Académique Documents
Professionnel Documents
Culture Documents
CLASSICAL ASSOCIATION
PROCEEDINGS
JANUARY 1912
(VOLUME
IX)
LIST
.'"'
';-'"
LONDON
JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET, W.
1912
1/si
CONTENTS
PAGE
48
112
DECLARATION OP TRUST
114
18th, 1910,
TO
120
APPENDIX
Officers and Council
125
Rules
127
.130
177
.193
.195
196
.
.198
Bombay Branch
Classical Association of
199
201
203
\sJ
1912
The
first
was held
of King's College,
in the
Theatre
Dr. F. G.
Kenyon
LoRiMER read
Miss H. L.
in
Homer and
in Archaic
Miss LoRiMER.
studied
little
" The
in
recent
a paper
Greek Art."
Homer
subject of dress in
years.
On
the
whole,
has been
Studniczka's
field.
More recently
common
is
of a
Mediterranean world, of which the best illustrations are furnished by monimients from the Mesopotamian area.
or
dress in
a priori, no reason
And if
known
The co-existence
the assumption.
why
is
admitted
there
in
is,
to us
same
period.
There
is,
of course,
to
it.
Ares
is
is
more
likely to persist
Hermes, 1909.
THE CLASSICAL ASSOCIATION
If there are
purpose
women's dress
description of
is
d/jLcpl
8'dp'
tifip6aL0i>
eavbv
?<ra^'
Granting that
is
a measure of desperation.
without
any further
relies
side
is
as a syncopated
in pairs,
way
or pins occur
Further,
it
is
viz.
the Frangois
S. 178-80.
Trachiniae, 924-5.
'
HOMERIC DRESS
Vase,^
is
and in
The dress
worn by the Moirai, and can be best examined
of the
(Fig. 1),
is
which Studniczka
is
Dorian or not
it
group
The
open to question.
whether
it is
really
but
here they have rather the air of having been copied by an artist
who
No pin inserted
much lower than their
in this
way
But even
level of the collar-bone.
would hardly occur to any one to say that they were placed
it
Kara
Read without
(tttJ^os.
modern
The Scholiast implies this when
was marked with the 8t7ry\^ " on Kara to
down
'
the front.'
line
ws
r][Jie7s
Kara
rrjv
Alexandrian scholars, however ignorant of Homeric archaeology, have a right to be heard on the interpretation of a Greek
phrase.
It is
due to
it is
down the
We may
it.
Hera's dress
is
neutral
co-aro
afj.(f)l
action.
This
is
5^
avTTi
d'
fie
Kirke
xl^aiv&v re
x''''w)'<i
re eifxara 'iaaev
vv/xcpT].
Studniczka, Altgriechische Tracht, fig. 28. See Furtwangler-Reiohi., ii. for the best reproduction of the vase.
hold, pi.
2
d/a<^i
of
K.
642,
3.
As
among the
pins
On
a Lycaonian
William Ramsay
is
fastened with
worn
one at least
is
so
we cannot
large that
it
tell
probably
It
felt.
is
and
should
have
had
ornamental,
being
of
a wide diffusion.
We
possess two
of
My-
is
absent
which are
all
it
small, the
crest rising
does in Homer.
men seem
from a cup-
Except
for the
to be a fairly accurate
ately rendered in a
1
'
fig.
284.
;-..
Fig.
(p.
3).
Fig. 2 (p.
4).
;i-
Fig. 3 (p.
4]
5).
Fio. 4
(p. 5).
HOMERIC DRESS
But
fits
of light-coloured stuff.
and
skirt are
how
exactly
made
in
a panel
is let
whether bodice
plain that
it is
it is
shaped and sewed dress, quite unlike the Dorian, and that it
cannot have been clasped on the shoulders
and in an un;
some
sort,
down
the front.
sleeves
Snake Goddess
bell
panels, too,
though
arch, occur
in
(Fig. 3) the
come
Crete
Repositories of Knossos.
of faience
The Cretan
do
to
so
in
any
What
is
It
its
Homeric type.
any
it
seems at
first
fifth
almost
The
^ is one of
a row of women
on a black-figured Ionian (Clazomeniw ii) vase, found at Daphnae,
and therefore
Again we have a
dress fitting closely to the figure, uiade this time in one piece,
for the pattern
is
uniform
The
of the shoulder,
little
pi.
xxix.
of
6
the dress
This
itself.
by a couple of incised
meet another
presumably indicating a narrow
plainly indicated
is
lines
running Kara
line,
horizontal in direction,
o-tiJ^os
girdle.
