1890.] MICEOSCOPICAL JOUKNAL. 47 



ical data selected from published observations, and to give the compu- 

 tations in full, so that they may serve the inexperienced computer as 

 models. 



Euripides^ Iphigenia among the Taurians . Edited by Prof. Isaac 

 Flagg. 13°, 197 pp. Ginn & Go., Boston. (Price $1.50.) 

 This volume is one of the college series of Greek authors, and is not 

 based upon any other commentary, but is an independent work, adapted 

 to the needs of American colleges, and designed to facilitate the sympa- 

 thetic study of this most charming and justly celebrated drama of Eu- 

 ripides. Since the play is well suited to be taken up as a first tragedy 

 in a course of Greek reading, both the introduction and the Notes have 

 been written with especial regard to the enlightenment of beginners in 

 the Dramatic Literature. At the same time, the finer insight and higher 

 cravings of the advanced reader are constantly remembered. The In- 

 troduction sets forth the celebi'ity of the play ^ "with quotation in full of 

 the most memorable classical passages that bear upon it ; sketches the 

 legend^ in its literary and popular development ; explains the rationale 

 of the plot^ with reference to the Aristotelian method of analysis ; dis- 

 cusses the artistic structure of the tragedy, as to prologue, narratives, 

 denouement^ etc.^ and gives a complete exposition of the meters and 

 technique. The text, which occupies 132 pages, is printed in a clear 

 and large type. The lines are numbered for reference. In the Notes, 

 the grammatical material is presented with sufficient fullness, but mostly 

 in a condensed form, with references to Goodwin and to Hadley & 

 Allen ; while the higher and more edifying matters of exegesis receive 

 explicit treatment. 



The Irregular Verbs of Attic Prose. By Addison Hogue, Professor 

 of Greek in the University of Mississippi. 12°, 268 pp. Ginn & 

 Co., Boston. (Price, $1.60.) 



In writing this book the author has aimed at helping students in the 

 two directions in which they find the greatest difficulty in Greek, i. e.^ 

 the mastery of the forms and the acquisition of a vocabulary. Under 

 the head of forms, the verb offers by far the greatest difficulty. 



The book contains after the Regular Verbs — pure, mute, and liquid 

 — the Irregular Verbs of Attic Prose in alphabetical order. Promi- 

 nent meanings and special uses of frequent occurrence are given, often 

 illustrated by translated examples. The most important compounds 

 are added, and also many related words — forming a very practical sort 

 of introduction to word-formation. The first declension alone is rep- 

 resented by about 400 substantives, and this indicates the range of vo- 

 cabulary. The English Derivatives, of which there are over 450, prove 

 an attractive feature to teachers and students alike. To the latter they 

 will be an additional support in learning some five or six hundred 

 Greek words, and will broaden their knowledge of their own tongue. 



Greek Moods and Tenses. By W. W. Goodwin, LL. D. 8°, cloth. 

 464 pp. Ginn & Co., Boston. (Price, $2.15.) 

 Since the publication of Goodwin's •' Greek Moods and Tenses" in 

 i860, many most important additions have been made to our resources 

 in the study of the Greek language. Comparative philology has thrown 

 much light upon the early history of the language, and also made stu- 

 dents of Greek more aware of their ignorance. The present enlarged 



