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Terribilis: Tune hinc spoliis indute meorum
Eripiare mihi? Pallas te hoc volnere, Pallas
Immolat, et poenam scelerato ex sanguine sumit.
Hoc dicens ferrum adverso sub pectore condit
Fervidus. Ast illi solvuntur frigore membra,
Vitaque cum gemitu fugit indignata umbras.

950

CANTABRIGIAE: TYPIS ACADEMICIS.

Bibliotheca Classica.

A SERIES OF GREEK AND LATIN

AUTHORS.

WITH ENGLISH NOTES. 8vo.

EDITED BY VARIOUS SCHOLARS, UNDER THE DIRECTION OF G. LONG, ESQ. M.A. CLASSICAL LECTURER OF BRIGHTON COLLEGE AND THE REV. A. J. MACLEANE, M.A. HEAD MASTER OF KING EDWARD'S SCHOOL,

BATH.

Juvenal and Persius. By the late REV. A. J. MACLEANE, M.A. Trinity College, Cambridge. 148.

Terence. By the REV. E. ST. J. PARRY, M.A. Balliol College, Oxford. 188.

Herodotus. By the REV. J. W. BLAKESLEY, B.D. late Fellow and Tutor of Trinity College, Cambridge. 2 vols. 328. The Clio separately, 58.

Cicero's Orations. Edited by G. LONG, ESQ. M.A. 4 vols. Vol. I. 168.; Vol. II. 148.; Vol. III. 168.; Vol. IV. 188.

Horace. By the late REV. A. J. MACLEANE,

M.A. 188.

Eschylus. By F. A. PALEY, M.A. 18s.

Euripides. By F. A. PALEY, M.A.

and II. 16s. each. Vol. III. in the press.

Vols. I.

Virgil. By J. CONINGTON, M.A. Professor of

Latin at Oxford. Vol. I. containing the Bucolics and
Georgics. 128. Vol. II. preparing.

Sophocles. By the REV. F. H. BLAYDES, M.A. [Preparing.

66

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Plato. Vol. I. containing "The Gorgias," 'Phædrus," and "Symposium." By the REV. W. H. THOMPSON, M.A. Regius Professor of Greek in the University of Cambridge.

[Preparing. Tacitus. By the REV. G. BUTLER, M.A. Exeter College, Oxford.

[Preparing. Demosthenes. By the REV. R. WHISTON, M.A.

Head Master of Rochester Grammar School. Vol. I. 168.

A COMPLETE GREEK GRAMMAR.

SECOND EDITION, VERY MUCH ENLARGED,

AND ADAPTED FOR THE USE OF UNIVERSITY STUDENTS.

BY THE REV. J. W. DONALDSON, D.D.
8vo. 168.

This enlarged Edition has been prepared with the intention of placing within the reach of Students at the Universities, and in the highest classes at Schools, a Manual of Instruction and Reference, which without exceeding the limits of the most popular Works of the kind would exhibit a more exact and philosophical arrangement of the materials than any similar book; would connect itself more immediately with the researches of comparative Philologers; and would contain the sort of information which the Author's long experience as a Teacher and Examiner has indicated to him as most likely to meet the actual wants of those who are engaged in the critical study of the best Greek authors.

Without being formally based on any German Work, it has been written with constant reference to the latest and most esteemed of Greek Grammars used on the Continent.

CAMBRIDGE: DEIGHTON, BELL AND CO.
LONDON: BELL AND DALDY.

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870

que horrore comae, et vox faucibus haesit. procul ut Dirae stridorem adgnovit et alas, felix crinis scindit Iuturna solutos, Unguibus ora soror foedans et pectora pugnis: Quid nunc te tua, Turne, potest germana iuvare? Aut quid iam durae superat mihi? qua tibi lucem Arte morer? talin' possum me opponere monstro? Iam iam linquo acies. Ne me terrete timentem, 875 Obscenae volucres; alarum verbera nosco

Letalemque sonum; nec fallant iussa superba Magnanimi Iovis. Haec pro virginitate reponit? Quo vitam dedit aeternam? cur mortis adempta est Condicio? possem tantos finire dolores

880

885

Nunc certe, et misero fratri comes ire per umbras.
Inmortalis ego aut quicquam mihi dulce meorum
Te sine, frater, erit? O quae satis alta dehiscat
Terra mihi, Manisque deam demittat ad imos!
Tantum effata, caput glauco contexit amictu,
Multa gemens, et se fluvio dea condidit alto.
Aeneas instat contra telumque coruscat,
Ingens, arboreum, et saevo sic pectore fatur:
Quae nunc deinde mora est? aut quid iam, Turne,
retractas?

895

Non cursu, saevis certandum est comminus armis. 890
Verte omnis tete in facies, et contrahe, quidquid
Sive animis sive arte vales; opta ardua pennis
Astra sequi, clausumque cava te condere terra.
Ille caput quassans: Non me tua fervida terrent
Dicta, ferox: di me terrent et Iuppiter hostis.
Nec plura effatus, saxum circumspicit ingens,
Saxum antiquum, ingens campo quod forte iacebat,
Limes agro positus, litem ut discerneret arvis;
Vix illud lecti bis sex cervice subirent.
Qualia nunc hominum producit corpora tellus;
Ille manu raptam trepida torquebat in hostem,
Altior insurgens et cursu concitus heros.
Sed neque currentem se nec cognoscit euntem,
Tollentemve manu saxumque inmane moventem;
Genua labant, gelidus concrevit frigore sanguis.
Tum lapis ipse viri, vacuum per inane volutus,

900

905

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