The subject
is
Daphnae
pattern however
is
black.
plain
is
their
figures, the
costume
white cross
meant to
This seems
is
and
indicate that
in this
in a difierent
material.
of the dress,
of
separate
The shaped
garment.
Warrior
and
centuries
of
six
Vase, separated though they are by a period
and it is in this series that the
or so, seem to be of one type
garment of Hera finds its place. The peplos which Antinoos
offers to Penelope may fairly be taken as falling into the same
dresses of the
Daphnae
figure,
The
category.
twelve
(unmistakably
TrepoVat
described
as
for
fibulae) could not be accommodated on the Doric peplos
Studniczka's
for
monumental,
there is no support, literary or
suggestion that its open side was closed by means of fibulae.
;
If there is
any woman
in the
Homeric poems
to
whom
dress
conceals
here
them
vitok oAttw.^
there is a type of
o.
ii.
pi.
54,
la.
16.
469.
pi.
xli.
;;
HOMERIC DRESS
ankles
if
it
rapid motion.
It
facilitate
distinguished by the
it is
and actual
represented
than the
Greek
archaic
in
tight-fitting
Daphnae
art.
This
dress,
looser
It is rather of
skirt.
down
much
women
at the
it
all
the
way
to the foot
this
There
side.
is
nothing impossible,
chiefs used to
of the
South Aegean
same
dresses of the
simple blanket
minimum
type of
of labour
and
garment which
of skill.
on Attic vases
toilet scenes
is
produced with a
So in the representation of
regularly wears the pleated Ionic chiton, her maids the Doric
peplos.
We may
a divine being
is
which points to the South and East rather than to the North.
u.pyv(f>iov,
^Spos, which
is
described
K.
542-3,
e.
230-1.
woollen
stuff,
The
linen.
Hera was
dress of
Athene made
is
dresses, for
was
it
find
8ai8aXa iroWd.
employed
linen
women's
for
the chiton.
attire
an Aegean prototype
is not found
Warrior Vase,
in the case of
normal Aegean
dress,
much
farther east.
close,
and that
it
was
originally
same
attitude.
fitted
it
It
In fact
it
In ordinary
these only
civil life
to battle.
to
kill
Twice, however,
Eumaios when he
prepares to wrestle.
knee, for
it
is
men
going
beggar, he
is
remark how stout a thigh he shows from out his rags, and he
has to move these aside when he shows the scar to Eumaios
and Philoitios
whereas when Menelaos is wounded, the blood
;
trickling
down
his
thighs
is
visible.
The manner
in
which
HOMERIC DRESS
Odysseus girds himself
a loose chiton open
is
down one
side,
he wore
by taking
knee and
If
he could shorten
it
them
tion,
in a knot.
So far there
is
in the
in
The passage
vases.
the
black-figured
is
and the
costume
loin-cloth survives in
of the
Aegean
ritual, as
its
But there
prince.
its
earlier,
it
use
may well
be at least partly
Games undoubtedly
is.
The
p^yftt are
of
what form
But
who
TrcTrXoi
^wa-Tpa, as
but
way
in the
poems
the girdle
is
it is
the
women
never mentioned
ambush.
Here
^wjaa is
The conclusion
evidence
is
tells of his
to be
that there
is
Odyssey,
482.
which
10
main, derived from the East, but shows traces of a South Aegean
type
interpreted
life.
