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her hand a crown; above it and at each of the four corners were rams' heads, and a garland ran all round, supported in the front by the figure of a naked

child. Close to this we found fragments of another small sarcophagus, also adorned with rams' heads and a garland, and carrying the inscription :

ΕΡΜΗΣ ΘΕΟΔΩΡΟΥ ΠΡΟΣΦΙΛΗΣ ΧΑΙΡΕ.

The large mausoleum itself, around which these tombs were grouped, stood on a platform approached by five grades of marble steps, the platform being 27 feet long by 11 feet wide at the edge of the highest grade.

In the lowest grade of steps we found an incision had been made and a large sarcophagus inserted underneath the building; this was approached by a narrow passage between two walls, 18 feet long; without destroying the whole superstructure we could not uncover this sarcophagus so as to see if it had an inscription on it, and as we saw that it had been opened at the side to extract whatever of value it had contained, we deemed it best to leave it as it was. Evidently this was the tomb of the individual to whose honour the mausoleum had been erected, for it was the only sarcophagus we could find actually under the building.

On the top of the platform there had once stood a very handsome and massive building, the lower chamber of which was formed of huge blocks of marble, with a corniced edge on the side facing the sea, namely that 27 feet long. Apparently there had only been two blocks of marble on this side, one of which bore the inscription

ΦΙΛΟΦ ΦΙΛΟ

in letters of a good period, suggesting that the name of the man to whose honour the mausoleum had been erected was one Philophron, son of Philophron. On the other large block we found a long metrical inscription evidently added at a later date.

Concerning the building which surmounted this lower chamber we can of course only offer speculations from the nature of the fragments of marble columns and decorations found amongst the ruins. Apparently huge stones with corniced edges formed the roof of this lower chamber, on the top of which stood an open Doric building supported by columns, of which we found many druins; these columns had been very fine, 2 feet 7 inches in diameter at the base, and with 22 flutings; the drums had been fastened together by neatly made iron rivets soldered into the marble with lead.

We also found the body of a well-formed marble lion, with traces of a mane down the back, and with a girth of 4 feet 1 inch. This fragment of the lion was found on the side towards the sea, and doubtless there had been another or others at the corners of the building.

A close examination of this one mausoleum enabled us to form some faint idea of the magnificent effect which this plain of tombs by the sea-shore must have afforded in the days of Thasiote splendour. Amongst the thickly-growing brambles are many indications of mausolea of equal magnificence, the excavation of which we did not undertake. The whole plain in which is the olive plantation is covered with 12 feet of soil above the original level on which the tombs stood, making it of course a matter of impossibility to recover the form and dimensions of many of them.

Tombs of the poorer class seem altogether to have been excluded from this plain, and we found many of these in lines running up a narrow valley at the back of the town. Most of them consisted of small terra

cotta sarcophagi about 3 feet square, some decorated with a pretty pattern, others perfectly plain, and each having in it nothing but a small vase of rude workmanship. The presence of golden ornaments in a few of the tombs which have lately been found is sufficient to account for the general rifling of them before the fall of earth had covered them, and before certain erections of later Roman and Byzantine date had been constructed above them.

Here we

The marble quarries of Thasos, as I have said, were situated to the south of the island, and on a narrow tongue of land joining the marble promontory to the island was situated a town which seems to have been the second in importance in the island, and probably wholly devoted to the commerce in marble. found buried in the sand by the shore other tombs, and fragments of beautifully-worked sarcophagi; one lid had bosses 1 foot 10 inches wide by 1 foot 3 inches high, decorated with female heads; another had the bosses decorated with wreaths of flowers, and the sloping roofs of the lids were occasionally decorated with well-worked diaper patterns. In the centre of the village stands a very large sarcophagus with a metrical inscription, which M. Perrot published in his monograph on Thasos, and on a tomb we dug up in the sand we found an inscription to the memory of a lady, which tomb was 6 feet 1 inch long by 2 feet 8 inches wide, and edged with a neat border.

On the top of the hill overlooking the sea we found amongst broken sarcophagi the fragments of several inscriptions-some plain, some metrical. A thorough excavation of this spot would undoubtedly bring to light interesting and varied devices in marble sarcophagi; the ground is full of them, but owing to the accumulation of soil they are at a great depth.—

J. THEODORE BENT.

[Thasos is held by the family of the Khedive: hence the transfer of the Thasiote eagle to Bulak.— C. T.]

