jo PUBLICATIONS OF 



ARISTOTLE. THE RHETORIC. With a Commentary 

 by the late E. M. COPE, Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, re- 

 vised and edited by J. E. SANDYS, M.A., Fellow and Tutor of St John's 

 College, Cambridge, and Public Orator. With a biographical Memoir 

 by the late H. A. J. MUNRO, Litt. D. 3 Vols., Demy 8vo. Now 

 reduced to 21 s. (originally published at 3. 6d.} 



"This work is in many ways creditable to the "Mr Sandys has performed his arduous 

 University of Cambridge. If an English student duties with marked ability and admirable tact, 

 wishes to have a full conception of what is con- ... In every part of his work revising, sup- 

 tainedin the Rhetoric of Aristotle, to Mr Cope's plementing, and completing he has done ex- 

 edition he must go." Academy. ceedingly well." Examiner. 



A SELECTION OF GREEK INSCRIPTIONS, with 

 Introductions and Annotations by E. S. ROBERTS, M.A., Fellow 

 and Tutor of Gonville and Caius College. \In the Press. 



PINDAR. OLYMPIAN AND PYTHIAN ODES. With 



Notes Explanatory and Critical, Introductions and Introductory 

 Essays. Edited by C. A. M. FENNELL, Litt. D., late Fellow of 

 Jesus College. Crown 8vo. 9^. 



" Mr Fennell deserves the thanks of all clas- in comparative philology." A thenceum. 

 sical students for his careful and scholarly edi- "Considered simply as a contribution to the 



tion of the Olympian and Pythian odes. He study and criticism of Pindar, Mr Fennell's 



brings to his task the necessary enthusiasm for edition is a work of great merit." Saturday 



his author, great industry, a sound judgment, Review. 

 and, in particular, copious and minute learning 



THE ISTHMIAN AND NEMEAN ODES. By the same 



Editor. Crown 8vo. qs. 



"... As a handy and instructive edition of valuable help to the study of the most difficult 



a difficult classic no work of recent years sur- of Greek authors, and is enriched with notes 



passes Mr Fennell's 'Pindar.'" Athenceunt. on points of scholarship and etymology which 



"This work is in no way inferior to could only have been written by a scholar of 



the previous volume. The commentary affords very high attainments." Saturday Review. 



PRIVATE ORATIONS OF DEMOSTHENES, with In- 

 troductions and English Notes, by F. A. PALEY, M.A. Editor of 

 Aeschylus, etc. and J. E. SANDYS, M.A. Fellow and Tutor of St John's 

 College, and Public Orator in the University of Cambridge. 



PART I. Contra Phormionem, Lacritum, Pantaenetum, Boeotum 

 de Nomine, Boeotum de Dote, Dionysodorum. Crown 8vo. 6s. 



"Mr Paley's scholarship is sound and literature which bears upon his author, and 



accurate, his experience of editing wide, and the elucidation of matters of daily life, in the 



if he is content to devote his learning and delineation of which Demosthenes is so rich, 



abilities to the production of such manuals obtains full justice at his hands. . . . We 



as these, they will be received with gratitude hope this edition may lead the way to a more 



throughout the higher schools of the country. general study of these speeches in schools 



Mr Sandys is deeply read in the German than has hitherto been possible." Academy. 



PART II. Pro Phormione, Contra Stephanum I. II.; Nicostra- 

 tum, Cononem, Calliclem. Crown 8vo. js. 6d. 



" It is long since we have come upon a work mosthenes '." Saturday Review. 



evincing more pains, scholarship, and varied " the edition reflects credit on 



research and illustration than Mr Sandys's Cambridge scholarship, and ought to be ex- 

 contribution to the 'Private Orations of De- tensively used." Atheneeum. 



DEMOSTHENES AGAINST ANDROTION AND 

 AGAINST TIMOCRATES, with Introductions and English Com- 

 mentary, by WILLIAM WAYTE, M.A., late Professor of Greek, Uni- 

 versity College, London. Crown 8vo. js. 6d. 



"These speeches are highly interesting, as prehended subject matter .... Besides a most 



illustrating Attic Law, as that law was in- lucid and interesting introduction, Mr Wayte 



fluenced by the exigences of politics ... As has given the student effective help in his 



vigorous examples of the great orator's style, running commentary. We may note, as being 



they are worthy of all admiration; and they so well managed as to form a very valuable 



have the advantage not inconsiderable when part of the exegesis, the summaries given with 



the actual attainments of the average school- every two or three sections throughout the 



boy are considered of having an easily com- speech." Spectator. 



PLATO'S PH^EDO, literally translated, by the late E. M. 

 COPE, Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, revised by HENRY 

 JACKSON, Litt. D., Fellow of Trinity College. Demy 8vo. $s. 



London ; C. J, CLA Y &> SON, Cambridge University Press 

 Ave Maria Lane. 



