University of Virginia Library

CLASSICAL PHILOLOGY.

It will be the aim of the courses in Latin and Greek to open to all
teachers and students the advantages of University instruction in


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those subjects. Courses 1-4 are especially intended to illustrate the
teaching of Latin in the secondary schools. Courses 5-7 are intended
to open to teachers and summer students the more important fields
of college Latin. The desirability of a knowledge of Greek and of at
least one Romanic language is specially commended to all who wish
to reap the full cultural and scientific benefit of the college courses
in Latin. Greece is the fountain head of European culture, and Rome
its universalizer and transmitter to the modern world. The instruction
will aim to exhibit these relations and thus to emphasize the
unity and continuity of all human culture. Course 1 is preparatory.
Thereafter the work is organized in all courses as follows: Latin
language—systematic study of Latin grammar, with oral and written
exercises in prose composition; Latin literature—systematic study of
the Latin authors, as nearly as possible in culture-historical sequence;
Roman life—systematic study of Roman culture-history in English,
in conjunction with the reading of the authors.

1. Beginners' Latin.—This course is intended for teachers in high
schools and academies, for college preparation and for students of
Latin at large. It involves the Roman pronunciation; careful study
of accent and quantity; thorough drill in declensions and conjugations;
the fundamental principles of the syntax of the cases, tenses,
and moods, the accusative and infinitive, relative and conditional
sentences, uses of the subjunctive; and the main laws of indirect discourse.
These grammatical principles will be illustrated in systematic
exercises in translating easy detached sentences into Latin;
translation into English of easy Latin prose preparatory to Caesar
will also be required.

Text-Book.—Pearson's Essentials of Latin.

Section I, daily, from 8:30 to 9:30; Section II, daily, from 2:30 to
3:30. Professor Montgomery. Cabell Hall, Room 1.

2. Caesar.—This course is offered for teachers in high schools and
academies, for college preparation, and for students of Latin at
large. It involves Caesar's Gallic War I-IV, with collateral readings
in Viri Romae and Roman history. The study of the author will be not
only grammatical, but also literary and culture-historical. Constant
practice in sight reading and systematic study of high school Latin
grammar, with accompanying prose composition based on Caesar,
will be required. Grammar and prose composition will be treated
on Tuesdays and Thursdays, and literature and life—Caesar varied
with Viri Romae and the broad outlines of Roman Culture-history—
on Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays.

Text-Books.—Bennett's Latin Grammar and Preparatory Latin Writer;
Caesar's Gallic War; Viri Romae; Abbott's Short History of Rome and
Kiepert's Atlas Antiquus.

Daily, from 3:30 to 4:30. Miss Bouldin. Cabell Hall, Room 1.

3. Cicero.—This course is offered for teachers in high schools and
academies, for college preparation, and for students of Latin at
large. It involves Cicero's Four Orations against Catiline, The Manilian
Law,
and Pro Archia, with collateral readings in Nepos' Lives,
and the private life of the Romans. The study of the author will be
grammatical, literary, and culture-historical. Constant practice in
sight reading will be required, and high school grammar with accompanying
prose composition based on Cicero will be continued.
Grammar and prose composition will fall on Tuesdays and Thursdays;


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Cicero, varied with Nepos and the private life of the Romans,
on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays.

Text-Books.—Bennett's Latin Grammar and Latin Composition;
Cicero's Orations; Nepos' Lives; Johnston's Private Life of the
Romans.

Daily, from 9:30 to 10:30. Mr. Bishop. Cabell Hall, Room 1.

4. Vergil I-VI.—This course is offered for teachers in high schools
and academies, for college preparation, and for students of Latin
at large. It involves Vergil's Aeneid I-VI, with collateral readings
in Ovid's Metamorphoses, the principles of Latin quantitative versification
as applied to the dactylic hexameter, and the mythology of
the Greeks and Romans. The study of the author will be grammatical,
literary, and culture-historical. Constant practice in sight reading
will be required, and high school grammar, with accompanying prose
composition based on Caesar and Cicero, will be concluded. Grammar
and prose composition will come on Tuesdays and Thursdays;
Vergil, varied with Ovid, and the mythology of the Greeks and
Romans on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays.

Text-Books.—Bennett's Latin Grammar and Nutting's Supplementary
Latin Composition;
Vergil's Aeneid; Ovid's Metamorphoses (Miller);
Fairbanks' Mythology of Greece and Rome.

Tuesday and Thursday, from 10:30 to 11:30. Miss Bouldin. Cabell
Hall, Room 1.

Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, from 10:30 to 11:30. Professor
Fitzhugh. Cabell Hall, Room 1.

