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This section is reproduced verbatim from the orignal text, published in 1916.

I wish to express my sincere gratitude to Professor Benjamin L. D'Ooge, of the Michigan State Normal School, for his generous assistance and hearty encouragement in the preparation of this work.

Sincere thanks are due to the various authors and publishers of copyrighted books from which selections are taken for their courteous permission to copy.

Specific acknowledgment is due George Bell and Sons, London, for Martial'sEpigrams; Smith, Elder, and Company, London, for The Doom of the Slothful; Houghton, Mifflin Co., for After Construing, A Roman Mirror, Enceladus, and the poems of John G. Saxe; The Chautauqua Press, for Capri and the Translations of Horace'sOdes; Charles Scribner's Sons, for the Assembly of the Gods, Cerberus, the Harpy, A Plea for the Classics, andMalum Opus; The American Book Company, for Cupid and the Bee; Lothrop, Lee and Shepard Co., for A Christmas Hymn;New England Magazine, for the Fall of Rome; Little, Brown and Company, for the translation ofDies Irae; The Outlook Company, for the Prayer of Socrates; Allyn and Bacon, for the music forFlevit Lepus Parvulus.

I must beg forgiveness of any one whose rights I have overlooked and of a few whom, after repeated efforts, I have been unable to trace.

1.See Pliny's Letter on Minicia Marcella,p. 109.

2.Copyright.Used by permission of Charles Scribner's Sons.

3.Virgil must bring some rare perfume in exchange for the rich wine, since Horace thus playfully conditions his invitation.

4.A little girl who died at six years of age.

5.This well known epigram is the original of one equally famous in English, that written by Tom Brown on Dr. John Fell, about 1670."I do not like thee, Dr. Fell.The reason why I cannot tell;But this I know and know full wellI do not like thee, Dr. Fell."

"I do not like thee, Dr. Fell.The reason why I cannot tell;But this I know and know full wellI do not like thee, Dr. Fell."

6.Anacreon was a Greek society poet, living in the sixth centuryb.c.

7.From the Prayer-book of Queen Mary, and believed to be her composition. Said to have been uttered by the queen just before her execution.

8.By permissionof Miss M. L. Smith. Latin Lessons. Allyn and Bacon.

9."This marvelous hymn is the acknowledged masterpiece of Latin poetry and the most sublime of all uninspired hymns."—Schaff.

—Schaff.

10.Ascribed to Innocent III, Robert II, of France, and others. Ranks second toDies Iraeamong the Great Hymns. Can be sung to the tune of Rock of Ages.

11.This may be sung to the tune of Sweet Hour of Prayer.

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Woolley's Written EnglishThe main things to know in order to write English correctly.

Espenshade's Essentials of Composition and Rhetoric. RevisedAn inductive course with abundant application of principles.

Kellow's Practical Training in EnglishHelpful in its study of vocabulary, grammar, and structure.

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Strang's Exercises in English. RevisedExamples in syntax, accidence and style, for criticism and correction.

Heath's English Classics. Prices range fromAbout 100 volumes covering literature for high school reading. Send for list.

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Howes's Primer of English LiteratureThe essentials concerning great writers and important periods.

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Paxson's Handbook for Latin Clubs.158 pages

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Gildersleeve-Lodge Latin Grammar.Complete. 560 pages

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Bain's First Latin Book.Revised. 420 pages

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Smith's Elements of Latin.361 pages

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Towle & Jenks's Caesar's Gallic War.Books I and II. 378 pages

Towle & Jenks's Caesar's Gallic War.Books I and II, with Selections for Sight Reading. 518 pages

Towle & Jenks's Caesar's Gallic War.Books I, II, III, and IV

Towle & Jenks's Caesar's Gallic War.Complete. 604 pages

Towle & Jenks's Caesar for Sight Reading.144 pages

Tunstall's Six Orations of Cicero.

Tunstall's Cicero's Orations.Eleven orations. 616 pages

Barss's Writing Latin, Book I.Based on Caesar. 144 pages

Barss's Writing Latin, Book II.Based on Caesar and Cicero

Daniels's Latin Drill and Composition.125 pages

Anderson's Selections from Ovid,with Vocabulary. 264 pages

Carter's Roman Elegiac Poets.330 pages

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Moore's Prose Exercises.Revised. 80 pages

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Wilson's Juvenal.372 pages


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