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Since this venerable book (originally published 1952) remains a good compendium of Latin literature including both prose and poetry, and since one cannot view the table of contents on line, I have reproduced the TOC taking some liberties with the titles to put them in a form classicists would recognize. I've included the (translators) of each section. The compendium is notable for its lack of material from Caesar and Martial and any of Ovid's love poetry. Moreover, in keeping with its times, the poetry of Catullus and Juvenal is bowdlerized. I recommend a review by Edward J. Bassett, CP 48 (1953) 109-112, http://www.jstor.org/stable/265407. It lists the many misprints in the book in footnote 1. I remain dissatisfied with the other possibilities for a text for a course on Latin literature in translation. Atchity is too thin on material, Russell has only prose. I do find Lombardo's Essential Aeneid very useful. TOC Roman Culture: An Essay (MacKendrick) p.3 Mostellaria of Plautus (Harry J. Leon) p.13 Andria of Terence (R. I. Wilfred Westage & Rogers V. Scudder) p.38 De Rerum Natura of Lucretius (Alban D. Winspear) p.60 -Invocation to Venus -Lucretius gives reasons for opposition to Roman institutional religion -The creed of religion vs. the creed of science -The poet's theme -The tranquil life -The movement of the atoms -Atoms vary in shape -In praise of his teacher Epicurus: The moral value of his philosophy -Lucretius with his arguments tries to banish the rear of death -The argument against the fear of death, continued -Lucretius discourses on sex and love -In praise of Epicurus and his achievements in moral enlightenment -The argument of the fifth book -The world is not eternal or divine -The life of primitive man -The evolution of man and human institutions -Origin of belief in the gods -The evolution of human institutions, continued -The great plague at Athens Selections from Sallust (MacKendrick) p.85 -The Jugurthine War p.86 -The Conspiracy of Catiline p.92 -To Caesar on the Republic, II p.99 Selections from the speeches of Cicero (Norman J. DeWitt) p.100 -Against Rullus (De lege agraria II contra Rullum ) p.102 -Pro Cluentio p.106 -Pro Sestio p.112 -Pro Murena p.115 -Pro Caelio p.120 -Pro Milone p.126 -Philippic II p.134 -Philippic IX p.140 Selections from philosophical works (MacKendrick) p.146 -Scipio's Dream from De Republica p.147 -De legibus p.153 -De finibus bonorum et malorum p.162 -Tusculan disputations p.171 -De natura deorum p.176 -On divination p.185 -On old age p.187 -On friendship p.190 -On duty p. 193 Selections from the poems of Catullus (Eric A. Havelock) p.204 -1 p.205 -27, 31, 41, 5 p.206 -7, 2, 3 p.207 -43, 86, 87, 92, 107, 101 p.208 -96, 68b p.209 -70, 8 p.210 -75,72, 85, 76 p.211 -58, 11, 38 p.212 Selections from the Georgics of Vergil (Robert Fitzgerald & Smith Palmer Bovie) p.213 -From the first Georgic p.213 -From the second Georgic p.217 Selections from the Aeneid of Vergil (Rolfe Humphries) p. 219 -The storm, Dido -Dido's passion and death -The funeral games for Anchises -The underworld -Aeneas in Italy -The shield of Aeneas -Nisus and Euryalus -Turnus in battle -Duels: Pallas, Lausus, Mezentius -Drances and Turnus -Camilla -Aeneas kills Turnus in single combat Selections from the Odes of Horace (Paul Shorey & Godwin Smith) p.264 -1.5, 1.11, 1.22 p.265 -1.23, 1.35 p. 266 -1.37, 1.38,2.3 p.267 -2.7, 2.10, 2.13 p.268 -2.14, 3.5 p.269 -3.16 p.270 -3.21, 4.5 p.271 -4.7 p.272 Selections from Ovid (Dorrance S. White) p.273 -From the Metamorphoses p.273 --Apollo and Daphne p.273 --Philemon and Baucis p.275 -From the Fasti p.277 --April 4 Cybele Selections from Livy's History of Rome (Inez Scott Ryberg) p.280 -The preface to the history -The birth of Romulus and Remus at Alba Longa -The founding of a new city by Romulus and Remus -The establishment of a place of refuge -The establishment of the Roman Senate -The rape of the Sabine women -In the war ensuing, the women put an end to the fighting -An Etruscan becomes king in Rome -The reign of Tarquinius Superbus -The capture of Gabii by treachery -The rape of Lucretia and the overthrow of the monarchy -The struggle between the patricians and the plebeians -Establishment of the office of tribune of the plebs -Intermarriage between patricians and plebeians legalized -The first dramatic performances in Rome -The character of Hannibal -Hannibal addresses his army before crossing the Alps -Proclamation of the freedom of Greece -Cato's speech against repealing the Oppian Law -The character of Marcus Porcius Cato Augustus' Res Gestae (Charles F. Edson & Carl Schuler) p.302 Seneca's Medea (Elizabeth C. Evans) p.309 Selections from the Satyricon of Petronius (Alston H. Chase) p.324 -The werewolf -The widow of Ephesus -The legacy-hunters of Croton -Trimalchio's banquet Selections from Quintilian's The Training of the Orator (MacKendrick) p.335 -Preface -Elementary education -Is school preferable to private tutoring? -Boy nature: some hints to the teacher -The teacher as the parent of the mind -Prologue: The lament of a husband and father -What to read -The good orator must also be good man -The morals of the orator Selected letters of the Younger Pliny (John Paul Heironimus) p.361 -Pliny to Soius Senecio 1.13 p.361 -Pliny to Avitus 2.6 p.362 -Pliny to Baebius Macer 3.5 p.362 -Pliny to Tacitus 6.16 p.364 -Pliny to Tacitus cont. 6.20 p.365 -Pliny to Trajan 10.96 p.366 -Trajan to Pliny 10.97 p.367 Selections from Tacitus (Harry J. Leon) p.369 -The Annals p.371 -The Germania p.405 Selections from the Sixth Satire of Juvenal (John Paul Heironimus) p.415 Selections from the Deified Julius of Suetonius (John Paul Heironimus) p.426
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