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A UTHOR : HODGMAN, ARTHUR W TITLE: ADVERBIAL FORMS IN PLAUTUS PLACE: [COLUMBUS] DA TE : [1 903] I* COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES PRESERVATION DEPARTMENT Master Negative # •.» PIDLIOCRAPHIC MICROFORM TARHFT Original Maierial as Filmed - Existing Bibliographic Record Restrictions on Use: BKS / PROD B'oak s FIJL/ BIB Record 1 of - RBcord updatf-d today ..o92 ID:MYCG92~B3:l322 CC:96(!:>6 BLTsam CPxQhu PCs'S MtiD : 040 245 10 260 300 LDS DCF:? IMTs? RTYPsa CSCs ? GPC:? REP:? DM: 031822 iT:a flOD : BIO:? CPIs? R r'^. FRMs SNRr FBIj; COL. : :1963/ OR 5 IH a d g .: V( a r> , A r t h i. .i r W i rt f r^d» A d V Ef r b i a 1 F o r- n^ s i n P 1 a u t u s = f h t m i c r o f n r m 1 HCoXumbuB , =: I bOhio State University , =^ I c:l.9r):ri GRIG 05-06-92 Acquisi tions MS EL ATC: (::0M: I [... 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Associates for America: Wm. Gardner Hale (University of Chicago). T. D. Seymour (Yale University), and J. H. Wright (Harvard University). CONTENTS Oricinal Contributions : ***«*' A Note on the Mu(un-,->sis ^IS. of Thcounii-s, T. HrDsoN WiLLiAXKs *2S5 Sonio Passafjcs of Aeschylus and Others. W. Headlam 286 Textual Notes on Plato's Repiihlic. R. G. HURY 295 Adverbial Forms in Tlautus. Arthur WiNFr.ED HoDOMAN 296 Remarks on tht Clri^. A. E. HousMAN . . 303 On Albinovanus Pedo Vv. 1-7 apud Sen. Snn^.Wb. Roland G. Kent 311 Quandu'Q}ii(kid or Qv.andi^-Quidem ? Wm. AV. Baker 313 Reviews : Bevan's House of Seleucus. Franklin T. Richards 317 Heinzt's TtrJmiqite of Virqll Walter C. Summers 321 Abbott's Roman Fu/itifal Institutions. T. N re KLIN 324 Yendrve-s' fj'fin J!'ord.s in Irish. J. Strachan. 326 Briefer NitTicKs: PAGE Sonnenschein's liudens of Plauins. W. M. Lindsay 326 Von Wissowa's Paulys Real - Encydopadie. G. F. Hill "... 327 CoRRKSrONDENCE : On Horace Episf. I. ii. 31. — A Coincidence. Samuel Allen 327 Archaeology : Recent Excavations in Rome. Thomas AsHBY, Jun 828 ilaas.s's Greeks and Semites. G. F. Hill . 329 Cook's Oreeic and Roman Antiquities in the British Mvsenm. H. B. Walters . . . 330 Monthly Record. F. H. Marshall .... 331 ArchaPologic:al and Numi.smatic Summaries. If. B. Walters and Warwick Wroih . 332 Corrigendum in June No 332 «onlron : DAVID NUTT, 57-59 LONG ACRE. ISoston : GINN AND COMPANY, 29 BEACON STREET. ENTERED AT THE POST-OFFICE AT BOSTON, MASS., AS SECOND-CLASS MATTER. Price for Single Numbers, One Shilling and Sixpence (35 cents), except the February Kumber, which is Three Shillings (70 cents). Yearly Subscription (Kine Numbers), Twelve Shillings ($3.00), or Thirteen Shillings and Sixpence, Post Free. ;1 GINN AND COMPANY, educational publiebcre (LONDON, BOSTON, and NEW YORK), 9 ST. MARTIN'S STREET, LEICESTER SQUARE, LONDON, W.C. (FRBD. J. MATHBSON, London Representative.) AESCHYLUS: Sevan against Tliob®! : Fl«gg ARISTOPHANES: Platui: Nlcobmi ... 3 6 COI.UEOS 8]»m.=:'r-:iii ... ... 6 VLATO : Apology aii.l Crlto : Djer ... .. 6 ,,, Oorglas: Lot! Re ... ... ..,-. ... 7 g „ Protagoras : Towk 5 § SOPHOCLES : Antigone : Doojje ... 6 TflUCYDIDES :. I. : Morris ... ,„ „,, .... 7 6 m 'II* : Snitli .. .... ... 7 6 „ ¥. : Fowler , .„. § § VII. : Smiili ... 6 XENOPHOll: BeUealoji,!. -IV. : liana! t ... 7 6 ft »• V.-VH. : BeiiiMtt ... 6 „ Memorabilia : Smilli ... ... $ $ DEMOSTHENES: Hellenic Orations : Fkgg 4 fi „ Philippics; JmbeU 4 6 lURIPIDI»; Alcestia: Ilayley, ... ... ... net 6 6 „.. Bacchao : Ke it, ' .... * ... net 4 $ Medea : Allen : llixare ..*. ... ... # f t» cm SCHOOL CLASSICS. ■OMER : Odyssey, VL : Bain ,.. ,.=. t» m wll, I iMin ... «.« tf >. ZII : MiMkwils ... UJCIAN : Timon : iSewall ... XENOPHON : Anabasis, V. : Botfe ff Qalo to Anabasis of : Olenaoii HIOLET : HOMER: Greek Composition School Iliad, I. -III. : Sernotir .» *■ » I.-VI. : Seyimmr... !• >. Odyssey, I.-IV. : IVrrJn : >t f.» „ I. «IT., IJL*XII. Seymour... KEEP: Uses of Moods in Greek and Latin MYERS : Eastern Nations and Greece .. History of Greece PINDER : Selected Odes : Seymour SOPHOCLES : Oedipus Tyrannus : White TYLER : Selections from Greek Lyric Poets WHITE : Beginner's Greek Book „ First Greek Book „ Greek Unseen Translations ... XENOPHON: Questions on: Ferguson ... Seymour : Ptrrin: Rolf© „. 