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COLLOQUIA
LATINA.
ADAPTED TO THE
BEGINNERS' BOOKS
JONES, LEIGHTON,
DAN1ELL.
BY
BENJAMIN
L.
D'OOGE,
M.A.,
BOSTON JnIVERSITY
COLLEGE F LIBERAL ARTS
LIBRARY
BOSTON,
D. C.
U.S.A.,
HEATH & CO
CO., PUBLISHERS.
fc
1890.
c>^
Copyright, 1888, by
BENJAMIN
L.
D'OOGE.
PA
en
PREFACE.
This
book
little
tested
by actual
the outgrowth of
is
own
author in his
classes,
use.
Its
aim
It
twofold
is
first,
most needed
is
it
increased thoroughness.
second, to insure
exhila-
ration to
Latin.
and
it
is
very
difficult for
young pupils
to interest
spirit
of reality and
themselves
abundant concrete
in
life
them.
expended
indeed,
it
for
The
and the
the
time
better,
The more complete mastery of grammar and vocabulary makes this increase in the amount accomadded than without
it.
plished possible.
It
will
thoroughness.
and accent,
to
It
is
make
sure to promote
pronunciation
It
is
make them.
Though
accom-
Preface.
be used to advantage
in
The
obvi-
to
The author
may
that he
tion,
and
made
excellence of the
feels
welcome any
will gladly
on whatever may
criticism
The
and
much grammatical
derivatives,
and
also contain
edgment
lish
is
here
made
to
Abbotfs
Eng-
Acknowl-
Glossarium
their
pages
Grammaticum," the
11
use
a few forms of
for
and
to
the
last
of which
for
was
the.
kindly
granted.
It
suggestions and
criticisms
especially to Prof.
H.
in
S. Frieze,
the
many
preparation of
LL.D. and
scholars
Prof. Elisha
Jones
for
book,
this
M.
Prof.
to L. C. Hull,
and
J.
Mich.,
who rendered
BENJAMIN
Michigan State Normal School,
June, 1888.
L.
D'OOGE.
INDEX COLLOQUIORUM.
PAGINA.
I.
Puella et Matrona
Dominus
Servus
et
III.
Ancilla et Cassius
9
10
IV.
Pater et Filius
12
II.
V. Nuntius
VI. Frater
VII.
VIII.
Patres
X.
XII.
XIII.
Simo
et
16
Chremes
Magister et Discipulus
Duo
et
21
Discipulus
28
30
XV. Miles
et
et
Hercules
et CIvis
XVIII. Mater
...
Romanus
et Nepos in Itinere
XXI. Magister et Discipulus
XXII. Duo Sodales, Nasica Enniusque
XXIII. Cyclops et Galatea
32
34
36
Tullia
XX. Avus
XXVIII.
24
26
Magister
Duo
18
19
Amicus
Pater et Filius
XIV. Charon
XIX.
14
Sorocula
et
IX. Princeps
XI.
Imperator
et
3$
4
42
44
47
49
51
53
56
58
60
62
64
67
i.
you think you know its meaning but do not translate it into
English, for you must learn to read and understand Latin in the
natural order of its words and thoughts without an artificial rearrangement into the English order.
;
When
i.e.
into
it
good
Remember
termination.
word
is its
may
all
involve.
review.
cise
'
The
ABBREVIATIONS.
A.
&
and Greenough's
Grammar.
G., Allen
Inf.,
Latin
J., Jones.
Act., Active,
compare.
cf., confer,
&
Infinitive.
lit., literally.
Pass., Passive.
Ex., Exercise.
Pres., Present.
Eng\, English.
N.B.
&
Daniell's,
ing in parenthesis are to the lessons teaching the required syntax. Since,
however, the notes are designed to clear up all syntactical difficulties, any
exercise may be successfully used after the requirements indicated by the
first reference have been met
COLLOQUIUM PRIMUM.
Lesson II
J.
li.
Lesson II
C.
& D.
28.
Puella et Matrona.
where
P.
is
Ub^es^Galba?
away
far
M.
P.
Estne 4 in Italia?
no indeed
M. Minime
P.
est.
Ubi
est
at
Geneva
Genavae
vero,
Nonne 5
Genava?
M. Minime
est.
vero, in Helvetia
in provincia
Genava
which
P.
M.
est?
est.
leads
Via longa
est
what
P.
Romana 6
Quae
et
per angustias et
silvas ducit.
of inhabitants
my
M. Lingua
incolarum
in
est.
The
is
obvious
Colloqina Latina.
8
2.
The
sum, I am.
he
sumus, we are.
you are.
estis,
is.
s, t,
pronouns.
3.
4.
What
What
& G. 210, a, c.
Romana is an adjective
1, n. 1,
6.
is
ne and nonne?
H. 351,
A.
What
modifying provincia.
its
noun?
neva.
fore says
relative clause is
9.
There
is
no word
in Latin
longa?
Is the
ducit.
implied in English
way
long?
it is
Rule
Whenever a
expressed in Latin.
meaning simply/^ or
usually repeated, e.g.
is
Hat, /I
In
no.
Estne via
is.
in
for
quidem
for
No
non,
Answer
Nonne Genava
Nonne est
Romana?
Genavae
in
Helvetia provincia
Italia?
at
home.
procul est?
Suntne
in-
Estne
Colloquium Secundum,
COLLOQUIUM SECUNDUM.
J.
Domiims 1
halloa
!
2
Ubi equus meus
D.
S.
4
Sane, et copia aquae
S.
D. 51.
et Servus.
Heus, serve
D.
&
4-^
est
which
Z>.
est.
est,
bona
cold
Aqua
5.
bona
agri
D. Unde aqua
est et frlgida.
est ?
which
fluvio est qui per
river
Aqua ex
5.
7
D. Amatne equus
Equus
fluit.
both
S.
agrum
et fluvium
amat
et silvas
quae in
ripis sunt.
Cf,
Eng. domineer.
the meaning.
exercise.
For meaning, cf. mea in the first
attach itself?
To what word in a sentence does ne usually
n.
Ex.
1,
9.
see
4. For meaning
Is there
bona is a predicate adjective modifying aqua.
5
think it
you
make
would
which
bona
anything about the form of
agro
?
with
than
rather
aqua
goes with
3.
Colio quia
io
6.
The
Latvia.
7.
The
What does
t.
that
tell
amo, I love.
amamus, we
am as,
amatis, you
amant, they
thou lovest.
amat, he
as to
2.
loves.
is
love.
love.
love.
What seems
Answer
Nonne
to
aqua
agrum
fluit?
frlgida in agro?
1
Suntne silvae
in ripis
A.
&
G. 40,
b.
fluvi
Cf.
Estne
in fluvio est?
Eng.
isle.
COLLOQUIUM TERTIUM.
J.
C.
&
maid-servant
Ancilla et Cassius.
door
C.
(Ante januam})
hail
Salve
Salve
who 2
C.
Cassius
dominus domi?
Estne
1!
Colloquium Tcrtium.
garden
C.
A.
C.
est,
is
walking
unfortunate
Me
miserum 8
Ita est,
et via
Ambulatne
solus in horto an
cum
aliis?
Charles
Carolo 6 ambulat.
A.
Non
C.
solus sed
A. Sane,
et
rosarum plenus 7
est.
est.
rosas
amas?
is
red
a rose
est
ex domini horto
Cassio dat?)
I
C.
Nonne
exceedingly
red
C.
cum puero
Ago
thank you
good by
tibi gratias.
Vale
Cfi
their construction?
Does
one?
we may say either " full of" or " filled with " so
in Latin we have either plenus rosarum, full of'roses, or plenus
rosis, filled with roses, though the former mode of expression is
the usual Roman way of looking at it.
By what cases are <?/"and
7.
In English
Colloquia Latum.
12
8.
lit.
The
Answer
What
used
for
9.
For the
case
Estne Cassius
Nonne
amicus domini?
pulcher est?
1
is
indirect object?
quid, what.
hortus
COLLOQUIUM QUARTUM.
J.
Pater et
my
F. Nonne, mi
pater,
Sane quidem, mi
&
D. 89.
me
P.
C.
Filius.
to
fill,
you
tibi
fabulam narrabo.
Amasne 3
F.
all
Maxime
indeed
vero, fabulas
therefore
P.
Ergo
tibi
in
Grecian
bello
F.
Quis
P.
Vir Dieneces
erat
erat.
vir?
who 9
when
cum
et
in
Graecorum numero
erat.
Qui
had said
adversarius
10
Numerus telorum
Colloquium Quartinn.
13
shade
of our
10
10
10
nostrorum solem obscurabit," respondit, "In umbra ergo
pugnabimus."
F.
responsum
10
bonum clarumque
mi
is
pronoun of the
2.
3.
mon
On
Do
first
person, raeus, a,
H.
51, 5
A.
um
&
G. 40,
c.
sense.
5.
its
antecedent
m gender,
Inflected,
eramus, we were.
eratis, you were.
erat, he was.
eram, I was.
9.
10.
refers to Dieneces.
is
" Old Sol" obscure, respo?id, respotise.
adversary,
Eng.
Cf.
qui
Be prepared
books closed:
either to ask or to
Quis fabulam
filio
tibi ?
Nonne
Genitive case.
Colloquia Latlna.
14
COLLOQUIUM QUINTUM.
J.
Wesson XVI;
!L.
et Imperator.
Nuntius
N.
Salve
Salve, imperator
&
J>.
103.
thou
Et tu
/.
N. In
castris
Ubi
/.
Ubi
salve, nuntl.
castra
fuisti?
Germanorum.
Germanorum sunt?
N. Castra Germanorum
trans
Rhenum
Bellum
sunt
et
magnum
in
copias
3
pop-
4
ulum Romanum comparabunt.
I
/.
am undone
Peril
lum nostrum
et
magnum pencu-
est.
to
6
7
N. Non quidem f sed multi populi juvabant atque
arma
/.
et carros et
equos dabant.
Miserum me
soli
et
murum 8
altum
perhaps
N. Et
them
iis
Ago
_
tibi gratias.
Vale.
tu vale, imperator.
The
of these nouns.
Colloquium Quiutum.
2.
This
is
What
&
inflected
fuimus,
ful,
A.
sum,
15
fuiati,
fuistis,
fuit,
fuerunt, or -ere.
See H. 471,
I, II
G. 279.
3.
in
4.
