26 PUBLICATIONS OF 
CICERO. DE AMICITIA. Edited by J. S. REID, Litt D., 
Fellow and Tutor of Gonville and Caius College. New Edition, with 
Additions. 35. 6d. 
**Mr Reid has decidedly attained his aim, namely, ‘a thorough examination of the Latinity 
of the dialogue.’..... The revision of the text is most valuable, and comprehends sundry 
acute corrections.... This volume, like Mr Reid’s other editions, is a solid gain to the scholar- 
ship of the country.”—A theneum. 
_ “A more distinct gain to scholarship is Mr Reid’s able and thorough edition of the De 
Amicitia of Cicero, a work of which, whether we regard the exhaustive introduction or the 
instructive and most suggestive commentary, it would be difficult to speak too highly. . . . When 
we come to the commentary, we are only amazed by its fulness in proportion to its bulk. 
Nothing 1s overlooked which can tend to enlarge the learner's general knowledge of Ciceronian 
Latin or to elucidate the text.”— Saturday Review. 
CICERO. DE SENECTUTE. Edited by J. S. REm, 
Litt.D. Revised Edition. 35. 62. . 
‘*The notes are excellent and schoiarlike, adapted for the upper forms of public schools, and 
likely to be useful even to more advanced students.” —Guardian. : 4 J 
CICERO. DIVINATIO IN Q. CAECILIUM ET ACTIO 
PRIMA IN C. VERKEM. With Introduction and Notes by W. E. 
HEITLAND, M.A., and HERBERT Cowik, M.A., Fellows of St John’s 
College, Cambridge. 35. 
CICERO. PHILIPPICA SECUNDA. With Introduction — 
and Notes by A. G. PEsKETT, M.A., Fellow of Magdalene College. 35. 6d. 
CICERO. PRO ARCHIA POETA. Edited by J. S. REID, 
Litt-D. Revised Edition. 2s. ; 
‘* It is an admirable specimen of careful editing. An Introduction tells us everything we could 
wish to know about Archias, about Cicero’s connexion with him, about the merits of the trial, and 
the genuineness of the speech. ‘The text is well and carefully printed. The notes are clear and 
scholar-like.. . . No boy can master this little volume without feeling that he has advanced a long 
step in scholarship.”—-7e Academy. 
CICERO. PRO BALBO. Edited by J. S. REID, Litt.D. 
Is. 6d, 
‘* We are bound to recognize the pains devoted in the annotation of these two orations to the 
minute and thorough study of their Latinity, both in the ordinary notes and in the textual 
appendices.”—Saturday Keview. 
CICERO. PRO MILONE, with a Translation of Asconius’ 
Introduction, Marginal Analysis and English Notes. Edited by the Kev. 
JoHN SMYTH Purron, B.D., late President and Tutor of St Catharine’s 
College. 25. 6d. 
**The editorial work is excellently done.”—The Academy. 
CICERO. PRO MURENA. With English Introduction 
and Notes. By W. E. HEITLAND, M.A., Fellow and Classical Lecturer 
of St John’s College, Cambridge. Second Edition, carefully revised. 35. 
‘Those students are to be deemed fortunate who have to read Cicero’s lively and brilliant 
oration for L. Murena with Mr Heitland’s handy edition, which may be pronounced ‘four-square’ 
in point of equipment, and which has, not without good reason, attained the honours of a 
second edition.”—Saturday Review. 
CICERO. PRO PLANCIO. Edited by H. A. HOLDEN, 
LL.D., Examiner in Greek to the University of London. Second Edition. 
45. 6d. 
CICERO. PRO SULLA. Edited by J. S. REM, Litt.D. 
35. 6d. 
“Mr Reid is so well known to scholars as a commentator on Cicero that a new work from him 
scarcely needs any commendation of ours. His edition of the speech Pro Sxdéa is fully equal in 
merit to the volumes which he has already published . . . It would be difficult to speak too highly 
of the notes, There could be no better way of gaining an insight into the characteristics of 
Cicero’s style and the Latinity of his period than by making a careful study of this speech with 
the aid of Mr Reid’s commentary ... Mr Reid’s intimate knowledge of the minutest details of 
scholarship enables him to detect and explain the slightest points of distinction between the 
usages of different authors and difierent periods ... The notes are followed by a valuable 
appendix on the text, and another on points of orthography; an excellent index brings the work 
to a close.” —Saturday Review. 
‘ 
London; C. F. CLAY & SONS, Cambridge University Press Warehouse, 
Ave Maria Lane. 
