

e Tragedies of Seneca 



Translated by FRANK JLSTUS MILLER 



This is a new translation of the ten trag- 

 edies which have come down under the name 

 Seneca, rendered into 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 introduciion on the in- 

 fluence of the tragedies 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 the corresponding 

 Greek dramas, and 



mythological index 



comprehensive 



600 



glossary. 

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Ancient Italy, Historical and 

 Geographical Investigations in 

 Central Italy, Magna Graecia, 



Sicily, and Sardinia 



By Ettore Pais, translated from the 

 Italian by C. Densmore Curtis 



Dr. Pais is well known to classical scholars. 

 The articles in the present volume are the results 

 of his studies in the ancient history of the Italian 

 tribes. Every available source of information 

 is drawn upon, and their breadth of view is 

 masterly. They embrace the relations of these 

 peoples with the surrounding nations, and inci- 

 dentally thro%v light on the history of Greece- 

 Their publication at this time will be welcomed 

 by scholars, to whom they have never been gen- 

 erally accessible. Many of them were printed 

 as detached papers with a limited circulation, 

 and all were of course in Italian. 

 480 pages, 8vo. cloth; net l5-00, postpaid $5-^ 



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CHICAGO AND NEW YOR*^ , 



chapter; 



1 



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PROG 



By KENYON L. BUTTERFiELD 



President of the MassKhusetts Agriculnira! College 



The increasing interest in rural matters 

 wMch began with the generally growine 

 loTe of ontdoor life and which has already 

 included the technical aspects of modern 

 agncTdtnre, is gradually being broadened 

 to embrace the field of economic and social 

 iimsstigations. At present the literature 

 regarding the sociological phases of rural 

 me la particularly meager. 



IJeaideat Butterfield emphasizes in his book 

 tU ^VoTtimce of the social aspinrts of the ru- 

 ral .-. -~- auty an« describes some of the aewer 



life Th.«'^'''^*?^ '"^ ^' expansion rf roral 

 L_- ^^'^^^ "« chapters on the work of the 

 --.OBS ageaci«i for rural developm.nt, sach 



SSTch,^ "^"''' *^ ««^' the country 



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CHICA<30 awo NEW YORK 



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BY HERBERT J. DAVENPORT 



The author thus defines his position 

 in his preface: "Since the time of Aa^iu 

 Smith, economic theory has been i 

 possession of doctrines enough tor 



reasonably complete, consistent, aa 



•^ ^ '- _if only those 



doctrines had been, with a wise eclectt- 

 cism, properly combined and articulate^ 

 The emphasis in the present voW^ 

 upon the entrepreneur point or vi^ ^^^ 

 the computation of costs 



logical system of thought 



and in 



analysis of the process by which disu 

 utive shares are assigned, has not 6 



,' only that tm 

 point of View be clearly distinguishe • 

 consistently held, and fully developea- 



ntw in it: it was necessary 



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