In Memoriam. 
441 
them, his classes in Sallust and Livy equipped him fully for writing with 
classic taste and terseness his own Short History of the Roman People , 
the crowning key-stone in the arch of his authorship —- in penning the 
last line of which he ceased at once to work and live. Nay, rather, he 
still lives, for we are instinctively prompted to apply to him the touch¬ 
ing words which he taught, edited, and loved so well: Quiequid ex Agri¬ 
cola amavimus, quiequid mirati sumus, manet, mansurumque est in ani- 
mis hominum. 
