TEBE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PREae 
Two Dramatizations from Vergil. I, ‘Dido, the Phoenician 
Queen.” II, ‘The Fall of Troy.” Translated by Frank 
Justus Miller, with stage directions and music for the Dido, 
by J. Raleigh Nelson. 
132 pages, r2mo, cloth; net $1.00, postpaid $1.08 
No two episodes in Vergil are so compelling in human interest 
and dramatic intensity as those of Aeneas and Dido and the fall — 
of Troy. The ordinary student, engrossed with an intensive — 
study of the text, fails to appreciate their dramatic homogeneity. 
To preserve this Professor Miller has cast into dramatic form a 
metrical translation wonderfully faithful to the original hexam- 
eters, and bearing all the marks of the scholarly care, vigor, and — 
fluency that distinguish his translation of the ten tragedies of 
Seneca. 
The School Review. Asa supplement to the study of Vergil they will prove — 
a source of great interest and help, for by giving the student a more ~ 
comprehensive view of the poem he is reading, they will lead to a fuller 4 
recognition of its meaning. 
fi 
Chicago Literary Papyri. By Edgar J. Goodspeed, Assistant 
Professor of Biblical and Patristic Greek in the University — 
of Chicago. 
57 pages, 8vo, paper; net 50 cents, postpaid 54 cents 
There is good reason for believing that many of the papytl — 
described by Dr. Goodspeed came from Ashmunén and ancient — 
Karanis in the Fayfim. The texts considered are of the first, — 
second, and third centuries and include three Homeric extracts; — 
hitherto unpublished sections of Isocrates’ ‘To Nicocles;”’ med- 
ical prescriptions of the second century; geometrical processes — 
and Alexandrian hexameters extant in no other papyri. There 
is an appendix on ‘‘Chicago Papyri from Kém Ushim and Ash 
munén” and an “Index of Texts not Otherwise Extant.” Two 
half-tone plates of important papyri enhance the value of this 
publication. 
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