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NALOPAKHYANAM, OR, THE TALE OF NALA; containing the Sanskrit Text in Roman Characters, followed by a Vocabulary in which each word is placed under its root, with references to derived words in Cognate Languages, and a sketch of Sanskrit Grammar. By the Rev. THOMAS JARRETT, M.A. Trinity College, Regius Professor of Hebrew, late Professor of Arabic, and formerly Fellow of St Catharine's College, Cambridge. Demy Octavo.

NOTES ON THE TALE OF NALA,

IOS.

by J. PEILE, M.A. Fellow and Tutor of Christ's College.
[In the Press.

GREEK AND LATIN CLASSICS, &c. (See also pp. 20-23.)

A SELECTION OF GREEK INSCRIPTIONS, With Introductions and Annotations by E. S. ROBERTS, M.A. Fellow and Tutor of Caius College. [Preparing.

THE AGAMEMNON OF AESCHYLUS.

With a Translation in English Rhythm, and Notes Critical and Explanatory. By BENJAMIN HALL KENNEDY, D.D., Regius Professor of Greek. Crown Octavo, cloth.

"One of the best editions of the masterpiece of Greek tragedy."-Athenæum.

66 By numberless other like happy and weighty helps to a coherent and consistent text and interpretation, Dr Kennedy has approved himself a guide to Aeschylus of certainly peerless calibre."-Contemp. Rev.

"It is needless to multiply proofs of the value of this volume alike to the poetical translator, the critical scholar, and the ethical student. We must be contented to thank Professor Kennedy for his admirable execu

6s.

tion of a great undertaking."-Sat. Rev.

"Let me say that I think it a most admirable piece of the highest criticism. I like your Preface extremely; it is just to the point."-Professor PALEY.

"Professor Kennedy has conferred a boon on all teachers of the Greek classics, by causing the substance of his lectures at Cambridge on the Agamemnon of Eschylus to be published...This edition of the Agamemnon is one which no classical master should be without."-Examiner.

THE THEÆTETUS OF PLATO by the same Author. [In the Press.

ARISTOTLE.-ΠΕΡΙ ΔΙΚΑΙΟΣΥΝΗΣ.

THE FIFTH BOOK OF THE NICOMACHEAN ETHICS OF ARISTOTLE. Edited by HENRY JACKSON, M.A., Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge. Demy Octavo, cloth. 6s.

"It is not too much to say that some of the points he discusses have never had so much light thrown upon them before. . . .

Scholars will hope that this is not the only portion of the Aristotelian writings which he is likely to edit."-Athenæum.

London: Cambridge Warehouse, 17 Paternoster Row.

PRIVATE ORATIONS OF DEMOSTHENES,

with Introductions and English Notes, by F. A. PALEY, M.A. Editor of Aeschylus, etc. and J. E. SANDYS, M.A. Fellow and Tutor of St John's College, and Public Orator in the University of Cambridge.

PART I. Contra Phormionem, Lacritum, Pantaenetum, Boeotum de Nomine, Boeotum de Dote, Dionysodorum. Crown Octavo, cloth. 65.

"Mr Paley's scholarship is sound and accurate, his experience of editing wide, and if he is content to devote his learning and abilities to the production of such inanuals as these, they will be received with gratitude throughout the higher schools of the country. Mr Sandys is deeply read in the German

literature which bears upon his author, and the elucidation of matters of daily life, in the delineation of which Demosthenes is so rich, obtains full justice at his hands..... We hope this edition may lead the way to a more general study of these speeches in schools than has hitherto been possible.-Academy.

PART II. Pro Phormione, Contra Stephanum I. II.; Nicostratum, Cononem, Calliclem.

7s. 6d.

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Edited by

OLYMPIAN AND PYTHIAN ODES. With Notes Explanatory and Critical, Introductions and Introductory Essays. C. A. M. FENNELL, M.A., late Fellow of Jesus College. tavo, cloth. 95.

"Mr Fennell deserves the thanks of all classical students for his careful and scholarly edition of the Olympian and Pythian odes. He brings to his task the necessary enthuiasm for his author, great industry, a sound judgment, and, in particular, copious and minute learning in comparative philology. To his qualifications in this last respect every page bears witness."-Athenæum.

"Considered simply as a contribution to the study and criticism of Pindar, Mr Fennell's edition is a work of great merit. But it has a wider interest, as exemplifying the change which has come over the methods and aims of Cambridge scholarship within the last ten or twelve years. . . . The short introductions and arguments to the Odes, which for so discursive an author as Pindar are all but a necessity, are both careful and acute... Altogether, this edition is a welcome and wholesome sign of the vitality and de

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velopment of Cambridge scholarship, and we are glad to see that it is to be continued."Saturday Review.