1 6 2 ""f t 4 6 6 7 G i t ? 6 ft % 6 5 3 3 t • ft 6 6 6 LATIN. ABBOTT: lli.Hioryaiul I'est 1 it.n of RomanPolitical Institutions ALLEN: Rumnantii i>f Early Latin (Vliiefly [a.siiii>- tioiis) .,, aa Short Ilistorv of Komaii I'tople ALtmt and GREENOUOH : Latin Grammar . . BENDER: Hii.f History of Roman Literature; Crowf'II, lieiider ami Uicli.inlsuu CAESAR: I.-VII. : Allen :uis ttoAAu iriOtpfVy ttuXlv av Kar' iSc'av p-iav cKacTTov, ws /xius oucri/s, Tt^cvTCs, o tariv eKua-rov Trpoaayop€vop.€v. Adam pertinently asks * if Kar i8cW is genuine, what is the grammatical object of Ti&€VT€s 1 ' Plainly we require an expressed antithesis to iroAAa ; and the simplest mode of obtaining it is to insert cv after hlOtpiv. * With regfird to the various things, in them- selves which we formerly posited as plural- ities, — now, conversely, positing a unity, according til tbe unitary idea of each, iissuming that such a unitary idea exists, we entitle each " essential being." ' This seems to be the manner in which Schneider takes tile passage ; though h^ is content, apparently, to supply Iv. VII. 515 b €1 oJrr StaAeyccr^ai oioLTiTiv Trpo? aAA>/Aoi'S, ov ravra Yjyel av ra Trapovra arroi€p€ 8r;, Tts rpoTTos Tvpan'tSos, (^t'Ac crarpc, yiyicrai : on p.kv yap Ik hrj/xoKpaTiaq /icraySuAAct, a)(€^ov ^yjXov. Stallbaum's suggestion rts rpoTro? rvpamSos w, w , w <^iAc €TaLp€f ylyvta-Bai ; Cp. Phil. \\1 B tuI rpoTTu) 8o^a . . . i^iAci yiyitaBai ; and for the corruption of intiu. ending, 407 c (atrKctrai for dfjKCidOai). R. G. Bury. 9 It) ADVEKBIAL FORMS IN PLAUTUS. I. — ^NouNS AND Adverbs. (1) Accusatives: — hoc commodum^ Trin. 1136. usque ad /atinij Poen. 534, and probably Men. 91 ; adfatim alone, 6(81) instances. nwic ipsum, B. 940, (2) Ablatives singular : — forte fortuna, B. 916, Mil. 287. immerito meOy As. 608, Cas. 919 ; immerUo tuoy Men. 371 ; immeritOf alone, as adverb, S. 16, 28. Similarly, merito, clearly a noun, 10 instances; indeterminate, 23; merito THE CLASSICAL REVIEW. 297 may is, Cas. 182 ; meritissumo eius, As. 737 ; meritissumOi adverb, E. 430. a mani, Am. 253, Most. 767 ; a 7«« we. Mil. 503, Most. 534 ; mane septimi. Men. 1157; mane alone as adverb, 10 in- stances. hac noctu, Am. 272. 404, 731, Trin. 869 ; noctu hac^ Am. 412, Mil. 381 ; nee noctu nee cliu, Aul. frag. 4 ; noctuqne et diu, Cas. 823 ; tieque . . . noctu neque dins, Merc. 862 ; noctu, alone, 21 instances; no.c, adverb, As. 597, clearly, and perhaps also (Fleekeiseu in Jahrb. 1894,850) K. Ill, 417, Tiin. 864, True. 546, though the MSS. give mox in all live places. nndiufi, 10 instances (best written separate from the ordinal, as Most. 956 show.s) viz : — tertins 5 times, all at end of verse or colon ; ijuarlus, Cure. 206, 438 ; quiHtus, True. 509 ; scctus, Cist. 230, Trin. 727. neque noctu neque dius, Merc. 862 ; interdius, once med. vs. (Capt. 730), once in cretic verse (Ps. 1298), and four times at end of colon or verse. If interdius he a genitive, compare iuteruias, which Nonius (496, 21) calls a genitive (Aul. 379; add Poen. 1162, where B and C give it as one word), nee noctu nee diu, Aul. flag. 4 ; noctuque et diu, Cas. 823, anapaestic. diu = & longtime, 18 instances at end of colon or verse, 49 med. vs. (iam diu 17, taut diu 13, otherwise modified 16, alone 21). inagno opere, True. 937 ; magnopere, Pers. 241 ; opere may no, Cas. prol. 21 ; opere tarn inayno, Cas. 430 ; niaiore oj>ere, Cas. prol. 73, Most. 763 ; nid-cumo \ opere, Cas. 992, 7 s Most. 420; ojyere mdxumo, Mil. 75, Most. 5 G 752, Ps. 897, S. 248; tanto opere, B. 1171 (1 only), Cas. 370, Most. 565, S. 608; ifintopere [B. 1171. all but B], Cas. 531 (B), E 134; opere tanto, B. 178, Cist. 713, E. 721 ; opere otherwise, 6 instances. in pereyre, Frag. 40, Caecus (Charisius 212, 20) ; pereyre = from, 27 instances, all -e ; pereyre = to, 7 instances, all -e (but Most. 957, -ei, A); pereyre = in, Am. 352, Trin. 596; hereyri = \n, Am. prol. 