Cf.
is
Eng.
5.
See Ex.
6.
Cf.
7.
What
Eng. against.
pre/tare, ftauciiy.
I, n. 9.
Eng.
is
ad/// tor.
the force of
atque
as distinguished from et or
que?
8.
Cf.
Eng. mural,
Be prepared
books closed
edifice,
import.
either to ask or to
Ubi nuntius
fuerat?
Nonne German!
hostes 1 populo
Romano
fuerunt?
Ubi German!
Germania? Num 2
copias convocabant?
German!
sol!
Latme 4 ?
1
hostes = enemies.
Remember that just
not the
as
nonne
in
so
Nonne
vir
answer no;
Est.
bonus est ?
bonus
man good?
est
isn't good, is
e.g.
Is
Yes.
Non
he?
Num vir
est.
No.
Anglice = in English.
Latine = in Latin.
The man
Colloquia Latvia.
COLLOQUIUM SEXTUM.
J.
XIX
Lesson
C.
&
. 134.
Frater et Sororcula. 1
to-day
school
S.
Fuistme in ludo, mi
F.
Sane
mea
fui,
Magister,
S.
frater,
sororcula.
suppose
credo, morosus
Numquam
F. Minime.
hodie?
erat.
morosus
est,
benlgnus semper, 4
nice
5
atque hodie fabulam gratam discipulis narravit.
indeed
Itane?
S.
Mihi, care
frater,
fabulam narra.
Fuitne de
leone ?
Minime vero
F.
claro
S.
Roman!
imperatore.
Nonne Caesar
F. Amavit
^S".
F.
erat,
Sine dubio
fuit
Erravisti,
mea
vir.
sororcula;
to his foes
to be sure
hostibus
quidem
malus
Galliam
then
Haec
de leone.
interest
this
fabula
me non
delectat.
rather
Potius narra,
please
amabo
te,
Colloquium Scxtum.
De
est.
_ _ _._
leone postea narrabo.
too late
F. Sero
17
good-night
Optime
vale.
cuius, cula, or
2.
Cf.
Eng. master.
The Eng.
3.
What
5.
6.
cases.
Although
7.
of the
number
st conj.
2d
conj., still
tell its
and
correctly.
8.
your knowledge
tense, person,
done
is
is
put in the
Ablative
ablative case without a preposition, called the
or Instrument.
9. amabo te
lit.
shall like
you = Eng.
please,
of Means
I pray.
Be prepared
books closed:
either to ask or to
Nonne in ludo, ml
quds 1 est colloquium sextum?
Estne fabula,
Estne tuus 2 magister morosus?
Caesar? Da
fuit
Julius
Quis
quam 3 magister narrat, de leSne?
4
Galliam
Quis
Instrument!.
ablatlv5
de
regulam
mihi Anglice
Inter
amice, fulsti?
to tarn superavit ?
Quid
2
est "
tuus,
w hom.
ablatlvus Instrument! =
your.
ablative of
quam = which.
means or instrument.
Colio quia
Latma.
COLLOQUIUM SEPTIMUM.
Lesson XXII
J.
L,.
Lesson XIII,
(L.VI)
C.
&
D. 148.
S.
es ?
because
Quod/ Simo,
C.
filius
dat.
S.
Doleo.
C.
Et malus
troublesome
over him
et molestus est.
Auctoritatem in
eum
nul-
lam habeo.
Meus quoque 2
^.
filius,
cum pudore 3
he was cured
sed miro
modo
heaven's
in
sanatus est.
name
rightly
C.
modum
amicum
recte
ambulabat
cum
numerum
spec-
s! te
appello. 4
S.
gladly
once
Libenter.
Forte
meus,
filius
qvK
of asses
pueris
alils,
mulierem
et
audaciae
Filius plenus
tavit.
asellorum
" Heus,
"
magnum
ml
fill
asellorum
exclamavit,
Sanatus
by these hard
est his
C/.
Ex.
the
II,
part of speech
same form?
is
it
(Ex.
there?
What
Ill, n. 2.)
here?
What
third
Whav
use oi
Colloquium Octavum.
Notice the position.
2.
It
never stands
19
and
first
it
emphasizes
Observe that
3.
the
this phrase,
This
question how.
When
is
and miro
modo
below, answer
the Ablative of
called
it
requires
cum.
Manner.
Here we
si te
objects
te
amicum
is
appello.
amicum, which
used?
6.
See H. yj^,
audaciae.
Ex.
Cf.
is
predicated
of course, in the
is,
same
A. & G. 239, a.
In what case? What other case might be
1
Ill, n. 7.
Eng. exclaim.
7.
8.
What
Be prepared
books closed:
n. 9.
the construction?
is
either
to ask or to
Nonne
Da
respondit?
Num
audaciae es?
1
modi, of manner.
COLLOQUIUM OCTAVUM.
J.
Lesson
XXV;
L. Lesson
XIV;
C.
&
X.
179.
Magister et Discipulus.
M. Quid
in penso,
mi
discipule, est?
review
D. Pensum
recognitio
plenus
20
Colloqida
Latma.
how many
decllnationes 3 Latlnae sunt?
M. Quot
D.
M.
Ita sunt
I
D.
now
to the
M. Nunc ad
nam
tertia
dlligentia superabis.
defessus et abjectus
work
what
opus
sum.
gender
Quae de genere
est
weary
for
Ita spero,
autem
et exceptiones sunt.
tamen magna
hope
regulae sunt?
narrabo.
Nomina 9
si
10
in
sunt
11
generis masculini.
very well
M. Optime
D. Nomina
12
Nunc
in do et go,
si
habent terminationem
nomina
inis in
in to generis
feminini sunt.
you remember well
well
M.
Narras probe
Bene memoria
tenes.
13
in this exercise.
Use
Used here
5.
6.
7.
Cf.
2.
3.
4.
Cf.
n. 1.
Eng. regular.
Colloquium Nonum.
8.
Cf.
9.
The
10.
Cf.
Eng.
dejected.
first
meaning
Eng.
increase.
is
name.
7101m
21
is
a name.
This
is
sum
is
of
Possession.
Eng. optimist.
you hold well by memory:
See Ex. VI, n. 8.
of memoria?
12.
Cf.
13.
Lit.
Be prepared
books closed
either to ask
or to
What
is
the construction
Quid hodie
in
bene memoria?
1
which.
COLLOQUIUM NONUM.
J. Lesson
XXVIII;
C.
&
I. VII)
Princeps et Amicus.
of this
P.
Nonne
A. Certe
lant.
est Cassius,
elves appel-
Colloqtna Latvia.
22
then
2
Cives igitur longe errant, praeest enim urbi Orbilius.
P.
him
pray.
do not know
3
A. Itane? Quis tandem Orbilius est? Ego eum non novl.
only
Ego
P.
viro
tantum
fortuito
met
occurri.
Fabulamne
tibi
narrabo ?
indeed
te.
city-walls
P.
Ita fuit.
umbra
Prope
occupabam.
fuit,
lapide
pulchramque
esse.
sedem, quae
in
in
me autem
vir alienus
said
alieno 8 dixi
Ego
fuit.
solis,
bona
est,
dominum
appellas?
Ego enim,
he
non
iste,
10
how
possum."
"
Quomodo? "
rogavi.
"
Ego sum
Orbilius
mag-
said he
et
"
Ego
sum
rather than
potius
quam
Cassius."
ciples,
Colloquium Nonunt.
All the
2.
23
We
3.
verb take the place of the personal pronouns, but the latter are
expressed when
we wish
Try
emphasis or contrast.
to indicate
Cf Eng. fortuitously.
6.
Cf.
7.
Cf.
8.
9.
esse
Eng.
Eng.
perceiving,
is
caloric.
alien.
infinitive is
sum.
require the
the accusative.
inji?iitive,
"
;
but in Latin
broad
The
is
we
say, "
to be
regarded in the
we
we have no
said the way
to be is
an
infinitive.
it
first
is
differ-
In English
viam
is
infinitive,
we have another,
hence, above,
Verbs of inco7nplete
an English usage.
predication co?nplete their predicate with an infinitive, e.g. Possum regnare, / a?n able TO reign. Here / am able requires
another action of the same subject to complete its predicate, and
which corresponds
an
to
want
in each language.
Colloquia Latina.
24
COLLOQUIUM DECIMUM.
J.
Lesson
XXXI
XXXIV,
L. Lesson
Duo
(I/VI)
C.
&
D. 199,
p. 34, n. 2.
F.
P.
pavit ?
all
Novum
F.
animls
fuit.
P.
Itane?
Punicum
bellum
in
mentibus 3 omnibus
et
again
Estne iterum
F. Scipio
dicit
belli
periculum?
Carthago,
twenty
mighty
urbs
magna
to
tres
et valida,
renew
viginti
contest
5
annos redintegrare
certamen parat.
Roman! quoque 6
P.
Erunt.
F.
Cato a consule
P.
F. Per deos
I
you know
by the gods
!
nonne Catonis
nosti sententiam?
do not know.
astonished
P.
F.
Attonitus
Cur tandem
tu
tam
attonitus es?
this
tiam ignoras.
sum quod
tu senator
as often as
so often
toties,
must be destroyed
in
extrema oratione,
dicit,
"Ergo delenda
est
Carthago."
Colloquium Decimum.
25
6.
7.
Construction?
8.
Remember
n. 2.
person, and the other the thing, retain the accusative of the thing
in the passive, the accusative of the person
ject
Act.
e.g.
opinion.
Catonem sententiam
Pass.
rogat,
He
asked his
opinion.
9. Whenever the preposition by is followed by a proper
noun or a word meaning a person or persons, it is expressed by
a or ab and the ablative this is called the Ablative of Agent.
This construction must be carefully distinguished from the Ablative of Means, which does not refer to persons, and which omits
;
the preposition.
Be prepared
books closed:
Nonne
either to ask or to
Flaccum et Pisonem?
Quid mentem tuam occupat?
nostl senatores
concilio nonfuit?
thago?
Ouot
bella
Punica fuerunt?
Cur Piso in
Ubi est CarQuis Scipio fuit?
Esne
tonis
an
in
ablativo
agentis?
Colloquia Latma.
26
COLLOQUIUM UNDECIMUM.
J.
Lesson
XXXV;
L. Lesson
XXXV
Pater
XXXVIII;
to
C.
