WILLIAM BLACKWOOD AND SONS. 57 



Now complete, in 20 vols., 2s. 6d. each. Also in 10 vols., with calf 

 or vellum backs, ;^2, los. 



Ancient Classics 



FOR 



English Readers 



BY VARIOUS AUTHORS. 



EDITED BY 



Rev. W. LUCAS COLLINS, M.A. 



Author of ' Etoniana,* 'The Puhlic Schools,' &c 



OPINIONS OF THE PRESS. 



"We gladly avail ourselves of this opportunity to recommend the 

 other volumes of this useful series, most of which are executed with dis- 

 crimination and ability." — Quarterly Review. 



' ' These Ancient Classics have, without an exception, a twofold value. 

 They are rich in hterary interest, and they are rich in social and histori- 

 cal interest. We not only havejia faithful presentation of the stamp and 

 quality of the literature which the master-minds of the classical world 

 have bequeathed to the modem world, but we have a series of admir- 

 ably vivid and graphic pictures of what life at Athens and Rome was. 

 We are not merely taken back over a space of twenty centuries, and 

 placed immediately under the shadow of the Acropohs, or in the very 

 heart of the Forum, but we are at once brotight behind the scenes of the 

 old Roman and Athenian existence. As we see how the heroes of this 

 ' new world which is the old ' plotted, intrigued, and planned ; how 

 private ambition and political partisanship were dominant and active 

 motives then as they are now ; how the passions and the prejudices 

 which reign supreme now reigned stipreme then ; above all, as we dis- 

 cover how completely many of what we may have been accustomed to 

 consider our most essentially modern thoughts and sayings have been 

 anticipated by the poets and orators, the philosophers and historians, 

 who drank their inspiration by the banks of Ilissus or on the plains of 

 Tiber, we are prompted to ask whether the advance of some twenty cen- 

 turies has worked any great change in humanity, and whether, substi- 

 tuting the coat for the toga, the park for the Campus MartiusJ the 

 Houses of Parliament for the Forum, Cicero might not have been a 

 public man in London as well as an orator in Rome?" — Morning 

 Advertiser. 



"A series which has done, and is doing, so much towards spreading 

 among EngUshmen inteUigent and appreciative views of the chief clas- 

 sical authors." — Standard'. 



' * To sum up in a phrase our sincere and hearty commendation of one 

 of the best serial publications we have ever examined, we may just say 

 that to the student and the scholar, and to him who is neither scholar 

 nor student, they are simply priceless as a means of acquiring and ex- 

 tending a familiar acquaintance with the great classic writers of Greece 

 and Rome." — Belfast Northern Whig. 