5(B,D), Pers. 29, b, twice i-i Charisius 212, 21, but e MSS. Plant.). tempore, As. 733, Men. 1020 (both elided) : tempore, E. 406 ; iempori, Capt, 183 (elided) ; temper edepol, Merc. 990; tenijyeri, 15 instances (-ei Men. 467 [A] and Ps. 1182 [A], both at vs. end). de uesperi suo, Mil. 995; de illaruni uesperi, R. 181 ; uesperi alone, 4 times (in Poen. prol. 114 MSS. give -e, but Charisius -i). (3) Ablatives plural : — amhorum inyratiis, Cas. 315 ; tueis ingrs,- tieis, Merc. 479 ; inyratiis, adverb, 10 in- stances ; yratiis in Plautus is never modified by adjective or by genitive. miris modis, twice at beginning of vs., three times at vs. end ; miri[s]modis, -i-^^^, Trin. 931, (corr. Guyet); multi- niodis, -£- w vy -'_, B 385 (corr. Camerarius), Mil. 1190 (B only), Most. 785 (A only), Pers. 706 (A only) ; omnibus modis, Cas. 940, Ps. 1074, R. 290 ; omni[hu8]modi8, ./- v^ ^ -£_, S. 684 (corr. Scaliger) ; modis otherwise, 3 times med. vs. (Cas. 944, Merc. 919, Trin. 264, anapaestic) and 21 times at vs. or colon end. II. — Adjectival forms. (1) Interchange of -e and der : — aequiter. Frag. Fab. Inc. 73(83), Priscian. aeque, 39 times. amiciter, Pers. 255, end of colon. amice, 7 times. ampliter, B. 677, Cas. 501, Cist. 598, Merc. 99. ^lil. 758, S. 692,— all at vs. end. ample, not Plautine. asperiter, Frag. Fab. Inc. 73(83), Priscian. aspere, not Plautine. auariter, Cure. 127, (anap., other form metrically possible), R. 1238 (vs. end). auare, not Plautine, so we should hesitate to emend auard to auare in True. 459. heniyniter. Cist. 448 (gloss). beniyne, 1 7 times; mayis heniyne, Poen. 752. blanditer. As. 222 (vs. end), Ps. 1290 (cretic). blande, 9 instances. fir miter, Cas. 132 (vs. end), E. 83 (vs. end), Ps. 901 (med. vs.). firme, Mil. 1015, Pers. 451, Trin. 335 (A?). laryiter, E. 485 (med. vs.) ; and, at vs. or colon end, Most. 438, R. 1188, 1315, True. 903. larye, Aul. 196. maestiter, R. 265 (med. vs.). maeste, not Plautine. munditer, Poen. 235 (bacchiac). munde, Poen. 1178. jyroynariter, Pers. 588 (vs. end). jyroynare, not Plautine. jyroperi, Am. 215 (med. vs.) by emendation. pr opere, 27 times. saeuiter, Poen. 335 and Trin. 1060, vs. end;Ps. 1290, cretic. saeue, not Plautine. Of these unusual forms in -ter, 18 are at vs. or colon end, or in bacchiac or cretic 298 THE CLASSICAL REVIEW. verse ; 5 are in the interior of the verse, and 3 are known to us only from glosses. celere^ Cure. 283 (elided). eeleriter, 10 times. /rWe/e, Capf. 439, according to Nonius. JideliteTy 4 instances, all at the end of vs. or colon. hila7'e, Merc. 99, Poen. 1367. hilarUeVj not Plautine. (2) Comparison : — mugis benignly Poen. 752 ; benfgnidsy Aul. 114, vs. end. maglts/aote^ Mil. 539. magis/dcilius, Men. 97H. magis lubenter. Most. 157 ; Mtfniliiki Capt. 119, E. 80, 380, Mtn. 979, 11. 780,— all at end of colon or verse. magis inerito, Cas. 182. mag is 8ae])e, Most. 197 ; saep'ms, CSfH. 240, med. vs. ; and, at vs. end, Am, 704, Capt. 975, Pood. 585, sa^plusculCf Cas. 703. magis uorsnte^ Ps. 1\)17. mag in (sc. ejlictim), Merc. 445. magis melius ?, Merc. 898. nitidiuHcuhj Ps. 774. plusculum. Am. 283, Per.-. 21. saepiuscule, Cas. 703. impunlssinne. Poen. 411. meintissiiiiiOy E. 430 ; cf. As. 737, Capt. 936. paenissume, Aul. 406, 668, Most. 656. (3) Centiens, deciens, etc., or centies, decies ? -iens attested by best MSS., II times (S. 501, -es A). -ies attested by l>e?t M8S., 4 times : Am. 577, 725 (yet -iens in Am. 619), Aul. 70, Mil. 354 (toties here a[>[)6ars as tofles in BCD). 18 S. The reading of Men. 1161 is corrupt, but quinqufigesies (Ba) looks as if it wore meant for a numeral adverb. Of the .similar adjec- tives we have centesumam, Capt. 421 (-«- B, D, E, -88- J, O), Mil. 763 {-s- B, C, D) and uicensimus^ Cap^. 