Rev. of Roman historical sources and institutions, UMS, humanistic series, i; Michigan Alumnus, xi, 301-303. A pilgrimage to Delphi and Mt. Parnassus; Normal College News, iii, 105-115. EDWARD BULL CLAPP. A quantitive difficulty in the new metric; CR, 1904, 339-340. The causes of Germany's eminence in productive scholarship; University Chronicle, 1904, 41–49. On reading Greek; ER, 1905, 243 249. CHARLES N. COLE. On Lucretius, v, 43 f.; CR, May, 1905. HERMANN COLLITZ. Zum Awesta-Alphabet; Verhandl. d. xiii. internat. Oriental-Kongresses (Leiden, 1904), 107–108. Das Analogiegesetz der westgermanischen Ablautsreihen; MLN, xx, 65-68. Dürfen and its cognates (note on F. A. Wood's article); MLN, xx, 105. Zum vokalischen Auslautsgesetze der Die Herkunft der a-Deklination; ARTHUR STODDARD COOLEY. Greece in 1904; Boston Evening WILLIAM A. COOPER. The life of Goethe, vol. i, 1749-1788, pp. xvi + 439, illustrated; New York and London: G. P. Putnam's Sons. [First part of authorized translation of Bielschowsky's Goethe, sein Leben und seine Werke.] WALTER DENNISON. A visit to the battlefields of Caesar; A new head of the so-called Scipio type; an attempt at its identification; AJA, ix, 11-43. The latest excavations in the Roman Forum; Records of the Past, 1905, 171-179. Book Reviews; Bibliotheca Sacra, lxi, 396, 397, lxii, 193, 194, 581584. BENJAMIN L. D'OOGE. Latin composition to accompany Greenough, D'Ooge, and Daniell's Second year Latin, pp. x + 131; Boston: Ginn & Co., 1904. Latin composition for secondary schools, pp. vi. + 321; same, 1905. The teaching of Latin composition in secondary schools, pp. 12; same, 1905. HERMAN L. EBELING. Report of Hermes, xxxviii; AJP, xxv, 219-224, 468–473; do., xxxix; Ib., xxvi, 225-230, 474-480. H. C. ELMER. Some faults in our Latin dictiona- tionary; PAPA, xxxv (1904), The metrical reading of Latin poetry, an address before the fourteenth meeting of the New York Latin Club; LL, May 8, 1905. JEFFERSON ELMORE. A note on Horace' Sat. i, 6, 126; On Aristophanes' Peace, 990; Ib., Abstract of same; РАРА, ХХХV (1904), xcii-xciii. ARTHUR FAIRBANKS. Archaeology an instrument of anthro- Excavations in the Roman Forum in EDWIN W. FAY. Studies of Latin words in -cinio-, -cinia-; II, -cinium, "calling," a partially developed Latin suffix; CR, xviii, 349-351; III, Zb., 461463. The Indo-Iranian nasal verbs; I, AJP, xxv, 369-389; II, Ib., xxvi, 172-203. EDWARD FITCH. Greek scholar; Chapter vi of Old ROY C. FLICKINGER. The meaning of ἐπὶ τῆς σκηνής in writers of the fourth century, pp. 16; Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1904. Plutarch as a source of information on the Greek theater, pp. 64, Chicago: the University of Chicago Press, 1904. HAROLD NORTH FOWLER. The bronze chariot in the Metropolitan Museum; Chautauquan, 1905, 50-55. Editorial work in AJA. BASIL L. GILDERSLEEVE. Editorial and other contributions; A syntactician among the psycholo- CLARENCE WILLARD GLEASON. Greek prose composition for schools, based upon Xenophon's Anabasis, I, i-viii, pp. 155; in Greek series for colleges and schools, ed. by H. W. Smyth; New York: American Book Co., 1905. JOHN GREENE. Notes on the emphatic neuter; CR, xviii, 448-450. ALFRED GUDEMAN. Articles in vol. i of the Thesaurus Linguae