236 Classic Literature, [Chap. XIII. 



edited, during this period, with great splendour, 

 by Wolfius and Clarke; the works of Aristotle, 

 by Buhle; Herodotus, by Gronovius and Wessel- 

 ing ; Thucydides, by Duker ; Xeiwphon and Poly-^ 

 bias, by Ernestus; Loiiginus, by Pearce, Toup, 

 and Rulinkcnius ; Demosthenes, by Wolfius, Tay- 

 lor, and Keiske ; Ilesiod, by Krebsius, Bodini, and 

 Loesner ; Pindar, by Heyne ; Euripides, by I\Ius- 

 grave; Sopiiocles, by Brunck and Capperonier; 

 Aristophanes, by Kuster and Brunck ; Lucian, by 

 lleitzius, Hemsterhuis, and Gesner; Plutarchy by 

 Jleiske ; Theocritus, by lleiske and Wharton ; Epic- 

 ietus, by Upton ; Anacreon, by Barnes, INIaittaire, 

 Pauw, Spaletti, Degen, and Gail ; JEschylus, by 

 Pauw and Porson ; Diodorus Siculus, by Wessel- 

 ing ; Dion Cassias, by Fabricius and Reimarus ; 

 Lysias, by Taylor and Augur ; Isocrates, by Battie 

 and Auger; and Callimachus, by Bentley and 

 Ernestus. 



OH\\G Latin classics the following editions, pub- 

 lished during the period under review, are worthy 

 of particular notice : Virgil, by Burmann, Heyne, 

 and AVakeficld ; Horace, by Baxter, Gesner, and 

 Zeunius ; Cicero, by Vcrbergius, Olivet, and Lal- 

 lemand j Liry, by Maittaire, Drakenborch, Rud- 

 dinian, Crevier, and Homer; Tacitus, by Grono- 

 vius, Ernestus, Broticr, Grierson *, and Homer j 



* Mrs. Grierson, an Irish lady, who was " possessed of singu- 

 lar eriiditioii, and had an elegance of taste, and solidity of judg- 

 ment, wliich jusil)' rendered her one of the most wonderful, as 

 well as amiable, of her sex. Her Tacilu.s is one of the best edited 

 books ever delivered to the v.orld." See Harwood's View of the 

 Classics, 