980 (us- B, E). (4) Ealem, (adem opera, una opera; prom i scam. ed'hm alone, with future indicative, 10 instances ; with future perfect, 5 ; with imperative, 1 (Pers. 445). eiidetn oi)erd, with future indicative, 2 (B. 60, Capt. 450) ; with future perfect, 1 (Most. 1039) ; with present, 1 (As. 640). Scansion of eddern : with .synizesis, times ; without synizesis, 2 (B. 60, 438). una oj)era, with potential subjunctive, 5 times ; with ut and subjunctive, once (Men. 525) ; with future indicative, once (Ps. 223) ; with imperative, once (Cas. 309). Against the.se 8, w^e get una oj)era sunt^ Capt. 563. Of all these instances, note Capt. 563, una opera—qua ; Cas. 309-311, una opera — qua opera ; Ps. 318-319, qtia o/iera — una oijera. jtromiscam : A». 366, o per am sese j/ru- r> luiscdin darr (MSS. jyromisnam) ; Ps. 10G2, 7 s pruniiscdni siet (B) ; R. 1182, operam j/)'6- 4 :. fi miacdia damus (B). 7 8 (5) Miscellaneous : — ex penitis/aucilnUy As. 40 ; jiinMmmnu, Cist. 63 ; j)€nili88uindy Pers. 522, 541, vs. end ; pe}iitissnma€y Frag. Dub. 16, Nonius. penitus adverb is not Plautine (cf. Ps. 132). saepissumdf adj., not advb., Pers. 633 (A). III. — Pkoxominal Adverbs. Itiv (or heic) .^ 611 istic 64 isti, before vowels ... 15 consonants »» illic t7//, before vowels ,, consonants doubtful which 47 2») 11 1 hue 380 hoc(^huc) 12 harsuin 2 Mnc 323 istuc 11 istoc 10 istOf before vowels 4 „ consonants ... 1 istinc (17 ?) 18 /«(*/>*], before vowel ... 1 llhtc 23 ilJoc 1 illOf before vowels ... 14 „ consonants ... 6 iilinc 15 mint, before vowels ... 2 „ consonants 2 olinit before vowel 1 Imc 84 ) istuc 5 iliac 9 I ilia, before consonsants 2 THE CLASSICAL REVIEW. 299 heic, Men. 375, Merc. 307, 468, 773, Poen. 713. isti, »\\o\yn by MSS., Cas. 546, E. 721, Mil. 255, Most. 764, 1143, Pers. 405, R. 1078, S. 628 (total 8). isti[c], shown by metre, Ciuv. 434, Most. 741, 1064,11. 1082 bi.s, 1109, 1133 (tot^l 7). il/i, shown by MSS.. Am. prol. 133, Am. 744, 761, 780, Capt. 323, 334, 341, E. 217, Men. 996, Merc. 97, 584, Mil. 850, 1279, Most. 315, 327, Pers. 190, 191, Poen. 336, 337, 343, 1195, R. 541, S. 471, Trin. 530, Trin. 555 (total 25). ///*■[(•], shown by metre. Am. 249, 534, 594, Capt. 94, 278, Mil. 288. Pers. 746, Ps. 758, 1273 (total 9). hoc (=huc), alone, attested by MSS., Capt. 480, Cas. 817, Merc. 321, 871, Poen. 1359, R. 1403, True. 531 ^otal 7). hoc and hue attested, B. 1151, Pers. 605, Ps. 654, True. 282, 304 (total 5). horsum, R. 172, and, by emendation, Mil. 304. istoc, B. 220, 382, Most. 1098, Pers. 504, Ps. 265, Trin. 551, True. 613, 717, 740, 752 (total 10). isto, shown by MSS., Mil. 455, Most. 837. isto[c], shown by metre, Cas. 543, Poen. 615, R. 1401. iUoc, True. 647. illo, shown by MSS., Am. 197, 203, 603, Capt. 359, 1002, Cure. 340, 646, E. 287 (290), Merc. 462, Mil. 1193, Most. 105, Pers. 575, Poen. 263, 1083, S. 185, 250, 265, Trin. 495 (total 18). /V/o[c], shown by metre, Aul. 705, Merc. 567. istim ? Capt. 658. illim,Ueu, 799, Merc. 511, Poen. 455. 987. olini ( = illim), B. 963. hac, in the combination sequere hac, 42 times; with other forms of sequor, b ; hac otherwise used as adverb, 37. istac, E. 660, Merc. 219, Pers. 444, Trin. 383,598. iliac. As. 742, Cas. 968, Cist. 679, Merc. 1009, Mil. 308, Most. 931, Pers. 679, R 213, True. 248 (total 9). ilia. Mil. 67, Most. 1045. IV. — VEfiBs AND Adverbs. (1) The wov^s fortasse, ilicet, scilicet, and uidehcet, though they show no aberration in form, appear occasionally with verbal func- tion, governing the infinitive, or being followed by an accusative of limit of motion. So are found : — forlasse. As. 36, B.Frag. xxi. (Donatus), E. 296, Merc. 782, Poen. 1004, True. 680; fortasse otherwise used, 14 ins^tances. 'if^cet = ire licet, Capt. 90, 469 ; otherwise u.sed, 7 times. *Uiceblt was conjectured by Studeuiund in Ps. 1182, metri gratia, but seems unlikely— MSS. ire licebit. scilicet^ scire licet, As. 787, Cure. 263, Ps. 1179, R. 395; scilicet otherwise used, 10 (11?) instances. uidtlicet = uidere licet, As. 599, S. 555, 557 ; uidelicet otherwise used, Capt. 286, Mil. 1283, Most. 980. (2) Compounds of uorsus. (a) Interchange of -us and -um. aduorsus, Men. 487, Most. 897, Trin. 724. aduorsum, 24 instances, according to Lodge. pror8us, Ps. 955 (so Varro, and metre). 