"There are many reasons why Mr C. A. M. Fennell's edition of 'Pindar's Olympian and Pythian Odes;' should not go unnoticed, even though our space forbids doing it full justice; as a helpful complement and often corrective of preceding editions, both in its insight into comparative philology, its critical acumen, and its general sobriety of editing. In etymology especially the volume marks a generation later than Donaldson's, though holding in respect his brilliant authority. Most helpful, too, is the introductory essay on Pindar's style and dialect, while the chronological sequence of the Odes (pp. xxxi.-xxxii.), and the 'Metrical Schemes,' which immediately precede the text and commentary, leave nothing to be desiderated.”— Contemporary Review.

THE NEMEAN AND ISTHMIAN ODES.

[Preparing.

London: Cambridge Warehouse, 17 Paternoster Row.

THE BACCHAE OF EURIPIDES.

with Introduction, Critical Notes, and Archæological Illustrations, by J. E. SANDYS, M.A., Fellow and Tutor of St John's College, Cambridge, and Public Orator. Crown Octavo, cloth.

ARISTOTLE.

IOS. 6d.

THE RHETORIC. With a Commentary by the late E. M. COPE, Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, revised and edited by J. E. SANDYS, M.A., Fellow and Tutor of St John's College, Cambridge, and Public Orator. With a biographical Memoir by H. A. J. MUNRO, M.A. Three Volumes, Demy Octavo. £1. 11s. 6d.

"This work is in many ways creditable to the University of Cambridge. The solid and extensive erudition of Mr Cope himself bears none the less speaking evidence to the value of the tradition which he continued, if it is not equally accompanied by those qualities of speculative originality and independent judgment which belong more to the individual writer than to his school. And while it must ever be regretted that a work so laborious should not have received the last touches of its author, the warmest admiration is due to Mr Sandys, for the manly, unselfish, and unflinching spirit in which he has performed his most difficult and delicate task. If an English student wishes to have a full conception of what is contained in the Rhetoric of Aristotle, to Mr Cope's edition he must go."Academy.

"Mr Sandys has performed his arduous duties with marked ability and admirable tact. ...Besides the revision of Mr Cope's material already referred to in his own words, Mr Sandys has thrown in many useful notes: none more useful than those that bring the Commentary up to the latest scholarship by reference to important works that have appeared since Mr Cope's illness put a period to his labours. When the original Commentary stops abruptly three chapters before the end of the third book, Mr Sandys

carefully supplies the deficiency, following Mr Cope's general plan and the slightest available indications of his intended treatment. In Appendices he has reprinted from classical journals several articles of Mr Cope's; and, what is better, he has given the best of the late Mr Shilleto's 'Adversaria.' In every part of his work-revising, supplementing, and completing-he has done exceedingly well."-Examiner.

"A careful examination of the work shows that the high expectations of classical students will not be disappointed. Mr Cope's 'wide and minute acquaintance with all the Aristotelian writings,' to which Mr Sandys justly bears testimony, his thorough knowledge of the important contributions of modern German scholars, his ripe and accurate scholarship, and above all, that sound judgment and never-failing good sense which are the crowning merit of our best English editions of the Classics, all combine to make this one of the most valuable additions to the knowledge of Greek literature which we have had for many years." "-Spectator.

"Von der Rhetorik ist eine neue Ausgabe mit sehr ausführlichem Commentar erschienen. Derselbe enthält viel schätzbares... Der Herausgeber verdient für seine mühevolle Arbeit unseren lebhaften Dank."Susemihl in Bursian's Jahresbericht.

PLATO'S PHEDO,

literally translated, by the late E. M. COPE, Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge. Demy Octavo. 55.

P. VERGILI MARONIS OPERA

cum Prolegomenis et Commentario Critico pro Syndicis Preli Academici edidit BENJAMIN HALL KENNEDY, S.T.P., Graecae Linguae Professor Regius. Extra Fcap. Octavo, cloth. 5s.

London: Cambridge Warehouse, 17 Paternoster Row.

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PUBLICATIONS OF

M. TULLII CICERONIS DE NATURA DEORUM Libri Tres, with Introduction and Commentary by JOSEPH B. MAYOR, M.A., Professor of Classical Literature at King's College, London, formerly Fellow and Tutor of St John's College, Cambridge, together with a new collation of several of the English MSS. by J. H. SWAINSON, M.A., formerly Fellow of Trinity Coll., Cambridge. Vol. I. Demy 8vo. IOS. 6d.

M. T. CICERONIS DE OFFICIIS LIBRI TRÈS, with Marginal Analysis, an English Commentary, and copious Indices, by H. A. HOLDEN, LL.D. Head Master of Ipswich School, late Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, Classical Examiner to the University of London. Third Edition. Revised and considerably enlarged.

Crown Octavo. 95.

"Dr Holden truly states that Text, Analysis, and Commentary in this third edition have been again subjected to a thorough revision.' It is now certainly the best edition extant. A sufficient apparatus of various readings is placed under the text, and a very careful summary in the margin. The Introduction (after Heine) and notes leave nothing to be desired in point of fulness, accuracy, and neatness; the typographical execution will satisfy the most fastidious eye. A careful

index of twenty-four pages makes it easy to use the book as a storehouse of information on points of grammar, history, and philosophy.. This edition of the Offices, Mr Reid's Academics, Lælius, and Cato, with the forthcoming editions of the De Finibus and the De Natura Deorum will do much to maintain the study of Cicero's philosophy in Roger Ascham's university.". -Notes and Queries.