&
D. 204, 298.
et Filius.
how
ft.
Me
P.
Cur, ml
F.
Quod, care
miserum
Quam
x
!
tam
fill,
defessus
sum
tristis es ?
to learn
sum.
pater,
quam me
lingua Latlna,
meum
pensum
turbas
discere
non pos-
4
!
book
Ad me 5
P.
Magister quidem
F.
Ubi pensum
est?
pri-
these
7
imperavit, sed haec sunt mihi enigma.
why
9
Nonne est villa regula?
P. Quid 8 enigma dicis?
mae
strange to say
F.
O
Per deos
P.
est.
here
stupid
this
non
explicabo. 13
verbum
capitis
Ago
tibi,
pater, gratias.
_
habeo. Vero
iter
Nunc
appellatur."
intellego.
Exempli
F.
sed
understand
is
Eccam
P. Paucis
sunt
which
regulam ipsam 11
F.
10
est
gratia
14
hortor
significat
/ ex-
deponens verbum.
intellego,
wisdom
dolorem autem
est.
Colloquium Undecimum.
27
See Ex.
2.
What
3.
Give construction.
4.
Cf.
Ill, n. 3.
other meaning
as an adverb?
9.
10.
It dieit
The
means he
says,
what ought
diets to
is
mean?
tuus,
a,
um
(like
bonus).
11.
12.
quod
ending show
13.
14.
it
is
What
to be here?
Eng. explicate.
For what does the
Cf.
Be prepared
books closed
common
either to ask or to
your.
28
Colloquia Latvia.
COLLOQUIUM DUODECIMUM.
J.
Lesson XXXVIII;
!L.
C.
&
D. 204.
Magister et Discipulus.
M.
Quae, 1 mi discipule,
in
D. Multa
et difficilia
decllnatio.
M.
D. Non
M.
est,
D. Genera
M. Quid
tria sunt.
D. Genus primum
M. Quid
alius, nul-
Quam
Sane.
tres terminationes in
nominatlvo habet.
de genere secundo ?
this
D. Hoc duas
minationem habet.
Imam
well done
for
M. Optime ml
puer
quid
tibi
penso ?
cellent!
of fun
if
you please
D.
Plus ludi 6
M.
si
for
D. Ago
ter-
tibi gratias,
magister
joy
weep
gaudio 7 lacrimo.
ex-
29
Colloquium Duodecimiim.
singular,
'
what
things.
The
meaning of tractare
first
handle, then to
Cf. Encr. tract
handle a
subject,
which means a
to drag, to
which means
manage,
to
to discuss, to treat.
treatise.
3.
is
as
nouns,
especially
in
the
plural.
What
4
c
use the
En
|
Llte al
case
Why
is it
do I weep?
Is there a
in?
Be prepared
books closed
Quae
in
after
Translate
either to ask or to
iectlvorum
adjectivorum sunt?
Unera
Quae
est
terminatiS in ablativo
TenesM memona
declinationis tertiae?
sin-ulari adjectivorum
parentes tibi plagas?
Dantne
causae?
ablativo
regulam de
Dantne magistri AmericanI
discipulis plagas?
Colloquia Latlna.
30
Lesson XLI
Duo
L. Lesson
XVII, (LV)
C.
&
D. 215.
S.
salve, viator.
J.
Et
tu salve, aliene.
S.
Mihi nomen
J.
Mihi nomen
Quod 3 nomen
est Smith.
Et
est tibi ?
tibi?
common
est Jones,
clarum nomen
commune 5
et
Esne Americanus?
multis hominibus.
English
S.
Minime.
benevolentia 6 Anglicus
sum.
J.
S.
y.
DI
in the
bom
world
quam Londinium
habemus.
S.
J.
Minime
vero.
altiores,
flumina
Anglia.
indeed
insult
S.
Tu
es
est
non hominibus.
J.
Nam
folly
stultitia laetatur.
hercle
Itaque
the truth
S.
31
don't
all
Noll
England
rogare
Americanum sententiam de
an Englishman
Nor
J.
Anglia.
3.
4.
Lit.
What name
is to
you t
This
and
It is
is
sometimes used
in other
e.g.
Eng. benevolence.
6.
7.
What
8.
What
9.
is
n. 7.
Cf.
Be prepared
books closed
either to ask or to
Quod nomen
Tnsulam habitant?
est tibi?
Estne benevolentia
Do
in ablatlvo agentis?
Nam
quam Londinium?
Nonne
1 soil.
Colloquia Latvia.
32
Lesson
XLIV
!L.
Charon
et Hercules.
C.
&
D. 232, 313.
ferryman
Ch.
Inferni
fluminis portitor
shades
5
et multas illustresque
by
6
umbras
my
ante hoc
fui,
such
numquam
boat
as
tempus talem
Heus, heus
vldi
Quis tu es
quid 9 tu
et
of the Styx
living
H. Ego sum
meus
ambulas?
Hercules,
Maximum
est.
I
filius
opus
me
Alcmenae
Juppiter pater
nunc
wish
10
me.
rumor
Ch.
Ego quidem
niintiat te
te
esse virum
maxime
terribilem
n
;
te
igitur hor-
besides
reo et timeo.
vivos
12
Stygem portare.
trans
H. At ego
te
sum
si
ad ripam ratem
autem me non
et, si
however
as a friend
movebis,
me numquam
et
juvabis,
Ch.
Per deos
nam
si
te
non
me miserum
H. Moneo
Ch.
si
te
33
portabo, Plutonem
periculum et
te vltare praesens
me
portare.
Portabo.
commanded
2.
What
3.
Cf.
4.
5.
Cf.
Eng.
The
7.
is
immaterial, so the
8.
9.
What
10.
1.
illustrious.
6.
soul
n.
How long?
Romans
called
it
a shadow.
n. 8.
In what case
is
hoc
there?
In what here?
why?
Construction?
12.
13.
1.
Be prepared
books closed
n. 5.
either to ask or to
Quot colloquia jam habuimus? Quod colloquium hodie habeQuis est Charon?
mus?
Fuitne umbrarum portitor multos
recusare =
to refuse.
Colloquia Latlna.
34
XL VII
Lesson
L. Lesson
XIX
C.
&
I>.
351.
M. Me miserum
vix 2
1
I
C.
Narra
celeriter.
Peril
you silent
Quid taces?
Quid est?
Quid
tremble.
trepidas ?
M. O Romam
letum
C.
est atque
Certe
infortunatam
maximam
calamitatem narras.
M.
Fortissime.
Nonne pugnavit
Multas horas
acriter
pugnabatur, 6 sed
tuerunt et
omnes
8
terga dederunt.
I
C.
pray
M. Minime, Romanis
militum acerrimo timore
equitatus
C.
M.
Maharbal,
C.
Ubi nunc
est exercitus
commoti
omnium
sunt.
dux.
Romanus ?
alas
M.
Exercitus
Romanus ?
Heu
exercitus
fuit.
Consul
hominum
milia,
11
35
omnes
in
campo
dead
extends
what
C.
will
become of us
fiet
the
Which
How many
5.
Construction?
6.
Intransitive verbs,
Lit. //
when in the passive voice, are imperwas fought, translate freely they fought.
9.
n. 4.
10.
11.
Be prepared
Num
Nonne
n. 7.
either to ask or to
miles
atque seems
8.
books closed
they follow
to the soldier?
4.
7.
When
made emphatic.
more dreadful
sonal.
verb.
the
de
proelio
laetatur?
Colloqiiia Latvia.
36
Clymene
& D.
C.
et Phaetlion.
breast
P.
Maximae
Quid
C.
curae,
est tibi,
auxilium dare
mea
mi
mater, pectus
Die
fill?
meum
tenent.
matri dolorem
et
to be silent
P.
tuum
Nostine
of Jupiter
Epaphum,
Vero
C.
filium Jovis ?
Cur quaeris?
novi.
you
P.
Mane
will
very
hear
et tu audies.
Ille
est valde
superbus Jove 6
yields to
Etenim
heri,
magna 8
dicens,
Epaphus, plenus
invidiae,
non
"Non
10
12
inani fefellit."
Ego pudore,
dolore, tacebam.
I
Mehercle
deas
et
tuus pater"
shame
has deceived
C.
11
inquit,
fabula
tulit.
swear
esse.
proofs
P.
tu,
Non
negare poteram.
Ergo
est.
Non
longus
37
yon _
for
tibi,
iter facere.
13
Si igitur
climb up
animum
these
tibi
de
P.
rebus dabit.
his
Faciam
et
quid est
tibi,
lit.
what
is to
you
= what
is
the matter
with you.
2.
A.
What
&G.
4.
Give construction.
See Ex. VII.
3.
H. 238;
128, c.
5.
6.
How
7.
What
is
66, 3
A.
& G.
25.
cause expressed?
the case of this word
is
What
as object?
8.
How
9.
What
is
10.
tulit
1 1
What
have on
its
this adjective
used?
effect
force?
12.
How
13.
The
do we express means?
infinitive clause
ad caelum
iter facere
is
the sub-
ject of est.
14.
15.
The
bility,
subjunctive
mode
is
n. 2.
the
mode
doubtful or possible
lie in
the future,
for that
which we hope
for
Colloquia Latina.
38
Duae
are
&
D. 298 to 310.
whither
J. Quo,
C.
you hastening
necessary
T.
mea
Doraura,
arnica,
me
contendere necesse
est.
what
Mea
mater
portas?
mihi mandavit. 11
sic
of Ovid
J.
Opera Ovidl.
Pensum hodie
fuit
de Orpheo
Eury-
et
dice.
funny
T.
Numquam
audivl.
nay indeed _
whether
J.
Num
ridicula
sit
me
Immo
rogas?
vero tristissima
est,
finely
et
narrat.
si
poteris.
I will try
J.
Experiar.
Eurydice,
11
puella
T.
J.
because
quam
oculos
Orpheus,
her
for
amabat
conjunx
pulcherrima,
est.
est?
he
demanded
speravit.
caram
flagitavit
regerr*
39
"Educ
Plutonem.
earn,"
inquit
Pluto,
"sed
you turn
flexeris
si
back
T.
J.
An
Orpheus,
vir
love
magno amore, 9
flexit
et
Eury-
forever
What
2.
quern
3.
-ne
words
4.
to
is
usually
of a verb
See H. 231,
Does
it?
is
A.
