University of Virginia Library

GREEK.

Professor Hays.

Professor Fitzhugh.

1. Homer.—Open to every one free of charge. For teachers in
high schools and academics, for college preparation, and for students
of literature and lovers of Homer at large.

This course is an invaluable accompaniment to the study of


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Vergil. The Homeric poems were the 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 human culture, in general, and to the Æneid of Vergil in particular,
upon every page of which it shows illuminating and inspiring light.

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

Text-Book.—Homer's Iliad.

2. Beginner's Course.—The essential inflexions and fundamental
principles of syntax are studied in connection with the translation of
Greek exercises into English.

Daily, hours to be arranged. Professor Hays. Cabell Hall,
Room 1.

Text-Book.—White's First Greek Book.

3. Xenophon's Anabasis.—Reading of selected portions to acquire
ability to read any prose readily.

Daily, hours to be arranged. Professor Hays. Cabell Hall,
Room 1.

4. Orations of Lysias against Erstosthenes.—Prose composition
—oral and written exercises.

Daily, hours to be arranged. Professor Hays. Cabell Hall,
Room 1.

Text-Book.—Gleason's Prose Composition.

5. New Testament Greek.—Reading and interpretation of selected
books.

Hours to be arranged. Professor Hays. Cabell Hall, Room 1.

Credit.—Courses 3 and 4 admit to University courses 2A and 3B
respectively, provided the conditions set forth on pages 14 and 15
have been fulfilled.