'irrorsus, As. 236, 748, Aul. 397. prosus, As. 748 (?), E. 582, Most. 307. Trin. 730. pvorsum. Cist. 700, Cure. 681, Mil. 1193, Pers. 677, Frag. 39, Caecus. prosum, Pers. 477, Poen. 1393, S. 720 (718), Trin. 1130. rursus, Merc. 1001, Pers. 71, Poen. prol. 79, Ps. 871. ^ russus, Cist. 754 (B^). rusus. Cist. 754 (VE), Poen. 1000. rursum, 23 instances. russutii, B. 146, Trin. 182. rusum, Aul. 649, Ca<. 557, Cure. 603, Men. 625, Merc. 68, 296, Mil. 525, 592, 702, 773, 1151, Per.<. 810, True. Ill (total 13). so7'su8y R. 1314. sorsum, As. 362, Capt. 710, E. 402. (b) Syncopation of -u-, or lack of it. aliouorsum, Aul. 287. aior8um, True. 403. aliquouorsum, Cas. 297. aliquosum, Mil. 221 (so Leo). deorsuMy - -^ w, Aul. 367. deorsum, -^ -, Am. 1108, Aul. 708. R. 179. or<8um>y Mil. 304. hoi'sum, R. 172. pror8U8y Ps. 955 (so Varro, and metre). prorsus (3), prosus (3 or 4?), prorsum. (5), prosum (4), see above, under (a). quorsum, Poen. 684, [Ps. 217?]. iretro(uo)rsumy Cas. 443 ? ?] 300 THE CLASSICAL KEVIKW. rur8U8'{^), riMstis (1?), 7ti8U8 (2 or 11), rursum (23), rusaum (2), rusum (13), see above, under (a). s&i'sus (\)tSor8um (3), see above, under (a). aursum^ Am. 1000, Aul. 366, (Japt. 656, Mil. 1150; su8um, Am. 1008, Cist. 622. (c) rR>ss>s. aliquo8uia, Mil. 221 (so Leo). p'orsus (3), p7'osu8 (3 or 4 ?), pt'orsaiu (5), prosujn (4), see above, under («). rursus (4), rtt«^u« (1 ?), rw^M^v (2 or 1 ?), rwr^wm (23), russum (2), ruaum (13), see above, under (a). Hursuiit (4), sUfSum (2), see above under (/>). Conversely, in Pers. 740, jjersuni will make a pun (MS8. j^esmm), and can be paralleled by a gloss. ((/) Separable compounds. rf/to uorsunif Aul. 287 (as two words BDJ). dliquo uift'sum, Cas. 207 (as two words BEF). 4/raeltre{a), 2 ; pniettwea before consonants, 4, and in hiatus, 2 (Cipt. 331 medial. True. 445). /traeter/t((c, Men. 112,725, Most. 75, R. 1117, S. 345, — written as two words in MSS. prnptered. Mil. 1257; pr6jitere{a), 2 instances ; jiroptcrea, 6 ; pi'opt(:rt[7'osi)erdbOy Pers. 263. 7 8 similiter, Men. 146. adsi mil iter, B. 951 ; but simuller, Ps. 382, Nonius. tt'dide, 10 instances: Am. 1062, 1130, Merc. 42, 5(\ Mil. 852, Most. 974, Pers. 427, Ps. 145, 364, R. 303 ; iialde, Cist. 298, Merc. prol. 103, Ps. 344, Frag. 99, Neruo- laria. For syncope in compounds of uorsus, see above, under IV, 2, b. THE CLASSICAL REVIEW. (b) Apocope : — With the exception of the statistics for /orle, the hgures in the following table are 301 based on the collections given by Skutsch in his l^orschungeu, I, pp. 64 ff. Bkfoue Consoxan ts ok \ deinde c | exinde forte iude and compounds jrroiude tutde and compounds Gxcei)t u/tdiqne 15 OWEJ.S, •J 13 15 1 7 1 29 30 30 03 dein, Am. 1008, B. 967. e,rinde, Cure. 363, Ps. 680, True. 8'^ e.nny Most. 227; exim, E. 40, Poen. /04. >r. As. 794, Cure. 271 ; in Mil. 720 either /orle or fort' will scan. [With forte we may group /^r^e /br^,,„^, b. 916, Mil. -8/ 'yjortasse, before vowels 7, before con- sonants 13 times ; fortassis, As. 493, B. 671 )Jorsfuat an, Ps. 432 (A). Forsitcm is Ps 432 1'^' ""' '^ "'''''''" ^^ *^*'^ ""^*^"^ ^" proiade before a consonant. Am. 073 emended by Skutsch. Similarly, apocope is found with tli^ words nempe and quippe; and probably in a few other words, in scattered instances. (c) Synizesis : — autehac, always spondaic ; 20 instances, see above, under V. d^Mnc, monosyllabic, 8 instances. dein, mono.syllahic, Am. 1008, B 067 deinde, dissyllabic, 15. deorsuniy see above, under IV, 2 b. eddem, see above, under If 4.' praeut, monosyllabic, 6. proin, monosyllabic, 18(10 ?--Cist. 488 in doubt. proinde, dissyllabic, 31. (d) Hardening : — diiUlus, eretic, Trin. 865 ; in R. 03 we get dhjtiiU, . -^ . i , the only instance any- where of such scansion of the word. ' In R 1-41 we find a similar adverb diutiae, "^"T""^' '"^nd in Mil. 503 the adjective d'tntiinim, ^ -^ ^ J~ nnnc i«w, spondaic, is required in Aul ;1->K Cipt. 266, E. 135, instead of nunclam \ m Poen. 374, either form is metrically possible. Per contra, Leo has suggested that quid lam sho.ild perhaps be scanned as a tribrach quldldm ; there are at least i8 instances of quid imu NO. CLII. vol. XVII. 2 3 Before Consonajjts Only. dein erin (or exim) ^ fwC^ [ovfors]) (3^\ 