Latinae: ambulabilis, ambulacrum, ambulatilis, ambulatio, ambulativa, ambulatiuncula, ambulator, ambulatrix, ambulatorium, ambulatura, ambulatus, ambulo (pp. 1868-1877), amicimen, amicio (pp. 1890-1891), amicto, amictorius, amictum, amictus, amiculatus, amiculum (pp. 18991902), amnicola, amniculus, amnicus, amnigenus, amnis (pp. 1941– 1951), amplectibilis, amplector, amplexabundus, amplexatio, amplexio, amplexor, amplexus, ampliatio, ampliator, amplificatio, amplificator, amplifico, amplificus, amplio, amplitudo, ampliusculus, amplo, amplus, ample, ampliter, amplius, amplissime (pp. 19892017). GEORGE DEPUE HADZSITS. A commentary on materials essential to the teaching of Roman history; University of Cincinnati Press. KARL P. HARRINGTON. Horace as a nature poet; PAPA, xxxv (1904), v-vii. The topography of Cicero's boyhood home; AJA, ix (1905), 85. J. E. HARRY. Edition of Aeschylus, Prometheus; and imperative in Greek; PAPA, The same in full; CR, October, L'Omission d' elvai, avec éтoμos; W. A. HEIDEL. Rev. of Döring, Geschichte der griechischen Philosophie; Philosophical Review, xiv, 64–72. OTTO HELLER. Schiller, President's address at the Schiller und wir, contribution to the pp. ix + 301; Boston: Ginn & Ahasver in der Kunstdichtung, a paper read before the German literature section at the International Congress of Arts and Science; MP, iii (1905), 61–68. NATHAN WILBUR HELM. Rev. of Johnston's The private life Rev. of Carter's Virgil's Aeneid; Rev. of Kirtland's Ritchie's Fabulae Rev. of Hale & Buck's Latin Gram mar; Ib., 303 f. Rev. of Caesars (Harkness & Forbes', Rev. of Daniell and Brown's New Latin composition; Ib., No. 2. Rev. of Pearson's Latin prose composition; Ib. Rev. of Mather's Caesar, episodes from the Gallic and the Civil Wars; Ib. E. WASHBURN HOPKINS. The fountain of youth; JAOS, xxvi (1905), 167. Various reviews in Nat. and in AJI (1905), 79-84. GEORGE B. HUSSEY. Handbook of Latin homonyms, pp. xxxi + 179; Boston: Benj. H. Sanborn & Co., 1905. A. V. WILLIAMS JACKSON. The modern Zoroastrians of Persia ; Light on a ruined shrine: the fire Bokhara the noble; The Outlook, Khshathra Vairya, one of the Zoro- Edited Justi's India; Ib., ii, 295- CHARLES W. L. JOHNSON. The accentus of the ancient Latin grammarians; TAPA, xxxv (1904), 65-76. GEORGE DWIGHT KELLOGG. Reports of Philologus, lxii (N. F. Bd. xvi, 1903), in AJP, xxvi, 230–236, and lxiii (N. F. Bd. xvii, 1904); Tb., 347-353. ROLAND G. KENT. The date of Aristophanes' birth; CR, xix, 153-155. The city gates of Demetrias; ĀJĀ, ix, 166-169. W. H. KIRK. Notes on the first book of the Aeneid; JOHN C. KIRTLAND, JR. The college requirements and the secondary school work; SR, xiii, 818-827. Also in Journal of the National Educational Association for 1905, 470-473 (considerably abridged). CHARLES KNAPP. Form in Latin poetry; LL, v, Nos. Some points in the literary study of Rev. of Hülsen's Das Forum Roma- WILLIAM CRANSTON LAWTON. Ideals in Greek literature (Chautau qua text-book, 1905). Can the ideal college live in a great city? Sewanee Review, 1905, 1– 22. Introduction to classical Latin litera ture, pp. x + 326; Scribner, 1904. EMORY B. LEASE. Titi Livi, ab urbe condita, libri i, xxi, xxii, edited, with introduction, commentary, and notes, lxxii + 