20 CHARLES GRIFFIN dk COMPANTS 



WORKS BY CHARLES T. CRUTTWELL, M.A., 



Fellow of Merton College, Oxford, and Head Master of Malvern College. 



I.— A HISTORY OF ROMAN LITERA- 



TURE: From the Earliest Period to the Times of the Antonines. Third 

 Edition. Crown 8vo. Cloth, 8/6. 



" Mr. Cruttwell has done a real service to all Students of the Latin Language and 

 Literature. . . . Full of good scholarship and good criticism."— yl/Zi^A/tf"?/;;;. 



"A most serviceable— indeed, indispensable — guide for the Student. . . . The 

 'general reader' will be both charmed and instructed." — Saturday Review. 



" The Author undertakes to make Latin Literature interesting, and he has succeeded. 

 There is not a dull p.ige in the volume." — Acadi'iity. 



" The great merit of the work is its fulness and a.ct:\iT:icy." —Guardian. 



'■ This elaborate and careful work, in every respect of high merit. Nothing at all 

 equal to it has hitherto been published in England." — Bntisk Quarterly Revie7v. 



Companion Volume. Second Edition. 



II.— SPECIMENS OF ROMAN LITERA- 



TURE : From the Earliest Period to the Times of the Antonines. Passages 

 from the Works of Latin Authors, Prose Writers, and Poets : 



Part I. — Roman Thought: Religion, Philosophy and Science, 



Art and Letters, 6/. 

 Part IL — Roman Style : Descriptive, Rhetorical, and Humorous 

 Passages, 5/. 



Or in One Volume complete, 10/6. 

 Edited by C. T. Cruttwell, M.A., Meiton College, Oxford ; and 

 Peake Banton, M.A., some time Scholar of Jesus College, O.xford. 



"'Specimens of Roman Literature' marks a new era in the study of Latin." — 

 English ChurchmaH. 



" Schoolmasters and tutors will be grateful for a volume which supplies them at once 

 with passages of every shade of difficulty for testing the most different capacity, or which 

 may be read with advantage in the higher forms of schools. There is no other book of 

 the kind in this country which can be more safely recommended, either for its breadth, 

 cheapness, or interest." — Prof. Ellis ill tlie ^''Academy." 



" A work which is not only useful but necessary. . . . The plan gives it a standing- 

 ground of its own. . . . The .sound judgment e.vercised in plan and selection calls 

 for hearty commendation." — Saturday Review. 



"It is haid to conceive a completer or handier repertory of specimens of Latin 

 thought and style." — Contemporary Revieiv. 



*^* KEY to Part IL, Period IL (being a complete Tran.slation 

 of the 85 Passages composing the Section), by Thos. Johnston, M.A., 

 may now be had (by Tutors and Schoolmasters only) on application 

 to the Publishers. Price 2/6. 



CURRIE (Joseph, formerly Head Classical 



Master of Glasgow Academy) : 



THE WORKS OF HORACE : Text from Orellius. English 

 Notes, original and selected, from the best Commentators. Illustrations 

 from the antique. Complete in One Volume. Fcap 8vo. Cloth, 5/. 

 Or in Two Parts : 



Part I.— Carmina, 3/. 



Part II. — Satires and Ensri-Ks, . . 3/. 



"The notes are excellent and exhaustive." — Quarterly Journal 0/ Educatioii. 



EXTRACTS FROM CESAR'S COM- 



MENTARIES ; containing his description of Gaul, Britain, and Germany. 

 With Notes, Vocabulary, &c. Adapted for Young Scholars. Fourth 

 Edition. i8mo. Cloth, 1/6. 



D'ORSEY (Rev. Alex. J. D., B.D., Corpus 



Christi Coll., Cambridge, Lecturer at King's College, London) : 



SPELLING BY DICTATION: Progressive Exercises in English 

 Orthography, for Schools and Civil Service Examinations. Sixteenth 

 Thousand. l8mo. Cloth, i/. 