Revue Archéologique. March-April, 1887. Paris. 1. M. Bazin on remains of the Roman theatre at Antibes, mostly demolished in 1691 to supply materials for Vauban's fortifications: plan. 5. M. Muntz on the remains of ancient Rome at the Renaissance: concluded. 6. M. Deloche on signet rings of the Merovingian period: continued. 7. M. Monceaux argues that the poet Avienus was really proconsul of Africa, although the old date for his proconsulate must be abandoned. 8 Dr. Néroutsos-Bey on Greek inscriptions from Alexandria, some of them previously published to be continued. 9. M. Guillemand on Gaulish inscriptions, starting with the bilingual of Todi: to be continued. M. Théodore Reinach receives Mr. Head's Historia Numorum with faint praise.-C. T.

Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique. April, 1887. Athens and Paris.

1. MM. Cousin and Deschamps on a decree of the Roman Senate dated 15 August 39 B. C. found by them within the temple of Zeus Panamaros near Stratoniceia in Caria. 3. M. Fougères summarises the results of his excavations at Delos last summer, and publishes thirty-eight of the inscriptions that he found there in these are signatures of the sculptors Agasias of Ephesos, son of Menophilos; perhaps Antisthenes; Boethos and Theodosios; Eutychides (of

Miletos); and Hephaistion of Athens, son of Myron. 4. M. Holleaux publishes a marble head found by him near the temple of Apollo Ptoos and belonging to the statue of an 'Apollo' with the dedication by l'ythias and Aschrion previously found there and

published by him in the Bulletin last year: two plates. 5. M. Foucart suggests that the record of victories discovered at Olympia and hitherto assigned to Theagenes of Thasos should rather be assigned to Diagoras of Rhodes.-C. T.

SUMMARIES OF PERIODICALS.

Athenacum: 21 May; an obituary notice of Mr. Keith-Falconer. 4 June; a review of F. H. Chase's Chrysostom, a study in the history of Biblical interpretation. 4 June; review of Lupton's life of Colet.

Academy: 21 May; a letter from the Bishop of Durham to show that the list of Bishops of Rome contained in Hegesippus' lost memoirs (Euseb. H. E. 4 22) is preserved in Epiphanius Haer. 27, 6; a letter from Rob. Ellis from Rome communicating his discovery of a new codex of the Culex of which the next number of the Journal of Philology is to give an account. Its date is the end of the 14th century; 'a passage in that poem till now given up as incurably vitiated is convincingly restored by the new codex': a letter from R. Brown, jun., on the Etruscan Numerals. 28 May; a review of Welldon's Rhetoric by J. E. Sandys. 4 June; a letter from T. W. Allen on compendiums in Greek Palaeography (&pa rapά &c.) ; S. G. Owen emends Ovid Tristia 5. 5. 45 nata pudicitia est moris probitasque fidesque, read oris for moris, cp. Martial 11.103 tanta tibi est animi probitas orisque. 11 June; letters from F. J. A. Hort and I. O. Westwood on the Cod. Amiatinus, letter from M. A. Stein on the derivation of meridies, letter from W. M. Lindsay on compendiums in Greek palaeography; reviews of A. Darmesteter's La Vie des Mots, by H. Bradley, and of Head's Historia Numorum by C. Oman; an account of the performance of the Aulularia at Melbourne University with a new conclusion by Prof. Tucker. 18 June; reviews of J. Réville, La réligion à Rome sous les Sévères by F. T. Richards, of R. Ellis' Fables of Avianus by A. S. Wilkins; Isaac Taylor, in answer to A. Lang, attempts to explain the story of Cupid and Pysche as a naturemyth; an account of a paper by J. H. Moulton at Camb. Phil. Society.

The Journal of Education contains an interesting paper by A. Sidgwick on the Future of Classical Education.' He describes the expansion of classical studies, which has taken place of late years, as being in fact a renaissance'; gives a warning against over-specialisation on the port of teachers, and the substitution of erudition for training on the part of learners; speaks of the danger of the production of knowledge outrunning the distribution of it, and of the need of an intermediate class between the researchers and the general body of teachers. He thinks that in future the early training will be more systematic than in the past, but that in the higher stages there will be more general enlightenment, less mere grammar, perhaps no verse composition; it will be common perhaps for a boy to drop prose composition'; but the school will be a place of more varied life and interest, the masters will take up different lines of special study. While the Latin and Greek languages will be as well known as now to the few, the many will have a far greater knowledge of the matter than at present, and along with this a good working knowledge of the language, such as will enable them to have a familiar acquaintance with the history, the people, and the life of the ancients.

