Imágenes de páginas
PDF
EPUB

REFERENCE
NUMBER.

FACULTY OF ARTS.-EVENING LECTURES.

*TIME TABLE.

N.B.-The numbers in the left-hand column refer to the Synopses of Lectures on pp. 103-166.

SUBJECT.

FIRST YEAR.

[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

+Chemistry and Physics and Physiography are taken in alternate years. In 1904 Lectures

are given in Physics and Physiography; in 1905 in Chemistry.

Monday.

7787

[ocr errors]

6

7&9

Tuesday.

.

[blocks in formation]

∞ ::::

Friday.

LECTURE SUBJECTS FOR 1904.

LECTURES.

THE following regulations have been passed by the Senate :

NON-MATRICULATED STUDENTS.

It shall be open to any non-matriculated student, who has attended the full courses of lectures upon any subject, to compete for Honours or Pass in the regular examinations upon his subject, and to have his name published and recorded in the regular class lists, with a distinguishing mark; but he shall be incapable of holding any scholarship or receiving any prize of those already established for students proceeding to a Degree.

Each such student shall be entitled to receive a certificate of attendance upon the lectures or laboratory practice in the subjects which he has selected, and proficiency therein, as ascertained by the regular and ordinary examinations within the University.

The above regulations do not apply to the lectures and examinations in the Faculty of Medicine.

The following regulation has been adopted by the Faculty of Science :-"There shall be only one standard for Honours in Scientific subjects, viz., that adopted in the Faculty of Science." N.B.-The numbers refer to the Time Tables of Lectures on pages 83-102.

CLASSICS AND MODERN LANGUAGES.
Subjects selected for Lectures and Examinations:—

LATIN-1904.

1. First Year, Pass.-Livy, Book II.; Virgil, Georgics (selections). Add. for Honours.-Tacitus, Dialogus de Oratoribus and Agricola; Virgil, Eneid, I. to IV. Roman History to the Tribunate of Ti. Gracchus.

2. Second Year, Pass.-Sallust, Jugurtha; Horace, Odes. Add. for Honours.-Watson's Select Letters of Cicero, parts 3 and 4; Terence, Phormio; Catullus (selections). Pass and Honours.— Roman History from the Tribunate of Ti. Gracchus to the battle of Actium.

3. Third Year, Pass.-Tacitus, Annals, III. and IV.; Cicero, de Finibus, I. and II.; Lucretius (selections). Roman History from the battle of Actium to the death of Marcus Aurelius. Add. for Honours. Tacitus, Annals, I., II., V., VI.; Horace, Epistles; Martial, select Epigrams (Stephenson), Books IV. to XII. Roman Literature.

LATIN 1905.

First Year, Pass.-Cicero pro Milone and pro Archia; Virgil, Eneid I. and II. Add. for Honours.-Cicero de Oratore, Book I.; Virgil, Eneid III. to VI. Roman History to the Tribunate of Ti. Gracchus.

Second Year, Pass.-Cicero, Second Philippic; Sallust, Catiline; Horace, Satires (selections), and Epistles, Book I. Add. for Honours.-Watson's Select Letters to Cicero, Parts 1 and 2; Plautus, Captivi and Trinummus. Pass and Honours.Roman History from the Tribunate of Ti. Gracchus to the battle of Actium.

Third Year, Pass.-Tacitus, Histories I. and II.; Cicero, Tusculanae Disputationes, I. and II.; Juvenal (selections). Roman History from the battle of Actium to the death of Marcus Aurelius. Add. for Honours.-Tacitus, Histories III., IV., V.; Lucretius (selections); Lucan (selections). Roman Literature.

GREEK.

There will be three Pass classes in Greek. Students of the First Year reading for a Pass must attend the First Year class; but candidates for Honours in the First Year must attend the Second Year class, taking also the additional subjects prescribed for Honours.

Students of the Second Year reading for a Pass must attend the Second Year class; candidates for Honours in the Second Year must attend the Third Year class, taking the additional subjects prescribed for Honours. Those who, having read for Honours in the First Year, are not candidates for Honours in the Second Year, must attend the Third Year Pass class.

Students of the Third Year must attend the Third Year

classes.

The lectures will be illustrated, so far as is desirable, by diagrams, lantern slides, and such other means as may prove feasible.

GREEK-1904.

4. First Year, Pass.-Homer, Odyssey, Book I.; Sophocles, Antigone; Andocides, De Mysteriis; Greek History to 404 B.C. Composition and Unseen Translation.

