(BY THE REV. T. K. ARNOLD) PUBLISHED BY MESSRS. RIVINGTON, ST. PAUL'S CHURCH YARD, AND WATERLOO PLACE, PALL MALL. There are Keys to those works ONLY to which † is prefixed. Every application for KEYS must contain: (1) a post-paid letter to Messrs. Rivington, 3, Waterloo Place, London: (2) enclosed in a post-paid letter to the Rev. T. K. Arnold, Lyndon, Uppingham, containing a clear statement of the ground on which the application is founded. [Works that are bracketed together may be studied at or about the same stage of a pupil's progress.] 2. Companion to the First Verse Book, containing additional Historiæ Antiquæ Epitome 3. A Second Verse Book (being Mr. Rapier's Introduction, Ecloga Ovidianæ..... Practical Introduction to Latin Prose Composition, Pt. I. ...... + Cornelius Nepos, with Critical Questions and Imitative Exercises VIRGILII ENEIS, lib. I-VI. .... 4. Eclogæ Horatianæ. Pars I. (Carmina) Ecloga Horatianæ. Pars II. (Sermones) Practical Introduction to Latin Prose Composition (continued). + Practical Introduction to Latin Verse Composition 2 ...... 0000 4255 SELECTIONS FROM CICERO, WITH ENGLISH NOTES. Part I. (Orations) 1 4 0 VIRGIL (continued). 5. Ecloga Horatianæ, I. (continued). + Practical Introduction to Latin Prose Composition, Pt. II.... 2 Practical Introduction to Latin Verse Composition (continued). HANDBOOK OF ROMAN ANTIQUITIES ELLISIAN EXERCISES (adapted to the Practical Introduction, Ellisian Exercises at any time in 3 or 4, for pupils who Greek Grammar (intended as a sufficient Grammar of reference for the higher forms) (2nd Edition in the press) This Work is published by Messrs. Longman & Co., the original publishers of Mr. Rapier's work. 2 A Key to this Work is in preparation. 3 This Work is published by the proprietors of Ellis's Latin Exercises. 1 REV. T. K. ARNOLD'S WORKS (continued). Edition Price. COPIOUS AND CRITICAL ENGLISH-LATIN LEXICON, founded "A very slight inspection of it will show that it aims at a THE CHRISTOLOGY OF THE OLD TESTAMENT, and Commentary THE CHURCHMAN'S COMPANION, containing a great variety of SHORT HELPS TO DAILY DEVOTION, selected and arranged for ANNALES New Work on Ancient Chronology. VETERUM REGNORUM ET POPULORUM, imprimis Romanorum, confecti à C. T. ZUMPTIO. Librum utilissimum ad editionem alteram ab ipso Zumptio auctam et emendatam typis describendum curavit T. K. ARNOLD, M.A., Coll. SS. Trinitatis apud Cantabrig. quondam Socius. 12mo. 5s. Nearly ready. HOMER'S ILIAD. Books I-IV.: with a Critical Introduction, and copious English Notes (in the press). SELECTIONS from CICERO, with English Notes. Part II. Epistles (in the press). (In preparation). SELECTIONS from XENOPHON, THUCYDIDES, DEMOSTHENES, and ESCHINES, with Short English Notes, and References to Mr. Arnold's new Greek Grammar, are in the press. By the Rev. H. H. Arnold. DOEDERLEIN'S HAND-BOOK of LATIN SYNONYMES. 78. 6d. The ITALIAN ANALYST ; or, the Essentials of Italian Grammar, and their application in Parsing. 3s. 6d. GOSPEL EXTRACTS for YOUNG CHILDREN. 38. By the Rev. C. Arnold. BOY'S ARITHMETIC, Part I. 3s. 6d. + Ditto, Part II. 3s. 6d. OR, SELECTIONS FROM THE ROMAN HISTORIANS; BEING THE LAST PART OF THE LATEINISCHES ELEMENTARBUCH BY F. JACOBS AND F. W. DOERING. EDITED BY THE REV. THOMAS KERCHEVER ARNOLD, M.A. RECTOR OF LYNDON, AND LATE FELLOW OF TRINITY COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE. LONDON: FRANCIS & JOHN RIVINGTON, ST. PAUL'S CHURCH YARD, AND WATERLOO PLACE. PREFACE. THE following work is the last Part of the popular ‘Lateinisches Elementarbuch' by Jacobs and Döring. As a separate volume of that work, it bears the title of 'Klio der Römer. I have excluded from it the Selections from Cæsar, being of opinion that, from the admirable style of that author, the whole, or a very large part, of his works should be read at school. The following Selections will, I think, be found a useful school-book; containing as much of each author as can well be read in school without taking up a part of the time that should be devoted to Cæsar and Cicero. The principles on which the compiler (F. Jacobs) made his selections, were those of choosing such episodes as would form each a whole, and not interfere with the study of the entire works; and of preferring those that illustrate foreign, rather than Roman, institutions, customs, deeds, and modes of thought,-leaving the latter to a connected perusal of whole authors in the higher classes. The Notes are by that elegant scholar, F. Jacobs. His reasons for writing them in Latin in this volume (those of the preceding volumes and the Preface to this volume being in German), are these: 'is so far advanced as to be able to When the pupil read these Selec |