THE CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS. 9 
GREEK AND LATIN CLASSICS, &c. 
SOPHOCLES: The Plays and Fragments, with Critical 
Notes, Commentary, and Translation in English Prose, by R. C. 
JEBB, Litt.D., LL.D., Professor of Greek in the University of Glasgow. 
Part I. Oedipus Tyrannus. Demy 8vo. New Edition. 12:5. 6d. 
Part II. Oedipus Coloneus. Demy 8vo. 12s. 6a. 
[New Edition. In the Press. 
Part III. Antigone. Demy 8vo. 
Part IV. Philoctetes. 
* Of his vs omer ap and critical notes we 
can wl speak with admiration. Thorough 
scholarship combines with taste, erudition, and 
boundless industry to make this first volume a 
pattern of editing. The work is made com- 
plete by a prose translation, upon pages alter- 
ae with the text, of which we may say 
shortly that it displays sound judgment and 
taste, without sacrificing precision to poetry of 
expression.”"— The Times. 
** Professor Jebb’s edition of Sophocles 1s 
already so fully established, and has received 
such appreciation in these columns and else- 
where, that we have judged this third volume 
‘when we have said that it is of a piece with 
the others. The whole edition so far exhibits 
perhaps the most complete and elaborate edit- 
orial work which has ever appeared.”—Satur- 
125. 6d. 
[Jn the Press. 
**Prof. Jebb’s keen and profound sympathy, 
not only with Sophocles and all the best of 
ancient Hellenic life and thought, but also with 
modern European culture, constitutes him an 
ideal interpreter between the ancient writer 
and the modern reader.” —A theneum. 
** Tt would be difficult to praise this third in- 
stalment of Professor Jebb’s unequalled edition 
of Sophocles too warmly, and it is almost a 
work of supererogation to praise it at all. It is 
equal, at least, and perhaps superior, in merit, 
to either of his previous instalments ; and when 
this is said, all is said. Yet we cannot refrain 
from formally recognising once more the con- 
summate Greek scholarship of the editor, and 
from once more doing grateful homage to his 
masterly tact and literary skill, and to his un- 
wearied and marvellous industry.” —Sfectator. 
day Review. 
AESCHYLI FABULAE.—IKETIAEY XOH®OPOI IN 
LIBRO MEDICEO MENDOSE SCRIPTAE EX VV. DD. 
CONIECTURIS EMENDATIUS EDITAE cum Scholiis Graecis 
et brevi adnotatione critica, curante F. A. PALEY, M.A., LL.D. 
Demy 8vo. 7s. 6d. 
THE AGAMEMNON OF AESCHYLUS. With a Trans- 
lation in English Rhythm, and Notes Critical and Explanatory. 
New Edition Revised. By the late BENJAMIN HALL KENNEDY, 
D.D., Regius Professor of Greek. Crown 8vo. 6s. 
“One of the best editions of the masterpiece of Greek tragedy.” —A thenaum. 
THE THEAZTETUS OF PLATO with a Translation and 
Notes by the same Editor. Crown 8vo. 7s. 6d. 
ARISTOTLE—IIEPI WYXH>Y. ARISTOTLE’S PSY- 
CHOLOGY, in Greek and English, with Introduction and Notes, 
by EDWIN WALLACE, M.A., late Fellow and Tutor of Worcester 
College, Oxford. Demy 8vo. 18s. 
‘The notes are exactly what such notes 
ought to be,—helps to the student, not mere 
displays of learning. By far the more valuable 
parts of the notes are neither critical nor lite- 
rary, but philosophical and expository of the 
thought, and of the connection’ of thought, in 
the treatise itself. In this relation the notes are 
invaluable. Of the translation, it may be said 
that an English reader may fairly master by 
means of it this great treatise of Aristotle.”— 
Spectator. 
** Wallace’s Bearbeitung der Aristotelischen 
Psychologie ist das Werk eines denkenden und 
in allen.Schriften des Aristoteles und gréssten- 
teils auch in der neueren Litteratur zu densel- 
ben belesenen Mannes... Der schwachste 
Teil der Arbeit ist der kritische ... Aber in 
allen diesen Dingen liegt auch nach der Ab- 
sicht des Verfassers nicht der Schwerpunkt 
seiner Arbeit, sondern.”—Prof. Susemihl in 
Philologische Wochenschrift. 
ARISTOTLE.—IIEPI AIKAIOZTNH>Y. THE FIFTH 
BOOK OF THE NICOMACHEAN ETHICS OF ARISTOTLE, 
Edited by HENRY JACKSON, Litt.D., Fellow of Trinity College, 
Cambridge. Demy 8vo. 6s. 
‘*Tt is not too much to say that some of the 
ints he discusses have never had so much 
fight thrown upon them before. . . . Scholars 
will hope that this is not the only portion of 
the Aristotelian writings which he is likely to 
edit.” —A thenaum. 
London: C. F. CLAY & SONS, Cambridge University Press Warehouse, 
Ave Maria Lane. 
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