" It seems to be beautifully done." 



Prop. P. B6chee, o£ Harvard. 



" So far as I am aware there has been nothing hitherto in English 

 that filled anything like the same place. It should be in the hands 

 of all teachers, and introduced into those classes to whose scale of 

 study it is adapted." 



Pkop. William D. Whitney, of Yale. 



"I shall expect to derive great help from Prof. Harrison's 

 Syntax, and shall recommend it to my classes." 



Prop. Aionzo Williams, of Brown. 



" I shall require the University booksellers to have the book on 

 hand in numbers, and I shall strongly recommend all French 

 students to get the book and study it carefully." 



Pkof. Schelb De Veee, University of Virginia. ,] 



, From The Dial, Chicago. 

 "Attention has already been called in these columns to Professor 

 Harrison's admirable "French Syntax" (John E. Potter & Co.). A 

 new edition now comes to Us, adapted to the use even of beginners 

 by the addition of a series of "Practical Exercises" from the 

 competent hands of Prof. M. W. Easton, of the University of 

 Pennsylvania. The essential rules and directions are printed with 

 the exercises,; to \yhich full vocabularies are appended. After.the 

 exercises for beginners, a number of well-annotated and varied 

 anecdotes, etc., for translation into French, provide for the 

 needs of the more advanced student. No one should be misled 

 by the too modest title to suppose this work to be merely an 

 exhaustive syntax : the addition of full chapters upon phonology, 

 etymology, historical grammar, and prosody; together with a great 

 number of convenient tables and lists of various kinds, make the 

 book a cyclopedia of exact information concerning the French 

 language. All students will appreciate the advantage of having 

 between the covers of one book answers to all tte questions that it 

 can ever occur to the most curious to ask. Teachers should be 

 thankful that they can at last put into the hands of beginners the 

 best French grammar in the world, and proud that they owe this 

 privilege to an American scholar," 



JOHN E. POTTER & CO., 



PUBLISHERS, PHILADELPHIA. 



(363J 



