io PUBLICATIONS OF 



A SELECTION OF GREEK INSCRIPTIONS, with 

 Introductions and Annotations by E. S. ROBERTS, M.A. Fellow 

 and Tutor of Gonville and Caius College. [/;/ the Press. 



PINDAR. OLYMPIAN AND PYTHIAN ODES. With 



Notes Explanatory and Critical, Introductions and Introductory 

 Essays. Edited by C. A. M. FENNELL, M.A., late Fellow of Jesus 

 College. Crown Svo. 9.$-. 



&quot;Mr Fennell deserves the thanks of all clas- of the vitality and development of Cambridge 



sical students for his careful and scholarly edi- scholarship, and we are glad to see that it is to 



tion of the Olympian and Pythian odes. He be continued.&quot; Saturday Review. 

 brings to his task the necessary enthusiasm for &quot;Mr C. A. M. Fennell s Pindar displays 



his author, great industry, a sound judgment, that union of laborious research and unassum- 



and, in particular, copious and minute learning ing directness of style which characterizes the 



in comparative philology. To his qualifica- best modern scholarship . . . The notes, which 



tions in this last respect every page bears wit- are in English, and at the foot of each page, are 



ness.&quot; Atkenceum. clear and to the point. There is an introduc- 



&quot; Considered simply as a contribution to the tion to each Ode. There are Greek and Eng- 



study and criticism of Pindar, Mr Fennell s lish Indices, and an Index of Quotations.&quot; 



edition is a work of great merit. . . Altogether, Westminster Review. 

 this edition is a welcome and wholesome sign 



THE ISTHMIAN AND NEMEAN ODES. By the same 



Editor. Crown Svo. 9^. 



&quot;Encouraged by the warm praise with Fennell s Pindar. &quot; AthencruMt. 

 which Mr Fennell s edition of the Olympian &quot; Mr Fennell, whose excellent edition of 



and Pythian odes was everywhere received, the Olympian and Pythian Odes of Pindar 



the Pitt Press Syndicate very properly invited appeared some four years ago, has now pub- 



him to continue his work and edit the re- lished the Nemean and Isthmian Odes, toge- 



mainder of Pindar . . . His notes are full of ther with a selection from the extant fragments 



original ideas carefully worked out, and if he of Pindar. This work is in no way inferior to 



often adopts the opinion of other editors, he the previous volume. The commentary affords 



does not do so without making it sufficiently valuable help to the study of the most difficult 



plain that he has discussed the question for of Greek authors, and is enriched with notes 



himself and decided it upon the evidence. As on points of scholarship and etymology which 



a handy and instructive edition of a difficult could only have been written by a scholar of 



classic no work of recent years surpasses Mr very high attainments.&quot; Saturday Review. . 



ARISTOTLE. THE RHETORIC. With a Commentary 

 by the late E. M. COPE, Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, re 

 vised and edited by J . E. SANDYS, M.A., Fellow and Tutor of St John s 

 College, Cambridge, and Public Orator. With a biographical Memoir 

 by H. A. J. MUNRO, M.A. Three Volumes, Demy Svo. i. us. 6d. 



&quot;This work is in many ways creditable to the &quot;Mr Sandys has performed his arduous 

 University of Cambridge. If an English student duties with marked ability and admirable tact, 

 wishes to have a full conception of what is con- ... In every part of his work revising, sup- 

 tained in the Rhetoric of Aristotle, to Mr Cope s plementing, and completing he has done ex- 

 edition he must go.&quot; Academy. ceedingly well,&quot; Examiner. 



PRIVATE ORATIONS OF DEMOSTHENES, with In 

 troductions and English Notes, by F. A. PALEY, M.A. Editor of 

 Aeschylus, etc. and J. E. SANDYS, M.A. Fellow and Tutor of St John s 

 College, and Public Orator in the University of Cambridge. 



PART I. Contra Phormionem, Lacritum, Pantaenetum, Boeotum 

 de Nomine, Boeotum de Dote, Dionysodorum. Crown Svo. 6s. 



PART II. Pro Phormione, Contra Stephanum I. II.; Nicostra- 

 tum, Cononem, Calliclem. Crown Svo. js. 6d. 



DEMOSTHENES AGAINST ANDROTION AND 



AGAINST TIMOCRATES, with Introductions and English Com 

 mentary, by WILLIAM WAYTE, M.A., late Professor of Greek, Uni 

 versity College, London, Formerly Fellow of King s College, Cam 

 bridge, and Assistant Master at Eton. Crown Svo. js. 6d. 



&quot;The present edition may therefore be used each paragraph of the text there is a summary 



by students more advanced than school-boys, of its subject-matter . . . The notes are uni- 



and to their purposes it is admirably suited. formly good, whether they deal with questions 



There is an excellent introduction to and ana- of scholarship or with points of Athenian law/&quot; 



lysis of each speech, and at the beginning of Saturday Review. 



London : Cambridge University Press Warehouse, 17 Paternoster Row. 