2 ind* and compounds 12 proin jg 10 und' VII. — Quantity. contra, Am. 217; elsewhere contra or contric,). In Ps. 156 eontrd m{e) et, contra is a preposition, as also in Pers. 13, bis fortuito, Aul. 163. M^tra : ne frustrd sis, Capt. 854, Men. 692, Pers 140, R. 060 ; ne tu frustrd sisy Merc. 528 R. 1255; frustra sit. True. /04,— all 7 at the end of vs. or colon. J^rustra with the quantity of -a indetermin- ate, 15 ir stances. /wdie, Ps. 1071, very doubtful. ibidem, 20 instances; iblleniy B 756 Cist. 520, Pers. 614, Ps. 023, R. 847 s' 756; ibidem, P.s. 1271 (bacchiac), R '3O6 (iamb, septen). inimo, with -0, at least 13 times. ita, with long -a possible but not probable ''l,^^' ^l^l 1^^7' l^^Sl' Aul. 69, Capt. 3^2, Cas. 34.3, Cure. 667, Mil. 1356, Poen. 566, True. 276. ^^t'^if^.^^'''''• ^^^ similarly ,rMuSy R. 1332, MSJ5.; ociiis. Cure. 312 (at change of speaker, however) ; ;>rm«, Most. 326 (eretic vs. syllaba anceps ?) ; but sdtius est, Poen. 1337, Ps. 449. ' * mdxume, Mil. 1024 (auap.). prospered Ps. 574, see above, under VI a. proteruey Am. 837; probably to be explained by the reading of D, propterue ; el. B. 612, propteruo, abl. masc. (BCD), True. 256 propterue (A). In R. 414, pro- tcrue, quantity indeterminate. somnlculose, Am. 622, Capt. 227; cf. metucidosus, Am. 293, -sa, Mo.st. 1101. ' statim, Am. 239, 276 (E. 567 ?), but the quantity is not indicated ; Nonius says that in the^ sense of standing one's <'round statim has long -«-. ** tery B. 1127, cf. terrunciy Capt. 477; quantity indeterminate in Pers. 153 Ps' 705, 705 a. Tie utiquam as tribrach, i.e. as two words, 302 THE CLASSICAL REVIEW. Capt 586, Mil. 631, Poen. 199; in Merc. 599 we may read either ne vtiquam hu\iu3 or neutiquam huius. Of the simihvr words neutsi' and cases and neutruhi, we get in all 10 instances; in all 14 places ne ic- is per- missible (6 times without elision, 7 with), and in the above three pi ices m« utiqwun is required. VII r. — Parallel Foiims. demu9t True. 245 (BCD; ihinunt A); demiim before vowels, 17 instances {tlennis will prevent hiatus in Trin. 781); demum before consonants, 1 6. herit X\ instances ; here, Mil. 59 {^ ^)y Pers. 108 (vs. end), K. 1>4(>, gloss (^ -). Quantity of heri or here : ^ -, 6 ; ^ «, 7 ; insanutn magnum, B. 701 . /. bene, Mil. 24, Most. 761 ; t. honam, Most. 908 ; /. malum, Trin. 67.*J ; insanum ualde, Frag. 99, Neruolaria, Nonius ; insane, Curr. 1 7<). mage^ before a, As. 66, Men. .*iH6, True. 177, 682, 887, 918; before e, Poen. 461, Trin. 1153; before*, As. .{94, Poen. 27«'). ]X)siriduo, Mil. 1082 ; postridie. Am. 256, B. 300, Merc. 104, Pers. 106, 8. 122. iyra^fi\ci\scinii As. 491 ; j)r((ej\ci\8cii>(', R. 461. />ro, 12 ; before 9 other consonants, 28, — total 71. nee = mm : neclegeve, Poen. 823 (B) ; else- where negl' in noun and verb, 7 instances. nee quoqu'im, Most. 562. uecrecte, As. 15r>, 471, B. 119, 735, Mo.st. 210, Poen. 516, Ps. 1085. iiec ullum, Trin. 282; probably to be restored in ('apt. 104, True. 461. nee uinqnam. True. 231 ; neqne umquam, Poen. 2:U, Trin. 533 (probably no con- junctive force), True. 240? neqne = non, Am. 279. neqmdum, (Jure, 'u, Mil. 641, Ps. 624; nee dum, l*s. 730 ; nil dum, Ps. 1)57, 1028. ne = non: n^Jacere, True. 877 (re- BCD, ne- F) ; ne/acerfs, Ps. 437 ( I)). neparcunt, Most. 124 (B'-D;. ne ntiqruim, neuter, neutrubif see above under VII. neuis, at vs. end, 6 ; med. vs., Mere. 150, Poen. 1079, Trin. 328. neuolt, at vs. or colon end, 4 ; med. vs. Trin. :;64. nocitnnt, Aul. 64, B. 'M. otiosse, Trin. 1077, but otiose True. 168 ; obnoxiosse, E. C)*.)^}, vocative ? Hybrid sueophantiose, Ps. 1211. pauxUhitiin, K. 24H, R. 929 ; jtauxillum, Cure. 176, True. 686; pansiUisper, True. 913 {-8- BCD) ; pausilluhim. B. 833 {-s- B^), R. 729 (-«- D). Similar interchange of s and .'