SER.I CRETIUS A Christ, and that a legend ascribes cts of a maddening love-philtre. n, what makes his name known -or, speaking of it as a whole, ust to say, a single treatise in ect of this poem is not poetias poetry the author's first re all things, the work is ly scientific (at least in dern treatise on optics, es; and, except as far es as little of poetry here is in it try the lofti when ÆSCHYLUS, CICERO, SOPHOCLES, BY THE EDITOR. BY THEODORE MARTIN. BY THE RIGHT REV. THE BISHOP OF COLOMBO. BY CLIFTON W. COLLINS, M.A. PLINY, BY A. CHURCH, M.A., AND W. J. BRODRIBB, M.A. EURIPIDES, '. ARISTOPHANES, BY WILLIAM BODHAM DONNE. HESIOD AND THEOGNIS,' BY THE REV. JAMES DAVIES, M.A. LUCRETIUS BY W. H. MALLOCK BIBLIOTHECT OCT '878 GODLEIANA WILLIAM BLACKWOOD AND SONS EDINBURGH AND LONDON MDCCCLXXVIII SECT. II. THE FORMATION OF THE UNIVERSE, 31 OF MATERIAL SUB- SECT. III. THE INTERACTION STANCES, SECT. IV. THE ORIGIN OF LIFE AND SPECIES, SECT. V. THE NATURE OF LIFE AND CONSCIOUSNESS, SECT. VI. LUCRETIUS'S THEORY OF VISION, SECT. VII. THE MIND AND SENSE, 62 SECT. VIII. THE MORTALITY OF MIND AND SOUL, 68 50 |