Page:Juvenal and Persius by G. G. Ramsay.djvu/82

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INTRODUCTION

Owen takes P as his first authority; he follows A B P when they agree, and prefers P when they disagree, correcting palpable mistakes from A B. Owen adds to his list Oxoniensis, in the Bodleian Library (O) of the tenth century, and Cantabrigiensis, in the Trinity College Library O. iv. 10 (T), which is also of the tenth century.

The editions of Juvenal are innumerable. Those which I have found the most useful are the following:—

G. A. Ruperti, 1801 and 1825.
C. F. Heinrich, 1839.
Dr. Stocker (including Persius), 1845.
Otto Jahn, 1851; re-edited by Bücheler (including Persius) in 1886, 1893, and by F. Leo in 1910.
Prof. J. E. B. Mayor, 1853; enlarged in 1869, etc.
A. J. Macleane (including Persius), 1857.
G. A. Simcox (Catena Classicorum), 1867.
J. D. Lewis (with translation), 1879.
Pearson and Strong, Clarendon Press, 1887 and 1892.
L. Friedländer, 1895.
J. D. Duff, 1898 and 1914.
A. E. Housman, critical edition, 1905.

Valuable books on Juvenal and Persius are the following:—

H. Nettleship, Lectures and Essays, Second Series, 1895, Arts. II. and V.
Friedlander, Sittengeschichte Roms, 1869.

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