• in the adjeetivt's p^tuxillas (6) and panxiUidnH (7) ; total on the stem, 20. j)i'eimum, E. 600. /mplieitufi, Am. 161 (B) ; pnhlicitus, Am. 1027, B. 313, Pens. 509; publiee. Mil. 102, Trin. 548; corrupted to pullicCf S. 491 (B), Trin. 1046 (B). quamueis, Mere. 687. quasi = quam si : Am. 1078, nee secus est qndsi si ) Aul. 231, tu me bos magis haud respieias gndtus qudsi numqudm siem ; Cure. 51, tarn a me pudieast qudsi soror mea sit y Men. 1101, tdm quasi me emeris argenfo liber seruibo tibi ; Mere. 1023, pluit perdet cldm si j/raebuerit paldm ; Mil. 482, neque . . . phis cdrat qudsi non 8eruilut.e seruidt ; Pa. 6il,vidgi8 erit soldtum qud[in^si ipsi dederis ; Trin. 265, b, peius perit qud[m]si saxo salidt ; True. 341, nemo magis respiciet .... qua[7n]si hlnc ducentos dnnos fuerim rnortuos. quein, Merc, 773, 775. THE CLASSICAL REVIEW. 303 quor, 10, qur 21, — on authority of A or B, qur especially in Poen. (5) and Ps. (5) ; quur. Cure. 542 (BE), Poen. 1225 (B). recens eaptum, Capt. 718 ; recens natum, Cist. 136; recens as adjective. As. 178, Ps. 1126. seic, E. 521, Merc. 268, 785, 786. • si[similem]rem{i]pse, Am. prol. 73; ef. reapse, (.'amerarius in True. 815, and rem- psam, True. 864 (B). suhlimen, Men. 992 (BF), 995 (BCF), 1002 (BCD^F), 1052 {W) - sublimem, A.^, 868, Mil. 1394. It would seem that -en is the correct form, and that the word is an adverb rather thin an adjective. (am = tamen, in the phrase tarn gratiastf Men. 387, Ps. 713, S. 472 ; cf. S. 41, Mil. 1209, 1210. tamine. Mil. 628 (CD; tarn me B) ; cf. Fostus, 359, M. Tmesis, in various parts of speech : disque iulissent,Tr{n, 833; [malene id /actum C.\pt, 709] ; maleque diclis, B. 982 ; per pol saepe, Cas. 370; qua istaec propter , Am. 815, cf. Ter. Hecyr. S64:;quoipol quomque, Pers. 210 ; super illi fuerit, Cure. 85 ; ubi Jit quomque^ satis facial, Am. 889 ; satis facit. As. 437 ; fecisse satis, As. 437 : facturum satis. As. 497. tuatim. Am. 554. ubiquomque, Ps. 580, ubicumque, As. HO, Cas. 226 ; cf. B. 282. uno<8e>. Most. 607. as if from unosus, not from uniuorsus. utquomq, Poen. 754; utcumque, E. utrobique, Mil. 466. utrubi, S. 696, 750 bis. uolup est, 10 instances ; uolup est, Am. 958, 994, Poen. 1326; uohip, 3(As. 942, fecit udlifp ; Cas. lU,facite. . .uolup ; Men. 7 8 6 677, sit uolup) ; metre doubtful in Most. 7 8 153, uictitaham uolup. Total 17. Arthur Winfred Hodgman. Ohio Statk Univeiisity, Columbus. March 21, 1903. REMARKS ON THE GIRIS. For the first 453 verses of the Ciris we depend entirely upon four MSS of the 15th century : H, cod. Helmstadiensis 332, now at Wolfenbuettel ; A, Arundelianus 133 in the British Museum ; R, Rohdigeranus s. 16 17 ; and L, Vatieanus 3255, written by the hand of Pomponiiis Laetus. Only from u. 454 to 541 do we possess an earlier authority. This is B, Bruxellensis miscel- laneus 10675, of the 12th century; and it is not only the oldest MS but also, a very different thing, the best. The following are its chief services to the text : i^% fecisse for legisse, 469 eheu for secum heu, 481 usx- arier undis for uexauit et aegros, 5 1 1 Jlauo for «a to, 513 illi (Heinsius) for illis, 530 damnata for iam nata or iam 7iacta, 533 ut m for utinam. But its superiority to the MSS of three centuries later is not so great as the sanguine might hope and the inex- perienced expect : it shares with them, for instance, the corruption uidemus for nit- entum"^ in 524 and the interpolation of que in 506 ; and it is sometimes even inferior to one or two of them, as 525 resperserat aras rightly R, resperserat auras AL, respexerat auras HE. Of the other MSS, H is con- * Or ruhcitUs) luu. xiii 37 'arae^iue rubenti'. siderably the best, A and R are nearly equal to one another and closely allied, L is much the worst. But still it is indispens- able. Grossly interpolated though it is, — 45 primos for iuuenes, 57 contenta for infec- tata, 270 tribuunt nullo quod for tribuere nee ullo, and so on, — it nevertheless some- times agrees with H or with B in genuine readings where the other MSS are corrupt or interpolated,— 98 age HL, agite AR, 384 Cretes (tir.st corrupted to ores)] crescal HL, crescant AR because of rnoenia, 528 halia^- etos ales] halietos ales B, aliethos ales L, helice sales AR, helicone sales H, 530 uero BL, ero HAR, — and it sometimes even is the sole preserver of the truth: 31 cocco L, corco corr. in coco H, socco AR, 111 populatcyr L, populalo H, populata AR, 162 in tenera L, interea HAR, 323 es conata] est contata L, es cantanda HA, esca tentanda R, 427 fac- turum lj,factorum Il,fatorum AR. 1—9. etsi me uario iactatum laudis amore irritaque expertum fallacis praemia uulgi Cecropius suauis expirans hortulus auras florentis uiridi sopl^a^ complectitur umbra, X 2 304 THE CLASSICAL REVIEW. mensque, ut quiret eo dignum sibi quaerere carmen, 5 longe aliud stadium atque alios accincta laboresy altius ad magni suspcxsit sidera muDdi et placitum paucis ausa est ascendere collem, non tamen absistam coeptum detexere munus. 