M. T. CICERONIS PRO CN. PLANCIO ORATIO by the same Editor. [In the Press.

MATHEMATICS, PHYSICAL SCIENCE, &c. THE ELECTRICAL RESEARCHES OF THE HONOURABLE HENRY CAVENDISH, F.R.S. Written between 1771 and 1781, Edited from the original manuscripts in the possession of the Duke of Devonshire, K. G., by J. CLERK MAXWELL, F.R.S. Demy 8vo. cloth.

"This work, which derives a melancholy interest from the lamented death of the editor following so closely upon its publication, is a valuable addition to the history of electrical research.... The papers themselves are most carefully reproduced, with fac-similes of the author's sketches of experimental apparatus. Every department of editorial duty appears to have been most conscientiously performed; and it must have been no small

18s.

satisfaction to Prof. Maxwell to see this goodly volume completed before his life's work was done."-Athenæum.

"Few men have made such important discoveries in such different branches of Natural Philosophy as Cavendish... The book before us shews that he was in addition the discoverer of some of the most important of the laws of electricity."-Cambridge Review.

A TREATISE ON NATURAL PHILOSOPHY. By Sir W. THOMSON, LL.D., D.C.L., F.R.S., Professor of Natural Philosophy in the University of Glasgow, and P. G. TAIT, M.A., Professor of Natural Philosophy in the University of Edinburgh. Vol. I. Part I. 16s.

"In this, the second edition, we notice a large amount of new matter, the importance of which is such that any opinion which we

could form within the time at our disposal would be utterly inadequate."-Nature.

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MATHEMATICAL AND PHYSICAL PAPERS, By GEORGE GABRIEL STOKES, M.A., D.C.L., LL.D., F.R.S., Fellow of Pembroke College, and Lucasian Professor of Mathematics in the University of Cambridge. Reprinted from the Original Journals and Transactions, with Additional Notes by the Author. Vol. I. Demy Octavo, cloth. 155.

VOL. II. In the Press.

ELEMENTS OF NATURAL PHILOSOPHY.

By Professors Sir W. THOMSON and P. G. TAIT. Part I. 8vo. cloth, Second Edition. 9s.

"This work is designed especially for the use of schools and junior classes in the Universities, the mathematical methods being limited almost without exception to those of the most elementary geometry, algebra, and

trigonometry. Tiros in Natural Philosophy cannot be better directed than by being told to give their diligent attention to an intelligent digestion of the contents of this excellent vade mecum."-Iron.

A TREATISE ON THE THEORY OF DETERMINANTS AND THEIR APPLICATIONS IN ANALYSIS AND GEOMETRY, by ROBERT FORSYTH SCOTT, M.A., of St John's College, Cambridge. Demy 8vo.

125.

HYDRODYNAMICS,

A Treatise on the Mathematical Theory of the Motion of Fluids, by HORACE LAMB, M.A., formerly Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge; Professor of Mathematics in the University of Adelaide. Demy 8vo. 12s.

THE ANALYTICAL THEORY OF HEAT,

By JOSEPH FOURIER. Translated, with Notes, by A. FREEMAN, M.A. Fellow of St John's College, Cambridge. Demy Octavo. 165.

"Fourier's treatise is one of the very few scientific books which can never be rendered antiquated by the progress of science. It is not only the first and the greatest book on the physical subject of the conduction of Heat, but in every Chapter new views are opened up into vast fields of mathematical speculation."

"Whatever text-books may be written, giving, perhaps, more succinct proofs of Fourier's different equations, Fourier himself will in all time coming retain his unique prerogative of being the guide of his reader into regions inaccessible to meaner men, however expert."-Extract from letter of Professor Clerk Maxwell.

"It is time that Fourier's masterpiece, The Analytical Theory of Heat, translated by Mr Alex. Freeman, should be introduced to those English students of Mathe

matics who do not follow with freedom a treatise in any language but their own. It is a model of mathematical reasoning applied to physical phenomena, and is remarkable for the ingenuity of the analytical process employed by the author.' Contemporary Review, October, 1878.

"There cannot be two opinions as to the value and importance of the Théorie de la Chaleur. It has been called 'an exquisite mathematical poem,' not once but many times, independently, by mathematicians of different schools. Many of the very greatest of modern mathematicians regard it, justly, as the key which first opened to them the treasurehouse of mathematical physics. It is still the text-book of Heat Conduction, and there seems little present prospect of its being superseded, though it is already more than half a century old."-Nature.

AN ELEMENTARY TREATISE ON QUATERNIONS, By P. G. TAIT, M.A., Professor of Natural Philosophy in the University of Edinburgh. Second Edition. Demy 8vo. 145.

London: Cambridge Warehouse, 17 Paternoster Row.

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