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SCHOOL OF LATIN.

Professor Fitz-Hugh.

Adjunct Professor McLemore.

Mr. Lehman.

Mr. Hart.

Latin A1: Latin A, B, C, and D, of the entrance requirements, prerequisite.—General
grammar, with oral and written exercises. Sallust, Jugurthine
War
and Conspiracy of Catiline; Virgil, Æneid VII-XII; Ovid, Metamorphoses
XIII-XIV;
Cicero, Friendship and Old Age, Tusculan Disputations and
Dream of Scipio. The geography, history, and private and public life of the
Romans.—(B.A. or B.S. credit, 3 session-hours.) Section I, Mon., Wed.,
Fri., 10-11; Section II, Tues., Thurs., Sat., 10-11. Professor Fitz-Hugh, Mr.
Lehman, Mr. Hart.

Latin B1: Latin A1 prerequisite.—General grammar, with oral and written
exercises. Livy I-II; Tacitus, Agricola; Catullus, Odes; the elegiac
poets; Cicero, De Officiis; Seneca, Moral Essays. The religion and mythology
of the Romans.—(B.A. credit, 3 session-hours.) Mon., Wed., Fri., 11-12.
Professor Fitz-Hugh and Mr. Lehman.

Latin B2: Latin A1 prerequisite.—General grammar, with oral and written
exercises. Livy XXI-XXII; Tacitus, Germania; Horace, Odes; Virgil,
Bucolics and Georgics; Cicero, De Claris Oratoribus; Quintilian, Training of
the Orator.
The art of the Romans.—(B.A. credit, 3 session-hours.) Tues.,
Thurs., Sat., 11-12. Professor Fitz-Hugh and Adjunct Professor McLemore.


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Latin C1: Latin B1 and B2 prerequisite.—History of the Latin Language,
with oral and written exercises. Tacitus, Annals; Cicero, Letters; Plautus,
Captivi; Terence, Phormio; Horace, Satires and Epistles; Cicero, De Oratore
and Orator; Tacitus, Dialogus de Oratoribus. The literary life of the Romans.
—Mon., Wed., Fri., 12-1. Professor Fitz-Hugh and Adjunct Professor McLemore.

Latin C2: Latin B1 and B2 prerequisite.—History of the Latin Language,
with oral and written exercises. Tacitus, Histories; Pliny, Letters; Plautus,
Mostellaria; Terence, Andria; Juvenal, Satires; Lucretius, De Rerum Natura;
Cicero, De Natura Deorum. The philosophic life of the Romans. Tues.,
Thurs., Sat., 12-1. Professor Fitz-Hugh and Adjunct Professor McLemore.

Latin D: Latin C1 or C2 prerequisite.—A three-year course for those
who desire to specialize in classical philology, especially those who choose
Latin as their major for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. If the candidate's
major be Latin, a respectable familiarity with Greek is required. If
the candidate's major be Romantic, the technical Greek requirement is
waived as far as practically possible, and he is guided into the history of
the Roman popular vernacular and into an acquaintance with the authors
illustrating the Vulgar Latin in literature. It is the aim of this course to
prepare the candidate to investigate independently the sources of our knowledge
of the language, monuments (literary and objective), and life of the
Romans. The following is, therefore, an outline of the course: I. In Language:
Elements of comparative grammar; introduction to Latin historical
grammar; systematic grammar; reading of epigraphic and literary monuments
illustrating the history of the Latin Language. II. In the Literary
and Objective Monuments of the Romans: Reading of authors in groups
systematically planned to illustrate the literary life of the Romans; history
and interpretation of texts; elements of palaeography, epigraphy, numismatics,
topography and remains. III. In Roman Life: Constructive study
of Roman culture-history; reading of authors illustrating the development
of Roman civilization; study of modern authorities in Roman culture-history.—Hours
by appointment. Professor Fitz-Hugh, Adjunct Professor
McLemore.