PUBLICATIONS OF 
ARISTOTLE. 
THE RHETORIC. With a Commentary by the late E. M. Cope, 
Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, revised and edited by J. E. 
Sandys, M.A., Fellow and Tutor of St John’s College, Cambridge, 
and Public Orator. With a biographical Memoir by H. A. J. Munro, 
M.A. Three Volumes, Demy 8 vo. £i. in. 6d. 
what is contained in the Rhetoric of Aris- 
totle, to Mr Cope’s edition he must go.” — 
A cademy . 
“Mr Sandys has performed his arduous 
duties with marked ability and admirable 
tact In every part of his work 
■ — revising, supplementing, and completing — 
he has done exceedingly well.” — Examiner. 
“This work is in many ways creditable to 
the University of Cambridge. And while it 
must ever be regretted that a work so laborious 
should not have received the last touches of 
its author, the warmest admiration is due to 
Mr Sandys, for the manly, unselfish, and un- 
flinching spirit in which he has performed his 
most difficult and delicate task. If an English 
student wishes to have a full conception of 
PRIVATE ORATIONS OF DEMOSTHENES, 
with Introductions and English Notes, by F. A. Paley, M.A. Editor 
of Aeschylus, etc. and J. E. Sandys, M.A. Fellow and Tutor of St 
John’s College, and Public Orator in the University of Cambridge. 
Part I. Contra Phormionem, Lacritum, Pantaenetum, Boeotum de 
Nomine, Boeotum de Dote, Dionysodorum. Crown 8 vo. cloth. 6s. 
“Mr Paley’s scholarship is sound and literature which bears upon his author, and 
accurate, his experience of editing wide, and 
if he is content to devote his -learning and 
abilities to the production of such manuals 
as these, they will be received with gratitude 
throughout the higher schools of the country. 
Mr Sandys is deeply read in the German 
the elucidation of matters of daily life, in the 
delineation of which Demosthenes is so rich, 
obtains full justice at his hands We 
hope this edition may lead the way to a mote 
general study of these -speeches in schools 
than has hitherto been possible.” — Academy. 
in the needful help which enables us to 
form a sound estimate of the rights of the 
case It is long since we have come 
upon a work evincing more pains, scholar- 
ship, and varied research and illustration than 
M.r Sandys’s contribution to the ‘ Private 
Orations of Demosthenes’.” — Sat. Rev. 
“ the edition reflects credit on 
Cambridge scholarship, and ought to be ex- 
tensively used.” — Athenceum. 
Part II. Pro Phormione, Contra Stephanum I. II.; Nicostratum, 
Cononem, Calliclem. js. 6d. 
“To give even a brief sketch of these 
speeches {Pro Phormione and Contra Ste- 
$hanum~\ would be incompatible with our 
limits, though we can hardly conceive a task 
more useful to the classical or professional 
scholar than to make one for himself. .... 
It is a great boon to those who set them- 
selves to unravel the thread of arguments 
pro and con to have the aid of Mr Sandys’s 
excellent running commentary .... and no 
one can say that he is ever deficient 
DEMOSTHENES AGAINST ANDROTION AND 
AGAINST TIMOCRATES, with Introductions and English Com- 
mentary, by William Wayte, M.A., late Professor of Greek, 
University College, London, Formerly Fellow of King’s College, 
Cambridge, and Assistant Master at Eton. [In the Press. 
PINDAR. 
OLYMPIAN AND PYTHIAN ODES. With Notes Explanatory 
and Critical, Introductions and Introductory Essays. Edited by 
C. A. M. Fennell, M.A., late Fellow of Jesus College. Crown 8 vo. 
cloth, gs. 
“Mr Fennell deserves the thanks of all 
classical students for his careful and scholarly 
edition of the Olympian and Pythian odes. 
He brings to his task the necessary enthu- 
siasm for his author, great industry, a sound 
judgment, and, in particular, copious and 
minute learning in comparative philology. 
To his qualifications in this last respect every 
page bears witness.” — A thenceum. 
“Considered simply as a contribution to 
the study and criticism of Pindar, Mr Fen- 
nell’s edition is a work of great merit. But 
it has a wider interest, as exemplifying the 
change which has come over the methods 
and aims of Cambridge scholarship within 
the last ten or twelve years. . . . Altogether, 
this edition is a welcome and wholesome sign 
of the vitality and development of Cambridge 
scholarship, and we are glad to see that it is 
to be continued.” — Saturday Review. 
THE NEMEAN AND ISTHMIAN ODES. [In the Press. 
London: Cambridge Warehouse , 17 Paternoster Row. 
