentence; CHAP. III.—Unity in Latin Prose, Subject and Object; CHAP. IV.-On the Period in Latin Prose; CHAP. V.-On the position of the Relative and Relative Clauses. The GLOBE characterises it as an admirable little book which teachers of Latin will find of very great service."

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Roby.-A GRAMMAR OF THE LATIN LANGUAGE, from Plautus to Suetonius. By H. J. ROBY, M.A., late Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge. Part I. containing :—Book I. Sounds. Book II. Inflexions. Book III. Word-Formation. Appendices.

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This work is the result of an independent and careful study of the writers of the strictly classical period, the period embraced between the time of Plautus and that of Suetonius. The author's aim has been to give the facts of the language in as few words as possible. This is a Grammar strictly of the Latin language; not a Universal Grammar illustrated from Latin, nor the Latin section of a Comparative Grammar of the IndoEuropean languages, nor a Grammar of the group of Italian dialects, of which Latin is one. It will be found that the arrangement of the book and the treatment of the various divisions differ in many respects from those of previous grammars. Mr. Roby has given special prominence to the treatment of Sounds and Word-formation; and in the First Book he has done much towards settling a discussion which is at present largely engaging the attention of scholars, viz., the pronunciation of the classical languages. "The book is markea by the clear and bractised insight of a master in his art. It is a book that would do honour to any country."—ATHENÆUM.

Rust.-FIRST STEPS TO LATIN PROSE COMPOSITION.

By the Rev. GEORGE Rust, M.A. of Pembroke College, Oxford,
Master of the Lower School, King's College, London. New
Edition. 18mo. Is. 6d.

This little work consists of carefully graduated vocabularies and exercises, so arranged as gradually to familiarise the pupil with the elements of Latin Prose Composition, and fit him to commence a more advanced work.

Sallust.-CAII SALLUSTII CRISPI CATILINA ET JUGUR

THA. For Use in Schools. With copious Notes. By C.
MERIVALE, B.D. (In the present Edition the Notes have been
carefully revised, and a few remarks and explanations added.)
Second Edition. Fcap. 8vo. 4s. 6d.

This edition of Sallust, prepared by the distinguished historian of Rome, contains an Introduction, concerning the life and works of Sallust, lists of the Consuls, and elaborate Notes. "A very good edition, to which the Editor has not only brought scholarship but independent judgment and historical criticism."-SPECTator.

The JUGURTHA and the CATILINA may be had separately, price 2s. 6d. each.

Tacitus.-THE HISTORY OF TACITUS TRANSLATED INTO ENGLISH. By A. J. CHURCH, M.A., and W. J. BRODRIBB, M.A. With Notes and a Map. New and Cheaper Edition. Crown 8vo.

6s.

The translators have endeavoured to adhere as closely to the original as was thought consistent with a proper observance of English idiom. At the same time, it has been their aim to reproduce the precise expressions of the author. The campaign of Civilis is elucidated in a note of some length, which is illustrated by a map, containing the names of places and of tribes occurring in the work. There is also a complete account of the Roman army as it was constituted in the time of Tacitus. This work is characterised by the SPECTATOR as a scholarly and faithful translation."

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THE AGRICOLA AND GERMANIA OF TACITUS.

A Revised

Text, English Notes, and Maps. By A. J. CHURCH, M.A., and W. J. BRODRIBE, M. A. Fcap. 8vo. 35. 6a,

Tacitus-continued.

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We have endeavoured, with the aid of recent editions, thoroughly to elucidate the text, explaining the various difficulties, critical and grammatical, which occur to the student. We have consulted throughout, besides the older commentators, the editions of Ritter and Orelli, but we are under special obligations to the labours of the recent German editors, Wex and Kritz." Two Indexes are appended, (1) of Proper Names, (2) of Words and Phrases explained. "A model of careful editing," says the ATHENÆUM, "being at once compact, complete, and correct, as well as neatly printed and elegant in style.”

THE AGRICOLA and GERMANIA may be had separately, price

25. each.

THE AGRICOLA AND GERMANIA.

Translated into English

by A. J. CHURCH, M.A., and W. J. BRODRIBB, M.A. With Maps and Notes. Extra fcap. 8vo. 2s. 6d.

The translators have sought to produce such a version as may satisfy scholars who demand a faithful rendering of the original, and English readers who are offended by the baldness and frigidity which commonly disfigure translations. The treatises are accompanied by Introductions, Notes, Maps, and a chronological Summary. The ATHENÆUM says of this work that it is a version at once readable and exact, which may be perused with pleasure by all, and consulted with advantage by the classical student."

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Theophrastus.