&
it
-Iri,
-pertus sum.
What
kind
G. 135,
a, c.
How
6.
7.
n. 7.
n. 8.
n.
1.
Give the
in the per-
amore:
construction?
10.
Accusative case.
1 1
Cf.
infelicity.
N.B.
It is
Colloquia Latlna.
40
COLLOQUIUM DUODEVICESIMUM.
J.
Lesson L.VI
L. Lesson
Mater
F.
ejus in librls
C.
& I>.
315,
et Filia.
Quis,
mels saepissime 3
Nomen quidem
fuit?
vldi,
himself
ipso novi.
M.
Socrates,
Habuitne
F.
filia
Romae domicilium?
5
fuit.
12
renowned
M. Romam numquam
6
quae
in
Graecia
elves praecepta
F.
est,
9 " 12
venit, sed
docuit
ibi
philosophiae.
Si fuit
M.
him
to
ever
erant.
ei
quomodo
F.
of Socrates
visti
Numquam,
sed
ita
cupio.
as the story goes
listen
M.
obvium
staff
Xenophon ?
tulit.
10
et
modestissimus,
Socrates,
magna
12
fama
Xeno-
est,
philosopho sese
admiratione
12
motus,
stop
plainly
clare
Colloquium Duodevicesimitm.
41
nibus 11
iterum rogavit
no
Socrates
liceat?"
puerum
"Unde homines
statim
respondentem
Nullo
response
you
dato,
will learn
"atque tu disces."
2.
viz.,
proper case,
excepting when we use names of towns and the words domus
and rus, which omit the preposition.
3. How are adverbs formed from adjectives?
which, requires a preposition with
its
4.
Decline
5.
filia.
singular
number of
singular.
it
Why
before
Cf
n. 5.
8.
9.
It
What
What
therefore follows n.
2.
How long?
Colio quia
42
obvium
sese
io.
mon
tulit
lit.
Latina.
to meet,
dative',
hence philosopho.
11.
The verb
12.
C/.
diligently, modesty
COLLOQUIUM UNDEVICESIMUM.
J.
Lesson I.IX
L. Lesson
XXV;
&
C.
D. 315.
terribilis,
10
qui,
stat,
knocks
januam pulsat. 10
lam
Matrdna pulsatwnem
vocat.)
M.
Quis,
januam
ancilla,
Tune 3 eum 4 ex
pulsat?
window
to see clearly
A.
M.
stupid
Age, quid
est,
linger
quam 8
open_
celerrime aperl
jam domum, 5
{Ancilla
magna
as
think
exit
et
brein
voce auditur.)
tempoi-e
damans ad 6 januam
away
plagas accipies.
faciam?
Abl, inquam,
Quid agam?
ah,
abl
hinc
me
Ei mihi,
quid
Colloquium Undevicesimum.
43
Quid
(damans).
M.
fenestra videns.)
Quid de nobis
I rejoice
te
M. Me
10
patior.
Me
miseram
quod
Salve, matrona,
Athenas profectus
E. Dolesne?
In
mo
fiet
E.
est erro
atrio
(Errdnem ex
Quid fades?
est?
est.
ejus
10
Atcanis! Ubi canis est? Facitne
aequo
ani-
quoque
iste
Athenas ?
iter
M.
est.
Age
quam 8
celerrime
canem
let in
immitte, ancilla.
E.
must hasten
est.
Ha,
ha,
(sola).
_
\_&xit erro.
l_
Statim maturandum
M.
off
optime
ago
mum,
9
abhinc duos annos mortuus
est.
Erro, a tramp.
to
Cf. Latin erro, are,
wander, English
trr
2.
We
The form
januam
est
nomen
januam
in Latin.
words
as a model,
is
as follows
Colio quia
44
tivl in
Grammaticum" you
3.
When
Ex. IX,
4.
will
regulam
By
est.
are personal
See
n. 3.
is,
ea, id,
is
which
Latina.
is
often-
always reflexive.
is
domum?
5.
Why
not
6.
ad
7.
Cf.
8.
quam
is
ad
quam
Cf.
Eng.
terrible,
pulsate,
inapt,
conjugal,
equanimity
',
canine.
1
secundum =
according
to.
COLLOQUIUM VICESIMUM.
J.
Avus
et
Nepos
raedari,
C.
&
D. 315.
in Itinere.
driver
incita
maturandum
est.
Celeriu?
equos tuos.
N. Putasne,
is it
futuros esse?
according to
A. Ita timeo.
Hora quota
N. Nunc hora 2
est
ex horologio 2 tuo?
Estne
statio
procul?
Vicesimum.
Colloquium
45
William
A.
right there
Gulielme,
Fellciter,
est
ilia
Sed eccam 9
proxima.
of the carriage
it is
ipsam
Nonne
N.
Jam
Certe.
dense
2
crebras vaporis nubes locomotus.
here
we
are
A. Ecce nos
trunk
R. Altera 4
cista,
domine,
in
carro,
altera
jam
quam
celerrime et
in
sta-
tione est.
run
Tu
A. Bene narras.
curre, Gulielme,
tickets
ego impedimenta
meanwhile
interim curabo.
soon
N. {niox
tuta?
revert ens).
Ecce
tesseras!
Impedlmentane
A. Tuta omnia
quidam ea
in vehiculo deposuit.
bell
let
Age,
us get aboard
Conscendamus.
here
Num
omnes
hi
Bostoniam proficiscuntur?
alii
aliam
10
in
urbem
iter faciunt.
umbrella
gentium
N.
in
Sed ubinam
est
Me
meum umbraculum?
miserum,
in statione id reliqui
would that
A. Quid audio?
there
sime,
illlc
esses
In statione?
Utinam
tu quoque, pes-
Colloquia Latina.
46
1.
quently.
in gradu
fre-
etc., in
2.
Cf.
3.
If
4.
5.
of, in
in the
6.
What
7.
8.
conscendamus
see
Ex. XVI,
n.
15;
so,
too,
esses
below.
Ecce
9.
is
When
etc.
eccam = ecce
earn,
is
it
and
others to another.
Colloquium
Vicesimum Primiim.
47
C.
&
D. 327, articles
Magister et Discipulus.
M.
D, Ah
I
magister,
dolor!
est
have learned
didicl.
M. Quid
non, male
D. Certe habeo.
Num habes
ullam 2 excusationem
puer
Gulielmus,
13
mihi amicissimus,
domo
sereno, 3
caelo
at
my
pervenit, 4
hodie
profectus
et
dies
sane
house
paucos apud
me
manebit.
13
Illo
autem praesente,
M.
have
to
ac de Cicerone,
D.
excuse you
Tibi ignoscendum.
Libenter,
si tibi
nam
At hac hora 7
alio
modo 8 utamur
iste
me semper maxima
admiratione 13
ability
Quanta potestas
movet.
quentia
in eo,
quanta
facultas,
quanta elo-
13
!
on which account
M. Bene
admlrari. 13
dicis,
Paucis
I
ante diebus 10
illud
satis
possum
opusculum u " De
surely
Amicitia " iterum legl quo nihil profecto melius esse potest.
hitherto
amplius?
Quid
48
of writing
M.
Ille
multos de hac re
scripsit
D.
M.
Ita
fuit.
Id
De
13
est, et
senex,
12
de-
philosophiae petivit et
libros.
est.
est
for the
young
D. QuantI Cicero
M.
13
delightful
quam
amlcitiam."
1.
is
disco.
Cf.
discipulus.
2. Rule: The indefinite pronouns quisquam and ullus are
used in negative and comparative sentences, and in interrogative
may
What
exercise
What
4.
tione quarta
pervenit
est
verbum
in conjuga-
-ventum
bases sunt perveni, perven, pervent Tnflexio pervenl, pervenlsti, pervenit, pervenimus, pervenistis, pervenerunt,
;
-ere
in voce activa, in
modd
persona
tertia, in
Vicesimum Secundum.
Colloquium
5.
So
apud
also
t, se,
nos,
etc.,
meaning
at the
49
house of a
person.
6.
of
participle
praesum.
7.
8.
9.
10.
See H. 448, n. A.
See Ex. XIX, n. 9.
;
13.
with
&
utamur?
G.
153, inter.
n. 1.
J. Lesson
Duo
L. Lesson
XL VI,
(LVIII); C.
&
D. 333.
domum
{Nasica forte
Januam
puis at.)
N. Aperi
Aperi
Ancilla {intus)
N. Ennium
videre,
vis ?
tuum dominum,
void.
Estne
iste
domi ? 3
Ancilla.
Domi non
est.
Veni
alio die.
perceived
cum
silentio
12
concedit.
cae se contulit.)
Proximo
die
Colio quia
5<D
E.
bone
Aperi,
Latina.
Nonne me
audis
Quid
N. {caput ex fenestra
Quid
istlc
superiore exserit.)
fades ?
Noli,
Enni
12
obsecro, januam frangere.
lame
anger
E. {cum
salve,
break in
to
there
cessas ?
thrusts out
ira).
Jam
claudus, hercle,
by pounding
altera
Tu
to get
celer-
E.
12
Nonne
{attonitus).
es
apud
te.
N. Minime
ancillae
optime
Quid tandem
intus vis?
colloqul volo.
N. Mecum ?
nam
quam
angry
IrascI,
E. Tecum
non
N. Noli
you
10
Per
vides, inepte,
deos
me non dom!
esse ?
Tu non domi?
Certe
AmisistTne
mentem?
tuae dicentl te
ipsi.
Enni,
homo impudens
domi non
Abi n Veni
12
esse credidi
es,
tu
alio die.
Is
3.
In what case?
BOSTON UNIVERSITY
COIXE6E OF LIBERAL ARTS
LIBRARY
Vicesimum Tertium.
Colloquium
manu =
claudus altera
7.
respect
is
lame
In what case
he lame?
is
in
51
one hand.
manu?
In what
Now make
your
9.
Why
in that position?
Celerrime
est
adverbium modi,
lam
Adverbia verba,
ancillae
10.
object of credidi.
is
See H. 385,
II
A.
&
G.
227.
1
12.
Eng.
C/.
silence,
Lesson I.XXI
C.
&
D. 345, (415,
Cyclops et Galatea. 1
C.
