CHEAP SCHOOL-BOOKS. 



LOCKE'S SYSTEM OF CLASSICAL INSTRUCTION. 



"We do amiss to spend teven or eight years merely icraping together to much 

 miserable Latin and Gretk, as might be learned otherwise tasHy and delightfully in one 

 year." MILTON. 



This method is a restoration of the excellent system of tuition advocated by 

 Milton and Locke ; practically esrablished by Dean Colet, Erasmus, and Lilly, at 

 the foundation of St. Paul's School ; and subsequently enjoined by authority of the 

 State, to be adopted in all other public seminaries of learning throughout the 

 kingdom. By means of a series of interlinear translations, it aims to furnish the 

 Pupil with a supply of words, with general notions of their modes of combination 

 and transposition, and their different meanings under different circumstances. His 

 time and labour are thus abridged at the beginning of his classical studies, merely 

 to set him fairly forward on his way without perplexity and discouragement. 



INTERLINEAR TRANSLATIONS. 



Price of each work, Is. 6d. 



Latin. 



1. PH^EDRTTS' FABLES OF 



2. OVID'S METAMORPHOSES. BOOK I. 



3. VIRGIL'S JNEID. BOOK I. 



4. PARSING LESSONS TO VIRGIL. 



5. CESAR'S INVASION OF BRITAIN. 



Greet. 



1. LPCIAN'S DIALOGUES. Selections. 



2. THE ODES OF ANACREON. 



3. HOMER'S ILIAD. BOOK I. 



4. PARSING LESSONS TO HOMER. 



Greek. 



5. XENOPHON'S MEMORABILIA. BOOK I. 



6. HERODOTUS'S HISTORIES. Selections. 



French. 



SISMONDI; THE BATTLES OF CRESST AND 

 POICTIERS. 



German. 

 STORIES FROM GERMAN WRITERS. 



AN E->AY, EXPLANATORY OF THE SYSTEM. 



12mo. 6<t 



LATIN. 



HILL'S PKINCIPAL EOOTS OF THE LATIN 

 LANGUAGE. 



12mo. 1*. 6d. cloth. 



This work is intended to facilitate the acquisition of the Latin language ; 1st, by 

 putting the pupil in possession of its radical words ; 2nd, by associating each of 

 them with some English word derived from the Latin. When the Latin is the 

 parent of several English words, the most obvious derivative is selected ; but 

 wherever the connexion between the Latin and the kindred English is indirect or 

 obscure, a foot-note traces or explains the relationship between the two languages. 



LONDON LATIN GRAMMAR. 



12mo. 1*. fid. cloth. 



The " London Latin Grammar" contains all that is necessary to introduce the 

 pupil to a knowledge of the language ; and in order to render the rules and their 

 application more easily understood, all the examples are accompanied by a trans- 

 lation. Throughout the book, the parts intended to be committed to memory are 

 printed in larger characters, to distinguish them from those intended only for 

 reference, which are in smaller type. 



