. V, Q
 __ STATE COLLEGE OF KENTUCKY. 31 Z
 · SI plus S2, or Ir, and will present a thesis written in French (about 4,000  
  words). .
L The text—b0oks in this Department are frequently changed, and a large portion of the ·
° instruction in all classes is independent of the manual adopted. Texts recently used are:
A; G1: Becker‘s Elementary German; ]oynes·Meissner’s and Whitney‘s Grammars;
Thomas & I-Iervey‘s Reader; Carmen Sylva’s Aus meinem Koenigreich.
_ Gs : Hodges’ Scientific German; Gore’s Science Reader. _
I G2: Hoffman’s Historische Erziihlungen; Freytag's Luther; Schiller‘s Wallenstein -
Maria Stuart, etc.; Scheffel’s Trompeter; Freytag’s Soll und Haben; Harris' Composition.
G3; Lessing‘s Nathan. Mina von Barnhelm, Laokoon, etc.
Gh : Bernhardt’s Litteraturgeschichte.
Gl : Klenze’s Gedichte.
_` Gph: Paul's Mittel—hochd. Grammatik; Wackernagel, Edelsteine,
F1: Frazer & Squair’s Grammar; Edgren‘s Grammar; Verne‘s Michael Strogoff, Tour
¤ du Monde; Van Daell‘s Introduction to French Authors; Fontaine's Napoléon.
F2 : Loti‘s Pécheur d'lslande; Lacombe‘s Petite Histoire; Rostrand‘s Cyrano de Ber-
I gerac; VVhitney's Grammar, Part Il; Grandger1t‘s Composition; Luquie¤s‘ Places and
Peoples; Herdler's Scientific French Reader.
Fh : Demogeot’s and Aubert’s Litérature Francaise. ·
S1 : Edgren‘s Grammar; Matzke’s Reader.
,· S2: Same, Knapp‘s Readings; Alarcon's El Capitan Veneno.
Q I1 : Grandgent’s Grammar; Bowen’s Reader.
  I2: Goldoni’s Comedies; Pellico`s Prigioui.
l VIII. DEPARTMENT OF GREEK AND LATIN.
  PROFESSOR NEVILLE, ASSISTANT PROFESSOR BLANTON.
, grim.
; PREPARATORY. i
Firsl Sc::i01z—Smiley& Storke‘s Beginner’s Latin Book, the study involving a daily
exercise in inflexion and in translation from and into Latin on the blackboard; ViriRon1ae.
Scrum! Scs.vizm—Ten lives of Nepos; tive books of Caesar; Daniell’s New Latin Com-
position; Creighton’s History of Rome; Guerber’s Myths of Greece and Rome. .
FRESH MAN CLASS.
Six orations of Cicero ; selections from Ovid, with instruction in scan-
) ning; the first and twenty-first books of Livy; ]ohnson’s Private Life of the
Romans.
SOPHOMORE CLASS.
, Six books of Virgil; Cicero De Senectute; the Captives of Plautus or
1 the Phormio of Terence ; Sallust’s Conspiracy of Catiline.
`V 4 JUNIOR CLASS.
V Horace (except a part of the Epodes and most of the Satires), with the
scanning of the more common metres; letters of Cicero and of Pliny; the
first half of Bradley’s Arnold’s Latin Prose Composition.
I r SENIOR CLASS.
» . ....
Tacitus—The Germania and the Agricola; the third, seventh, eighth,
and tenth Satires of juvenal; or, instead of the seventh and eighth, an
essay of Seneca’s; poems of Catullus; the second half of Arnold‘s Compo—
sition; Wilkin’s Sketch of Latin Literature. '