Heu
Heu
Ubinam gentium
es,
Galatea,
meae
sweetheart
mea
deliciae,
semper,
gis,
me
vita?
vlso,
Te
videre quid
maxima
fugis
me
puella pulcherrima,
te,
ternum
celeritate?
ardentl
veni,
et
tolle.
petere
non
cessas
12
licet?
Nonne
Quid
intelle-
jam tandem
alto ex
mari
me
ae-
non mihi
12
Cur, Cyclops,
Numquam, numquam
te
Colloquia Latlna.
52
est.
C.
pura
lately
me
certe ego
vidl,
mea forma
novl
mihi
me
maxime
aqua
in
Specta quantus
placuit.
heaven
sim
hoc corpus
regnat,
est.
G. At tamen
alter oculus tibi,
tibi
antequam me
11
10
quamobrem
est,
mock
my
nam
C.
of
hair
looks
beard
you
for
barbam longam
tibi
comb
recidi
tibi
falce,
habeo.
G. Munera dicis?
goat
Parva
Erravisti.
et facilia sine
dubio sunt
ilia,
miserum,
mea
of pigeons
pair
columbarum.
C.
with a rake
faciei est.
domi
stiff
Ego
tibi
habeo.
Me
fools
Ita
me
quotidie
fallit.
Ei mihi
1.
he
is
madly
2.
licet
object
3.
Trans.
is
is
whom
in love.
Why is
impersonal,
it
not permitted to
its
mihi.
3.
subject
is
me
to see you ?
te videre, and
its
The verb
indirect
Vicesimum Quartum.
Colloquium
53
a.
c
is it trans-
amatura
6.
lated
Why?
In what case is mini?
What is the construe*
ferendaest. Where is it made?
by me t See Ex. X,
translate
usually
we
do
How
tion of mini?
7
n. 9.
9.
10.
11.
12.
Cf same
Cf. Ex.
XXII,
n. 7.
cease,
eternally,
,,
cavitary,
de-lude,
re-munerate.
Duo
Pnmus.
Salve,
At
amice
veni, obsecro,
P.
Vero ac
libenter.
5.
Minime
vidi
mamVhaee
(O, LXT)
&
I>.
363, (384).
Cives American!.
Quo
I.V,
is?
librariam iturus
^^
mecum.
nam quldam
ex sacSio
Ego ad tabernam
meo
di supplicium
clam" eripuit.
de eo su-
Quid, obsecro,
any news
rogas
Europa
vero,
me
judice,
belli
54
videtur
sibus
S.
P.
causa,
vereor
igitur
ne bellum
maximum
paucis in men-
audiamus.
Cur
Itane?
ita
judicas?
Multis de causis.
6
Primum omnes
magno incitamento
sunt bello. 7
S.
gentes pugnatu-
ras esse?
Russia
P.
according to
Sarmatia,
my
opinion indeed
sententia, 9 ut
mea quidem
Austria
Noricum
11
sperat.
Ne hoc
vincat, 4
victo, se
fiat,
12
urbe
Germania
treaty
maniam
S.
Gallia.
Vera
dicis
at
Gulielmus imperator, ut
ama
est,
causas
belli toilet.
P.
Nonne
P.
Difficile est
S.
Dis
est
Germania
perveniet.
ad
legio-
validior Gallia?
immortalibus
Americani sumus.
13
gratias
Numquam
Colloquium
Vicesimum Quartum.
55
me
3.
judice
^tTereor ne
ablative
audiamns.
Q>
Rule
clause mthut
be followed by an object
to the future may
verbs are those s.gmfySuch
purpose.
ne), denoting
please, strive, urge, or
command, exhort, persuade,
rets
(iZve
"f
to ask,
fea
['
simple
6.
Cf
Ex.
XX,
n. 10.
inoitamento, bello.
Two
datives.
T2
8.
q
,o
eL
iT
t
; fmperavit
munirent atque
reverterentur.
subjunctive
Observe that the imperfect
in
is
See
here used
"c^seeontoy)
imperavit
use tht leading verb
English as well asm
is observed in
tense
of
Sequence
tense.
Sconquer the
fights that he may
Latinhe
that
fought
He
principal tenses
vineat is
/He
na ; rSgem
corner
kmg-Pu
- Pngnavit
the king
tenses.
historical (secondary)
nt regem vinceret
Colloqttia Latvia.
56
J.
I,.
and
(384
&
C.
D. 371,
385).
Heu
P.
tibi
Heu
Siste
Heu me miserum
Siste
Heu
Quid fades
meum
caput
Quid
est
Obsecro,
rascal
amlci, repellite
Quare
F.
plagas
tibi
11
hunc scelestum.
Tace,
dedi.
11
Tantum
carissime?
pater
clamas,
ita
inquam, tace
Si
non
tres
tacebis,
A. Heus
puer
tii,
Nonne deos
Dasne
plagas, pessime,
vereris? 11
deservedly
F. Certe vereor
hie
tuo patri?
huncce 2
quidem me puerum
tarn en merito
was beating
verberabam,
nam
Numquam, ml
At
melior
ravl.
potero.
livisci
P.
pater, istarum
patris
fieres,
est,
ml
fill,
Nisi te amavissem,
id
non fecissem.
unmindful
F.
tui beneficl
equally
te
amo
Vicesimum Quintum.
Colloquium
ut aiunt
Neque verba
P.
Quid
es.
57
"similibus curantur."
Tu
aliud vis ?
tua,
A. Utinam
fiet, si licet
11
te
monere possemus
10
!
Trans. If you
are
not quiet.
uses
exactness,
the
future
in
such cases
tacebis,
e.g.
not
taces.
2.
it
adds
emphasis,
3.
4.
Trans.
5.
What
6.
patris.
The
predicate genitive
is
the most
common
with
sum.
7.
future time
is
not true
now;
Apply the
tence.
8.
Construction?
9.
This
known
is
See H. 399,
the regular
I,
A.
&
G. 218, a.
saying.
10.
What
11.
Cf.
is
Eng.
or well-
Latma.
Colloqiiia
58
Lesson
Duo
LXXX
LXII
I* Lesson
Johannes
Fratres,
&
C.
D. 378.
et Henricus.
out of doors
J.
mecum
Foris
hodie venl.
Intus
day
after
domique diem ex
quamquam
die,
non
robusto 12 cor-
es
pore, 2 manes.
H. Vero ac
possem
libenter.
sed aliud ex
alio
me
si
At quo tandem
prohibet.
iturus es ?
Eamus, 6
J.
si vis,
ad
fluraen.
Quam
dulce est 7 in
umbra
pleasant
grata sedere et
H. Bene
murmur 12 aquarum
Quam
narras.
audire
serenum
12
caelum
Quam
bright
fulgens 12 sol
is
ager,
nunc omnis
12
most beautiful
are green
Nunc
bearing
parturit arbos
y.
Mehercle, ml
frater,
12
tu
vim
scis Latin!
Tune
ipse
?
talent
H. Utinam possem
imo eos
J.
scripsit.
Quid?
Vergilius, poeta
Amo?
Sed
scis
ille
sunt
illi
cui pecunia
12
proverbium 12
deest."
ingenio 2
Amasne
illud
money
9
Heu, heu
'
12
raax-
navigare 12 ?
"Omnia
de-
Colloquium
how much
does
H. QuantI 10
a boat
cost
it
constat
59
to hire
cymbam conducere?
sesterces
J.
Quinque
10
sestertils
H. Propterea quod
Est
accepi.
igitur
At quare rogas ?
constat.
cum
litteras
cymbam
mihi in animo
will
pecunia
domo
hodie
conducere, sed
be angry
Ego minime
timeo,
quotldie exercitatione
quam
H.
I2
nam
utamur.
Quid melius
esse
potest
navigare?
Ita est ut dicis
to
Eccam cymbam. 11
ergo navigemus.
row
tiller
Tu primum,
1.
By what mode
2.
robusto corpore.
is
What
tense
is
followed?
A noun with
tiling, is
and what
this,
is
cum?
etsi?
an adjective or a genitive,
put in the ablative case.
force in a conditional
its
sentence ?
4.
Trans.
One thing
How
6.
7.
est.
8.
ille often
9.
Cf.
Translate
translated literally?
What
n. 15
diem ex
die above,
is its
also Ex.
subject
XXV,
eundum
est.
n. 7.
10.
after another.
n. 10.
its
it
noun.
n. 2.
Definite price
is
regularly expressed
by the
ablative
bu\
after
Colio quia
6o
Latvia.
1.
and
See Ex.
12.
Cf.
after verbs
of
Ex. XX, n. 9.
murmur serene,
Ill, n. 8
Eng. robust,
J. Lesson
L,.
Lesson L.XIV; C.
&
D. 398.
Cyclops et Ulixes. 1
(magna
C.
Heus, aliene
voce).
merchant
Unde
U.
Utrum mercator
venisti?
cum
Graecus Troja
C.
Ubi
socils
Minime
an plrata?
plrata,
navem tuam
igitur
es
reliqulstl?
craft
U.
(cum dolo)
Heu, heu
nam
tanta tempestas
navigamus 3 coorta
wrecked
est ut nos,
nave
fracta, soli
superessemus.
C.
U.
Eccum, 5
wine
Cyclops, vinum
antlquissimum
dulcissi-
drink
mumque.
precious things
pretiosa fuerint. 4
Colloquium
Ha,
(qui potaf).
C.
Vicesitnum Scptimum.
ha, ha, mehercle,
hoc vinum
dis
im-
vines
mortalibus
idoneum
Cum
est.
vites
plurimae in
his terrls
such
tamen nequaquam
sint,
quod noraen
tibi sit?
At die mihi
ferunt nectar.
tale
No-man
U.
me
petas.
to
Neminem
C.
pour
Audlsne?
fundere jubeo.
U.
sit
meum
_g' ft
tibi
Nonne
donum.
to return
referre ?
jolly
C.
feclstl,
te,
Qua de
quia 10
me
tarn festlvum
I will eat
tuos
edam quam
11
te interficiam.
drunk goes
(Cyclops ebrius
it
Hoc
esto
meum donum.
to sleep
dormitum.)
the siege
Ulysses, succeeding in
getting the monster drunk, puts out his solitary eye, and thus
3.
What mode
force does
4.
quid
it
.
n. 2.
follows
dum
teneas.
An
H. 467, 4; A.
indirect question.
&
and what
G. 276,
e.
Indirect ques-
Colloquia Latvia.