THE

CHARACTERS OF THEO. PHRASTUS. An English Translation from a Revised Text. With Introduction and Notes. By R. C. JEBB, M. A., Public Orator in the University of Cambridge. Extra fcap. 8vo. 6s. 6d. The first object of this book is to make these lively pictures of old Greek manners better known to English readers. But as the Editor and Translator has been at considerable pains to procure a trustworthy text, and has recorded the results of his critical labours in an Introduction, Notes, and Appendices, it is hoped that the work will prove of value even to the scholar. "We must not omit to give due honour to Mr. Febb's translation, which is as good as translation can be. . . . Not less commendable are the execution of the Notes and the critical handling of the Text."

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The SATURDAY REVIEW speaks of it as a very handy and scholarly edition of a work which till now has been beset with hindrances and difficulties, but which Mr. Febb's critical skill and judgment have at length placed within the grasp and comprehension of ordinary readers." Thring.-Works by the Rev. E. THRING, M.A., Head Master of Uppingham School.

A LATIN GRADUAL. A First Latin Construing Book for Beginners. New Edition, enlarged, with Coloured Sentence Maps. Fcap. 8vo. 2s. 6d.

These

The Head Master of Uppingham has here sought to supply by easy steps a knowledge of grammar, combined with a good Vocabulary. Passages have been selected from the best Latin authors in prose and verse. passages are gradually built up in their grammatical structure, and finally printed in full. A short practical manual of common mood con▪ structions, with their English equivalents, forms a second part. To the New Edition a circle of grammatical Constructions with a Glossary has been added; as also some coloured Sentence Maps, by means of which the different parts of a sentence can easily be distinguished, and the practice of dissecting phrases carried out with the greatest benefit to the student.

A MANUAL OF MOOD CONSTRUCTIONS. Fcap. 8vo. Is. 6d. Treats of the ordinary mood constructions, as found in the Latin, Greek, and English languages. The EDUCATIONAL TIMES thinks it "very well suited to young students."

A CONSTRUING BOOK. Fcap. 8vo.

2s. 6d.

Thucydides.-THE SICILIAN EXPEDITION. Being Books VI. and VII. of Thucydides, with Notes. A New Edition, revised and enlarged, with a Map. By the Rev. PERCIVAL FROST, M. A., late Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge. Fcap. 8vo. 5s. This edition is mainly a grammatical one. Attention is called to the force of compound verbs, and the exact meaning of the various tenses employed. The notes are excellent of their kind. Mr. Frost seldom passes over a difficulty, and what he says is always to the point."— EDUCATIONAL TIMES.

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Virgil.-THE WORKS OF VIRGIL RENDERED INTO ENGLISH PROSE, with Notes, Introductions, Running Analysis, and an Index, by JAMES LONSDALE, M.A. and SAMUEL LEE, M.A.

Second Edition. Globe 8vo. 35. 6d.; gilt edges, 4s. 6d.

The original has been faithfully rendered, and paraphrase altogether avoided. At the same time, the translators have endeavoured to adapt the book to the use of the English reader. Some amount of rhythm in the structure of the sentence has been generally maintained; and, when in the Latin the sound of the words is an echo to the sense (as so frequently happens in Virgil), an attempt has been made to produce the same result in English. The general introduction contains whatever is known of the poet's life, an estimate of his genius, an account of the principal editions and translations of his works, and a brief view of the influence he has had on modern poets; special introductory essays are prefixed to the "Eclogues," "Georgics," and "Eneid." The text is divided into sections, each of which is headed by a concise analysis of the subject; the Index contains references to all the characters and events of any importance. "A more complete elition of Virgil in English it is scarcely possible to conceive than the scholarly work before us."-GLOBE.

Wright.-Works by J. WRIGHT, M.A., late Head Master of Sutton Coldfield School.

HELLENICA; OR, A HISTORY OF GREECE IN GREEK, as
related by Diodorus and Thucydides; being a First Greek Reading
Book, with explanatory Notes, Critical and Historical.
Edition, with a Vocabulary. 12mo.

3s. 6d.

Third

In the last twenty chapters of this volume, Thucydides sketches the rise and progress of the Athenian Empire in so clear a style and in such simple language, that the editor has doubts whether any easier or more instructive passages can be selected for the use of the pupil who is commencing Greek. This book includes a chronological table of the events recorded. The GUARDIAN speaks of the work as a good plan well executed."

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A HELP TO LATIN GRAMMAR; or, The Form and Use of Words in Latin, with Progressive Exercises. Crown 8vo. 4s. 6d.

This book is not intended as a rival to any of the excellent Grammars now in use; but as a help to enable the beginner to understand them.

THE SEVEN KINGS OF ROME. An Easy Narrative, abridged

from the First Book of Livy by the omission of Difficult Passages; being a First Latin Reading Book, with Grammatical Notes. New and revised Edition. Fcap. 8vo. 35. With Vocabulary, 35. 6a.

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