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INDEX.

ALE

ALEXANDER the Great, story of,

Alexander, Prof., monosyllabic sonnets,
98

Alfred, King, unknown to early English
literature, 230

Ancren Riwle, The, 169
Anglo-Saxon art, 105
Chronicle, 104

language, character of, 92
origin of, 45, 48
mixed, 47, 55

our knowledge of, 88
Latin words in, 60

not English, 56

pronunciation of, 62, 69
orthography of, 65, 69

inflections in, loss of, 107, 111
grammar of, 119

derivative and composite, 95,

113

Vocabulary of, 89, 93, 94
moral and intellectual vocabulary
of, early obsolete, 135, 136,
443

formation of words in, 113

literature, loss of, 11

no influence on English, 100
unhistoric, 102-105

manuscripts, age of, 54
people, origin of, 43, 49

and Celts, 60, 85

and Scandinavians, 62-69
and Normans, 103, 106
translation of Gospels, 96

Armenian language, construction in, 46

Ascham, Roger, works, 551

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mixed, 58

Frisic, pronunciation of, 51
Froissart as an historian, 487
in England, 336

ENDER, grammatical, 108

Germanic dialects, 19, 51, 76, 80
Golding's translation of Ovid, 555
Gothic, how used in this course, 41
Gower's Confessio Amantis, 432
Grammar, study of, 26, 27

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in England, 507-550

[AWES, Pastyme of Pleasure, 512

nion of, 105

critic's opi

Henry III., proclamation of, 189
Hereford's share in Wycliffite versions,
344, 360, 440

Heywood, John, works of, 525

Historical literature of Middle Ages,
10, 55

Holinshed's Chronicle, 537

Hooker, Ecclesiastical Polity, 559
Horn, Kyng, Geste of, 211

Humour, characteristic of English lite
rature, 298, 300

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wanting in Anglo-Saxon literature,

298

and wit products of culture, 299
hw, sound of, 171

ICEL

[CELANDIC sagas, character of, 254,
note

Icelandic vocabulary, 94

Individuality of character, 567
Invention in literature, 398

Italian dialects, note on, 337
Italy, traditional culture in, 299
iw, sound of, 65, 171

JAMES L., of Scotland, works of, 457

ANGLANDE. See Piers Ploughman

common literary language of L Language, how affected by great

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265
Frisic dialects, 73

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Regular and irregular verbs, 377
Religious dialect in English, 365
Rhyme and Romance words, 390,
515

Richard Cœur de Lion, poem on, 226
Richard II., poem on, 334

Robert of Brunne, 235

Robert of Gloucester, Chronicle, 231
- Lives of the Saints, 233
Roman de la Rose, and Chaucer's ver-
sion, 445

Dutch translation of, 447
Romance, how used in this course, 42
Romance languages, origin and charac
ter of, 15, 37

oldest specimens of, 71
Runic characters, 69

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A New Life of Cicero.

BY WILLIAM FORSYTH, M. A., Q. C.

With Twenty Illustrations. 2 vols. crown octavo. Printed on tinted and laid paper. Price, $5.00.

The object of this work is to exhibit Cicero not merely as a Statesman and an Orator, but as he was at home in the relations of private life, as a Husband, a Father, a Brother, and a Friend. His letters are full of interesting details, which enable us to form a vivid idea of how the old Romans lived 2,000 years ago; and the Biography embraces not only a History of Events, as momentous as any in the annals of the world, but a large amount of Anecdote and Gossip, which amused the generation that witnessed the downfall of the Republic.

The London Athenæum says: "Mr. Forsyth has rightly aimed to set before us a portrait of Cicero in the modern style of biography, carefully gleaning from his extensive correspondence all those little traits of character and habit which marked his private and domestic life. These volumes form a very acceptable addition to the classic library. The style is that of a scholar and a man of taste."

*

From the Saturday Review:- -"Mr. Forsyth has discreetly told his story, evenly and pleasantly supplied it with apt illustrations from modern law, eloquence, and history, and brought Cicero as near to the present time as the differences of age and manners warrant. * * These volumes we heartily recommend as both a useful and agreeable guide to the writings and character of one who was next in intellectual and political rank to the foremost man of all the world, at a period when there were many to dispute with him the triple crown of forensic, philosophic, and political composition."

"A scholar without pedantry, and a Christian without cant, Mr. Forsyth seems to have seized with praiseworthy tact the precise attitude which it behoves a biographer to take when narrating the life, the personal life, of Cicero. Mr. Forsyth produces what we venture to say will become one of the classics of English biographical literature, and will be welcomed by readers of all ages and both sexes, of all professions and of no profession at all.”—London Quarterly.

"This book is a valuable contribution to our Standard Literature. It is a work which will aid our progress towards the truth; it lifts a corner of the veil which has hung over the scenes and actors of times so full of ferment, and allows us to catch a glimpse of the stage upon which the great urama waɛ played."-North American Review.

Copies sent by mail, post paid, on receipt of price.

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