5. Second Year, Pass.-Eschylus, Persae; Aristophanes, Knights; Thucydides, Book V.; Greek History to 404 B.C. Unseen Translation.

Additional for Junior Honours.-Homer, Odyssey, Books. XVII-XIX. Composition.

6. Third Year, Pass.-Eschylus, Persae; Homer, Odyssey, Books XVII-XIX.; Demosthenes, Against Leptines; Herodotus, Book VIII.; Greek History, 404-323 B.C.

Additional for Senior Honours.-Composition and Unseen Translation; Topography of Athens, with ancient authorities.

Additional for Third Year Honours.-Demosthenes, Pro Phormione and Contra Stephanum, I. and II. General Paper.

GREEK-1905.

First Year, Pass.-Lysias, Orations (selections, ed. Shuckburgh); Euripides, Iphigenia in Tauris; Greek History to 404 B.C.; Greek Composition and Unseen Translation.

Second Year, Pass.-Thucydides, Book VI.; Aristophanes, Peace; Sophocles, Edipus Rex; Greek History to 404 B.C.; Unseen Translation.

First Year, Honours.-As Second Year, Pass, with Xenophon, Hellenica, Books 1V. to VII., and History of the Period 404 to 362 B.C.; Greek Composition.

Third Year, Pass.-Homer, Iliad 16, 18, 22-24; Herodotus, Book VI.; Sophocles, Edipus Rex; Greek History, 404-323 B.C.; Unseen Translation.

Second Year Honours.-As Third Year, Pass, with Aristotle, Poetics; Lectures on the Greek Theatre and History of the Greek Drama; Greek Composition.

Additional for Third Year Honours.-The Homeric Hymns; General Paper.

CLASSICS.

BOOKS RECOMMENDED*

[ocr errors]

Lewis and Short's Latin Dictionary (Clarendon Press)

Roby's Latin Grammar (Macmillan).

Gildersleeve and Lodge's Latin Grammar.

Liddell and Scott's Greek Lexicon.

Goodwin's or Hadley and Allen's Greek Grammar.

Comparative Grammar of Greek and Latin, by Victor Henry, translated by R. T. Elliott; or, Giles' Manual of Comparative Philology for Classical Students (Macmillan).

Rutherford's First Greek Grammar.

Thompson, Syntax of Attic Greek.

ANCIENT HISTORY

Mommsen's History of Rome, translated by Dickson (Bentley).
Mommsen, The Provinces under the Roman Empire.

Greenidge's Roman Public Life.

How and Leigh's History of Rome (Longmans).

Pelham's Outlines of Roman History.

Bury's Student's Roman Empire (Murray).

Strachan-Davidson, Cicero. Warde Fowler, Julius Cæsar.

Grote's History of Greece.

Bury's History of Greece (Macmillan).

ANCIENT ATLAS

Atlas Antiquus, Kiepert (Berlin).

GREEK AND ROMAN LITERATURE

Teuffel's History of Roman Literature, translated by Warre (Bell).

History of Roman Literature, Cruttwell.

Roman Poets of the Republic, Sellar.

Roman Poets of the Augustan Age, Sellar.

Virgil, Sellar.

Mackail's Latin Literature.

History of Ancient Greek Literature, Murray or Mahaffy.

FOR PASS STUDENTS:

Editions of Latin Authors.

Cicero, 2nd Philippic, J. E. B. Mayor (Macmillan), or Peskett (Cambridge); pro Milone, Red Cambridge), or Colson (Macmillan); pro Sestio, Holden (Macmillan); pro Murena, Heitland (Cambridge); in Catilinam, Wilkins (Macmillan); pro Lege Manilia, Wilkins (Macmillan); pro Roscio Amerino, Donkin (Macmillan); pro Archia, Reid (Cambridge); in Verrem, Book V. (Baiter and Kayser), or Laming (Rivington); de Provinciis Consularibus (Baiter and Kayser); de Finibus (Baiter and Kayser). Tusculana Disputationes (Baiter and Kayser). Selected Letters, Tyrrell (Macmillan).

Horace, Odes, Wickham (Oxford), or Page (Macmillan); Satires, Palmer (Macmillan); Epistles, Wilkins (Macmillan).

Juvenal, Pearson & Strong (Oxford), or Hardy (Macmillan), or Duff (Cambridge).

*Students are strongly recommended to order as early as possible all books that will be needed in the course of the year.

« AnteriorContinuar »