Erpositor, June. Mr. Gore, criticising Prof. Sanday's papers from the Anglican point of view,

expresses general agreement in regard to the origin of the Christian ministry, but desiderates a fuller recognition of the princip'e of succession.' Mr. W. H. Simcox rejects Volter's analysis of the Apocalypse into an original work of the Apostle John, written about 65, an appendix by the same about 69, and three later recensions. Similarly Vischer's hypothesis favoured by Prof. Harnack, that the book is a Jewish apocalypse with Christian interpolations, is rejected on the ground that the Christian idea of the Messiah pervades the whole, and that, if the groundwork is pre-Christian, it is incredible that the name of St. John should have been substituted for that of the original writer. Mr. Simcox is himself inclined to believe that we have, besides the original apocalypse of St. John, four distinct visions contained in vii. 9-17, xi. 1-13, xiv. 14-20, xvii., visions, however, of the same seer or of the same prophetic school.' Prof. Westcott continues his series on the Revised Version, this time pointing out its value in restoring uniformities of language. The number closes with a slight paper by Dr. Schaff on the German and Anglo-American revisions of the Bible.

Hermes, vol. xxii. part 2, contains: 1. Uber die dem Joannes Antiochenus zugeschriebenen Excerpta Salmasiana, by W. Ph. Boissevain, who argues that the Excerpta of the Codex Regius 1763, placed by C. Müller among the other fragments of Johan. Antioch. are not genuine with the exception perhaps of fragments 1-29. The arguments are partly negative -such as (1) the contradiction between some of the Salin. Excc. and the genuine frr.; (2) the agreement of the Salm. Excc. with Dion rather than Herodian in the period from Commodus to Gordian; (3) the absence of all trace in the Salm. Excc. of the Greek translation of Eutropius used by Johan. Antioch.— partly positive (1) the presence in some of the Salm. Excc., referring to the kingly period, of Byzantine pedautry alien to the genuine fragments, and (2) in the imperial history the coincidence of the Salm. Excc. with the anecdotes of Cedrenus, Glycas, Constantinus Manasses, &c., which points to one common source. 2. Die Textesüberlieferung der angeblich Hippokratischen Schrift über die alte Heilkunde, by H. Kühlewein, who maintains that the Codex Parisinus A is the best authority for the text of περὶ ἀρχαίης Ιατρικής. Where this needs correcting, it must be by means of the Marcianus 269, which in most cases supports the good readings of the former, and in some places corrects it. To support this view of the value and functions of the two. Codices, many examples are given. 3. Die erste Rede des Antiphon, by U. v. Wilamowitz-Mollendorf. An interesting analysis der ältesten attischen Gerichtsrede,' in which the essential legal points are clearly brought out and explained. 4. Demotika der Metocken II. by the same: continued from previous number. From the fact that the demes of the uÉTOIKOL are given, the writer seeks to prove that they must have stood in some legal relation to the demes, and so to the tribes; that in fact they were not in the position of mere clients needing a pоoráτns, according to the common view, but quasi-citizens. To prove this position he claims to show that the μéTOIKOI

