THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS 



The Tragedies of Seneca 



Translated by FRANK JUSTUS MILLER, Associate Professor of Latin in the 

 University of Chicago 



- 445 pages, 8vo, cloth; net $3.00, postpaid $3.20 



This is a new translation of the ten tragedies which have come down under the name of 

 Seneca. They are rendered in English blank verse, with appropriate lyric meters for the 

 choruses. The work is enriched and its value greatly enhanced for both classical and 

 English students, as well as for the general reader, by an introduction on the influence of 

 Seneca upon early English drama, contributed to the volume by Professor John M. Manly; 

 also by a review of the Roman historical drama in connection with the Octavia, by comparative 

 analyses of Seneca's tragedies, and by a comprehensive mythological Index and glossary. 



Dramatic Traditions of the Dark Ages 



By JOSEPH S, TUNISON 



350 pages, i2mo, cloth; net $1.25, postpaid $1.36 



The critics of the ancient drama never get beyond Seneca — if indeed they go so far— and 

 students of the modern stage usually begin with the thirteenth century. This book aims to 

 cover the interval. 



Mr. Tunison has the skill and liveliness of method The quantity of his results can not easily be 



which enable him to marshal this wonderful array of measured. — Springfield Republican. 

 facts.— TVe^ York Times. 



The Interpretation of Italy During the Last Two Centuries ; A 



Contribution to the Study of Goethe's ITALIENISCHE REISE 



By CAMILLO VON KLENZE, Professor of German Literature iti Brown 



University 



150 pages, 8vo, cloth; net $1.50, postpaid $1.62 



With 



during 



volume 



book 



to anyone who desires to follow the story of mo<Jern 



amount of reading and labor, and will be of service culture and intellectual life— r/z^ Dial 



Old German Love Songs : Translated from the Minnesingers of the 



12th to 14th Centuries 



By FRANK C. NICHOLSON 



236 pages, 8vo, cloth; net $1.50, postpaid $1.61 



In this volume an attempt has for the first time been made to present English readers with 

 a fairly large and typical selection from the German Minnesingers of the twelfth to the fuur- 



The English versions, whUe preserving the form of the originals, aim, so 



:unes 



far as is possible, at faithfulness of rendering. An introductory essa) 



discusses 



Profes 



Minnesong 



The 



