212 PHILOLOGY 



("La prose metrique de Symmaque et les origines du 

 Cursus," 1892), in pronunciation, in word-order, and in 

 the principles of criticism ("Manuel de critique verbale 

 appliquee aux textes latins," 1911). MONCEAUX, of 

 Paris, has worked especially in the literary history of 

 Christian Africa ("Histoire litteraire de PAfrique chre- 

 tienne," 1901-12), and in the Christian epigraphy of 

 Africa ("Enquete sur 1'epigraphie chretienne d'Afrique," 

 in each number of the "Revue Archeologique " since 

 1903). LEJAY, of the Catholic Institute, Paris, has 

 worked especially in Horace (the Satires were pub- 

 lished in 1912, and the Epistles are now in hand), and 

 in syntax ("Le progres de 1'analyse dans la syntaxe 

 latine," 1909; several editions of Riemann's "Syntaxe 

 Latine"), and is a constant contributor to the "Revue de 

 Philologie," of which he is one of the editors. PLESSIS, 

 of Paris, has published upon Latin poetry ("La poesie 

 latine," 1909; Etudes critiques sur Properce," 1889), 

 and upon versification ("Traite de metrique grecque et 

 latine," 1889), and is now engaged upon the Odes and 

 Epodes of Horace, complementing the work of LEJAY. 

 GOELZER, of Paris, has worked especially in the charac- 

 teristics of later Latin ("Etude lexicographique et gram- 

 maticale de la latinite de Saint Jerome," 1884; "Le 

 latin de Saint Avit," 1909), in Tacitus, and in com- 

 parative grammar ("Grammaire comparee du grec et 

 du latin," 2 vols., 1897 and 1901, the most considerable 

 work of its kind produced in France). Jules MARTHA, of 

 Paris, has published upon Cicero ("Brutus," 1892; 

 "Comment Cicero est arrive aux honneurs," 1903). 



CARTAULT, of Paris, has published upon Horace (the 

 Satires, 1899), Tibullus and the authors of the Corpus 

 Tibullianum (1909), the elegiac distich in Tibullus, 

 Sulpicia, and Lygdamus (1911), Virgil and Lucretius. 

 COURBAUD, of Paris, has published upon Cicero ("De 



