FOR ENGLISH READERS, 15 
Fe er ge i ee ey 
By THE EpirTor. 
‘‘No charm of style, no facility and eloquence of illustration, is 
wanting to enable us to see the great Roman advocate, statesman, and 
orator, in the days of Rome's grandeur, in the time of her first fatal 
hastening to her decadence, with whom fell her liberty two thousand 
years ago. The first lines of introduction to this fascinating book are 
full of help and light to the student of the classical times who has not 
mastered the classical literature, and in whose interests this book is 
done, simply to perfection.”— Saunders’ News-Letter. , 
X:—SOPHOCLES., 
By Ciirton W. Cottins, M.A. 
‘Sophocles has now been added to the acceptable and singularly 
equal series of ‘Ancient Classics for English Readers.’ Mr Collins 
shows great skill and judgment in analysing and discriminating the 
plays of the sweet singer of Colonus.”— Guardian. 
XI.—PLINY’S LETTERS. » 
By the Rev. ALFRED CHuRcH, M.A., and 
The Rev. W. J. Bropriss, M.A. 
‘* This is one of the best volumes of the series called ‘ Ancient Classics. 
for English Readers.’ . . . This graceful little volume will introduce 
Pliny to many who have hitherto known nothing of the Silver Age,” — 
Atheneum. 
‘*Mr Lucas Collins’s very useful and popular series has afforded a fit 
opportunity for a sketch of the life and writings of the younger Pliny ; 
and the writers of the volume before us have contrived, out of their 
intimate and complete familiarity with their subject, to place the man, 
his traits of character, his friends, and his surroundings so vividly before 
us, that a hitherto shadowy acquaintance becomes a distinct and real 
personage.”’—Saturday Review. 
AIL—E U' Rl Pero es. 
By W. B. DoNNE. 
‘‘Mr Donne’s earlier chapters will be found extremely serviceable in 
helping to a right conception of the times, the scenes, and the char- 
acters amidst which Euripides was matured. In no ‘Theatre of the 
Greeks’ do we find so vivid and distinct an expression of the aspect of 
the Attic clime, its amusements, and its representative men, in the days 
of the youngest member of the dramatic triumvirate. . . . We 
take leave of a tribute to the merit of ‘ Euripides’ which is calculated 
to enhance the appreciation of the most pathetic and philosophic of 
Greek dramatists.”—Saturday Review. 
XIIL—JUVENAL., 
By Epwarp WALForRD, M.A. 
‘«This is one of the best executed volumes of the whole series of 
‘ Ancient Classics,’ and exhibits Mr Walford’s critical powers in a very 
favourable light.”—Pall Mall Gazette. 