62
What
7.
cum
cum
case follows
.
sint.
idoneus ?
concessive clause.
The
conjunction
8.
9.
sit.
See above.
desire.
10.
11.
tive
causal clause.
except
when
the subjunc-
commenced or
is
com-
mencing.
Lesson
LXXXVI
L. Lesson
LXVIII
C.
&
D. 429.
elves
et mllites,
non possum.
surpass
manis 3 antecellunt.
S.
111!
tione.
maxima
13
5
Praesertim ut mllites eos laudo.
Pleni
omnes
historians
sunt
tutis.
libri,
6
vir-
Vlcesimutn Octdvum.
Colloquium
Z.
Bene
narras, verba
63
Lacedaemonils
memoriam
in
reducunt.
modo
ilia
mimiretur.
futu-
Quidam
namely
quisque esset
S.
Ha,
ha,
later.
bene dictum
esse
quendam militem
cum
aliquis dixisset
Audlvl autem in
isto exercitu
non
bello
10
idoneum
se
esse, respondit
se
curreret.
L.
Ille,
ut
13
responsum excellens
111!
quidem fuerunt
ver-
boasting
11
bis
virtute.
tur
12
elves
suos
numquam
quaesivisse
magnaque
fert,
gloriaba-
The
4.
5.
n. 6.
Colloquia Latina.
64
virtutis
6.
8.
trate the
turn
7.
if
to
illus-
you can
all
9.
See
Why
Would
the subjunctive?
it
be retained in direct
discourse?
Ex. XIII,
10.
Cf
11.
Cf. Ex.
12.
gloriabatur.
13.
Cf.
n. 5.
XXVI,
n. 2.
What
is
LXXXIX;
L,.
Lesson
Menippus
LXXV;
C.
&
J>.
et Charon. 1
having landed
(Menippus,
debat quern
436.
delay
revocat).
fare
C/i.
Revertere,
pay
M.
Iterum
atque
iterum
clama,
Charon,
si
hoc
tibi
placeat.
transported
M. Numquam
ferendl
Ch.
Trans Stygem
transtuli te.
causa.
trans-
Vicesimum No?ium.
Colloquium
M.
65
be
can't
it
Num
Quid?
Ch.
fieri
potest ut quisquam
sit
qui
unum
or not
M.
Nescio utrum
tam pauper
alius
sit
Egomet'
necne.
nullum habeo.
Sed
Ch.
M. Et
in
ego
flumen tamen
tibi
meo
caput baculo
frangam,
nisi
statim
tacebis.
foe
Te
Ch.
minime ego.
liberabo
M. At quomodo
Nonne
Ch.
M. Ego
scis
accipies ?
sciens
id
habeo
esse.
nihil.
a thousand times
quam
millies audias.
Tu autem
Ch.
M. Jam
vecturam auxilium
bilge-water
ego
sentinam
et
I
was
tibi
dando
solvi;
unus,
mirabile
etenim
bailing out
exhauriebam
et
dictu,
was laughing
viatorum ridebam.
Omnes
alii
flebant.
I will
Ch.
transieris.
Tamen haec
exchange
Da
vecturam.
otherwise
Fieri aliter
M. Non
non
potest.
Ch.
manu
Nonne audls?
dare possum.
by deceiving
Fallendone
to
te
escape
elapsurum
tua ostende.
M. Hoc
tua
minime
refert.
sperabas?
Quid teneas
Colloquia Latlna.
66
did
rascal
Ubinam gentium,
Ch.
you
find
nosti istum?
Ch.
M.
Si
pessime, capiam
my good fellow
capias, 'optime \ sed
iterum
Sane,
si
te,
me quidem numquam
twice
Vale.
bis capies.
pay Charon.
in mind
a. That the gerund
either alone or with an
3.
b.
Keep
is
may
therefore stand
object.
is
6.
met added
to personal
is
preferred.
necesse
is
usual after
est.
I will
7.
Trans.
8.
Trans. That
translation
What
is
the literal
Colloquium Tricesimum.
67
COLLOQUIUM TRICESIMUM.
Deraea et Syrus. 1
together
De.
Peril
Ctesiphonem audivi
una
f Ilium
fuisse in illo
mischief
Si
el
ille
profligate
impurus,
scio.
satis
ubi fllius
sit
jam sciam.
ex hoc
Ire video,
but yet
company
of
illo
grege
est,
to be questioning
et
si
me eum
Non ostendam
quaeritare senserit
id
me
scelestus dlcet.
velle.
I
Ehem Demea,
Sy.
numquam
te
had noticed
haud aspexeram
mlrari
satis
conduct
rationem.
to
Sy.
clean
ceteros purga,
fish
aqua ludere
when
permit
sinito
Pisces
meanwhile
eel
Dromo 3
to play
in
speak plainly
it
will be
tantisper
boned
prius
nolo.
De.
Sy.
haec scelera
De.
Fratris
Haec
are freshened
salted fish
me
pulchre macerentur.
I am disgusted with
I am ashamed of
pigetque. 5
pudet
quidem
Colloquia Latvia.
68
too
much
Nimium
Sy.
inter vos,
there
is
interest.
ades,
howsoever great
a difference
nonsense
ilium
tuum haec
somniura.
Num
sineres 8 vero
facere ?
Nonne
sex totis
mensibus prius
detected
olfecissem,
quam
quidquam coepisset?
ille
At eum
vldisti
hodie?
long
think likely
Tuumne
Sy.
filium?
since
dudum
agere.
De. Scisne
Sy.
satis
hunc
De. Optime
est
ibi esse ?
proficiscl vidi.
model of
virtue
profligate.
their pranks,
ters,
who
engaged
are within.
assistant in all
Demea
young mas-
ne dolo dicam
a parenthetical
1
.
Names
of other servants.
clause-
Lit.
that
I may
Colloquium Trlcesimum.
7.
8.
SeeH.
4.
5.
6.
486," II;
A.
&
G. 311,.
69
VOCABULARY.
The number
avidus,
baculum,
19,
bis,
tibi
Anglus,
in-
antecello, 3.
1.
ardens, -ntis.
asellus,
-i,
m.
13.
atqui, conj.
-i,
-i,
M.
19.
f.
15.
23.
me
21,
30.
30.
19.
et cetera 12.
20.
23.
7.
16.
19.
cista, -ae, f.
28.
19.
Cannae, -arum,
13.
13.
30.
n.
9.
m. and f.
-is,
cesso, 1.
atrium,
21, 23.
29.
N.
-1,
capillus,
17.
m.
24.
calor, -5ris, m.
canis,
29.
-1,
18.
23.
num. adv.
caelum,
ut aiunt 25.
Anglice, adv. 5.
Anglicus, -a, -um.
n.
f.
gra-
ambulo, 1. 3.
amor, -oris, m.
Anglia, -ae, f.
10.
17.
aliter, adv.
-1,
barba, -ae,
bene, adv.
agd,
tias 3,
-um.
-a,
24.
21.
1.
is
abi 19.
-I,
m.
26.
columba, -ae, f.
communis, -e.
comparo, 1. 5.
conducd,
23.
13.
3, -duxi,
-ductum.
26.
Vocabulary.
72
20.
cSnsistS, 3,
-stiti,
cSnsSlatiS, -Snis,
cSnstS,
-stitum.
-statum.
1, -stiti,
crescS,
eo, 4.
20.
22, credo
cur, adv.
cymba,
dormitum
it
erg5, conj.
et, conj.
7.
20.
4.
19.
et
see
17.
is.
excellens, -entis.
defessus,
-a,
-um.
deinde, adv.
delecto,
excusatiS, -onis,
8.
exemplum,
6.
delenda
Carthago 10.
deliciae, -arum, f.
23.
dicS, 3, dixi, dictum.
4,
and
dies, -el, m.
F.
diligenter, adv.
diurnus,
-a,
dolus,
-1,
M.
-i,
nullo
re-
3, -tendi,
dicam
facies,
F.
1.
30.
-a,
ex-
27.
11, 20.
27.
29.
21.
f.
falsum.
16, 23,
fallendo 29.
fama,
F.
-ae, F.
fenestra, -ae,
23.
14, ut
fama
f.
19.
20.
22.
-tentum.
-um.
facultas, -tatis,
falx, -cis,
27.
3,
7.
23.
-ei, f.
fallo, 3, fefelli,
18.
ecce, interj.
tendens 18.
facinorSsus,
18.
29.
30.
9, 30.
27, ne dolo
n.
-haustum
24.
domicilium, -1, n.
domus, -us (domi),
donum,
26.
f.
4, -hausi,
1.
extendd,
datum,
sponso dato.
exhaurio,
exosso,
18.
-um.
dedi,
1,
est
21.
28.
n.
-i,
disco, 3, didici,
do,
28.
f.
exercitatio, -onis,
6.
1.
et cetera 12.
et 2,
etenim, conj.
eum,
26.
-ae, f.
20.
23.
sum.
est, see
8.
29.
17.
erro, -onis, m.
6.
crevi, cretum.
3,
19.
26.
27.
-ditum.
3, -didi,
(parenthetical)
mihi
ei
eleganter, adv.
21.
f.
credo,
18.
fiS,
fieri,
nobis
fieri
27.
factus sum.
fiet
15,
potest 29.
est 18.
fieret
quid de
18,
num
Vocabulary.
flagitd, 1.
17.
flexum.
fieeto, 3, flexi,
fluvius,
m.
-1,
-a,
-um.
illic,
fractum.
fregi,
22
27.
gavisus sum.
gaudium, -1, n.
Genava, -ae, F.
Genavae
-oris.
(loca-
genus, -eris, n. 8.
16.
gradior, 3, gressus sum.
Graecus, -a, -um. 4.
gratia, -ae, f. ago tibi gratias
f.
ineptus,
-um.
-a,
-um.
-a,
grex, -gis, M.
Gulielmus,
infernus,
3.
-1,
m.
herl, adv.
hoc
hodie, adv.
honestus,
-a,
hora, -ae,
F.
ingredior,
3,
horologium,
14.
26.
n.
ingressus sum.
-e.
inquit 9,
insulam
F.
2.
interim, adv.
20.
est 20.
-fui.
30.
29.
10.
22.
27.
20.
intersum, -esse,
ira, -ae, f.
6.
11.
ipse, -a,
n.
