Krey—John of Salisbury and the Classics. 
983 
A tabular statement of John’s classical knowledge will serve 
to summarize these conclusions: 
I. The classical writings which, according to the evidence 
presented, can be credited to John’s knowledge. 
Aulus Gellius —AToctes Atticae. 
Cicero —Ad Herennium, De Partitione Oratoria De In- 
ventione Rhetorica, De Oratore, De Officiis, Tuscu- 
lani Disputationes, Rova Academica, Ad Pamiliares, 
De Amicitia. 
F rontinus —Str ategematica. 
Horatius —Sermones et Epistulae. 
J uvenal —Satyrae. 
Lucanus —Pharsalia. 
Martial —Epigrammata. 
0 vidius —Metamorphoses, Fasti, Amores, Ars Amatoria, 
Remedia Amoris, Epistulae ex-Ponto. 
Persius —S atyrae. 
Petronius —Satyrae, Cena Trimalchionis. 
Plinius —Historiae Raturales. 
Quintilianus —Institutiones Oratoriae. 
Sallustius —Catilina, Jugurtha. 
Seneca —De dementia, De Beneficiis, Quaestiones Rat- 
urales, Epistulae et Dialogi. 
Statius —Thebais. 
Suetonius —Caesares. 
Publilius Syrus. 
Terentius —Eunuchus et Andria. 
Valerius Maximus —Memorabilia. 
ViRGriL—Aeneid, Georgica, Eclogues. 
II. Classical writings which John quotes and which cannot 
be credited to his knowledge for want of sufficient evidence. 
Accius. 
Cato. 
Catullus. 
Cicero —De Fato, De Divinatione, De Senectute, De 
TTatura Deorum, Orator, Orationes, Paradoxa Stoi- 
corum. 