5 mensque ut quiret scripsi (mensque iam Heyne, ^U mens qniret iam lUierlnler apud Skutschium ' aus Vergils Fi iihzeit ' p. 84), turn niea queret H, similliiiia ARL. 7 8U8j)exit Schrader, suspeiidit HAR, sus- pensi L, suhteudit Scaliger. Cic. Tiisc*. i 82 'uideote alte spectare et uelle in caelum migrare ' (Sillig), ciris 217 S(|. * alte | sus- picit ad celsi nictantia sidera mundi.' * • 'Although I have now devoted myself to philosophy and am planning a philosophical poem, I will yet complete this piece of verse which I have begun.* It is clear that uu. 1-8 are the protasis, andtheapodosis begins with * non tamen * in u. '.> : most of the conjectures at u. 5 disregard this plain fact or else cripple the sentence with parenthe- ses, and Mr Kllis' ' dum mea auens rdlio ' {dum Hertz, ratio Haupt), which does not, is out of court for another reason (etsi coni- jdectituTy dum ausa est^ non absistftm). fnensqueutqtdret = mens querit quiret, and < tuvi > mea querel made metre of it. For the past tense * quiret ' in dependence on the true perfects * suspexit ' and ' ausa e.st ' compare 30.*i sqij. ' alii fugisse ferunt et numen Aphaeae | uirginis adsignant, alii, quo notior esses, \ Dictynnam dixere tuo de nomine lunam.' * quaerere ' stands for * ad- quirere,' *coinpariire.' Verse 6, if it is sound, must mean * cincta ad aliud studium atque ad alios labores* with the accusatives governed by the pre- position in 'accincta': see Verg. Aen. xi 486 *cingitur ... in proelia Turnus.' And this is how Heruius interprets * accingier ' in Aen. iv 493 ' magicas inuitam accingier artes.' Those words are now generally and I think rightly explained otherwise, on the analogy of Aen. ii 501) sqq. * senior ... in- utile ferrum I cingitur'; but our * accincta labores', interpreted in this way, will make no sense: nemolaborelaboremue accingitur, ut eo tamquam instrumento utatur ; accin- gimur labori, ad laborem, in laborem. The MS variants are atque alios HAR, aliosque L. I have said above that L is an inde- pendent witness : at 210, where the author * alte Hertzberg, alii HAR, allnm L ; celsi Scali- ger, cell uel caeli codd. wrote arrectis, L gives arreptis and the other MSS erect isy each preserving half the truth ; and here the common source of the two readings, I suspect, was que alios, that is longe aliud studium que alios accincta labores, in having fallen out after -»». I do not write adque, both because it is very rare and because * ad * follows in u. 7. * in ' is aTTo Koivov, Ouid. trist. i 8 39 sq. * scopulis . . . t7iqiie feris . . . iugis', Hor. carm. iii 25 2 *quae nemora autquos agor i/i specus?' Catull. 33 5 * exilium malasque in oras.' If anyone would know the meaning of the word uKpia-ia, let him see what Mr Voll- mer has done to this passage in Rhein. Mus. vol. 55 pp. 523 sq. cum mens quaerit (eo dignum sibi quae- rere carmen longe aliud studium !) atque alios accincta labores altius ad magni ^uspendit sidera mundi. This he interprets * mens quaerit alios labores', non carmen lusura, atque hos labores accincta suspend it ad magni sidera mundi ' ; and he .says that * labores sus- pend it ad sidera ' means * naturam siderum et deorum comprendere conatur ' ; and with this he comp ires Horace's ' suspendit picta uoltum mentemque tabella.' It is whole- some, though dismal, that such things should appear in print ; and that they now appear in print .so often is all the better for the rising generation. 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