24.
defective verb,
-um, 28.
hora quota
19,
28.
13.
-i,
28.
22.
20.
9.
hoc
19.
-e.
-um.
-a,
-i,
inquam,
15.
heu, interj.
heus, interj. 2.
hie, haec, hoc, dem. pron. haec 6,
his 7, hujus 9, hanc 10, haec II,
12,
eum
17.
ingenium,
insula, -ae,
hercle, interj.
in
i.
innumerabilis,
6, 26.
30.
19.
vero 17.
20.
incola, -ae,
infelix, -icis.
20.
F.
missum.
immo
inexpugnabilis,
gens, -entis,
23.
25.
3, misi,
adv.
incito, 1.
19.
12.
1.
gratus,
immitto,
21.
20.
2.
frondeo, 2. 26.
fulgens, -entis. 26.
fundo, 3, fudi, fusum.
tive)
-notum.
3, -novi,
adv.
immd,
2,
9.
10.
immemor,
9.
26, 27.
gaudeo,
5, 6.
F.
7.
3,
3.
M. and
1.
ignosco,
26.
5.
fortuito, adv.
frango,
-is,
ignoro,
fortasse, adv.
forte, adv.
-1,
hostis,
igitur, adv.
24.
26.
foris, adv.
m.
hortus,
2.
foedus, -eris, N.
formosus,
17.
22, 26.
iis
5,
eum
Vocabulary.
74
iste, -a, -ud,
istie, adv.
ita, adv.
dem. pron.
mercator,
9.
-oris,
merito, adv.
22.
meus,
ita-ne 6.
iterum, adv.
-a,
mea
10.
m. 27.
25.
I,
tentia 24.
f.
28.
adv.
30.
jactatio, -onis,
jam-dudum,
janua,
-ae, f.
jocularis,
3.
17.
-e.
16.
16.
1.
juvenis,
juvo,
21.
21.
-e.
1.
5.
Latine, adv.
laudd,
macero, 1. 30.
magister, -tri, m.
8.
conj.
8.
19.
4.
f.
24.
26.
1.
nec-ne, conj.
24.
nequaquam,
30.
nescio, 4.
nimium,
17.
29.
adv.
13.
10.
neve, conj.
9.
tenes
29.
1.
7.
23.
26.
adv.
munera
-uris, N.
3.
ne, conj.
11.
libenter, adv.
maxime,
murmur,
navig5,
21.
29.
1.
natio, -5nis,
liber, -bri, m.
maturS,
-a, -um.
me miserum
modestus, -a, -um. 18.
moenia, -um, n. 9.
molestus, -a, -um. 7.
mora, -ae, f. 29.
mortuus, -a, -um. 15.
miser,
nam,
5.
-e.
28.
28.
1.
1.
mirabilis,
muto,
12.
1.
later, -eris, m.
minime, adv.
13.
adv.
30.
nixus sum.
nitor, 3, nisus or
n5men,
-inis, n.
n5n, adv.
Noricum,
8.
non vero
-i,
n.
13.
24.
24.
13.
4.
nosti =;
Vocabulary.
num,
num
conj.
interrog.
fieri
75
pirata, -ae,
f.
27.
piscis, -is, m.
potest 29.
nunc, adv.
nuper, adv.
placeo, 2.
8.
12.
plaga, -ae,
23.
30.
12.
F.
portitor, -oris, m.
Dbolus,
m.
-1,
obsecro,
poto,
29.
1.
potius, adv.
15.
obvium
29.
se fert
occurro,
-cursum.
3, -curri,
omnis,
-e.
10.
1.
19.
opinor,
optime, adv. 6, 8,
optimus, -a, -um.
opus,
-eris, n.
opusculum,
orbis,
-is,
Ovidius,
12.
14.
29.
probus,
Ovidi
n.
18.
-um.
-a,
-a,
-um.
18.
8.
21.
propero, 1. 17.
propterea, adv.
7.
probe
3.
1.
profecto, adv.
21.
m.
praeclarus,
-i,
procul, adv.
N.
-i,
-i,
9.
30.
8.
m.
6.
praeceptum,
18.
14.
27.
1.
17.
30.
23.
-is.
pariter, adv.
25.
26.
parturio, 4.
pate5, 2,
-ui,
pauci, -ae,
pauper,
(pexui),
-i,
quaerito.
qualis,
16.
26.
f.
n.
pexum
23.
pectus, -oris, n.
pensum,
1.
16.
19, 22.
30.
29.
-eris, adj.
3,
pecunia, -ae,
1.
5.
pexi
(pectitum).
pectd,
-oris, m.
pulso,
purgd,
15.
-a.
pudor,
8.
1,
30.
14.
-e.
quam, adv.
quamobrem,
rel. 9,
quantus,
-um.
-a,
interrog. II.
adv. 21.
21, 26.
18.
percipid, 3, -cepi, -ceptum.
pereo, 4, -ivi (-ii), -itum. 5.
pernimium,
adv.
30.
-oris, n.
16.
I,
quae, qui
ex quibus 18,
.
30
quidem, adv.
quinque, num.
rel.
pron.
quod
quo 21.
2,
6, 9.
adj.
8.
quae
II, qui 4,
Vocabulary.
76
fiet
quern
15,
17,
quid
n.
-1,
30.
sapientia, -ae,
salve 3.
ii.
f.
16,
quidnam
qud, adv.
quod,
quomodo,
quoque,
quotus,
28.
7.
adv.
-a,
sententia, -ae,
9.
conj.
quot, indecl.
quoties, adv.
adj.
sentina, -ae,
8.
f.
est 20.
serenus,
-um.
-a,
sero, adv.
ratio, -5nis,
silentium,
recido,
1.
-cisum.
23.
8.
f.
10.
1.
3, -duxi,
-ductum.
28.
27.
n.
-i,
retro, adv.
17.
res, rei, f.
rerum
responsum,
-i,
25.
SScrates,
m.
-is,
n.
somnium,
1.
n.
-i,
18.
statio, -onis, f.
13.
sum,
11, 13.
f.
supplicium,
esse, fui.
-i,
14.
se 17.
1.
n.
24,
3.
taberna, -ae,
24.
20.
f.
30.
8, 29.
-i,
22.
24.
F.
Styx, Stygis,
4.
25.
18.
15.
stultitia, -ae,
scriptor 28.
30.
statum.
statim, adv.
sacculus,
22.
sistS, 3, stiti,
sperS,
29.
26.
1.
12.
solum, -i, n.
solum, adv.
remigo,
17.
26.
7.
14.
redintegro,
reduco,
conj.
f.
m.
-i,
rec5gnitio, -onis,
recus5,
si,
14.
3, -cidi,
recte, adv.
sestertius,
30.
22, 27.
21.
6.
serpens, -entis,
-is, F.
29.
sensum.
sentio, 4, sensi,
10.
f.
mea quidem
f.
sententia 24.
7.
scriptor rerum
scriptor, -oris, m.
17.
conj.
scri-
bendi 21.
24.
taceo,
2.
f.
15, 16.
24.
29.
Vocabulary.
talis, -e.
una, adv.
7.
tandem, adv.
tantum, adv.
30.
niemoria tenes
-1,
n.
tessera, -ae,
timeo,
tentum.
8.
tintinnabulum,
tracts, 1.
-1,
-tuli,
26.
f.
amabo
tu 5,
1.
turn, adv.
turbo,
tuus,
1.
vacuus,
-a,
te 6, te 7, tibi 16.
ubinam,
3.
-um. 10.
vapor, -oris, m. 20.
vectura, -ae, f. 29.
vehiculum, -i, n. 20.
verberatid, -onis, f.
verbero, 1. 25.
-a,
verum,
verus,
adv.
-a,
vinum,
11.
26.
30.
13.
-i,
n.
13.
28.
27.
26.
27.
23-
umbra,
m.
-um.
vis, vis, F.
-ae, f.
25.
11.
1,
-i,
videlicet, adv.
11.
adv.
20.
viator, -oris, m.
17.
1.
fama
3, 16.
vitis, -is, F.
ubi, adv.
ut
20.
-um.
tibi 3, tibi 4,
15.
-um.
-a,
22.
-a, -urn.
trepidd,
20.
n.
12.
transfers, -ferre,
Troja, -ae.
6.
10.
tranquillus,
conj.
vale5, 2.
toties, adv.
utinam,
validus,
20.
2, -ui,
ut aiunt 25,
valde, adv.
19.
f.
20.
bene
15.
terribilis, -e.
n.
-1,
30.
18.
9, 13.
tenui,
2,
tergum,
ut, adv.
9.
tantisper, adv.
teneo,
umbraculum,
14, 27.
tarn, adv.
77
4, 14.
18.
14c
est
GLOSSARIUM GRAMMATICUM.
ablative, ablativus,
-I,
M.
(of in-
agentis;
comparison, comparatio,
compound, compositus,
-onis, F.
separations;
(of
de-
-a,
-a,
-is,
-um.
-um.
F.;
con-
-a,
-um;
ditio, -onis, F.
conditional, hypotheticus,
scription) qualitatis.
absolute, absolutus,
condition, hypothesis,
-um.
-a,
aration)
conditionalis, -e.
accent, accentus,
agreement, concordatio,
-i,
M.
-onis, F.
correctly, recti.
dative, dativus,
-i, M.
declension, declinatio, -onis,
decline, declino,
declinable, declinabilis,
defective, defectivus,
degree, gradus,
cardinal, cardinalis,
-e.
F.
or appellative, appella-
tivus, -a,
-um.
From
Collar
-us,
-e.
-a,
-um.
m.
demonstrative, demonstrativus,
-a,
-um.
common
F.
1.
deponent, deponens,
derive, traho,
3.
description
(abl.
-entis.
of),
-atis, F.
qualitas,
Glossarium Grammaticum.
8o
determinative, defmitus,
difference, discrimen,
-a,
-um.
liquus,
-a,
infinitive,
-a,
-um.
modus
finitivus,
F.
-i,
infinitivus or in-
M.
-i,
N.
f.
interrogative, interrogativus,
I.
-I,
M.
distributive, distributive,
-a,
dissyllable, dissyllabus,
-a,
-um.
Latin
(for)
N.
-i,
v.,
limito,
I.
-a,
locative, locativus,
formation, formatio,
-i,
long, longus,
-a,
M.
-um; productus,
-um.
n.