share both the rights and duties and religious ceremonies of the δημόται. Thus they served as ὁπλῖται ; contributed to the eiopopá, were subject to the χορηγία ; took part in the Παναθήναια, &c. A priori too, the Athenians must have found it almost necessary to incorporate the thousands of péTOLKO with the citizen body. The adverse testimony of the grammarians, of Isokrates, and of Hypereides is then explained away. The truth may be that the "poOTÁTηs was a member of the deme, who introduced the μέτοικος into it, and was his ἐγγυητής: and so the pooraría ended with the simple act, but was falsely thought to be permanent. But if the μéTOIKOS only became one by entry into a deme, he could not hold the same position as a tévos, in spite of the definition of Aristoph. of Byzant. The position of the ξένος rested on συμβολαί, which were liable to be caucelled by war: that of the μéroшos on Athenian law, and was unalterable. The article is able and interesting, but will hardly be judged to have settled the question. 5. Ueber das Capitel de versuum generibus bei Diomedes, by G. Schultz. An attempt to discover the sources of this chapter of Diomedes and to explain the arbitrary arrangement of the metres in it. Schultz believes that a number of various treatises were made use of, and unscientifically mixed up. The article is ingenious, and for specialists instructive. 6. Florentinische Homerscholien, by H. Schrader. A discussion on the value of the Scholia to Homer in the Codex Laurentianus, plut. xxxii 3. In opposition to E. Maas in vol. xix. pp. 287 ff. Schrader thinks that the Laurent and Venetus B are nearly of the same date, and copied from a common source. The only special value therefore of the former is to provide Scholia of the 'prima manus' for ff. 68, 69, and 145 of Venetus B, which are supplied by a later hand. A similar opinion is given of the value of the Scholia to the Odyssey in Codex Laurentianus, plut. lvii. 32. 7. Stadtrechtbriefe von Orkistos und Tymandos, by Th. Mommsen. An interesting account of Prof. Ramsay's finding and decipherment of the inscription given imperfectly in C.I.L. iii. p. 63. The emperor's letter to Ablabius is here given in full, and part of the petition of the Orkisteni. Part of a similar document is added, communicated by W. J. R. S. Sterrett, referring to Tymandos in Pisidia. 8. Zu Athenaeus, by G. Kaibel. Are the excerpts from the two first books of Athenaeus in the Lexicon of Suidas taken from the epitome of the books or from the larger edition now lost? Suidas certainly used the larger edition for the books now extant in the Venetian Codex. There is therefore a presumption that he used it for the first two. This presumption is confirmed by a number of instances in which Suidas contains points which are omitted in the epitome, and which he must therefore have got from the original.-Miscellen: Scenisches by C. Robert, who suggests that the two actors in the votive relief found in the Peiraeus are holding mirrors, not tympana, and that the figure sitting at the foot of the Kalm of Dionysus is neither his wife, nor Artemis Munichia, but the nymph of the victorious φυλή, who in the μεγάλα Διονύσια is wedded to the god of the festival. This is represented on the great crater in the museum at Naples.

Rheinisches Museum, vol. xlii. pt. 2 contains: Die pseudo-heraklitischen Briefe, u. ihr Verfasser (E. Pfleiderer.) Letters 4 to 7 certainly, 8 and 9 almost certainly, and all most probably, were the work of an educated Jew of Alexandria, perhaps the writer of the Book of Wisdom. Zur Entwicklung der kaiserlichen Stadtpräfectur (E. Klebs.) 'That Augustus originated the appointment of praefectus

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urbi, to act as police magistrate and civil head of the cohortes urbanae; hence the correction of xx. into xv. in Tac. Ann. is unnecessary.' Zu den historischen Arbeiten der ältesten Peripatetiker (F. Dümmler.) i. Politeien, Politik u. πολιτικὰ τὰ πρὸς τοὺς καιρούς. ii. Νόμοι und νομιμὰ βαρβαρικά. iii. Sakralalterthumer. Investigating how far Plutarch, Nicolaus, &c. are indebted to Theophrastus on the above subjects. Philodem über das homerische Fürstenideal (F. Bücheler.) On the Homeric quotations in the fragmentary work of Philodemus, περὶ τοῦ καθ' Όμηρον ἀγαθοῦ βασίλεως. Die Gründung von Naukratis (G. Hirschfeld.) Naucratis was given to the Greeks by Amasis, and the earliest date for its antiquities is 570 B. C. The Abu Simbel inscriptions date from Psammetichus 1.' Zu Entzifferung der messapischen Inschriften, iv. (W. Deecke.) Treating of the six most important of those published in Notizie degli Scavi di Antichita, 1884. Nachahmer u. Vorbilder des Dichters Gregorios von Nazianz (A. Ludwich.) His poems influenced Nonnus and show acquaintance with Aratus, Theocritus, &c.' Polykrates Anklage, u. Lysias' Vertheidigung des Sokrates (R. Hirzel) That the oration against Socrates current in antiquity bore the name of Polycrates, and called forth in reply Lysias' Defence, Xenophon's Memorabilia, and the episode in Plato's Meno.' Ueber die Nausikaaepisode (F. Marx.) 'Read toonτa paewýv in vi. 209. Expunge ll. 129, 136, 221, 222, read μernλ0ev in 135, and then the TÓρlos is simply a ἱκετήριος κλάδος. Alexandrinische Studien (A. Gercke.) (1) The date of Magas of Cyrene. Reigned from 300-297 to 251-247 B.C.' (2) The accession to power of Hiero II. Hiero was named general in 270 and Bariλeùs in 265: the Mamertine expedition therefore bears the latter date.' (3) Places Ptolemy II.'s marriage with his sister Arsinoe between 276 and 270. Quelle der Ueberlieferung ueber Ammonius Sakkas (H. von Arnim.) The third chapter of Nemesius, de Anima (and prob. the second also, if Numenius is corrupt) is based upon Porphyry, Συμμικτὰ Ζητήματα, as is Priscian Solutions I. p. 558 foll,, and both represent teaching of Ammonius. Ueber Eratosthenes Katasterismen (J. Böhme.) Demonstrating against Maass the Eratosthenic origin of the Catasterismi.

