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1 6 Messrs Blackwood 6 Sons' Recent Publications. ANCIENT CLASSICS FOR ENGLISH READERS. EDITED BY THE REV. W. LUCAS COLLINS, M.A. 2s. 6d., bound in cloth. The aim of the present series will be to explain, sufficiently for general readers, who these great writers were, and what they wrote; to give, wherever possible, some connected outline of the story which they tell, or the facts which they record, checked by the results -of modern investigations ; to present some of their most striking pas- sages in approved English translations, and to illustrate them gene- rally from modern writers; to serve, in short, as a popular retrospect of the chief literature of Greece and Rome. The Volumes published contain 1. Homer: The Iliad. By the EDITOR. 2. Homer: The Odyssey. By the SAME. 3. Herodotus. By GEORGE C. SWAYNE, M.A. 4. Ccesar. By ANTHONY TROLLOPE. 5. Virgil. By the EDITOR. 6. Horace. By THEODORE MARTIN. 7. ^schylus. By REGINALD S. COPLESTON, B.A. 8. Xenophon. By Sir ALEXANDER GRANT. 9. Cicero. By the EDITOR. 10. Sophocles. By CLIFTON W. COLLINS, M.A. 1 1 . Pliny's Letters. By the Rev. ALFRED CHURCH, M. A. , and the Rev. W. J. BRODRIBB, M.A. 12. Euripides. By W. B. DONNE. 13. JuvenaL By EDWARD WALFORD, M.A. 14. Aristophanes. By the EDITOR. 15. Hesiod and Theognis. By the Rev. J. DAVIS, M.A. 16. Plautus and Terence. By the EDITOR. 17. Tacitus. By W. B. DONNE. 1 8. Lucian. By the EDITOR. A Volume will be published quarterly. 2s. 6d. "It is impossible to praise too highly the conception and execu- tion of this series of the Classics. They are a kind of 'Bibliotheca Classicorum ' for unlearned readers, but executed by men of the most accomplished scholarship, and therefore conveying the very colour and tone of the authors. They will be as pleasant to scholars as they are valuable to those who know only their mother tongue." British Quarterly Review. " We anticipate that the judicious and novel design of such a series will meet, as it deserves, with widespread and lasting favour; and that, with its success, juster ideas will more generally prevail of the characteristics of the great writers of old." Saturday Review.