AND 30, BEDFORD STREET, COVENT GARDEN, 

 LONDON, W.C., April, 1888. 



CLASSICS. 



ELEMENTARY CLASSICS. 



i8mo, Eighteen pence each. 



THIS SERIES FALLS INTO TWO CLASSES 



(1) First Reading Books for Beginners, provided not 

 only with Introductions and Notes, but with 

 Vocabularies, and in some cases with Exercises 

 based upon the Text 



(2) Stepping-stones to the study of particular authors, 

 intended for more advanced students who are beginning 

 to read such authors as Terence, Plato, the Attic Dramatists, 

 and the harder parts of Cicero, Horace, Virgil, and 

 Thucydides. 



These are provided with Introductions and Notes, but 

 no Vocabulary. The Publishers have been led to pro- 

 vide the more strictly Elementary Books with Vocabularies 

 by the representations of many teachers, who hold that be- 

 ginners do not understand the use of a Dictionary, and of 

 others who, in the case of middle-class schools where the 

 cost of books is a serious consideration, advocate the 

 Vocabulary system on grounds of economy. It is hoped 

 that the two parts of the Series, fitting into one another, 

 may together fulfil all the requirements of Elementary and 

 Preparatory Schools, and the Lower Forms of Public 

 Schools. 