-i,
manner, modus,
-i,
M.
masculine, masculinus,
mean, signific5, I.
meaning, significatio,
-eris, N.
genitive, genetivus,
-a,
-um.
-i,
-onis, F.
gender, genus,
-um.
anoma-
-um.
-a,
liquid, liquidus,
-a,
limit,
F.
-e;
(in), Latine.
lesson, pensum,
-ae, f.
n.;
-a,
-um.
irregular, irregularis,
future, futurum,
-e.
-um; ob-
-a,
instrument, instrumentum,
-um.
discourse, oratio, -onis,
discuss, tract5,
indeclinable, indecllnabilis,
indirect, indi rectus,
-inis, N.
M.
-a,
-um.
-onis, F.
-i,
-i,
-1,
impersonal, impersonalis,
increase, cresco,
indicative,
M.
imperfect, imperfectum,
N.
-e.
noun, n5men,
3.
modus
M., or indicativus,
indicativus,
-i,
M.
-i,
-inis,
N.
numeral, numeralis,
-e.
tivum,
-i,
N.
substau
Glossarium
object, objectum,
sibilant, sibilus,
N.
-i,
ordinal, ordinalis,
Gram viaticum.
sound, sonus,
paradigm, parndigma,
particle, particula, -ae,
-i,
passive, passivus,
-um.
-a,
-i,
subject, subjectum,
N.
-e.
-i,
N.
-e.
positive, positivus,
-a,
-um.
-i,
pronoun, pronomen,
F.
syntax, syntaxis,
-is, F.
-a,
-e.
teacher, praeceptor,
-inis, N.
-um.
tense, tempus,
-oris,
-a,
-um;
treat
re-
-um.
regular, regularis,
-e.
relative, relativus,
-a,
remember, memoria
-i,
-onis, F.
-a,
-um.
tracto,
-um.
vowel,
littera
vocalis,
-is,
1.
n.
vocabulary,vocabularium,
vocative, vocativus, -i, m.
(= discuss),
verb, verbum,
ma-
-oris, n.
transitive, transitivus,
f.
M.
magistra, -ae, F.
termination, terminatio,
flexivus, -a,
M.
-entis, N.
principal, principalis,
proper, proprius,
N.
present, praesens,
-i,
M., or subjunctivus,
-i,
M.
-ae, F.
personal, personalis,
-us,
oratio.
-um.
-a,
-e.
m.
N.
F.
partitive, partitivus,
-i,
specification, respectus,
N.
-atis,
participle, participium,
person, persona,
-um.
-a,
singular, singularis,
-e.
perfect, perfectum,
81
f.
-i,
genus,
vocalis,
-is,
n.
-eris, N.
f.,
or
F.
-icis, F.
wish, optatio,
-onis, F.
word, verbum,
school, schola,
-i,
-ae, F.
F.
-a,
-i,
N.;
vox, vocis,
vocabulum,
F.
est,
verb of question
re-
ita
-um.
N.;
sunt;
peated.
ANNOUNCEMENTS,
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Heatlis
Series of
TO supply
decade,
Texts.
the increasing
out of the
last
Modem Language
we have planned
to
carefully
graded
to
meet
This series
commonly read
will
in
that are well adapted for such use, but are not
now
of suitable editions.
The
editions will be
in
cheap
ages.
For
fuller description of
books
in preparation, see
succeeding pages
of this announcement.
MODERN LANGUAGES.
CLASSIFIED LIST OF BOOKS.
(From
very general j the place for a given work depending on the age and
and
ELEMENTARY. For
notes and vocabulary
earliest
method of
the
study; with
instruction.)
full
grammatical
German.
i.
First
Professor Faulhaber.
Beginner's
German Reader.
Joynes.
Grimm's Marchen.
Van
German Reader.
Preparatory Book of German
German Conversation.
Deutsch.
Colloquial
Prose.
der Smissen.
Boisen.
Meissner.
French.
2.
Super.
Joynes.
Spanish.
3.
Practical
Method
in
INTERMEDIATE. With
II.
X.
Ybarra.
Spanish.
notes
German.
(a)
Eisy prose
second year.
Leander'sTraumereien.
Professor
"
Krammacher's Parabeln.
Van
Daell.
Harrison.
"
Storm's Immensee.
"
Van
"
Grandgent.
"
Faulhaber.
"
Bernhardt.
"
Beresford-Webb.
"
Grandgent.
Hauff's
{with vocalndary).
{notes in preparation).
der Smissen.
MODERN LANGUAGES.
idvanced.
MODERN LANGUAGES.
1
XIX/
Professor Super.
Siecle.
Stae'l.
Voltaire's Prose.
Moliere's
Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme.
lui.
Moliere's Le Tartuffe.
III.
ADVANCED. For
MODERN LANGUAGES.
3.
Spanish.
Cervantes'
Don
Quijote de la
Mancha
Professor Todd.
"
Lang.
{with vocabulary).
Calderorfs
4.
La Vida
es
Sueho.
Italian.
"
Boccaccio's Decamerone.
GRAMMATICAL. Herein
IV.
Elliott.
1.
and universities
German.
Joynes-Meissner German Grammar.
Selections for
German
2.
German Composition.
at Sight.
Professor Joynes.
"
Harris.
"
Labbitt.
French.
French Grammar.
3.
Edgren.
Italian.
Italian
V.
Grammar.
Grandgent.
HISTORIES OF LITERATURE.
Deutsche Liter aturgeschichte.
VI.
Sheldon.
"
Professor Wenckebach.
"
Warren.
DICTIONARIES.
Heath's
"
New German
"
French
Dictionary.
"
Elizabeth Weir.
Professor Roubaud.
GERMAN.
Grimms Marchen,
And
Such
to
fit
colloquial-
isms and idioms, as are found here in great abundance, are indispensable to the student of the language and should be acquired early.
The Notes
are very
full,
and
in
them more
is
German.
The Appendix
trated
The
which
care.
Words,
(illus-
The Tales
Taucher
is,
Roman
character.
German
Schiller's
type,
Der
so that the
student may not lose all recollection of this character. This fine
specimen of ballad literature will afford the pupil the needed opportunity of becoming more or less familiar with poetical and higher
forms of diction and construction, as the Tales familiarize him with
colloquial and common forms, and will thus extend his knowledge of
the uses of words and of the language in general.
this book
all
parts of this country the hearty appreciation to which its ?nerits entitle it.
The circular gives also a list of schools that use it in pre*
ference to other editions.
shall try
tion.
it
with
my
adopted
it
have already
French.
THIS
It
Romance element
of
modern
in English.
I like it.
It is, in my opinion, an excellent that he is eminently qualified for the work
work, practical, well developed and concise. of preparing a French Grammar.
FRENCH.
Modemes, Volume I
Historiettes
An
intermediate
selected
43
Washington, D. C.
160 pages.
Cloth.
historical
L.,
price, 60 cents.
THIRTEEN
short, pure
As they were all first published in 1887, they are emmodern French. In his choice of selections the author was
reading.
phatically
ever influenced by a desire to produce such as dealt with the everyday occurances of life, thus affording teachers as well as students the
The
full
Alcee Fortier,
Univ.,
Tulcuie
of French,
Orleans: J'ai lu
Prof,
New
choix
tacherai de trouver
dans
mon
moyen de m' en
cours.
"William Price,
Trinity
Coll.,
Prof,
C:
American
happy
of French,
They
je
servir
fulfil
shall use
knowledge of the
them next
year.
have seen
like the
my
pur-
every day.
The
" Historiettes
gems.
conceive them,
classes in French.
selection of matter
most
and
to a
which
It is
I
the
so par-
J.
H. Westcott,
Princeton,
Coll.,
N. J.
Prof, of French,
:
The
Historiettes
Coll.,
Ohio:
am
using them
now
desire of opening
undoubted excellence.
Historiettes Modernes,
Volume II
An
selected
HE
T ume
I.
this
volume
is
the
same
as that of Vol-
FKENC1L
4-
Lc Atari de Mme. de
Solange.
By Emile Souvestre.
Super, Ph.
15 cents.
THIS
is
Lamartine s yeanne
d Arc.
A SIMPLE
thor's
and touching
story,
recit
monde nouveau."
This edition of Lamartine's
intermediate reading.
the
life
The
tale
from history
is
to give abundant,
it
in
my
classes.
historical reading.
It is a
story full of
GERMAN.
26
school-edition
Die
of
Harzreise,
which has
been
great
and
this
consid-
The
au-
remark applies to a
schools.
its prose
and surely
any one entirely ignorant of prose works cannot be said to have fairly
completed even the elementary stages of study.*
and the Harzreise is no exception
Heine's works generally
contain some words, sentences, or passages which are not suited to
the young; but it is possible in many cases to take away objectionable
words without mutilating the thought. Sentences and passages have
been omitted whenever it has been deemed best. The editor has not
allowed himself any other liberties with the text, and believes that the
advantage which is offered students of becoming acquainted with
Heine's mingling of satire and poetry is a sufficient justification for
the publication of this somewhat incomplete text. The notes refer
only to such words or expressions as cannot readily be found in the
is
well
Your
little
A. F. Young, Teacher
admirably done.
H.
S.
White, Prof
nell Univ.,
diffuse
a knowledge
of
Heine's
of German,
prose,
am
glad to see
it
into the
list
of
ing book.
of
German,
it
in
III.:
my
Ger-
of
German,
German
mens
of
cious notes
and expurgations.
GERMAN.
distinctive features of
THE
ductory, simple and
Reader aie:
this
brief.
all
2.
3.
1.
It is fully
It is
It is
purely intro-
representative,
for
Beginners.
First:
easy texts
This view
has determined the extent of the book, less than 300 pages, and the
character of the selections. Difficult pieces are excluded altogether,
and
The
may
Classes
accomplished
in
Langs,
Reader there
of
my
is
made
in the market.
it.
the best
All three
care
It
is
introduce
it.
GERMAN.
!8
German
Conversation.
rHIS
*-
eminent reputation.
but hit the happy
on
No book
Companion
method
of equal ability
to all
of in-
this subject.
original
story.
By Oscar Faulhap.er,
Exeter Academy, N. H.
64
pages.
Cloth.
by mail, 18 cents.
Intro-
THIS
story
is
a picture of
German
life in its
ety.
German
literature.
Date Due
BOSTON UNIVERSITY