A Handbook for Latin Clubs | Page 6

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in the Senate. Harriet Waters Preston. Atlantic Monthly. Vol. lxi, p. 641.
CICERO, THE WIT. Cicero as a Wit. W.L. Collins. Chautauqua. Vol. xi, P. 377. Cicero as a Wit. Francis W. Kelsey. Classical Journal. Vol. iii, p. 3. Roman Life in the Days of Cicero. Alfred J. Church. P. 197. Foreign Classics in English. William Cleaver Wilkinson, Vol. iv, p. 235. Humor Repeats Itself. Irene Nye. Classical Journal. Vol. ix, p. 154.
CICERO, THE EXILE. _Rome: The Eternal City_. Clara Erskine Clement. Vol. ii, p. 621. Roman Life in the Days of Cicero. Alfred J. Church. Chap. x.
THE PROSECUTION OF ARCHIAS. Richard Wellington Husband. Classical Weekly. Vol. ix, p. 165.
A COMPARISON: CICERO AND DEMOSTHENES. Illustrated History of Ancient Literature. John D. Quackenbos. P. 286. Foreign Classics in English. William Cleaver Wilkinson. Vol. iv, p. 487.
CICERO IN MAINE. Martha Baker Dunn. Atlantic Monthly. Vol. xciii, p. 253.
DEBATE: Resolved that Cicero was justified in putting the Catilinarian conspirators to death. The conviction of Lentulus. H.C. Nutting. Classical Journal. Vol. iii, p. 186. Catiline as a Party Leader. E.S. Beesly. Fortnightly Review. Vol. i, p. 175.
THE DEATH OF CICERO. _Rome: The Eternal City_. Clara Erskine Clement. Vol. ii, p. 624.

VERGIL
"The noble sage who knew everything." --Dante
SONG.--Opening Lines of the Aeneid. An Experiment with the Opening Lines of the Aeneid. J. Raleigh Nelson. School Review. Vol. vii, p. 129. Dido. An Epic Tragedy. Miller and Nelson. P. 57.
VERGIL. Outline for the Study of Vergil's Aeneid. Maud Emma Kingsley. Education. Vol. xxiii, p. 148. Vergil. Harper and Miller. Introduction.
IN VERGIL'S ITALY. Frank Justus Miller. Chautauqua. Vol. xxxiv, p. 368.
DIDO: A Character Study. J. Raleigh Nelson. School Review. Vol. xii, p. 408. Vergil. Harper and Miller.
VERGIL'S ESTIMATE OF HIS ?NEID. _Rome: The Eternal City_. Clara Erskine Clement. Vol. ii, P. 636.
POEM.--The Doom of the Slothful. John Addington Symonds.
ESSAY.--Paris and Helen. Adventures among Books. Andrew Lang. P. 235, or Cosmopolitan. Vol. xviii, p. 173.
LEGENDS CONNECTED WITH VERGIL. A History of Roman Literature. Charles Thomas Cruttwell. P. 278.
VERGIL IN MAINE. Martha Baker Dunn. Atlantic Monthly. Vol. c, p. 773.
VERGIL'S INFLUENCE. On Teaching Vergil. H.H. Yeames. School Review. Vol. xx, p. 1.
A TRAVESTY ON THE TAKING OF TROY. Roba di Roma. William W. Story. P. 186. North American Review. Vol. xcvii, p. 255.
ST. PAUL'S VISIT TO VERGIL'S TOMB. _Rome: The Eternal City_. Clara Erskine Clement. Vol. ii, p. 640.
POEM.--To Vergil. Poetical Works. Alfred Tennyson. P. 511. _Littell's Living Age_. Vol. clv, p. 2.

HORACE
"Exegi monumentum acre perennius regalique situ pyramidum altius." --Horace. Carmina. III, xxx.
HORACE. Horace: Person and Poet. Grant Showerman. Classical Journal. Vol. vi, p. 158. A History of Roman Literature. Charles Thomas Cruttwell. P. 515.
A GLIMPSE OF HORACE'S SCHOOLDAYS. Roman Life in the Days of Cicero. Alfred J. Church. P. 39. Readings in Ancient History. Rome and the West. William Stearns Davis. P. 227.
POEM.--Capri. Walter Taylor Field.
AN INVITATION FROM HORACE TO VERGIL FOR DINNER. Foreign Classics in English. Vol. iv. William Cleaver Wilkinson. P. 183.
SOME TRANSLATIONS OF HORACE'S ODES. _Blackwood's Magazine_. Vol. civ, p. 150.
POEM.--The Sabine Farm. Michael Monahan. Current Literature. Vol. xlviii, p. 344.
A DIALOGUE FROM HORACE.--The Bore. Sat. i, 9. A Day in Ancient Rome. Edgar S. Shumway. P. 51. Masterpieces of Latin Literature. Gordon J. Laing. P. 295.
POEM.--I sing of myself. (Horace. Book ii, Ode xx.) Louis Untermeyer. Century Magazine. Vol. lxiv, p. 960.
POEM.--Byron's Farewell to Horace. Childe Harold. Byron. Canto iv, lxxvii.

ROMAN LITERATURE
"Haec studia adulescentiam alunt, senectutem oblectant, secundas res ornant, adversis perfugium ac solacium praebent, delectant domi, non impediunt foris, pernoctant nobiscum, peregrinantur, rusticantur." --Cicero. Pro Archia Poeta, vii.
ROLL CALL.--Gems of Latin Thought. Illustrated History of Ancient Literature. John D. Quackenbos. P. 425.
LATIN MOTTOES AND PROVERBS. Latin Lessons. M.L. Smith. P. 212.
THE LITERATURE OF ROME. Society in Rome under the Caesars. William Ralph Inge. Chap. v. Latin Literature. Nelson G. McCrea. Classical Weekly. Vol. v, p. 194.
CHILDREN IN ROMAN LITERATURE. Childhood in Literature and Art. Horace E. Scudder. Chap. ii, p. 6.
THE CALENDAR. How the Roman Spent his Year. William F. Allen. _Lippincott's Magazine_. Vol. xxxiii, p. 447. The Ancient City. Fustel De Coulanges. P. 212.
MUSIC IN ANCIENT ROME. Society in Rome under the Caesars. William Ralph Inge. Chap. v.
ROMAN FOLK-LORE. Second Latin Book. Miller and Beeson. P. 52.
ODE TO APOLLO. Complete Poetical Works. Keats. P. 7.

SOME FAMOUS WOMEN OF ANCIENT ROME
"A marked feature of the Roman character, a peculiarity which at once strikes the student of their history as compared with that of the Greeks was their great respect for the home and the mater familias." --Eugene Hecker
THE ROMAN MATRON. The Private Life of the Romans. H.W. Johnston. Chap. vii. The Life of the Greeks and Romans. Guhl and Koner. P. 482.
THE WOMEN OF CICERO'S TIME. Social Life at Rome in the Age of Cicero. W. Warde Fowler. P. 150. A Friend of Caesar. William Stearns Davis. Chap. vi, p. 104.
THE WOMEN OF
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