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Under the head of Miscellen: Zu Petronius cap. 58 (L. Friedländer.) The three riddles are all from spinning and weaving: the first denotes the process of weaving; the second is the spindle; the third, distaff and spindle.' Zu Quintilian (E. Wölfflin.) x. i. 60 idem amarior for quoquam minor. x. i 63 clegans ct for dicendi vi. x. i. 65 after praecipuus Halm's est and Wiegand's et admirandus should alike be removed. x. i. 69 Hunc imitatus for Admiratus. Ad Apulei Metamorphoses scripsit J. Van der Vliet. ix. 8, p. 159, 18 f. Read forte and bobus iungendo. ix. 10, p. 160, 25 read ut noxios cf. Tac. Ann. v. 11. ix. 19, p. 166, 18 omit festinat and read et ut magnis...percito nuntiat. x. 7, p. 186, 12 insert potui after scire. x. 19, p. 194, 10 at ille nequaquam curans quam posset illi de me etc. x. 25, p. 197, 26 insert multis before spectatus. x. 26 read elisum for clisus. xi. 3, p. 206, 27 insert vestis or tunica before porrectis. xi. 20 read cognitis...fabulis for [in]cognitis...famulis. Eine griechische Inschrift des Cyriacus (K. Schumacher.) From the Delian inscr. in Bull. de Corr. Hell. I. p. 388, no. 37, restoring that in Bull. vi. p. 491, no. 4. Aelteste lateinische Inschrift (F. B.) Found by Helbig and Dümmler on a golden fibula in a Pra"nestine tomb. It dates from the 6th century B. C. and is interesting chiefly for FHE: FAAKED (retrograde) showing reduplicated perf and the aspirate character of the f. sound.

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BALLIOL (begins Nov. 15) one law and history (Brackenbury) scholarship (£80): (begins Nov. 17) three classical scholarships (£80), candidates must be under 19 on Nov. 29; three classical exhibitions (£70); two mathematical scholarships (£80); two math. scholarships at QUEEN'S and CORPUs (£80) will be awarded on the same examination.

A combined examination (beginning Nov. 17) for Nat. Science scholarships and exhibitions. BALLIOL: one Sch. (£80), one Exh. (£40). EXETER : one Sch. (£80). CHRIST CHURCH: one Sch. (£80), one Exh. (£85). TRINITY: one Schol. (£80). No limits of age. Names sent to Master of Balliol on or before Nov. 10.

HERTFORD (begins Nov. 23), eleven scholarships: three open classical (£100); one open Math. (£100); two open (Lusby) scholarships (60); to the rest there are various restrictions. No limit of age.

BRASENOSE, PEMBROKE, WORCESTER, CHRIST CHURCH Combined exam. for Mathematical scholarships (begins Nov. 29): one scholarship at each college (£80); and also two open exhibitions (about £30) at Worcester. Candidates for the scholarships must be under 19 on Dec. 3.

CAMBRIDGE.

UNIVERSITY SCHOLARSHIPS: Craven Student (Classics), E. A. Gardner, Caius (City of London); Walker Student (Pathology), J. W. Hunter, M.D. Edinburgh, F.R.S. E.; Kenniatt Sch. (Hebrew), 1. R. V. Kennett, Queen's (Merchant Taylors'), 2. A. B. G. Lillingston, Queen's (Merchant Taylors'); Whewell (Int. Law), 1. A. Ll. Davies, Trin. (Marlboro'), 2. A. B. Case, Trin.

UNIVERSITY PRIZES: Mason (Hebrew), R. V. Kennett, Queen's (Merchant Taylors'); Yorke (Law), T. E. Seruther, Trin. (Mill Hill and Univ. Coll. London); Acc., E. Jenks, King's (Dulwich); Minshell (Pol. Econ.), S. M. Leathes, Trin. (Eton).