438 pp.; University Publishing Co., 1905. The same, text edition, pp. 177, 1905. D. O. S. Lowell. Our foreign-born educators; Munsey's, 1904, 40-50. The ship of the pilgrim fathers; Ib., 1905, 419-421. Are the present methods of admis sion to college satisfactory or fair? Journal of Pedagogy, 1905, 25-34. The study of English literature as a means of implanting high moral ideals; in The Aims of Religious Education: proceedings of the third annual convention held in Boston. February, 1905, 232-236. NELSON G. MCCREA. Articles on Caesar, Juvenal, Ovid, Seneca, and Tacitus in Encyclopaedia Americana (new edition, 1905). DAVID MAGIE, JR. De Romanorum iuris publici sacrique vocabulis sollemnibus in Graecum sermonem conversis. Leipzig, Teubner, 1905. HERBERT WILLIAM MAGOUN. Elision in Latin and Greek; LL, vi, Nos. 132-135. ALLAN MARQUAND. The palace at Nippur not Mycenaean but Hellenistic; AJA, ix (1905), 7-11. The façade of the temple of Apollo, near Miletus; Records of the Past, iv (1905), 3-15. MAURICE W. MATHER. Caesar, episodes from the Gallic and Civil Wars, with introduction, notes, and vocabulary, pp 549 ; American Book Co., 1905 (Morris and Morgan's Latin series). FRANK IVAN MERCHANT. Seneca, the philosopher, and his theory of style; AJP, xxvi (1905), 44-59. TRUMAN MICHELSON. The meaning and etymology of the Pāli word abbuļhesika; Zeitschrift der deutschen morgenländischen Gesellschaft, lix (1905), 126-128. WALTER MILLER. Associate editor; CJ. Associate editor, in charge of the department of classical languages; Southern Educational Review. Rev. of Mustard's Classical echoes in Tennyson; CJ. CLIFFORD H. MOORE. The shorter selection of Euripides' plays; CR, xix, 11-12. On Euripides' Medea, 714-715; Ib., xix, 12-13. The Oxyrhynchus epitome of Livy in its relation to Obsequens and Cassiodorus; AJP, xxv, 241–255. LEWIS F. MOTT. The round table; MLA, xx, 231264. WILFRED P. MUSTARD. Classical echoes in Tennyson; pp. Note on Spenser, Faerie Queene, WILLIAM A. NITZE. A new source of Yvain; MP, iii, 267-280. H. C. NUTTING. Advanced Latin composition, pp. iv Studies in the Si-clause: I. Concessive Si-clauses in Plautus. II. Subjunctive protasis with indicative apodosis in Plautus. University of California Publica- ̧ tions: Classical Philology, i, 3594. The status of classical studies; Christian Advocate (N. Y.), Aug. 31, 1905. Notes on the conspiracy of Catiline; PAPA, xxxv (1904), lxxxiii-lxxxvi. CHARLES J. O'CONNOR. The Graecostasis of the Roman Forum and its vicinity; Bulletin of the University of Wisconsin, No. 99, 1904. CHARLES W. PEPPLER. The Persians of Timotheus; South Atlantic Quarterly, iii (1904) 221-231. B. PERRIN. The rehabilitation of Theramenes; AHR, July, 1904. WILLIAM K. PRENTICE. Bishop Pococke and the tomb of Abedrapsas; PUB, xv, 224-240. HENRY W. PRESCOTT. The name of the slave in Plautus' Aulularia; PAPA, xxxv (1904), xcvii. ROBERT S. RADFORD. On the recession of the Latin accent in connection with monosyllabic words and the traditional wordorder, second and third papers; AJP, xxv, 256-273, 406-427. Rev. of Schlicher's Origin of Latin rhythmical verse; AJP, xxv, 359360. Studies in Latin accent and metric; TAPA, xxxv (1904), 33-64. EDWARD KENNARD RAND. Notes on Ovid; TAPA,xxxv (1904), 128-147. |