5. Vergil VII-XII.—This course is offered for teachers in colleges,
for college students, and for students of Latin at large. It involves
Vergil's Aeneid (Books VII-XII) and Ovid's Metamorphoses (Books
XIII-XIV), with study of the hexameter, and the private life of
the Romans, college grammar and prose composition. The grammar
and prose composition, comprising ten selections from Mather-Wheeler's
Latin Prose Writing, exercises 4, 10, etc., will be held on
Tuesdays and Thursdays, the literature and life on Mondays, Wednesdays,
and Fridays.

Text-Books.—Gildersleeve-Lodge's Larger Latin Grammar; Mather-Wheeler's
Latin Prose Writing; Vergil's Aeneid VII-XII; Ovid's Metamorphoses
XIII-XIV, and Johnston's Private Life of the Romans.

Tuesday and Thursday, from 12:15 to 1:15. Mr. Bishop. Cabell
Hall, Room 1.

Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, from 12:15 to 1:15. Professor
Fitzhugh. Cabell Hall, Room 1.

6. Horace.—This course is offered for teachers in colleges, for college
students, and for students of Latin at large. It involves Horace's
Odes and Epodes, the Latin Elegiac Poets, the rhythms of lyric
and elegiac verse, Roman art, college grammar and exercises in
Gildersleeve's Latin Composition, exercises 9, 21, etc. The grammar
and prose composition will be given on Wednesdays and Fridays and
the Horace, Elegiac Poets (Tibullus and Propertius), and the art
life of the Romans, on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays.

Text-Books.—Gildersleeve-Lodge's Larger Latin Grammar and Gildersleeve's
Latin Composition; Horace's Odes and Epodes; Carter's
The Roman Elegiac Poets; Goodyear's Roman Art.

Wednesday and Friday, from 10:30 to 11:30. Mr. Bishop. Cabell
Hall, Room 1.


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Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday, from 10:30 to 11:30. Professor
Fitzhugh. Cabell Hall, Room 1.

7. Plautus.—This course is offered for teachers in colleges, for
college students, and for students of Latin at large. In involves
Plautus' Captivi, Terence's Andria, Horace's Satires and Epistles; the
rhythms of scenic poetry; history of Latin literature; and advanced
grammatical and stylistic exercises. Historical grammar and prose
composition, comprising ten entire exercises in Moore's Exercises for
Translation into Latin Prose,
exercises 1, 8, etc., will be given on
Wednesdays and Fridays; Plautus, Terence, Horace, and the history
of Latin literature on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays.

Text-Books.—Whitney's Language and the Study of Language;
Moore's Exercises for Translation into Latin Prose; Plautus' Captivi;
Terence's Andria; Horace's Satires and Epistles; Mackail's Latin Literature
and Laing's Masterpieces of Latin Literature.

Wednesday and Friday, from 12:15 to 1:15. Mr. Bishop. Cabell
Hall, Room 1.

Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday, from 12:15 to 1:15. Professor
Fitzhugh. Cabell Hall, Room 1.

Note.—Course 5 is the full equivalent of the second term of Latin
A1 in the University of Virginia catalogue; Course 6 is the full
equivalent of the second term of Latin B1 or B2 in the University of
Virginia catalogue; Course 7 is the full equivalent of the first term
of Latin C1 or C2 in the University of Virginia catalogue.

University Credit.—Any student who fulfills the conditions set
forth on page 16 and who completes successfully Courses 5, 6, and 7
will receive credit for the corresponding courses in the University of
Virginia catalogue.

8. Homer.—This course is suitable for teachers in high schools and
academies, for college preparation, and for all students and lovers of
literature. It is an invaluable accompaniment to the study of Vergil.
The Homeric poems were the first great literary monument of European
culture, and the ultimate source of all subsequent artistic inspiration.
They were the models which Vergil kept always before
him. The Iliad will therefore be read and interpreted in its relation
to European culture in general, and to the Aeneid in particular, upon
every page of which it throws illumining and inspiring light.

Text-Book.—Homer's Iliad.

Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, from 9:30 to 10:30. Professor
Fitzhugh. Cabell Hall, Room 1.

9. New Testament Greek.—This course will consist of the reading
and interpretation of selected books of the New Testament.

Three times a week, hours to be arranged. Professor Montgomery.
Cabell Hall, Room 1.

10. Ancient Art.—This course is intended for all who are interested
in the origin and history of human culture as illustrated in
art. The purpose of the course is to portray by the aid of lantern-slides
the origin and history of European culture with special reference
to the typical monuments of art in the palaeolithic, neolithic,
Egyptian and Oriental, Aegean, and Graeco-Roman periods.

Text-Book.—Reinach's Apollo; An Illustrated Manual of the History
of Art throughout the Ages.

Tuesday, and Saturday, from 8:30 to 9:30 p. m. Professor Fitzhugh.
Cabell Hall, Room 1.


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Note.—No fee will be charged for courses 8 and 10, unless taken
for credit.

Certificate Credit.—Summer School Professional Certificate—Latin
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 and Greek 8, 9, and 10 combined; Special High
School Certificate—Latin 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7; Greek 8, 9, and 10
combined.