COLLEGES: Clare Fellows, A. Larmor (Belfast), C. R. Jessop (Univ. Coll. London); Pembroke Fellows, A. V. Leahy (Uppingham and Trin. Coll. Dublin), E. G. Browne; Caius (Tancred Physic. Student), A. L. Tatham (Lancaster); Corpus Scholars (Cl.) G. L. Richardson (Sheffield), 1st year; (Math.) J. L. Boulden (R. Inst.), 2nd year; Queen's Hon. Fellow, G. B. Finch; Fellow, W. R. Coates (Trin. Coll. Dublin); Scholars, (Math.) G. Duthie (Aberdeen), 1st year; (Cl.) W. R. Falkner (Weymouth), 1st year; S. Catherine's Hon. Fellows, Rt. Rev. H. Philpott, Bishop of Worcester; Rt. Rev. W. Boyd Carpenter, Bishop of Ripon, Rev. G. F. Browne.

ANNOUNCEMENTS: Cavendish. Two Scholarships of £30 per annum for years for candidates under 17 on August 3rd, 1887, on which day the examination begins; subjects, classical and mathematical. Names to be sent in one week before.

CLASSICAL TRIPOS, Part I.-Class I. : Division 1, A. F. Ramsay, Girton; Division 2, J. H. Badley, Trin. (Rugby), L. G. B. J. Ford, King's (Repton), W. Loring, King's (Eton), G. L. Pilkington, Pemb. (Uppingham), F. W. Thomas, Trin. (Birmingham); Division 3, W. G. Headlam, King's (Harrow), F. G. Hughes, King's (Uppingham), H. Macmaster, Cai. (Liverpool College), N. A. North, Chr. (Blackheath), N. H. Rendall, Trin. (Harrow), G. Swift, Emm. (Oakham), J. N. H. Wing, Trin. (Bury S. Edmund's).

Class II. Division 1, W. C Bridgeman, Trin. (Eton), R. R. Frederick, Magd. (Yarmouth), E. Lewis, Corp. (Eton), W. C. MacDonald, Pemb. (Aberdeen), E. N. Marshall, Joh. (Sedburgh), S. W. Meck, Trin. (Harrow), C. R. Miller, Pemb. (Chr. Hosp.), B. Pares, Trin. (Harrow), E. H. Pearce, Pet. (Chr. Hosp.), R. N. Pope, Joh. (Merchant Taylors'), W. R. Prideaux, Queen's (City of London), F. S. Ranken, Queen's (Highgate), G. D. Scott, Trin. (Haileybury), F. W. G. Sidebotham, Cai., W. H. Ward, Cla. (Repton), H. F. J. Wright, Pemb. (Highgate), K. Liberty, Girton; Division 2, F. C. Boddard, Trin., H. F. E. Blanchamp, Chr., H. S. Cronin, Trin., E. R. Ellis, Trin., R. H. Fuller, Emm., W. Greenstock, Joh., C. W. Greenstreet, Chr., P. B. Halcombe, King's, R. O. Hutchinson, Jes., G. W. Kinman, Joh., H. C. Marillier, Pet., C. Marriott, Sid., E. B. Nicholson, Joh., F. H. Oates, Trin., F. G. Padwick, Trin., G. H. Peacock, Cla., H. C. Sharpe, Trin., T. H. Sifton, Joh., P. Simpson, H. Selw., G. Stephenson, Trin., H. C. Stokes, Pemb., C. T. Whitmell, Sid., A. P. Williams-Freeman, Trin., J. J. Withers, King's, C. N. Ashford, Newnham, E. M. Watson, Girton; Division 3, W. D. Barnes, Pemb., C. Buttar, Pemb., J. W. Eyre, Magd., D. T. B. Field, Joh., C. Gallacher, Trin., C. Hartley, Magd., V. C. Le Fanu, Trin., H. Manley, Emm., A. Neild, Pemb., F. R. Nethersole, Emm., F. E. New, Pet., W. H. S. Peake, Cla., F. L. Perkins, Pemb.; H. H. Schreiber, Cla., E. H. L. Watson, Cai., A. L. S. Riding, Girton.

CLASSICAL TRIPOS, PART II.-The letters b, c, e, appended to the name of a candidate denote the section or sections for which he is placed in the first class (b Philosophy, c History, e Language). The letter a indicates that a candidate has also attained a first class standard in section A (Translation and Composition). The asterisk denotes especial distinction.-Class 1: E. W. Brooks (a, c), King's (Eton), R. S. Conway (a, e*), Caius (City of London), W. Cowper (c), Pemb. (Canterbury), P. Giles (a, c*, e*), Caius (Aberdeen), R. S. Haydon (e), Christ's (S.

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