Homer,
so
it
of
It is
on a
identity,
The
,=^
and
undetermined
which
of a terra-cotta
is
from Rhit-
by
It
cross-
which
is
women
of the
The panel
on the dress
recalls that
it
is
of the
Knossos
its parallel
whole surface.
this gives us
is
series,
shows
another point
the genuine
of
its
(jrrjdea 6'i/xep6evTa
The
of the goddess.
esting material.
3
B.S.A., xiv.
pi. vii.
fig.
1.
,>x.^>*>.
TJ^'^ik
Fig. 5
(p.
6).
Fig. 6
(p.
6)
Fig. 8
(p.
10)
HOMERIC DRESS
It
11
Artemis
is
that this
peplos,
char-
is
The
lies in
in the vase-painting
normally of
artist.
So apt
is
and
and the
especially
when
heroic, to continue to
porary fashions."
The Chairman.
"
am
However,
Professor Myres.
"
am
sure this
is
a very interesting
paper that Miss Lorimer has given us. It is difl&cult, in discussing Homeric Archaeology, to avoid slipping off into a general
any form
of
and on giving us so
of their meaning.
Homeric times
its original
of a
clear
If I
us.
The
you see, for the survival in
costume which, however fallen from
of
strong, as
is
type of
magnificence,
is still
made
us familiar.
And
would
like to
add a
distinctly a
in
costume with
JM.S., 1909.
12
self-coloured vestment,
be called a
'
zouave.'
is
up-to-date.*
It has front edges, that is, which begin at the shoulder, and
tail away like an Eton jacket, though shorter, and disappear
under the arms. In all probability the two figures belong to
the eighth or the seventh century. This suggests that, in outlying parts of the old region of Minoan civilization, the same
women
the
some
of
It
familiar Doric
this,
is
and Ionic
chitons,
which
part of the
way down
The Cypriote
modern night-gown.
not so
is
is
much
figures,
'
Oriental'),
facilitated
by
slit,
more important
women. I am sure
moving a hearty vote
and
Before
she began Miss Lorimer told me that her paper was going to
be very dull. I am sure you will agree that in this one point
my
me
great pleasure to
am
transit gloria
'
bolero
Mauri.
'
and
have
modern word
second
I
THE STUDY OF GREEK
that from one point of view
it
it
It
13
Gaedner
" That
it is
made an
alter-
" Let
The Times last Tuesday. The statement that the above report
would be discussed at this meeting of the Classical Association
of
is
may have led to some misunderwhat should have been said was that the publication
standing
member of both
as a
Societies, I
minds
of all of us for
some time.
All the
it
members
and
I feel it is
more
Commembers
of the
or less of an accident
its
investigations
are
now placed
its
recommendaand
of both bodies,
they
of
and
common aims
to have them.
14
The present time is a critical one for the study of the classics,
and for that of Greek in particular. The age of privilege is
passing away, and the age of free competition is taking its place
and Greek is more particularly the object of attack, not because
;
those
who attack
think
it
it
be more
it will
difficult to
may
The
defend.
be taken by those
first is to
who
defend
Some
is swept away by the enemy.
have actually said that they have saved Latin by giving up Greek
a result which most of us, I trust, would not look on with any
while the outwork of Greek
complacency.
Dying
'
is
but a pessimist.
now be
it is entitled.
But,
if it
Homer
15
all
am by
know
this
many
that
will
say
and
if
is
it is
voice of prejudice
For
mean
But
both Latin
of Latin
but to
is
who
cation at
all
is
really
above
of physical science,
all,
many
Greek
law,
romance philology.
But,
is
Latin, since most of the technical terms used are Greek in origin,
and are
It
thing;
not,
it
is
educational value.
beyond dispute
to allow
part.
is
it
is
is
whether
the essential
of
it is
Greek are
practicable
Some
that therefore
it
grammar
is
should be taught
first
essen;
and
16
of
Greek authors.
It is
discuss
such
what order the two are taken, and at what age they are
But if we wish Greek to be the main classical subject,
at least for a certain number of schoolboys and schoolgirls, we
must first see that no disabilities or adverse conditions are imposed on those who take it up. That is to say, we must insist
on two things. The first of these is that Greek and Latin should
begun.
be alternative subjects,
if
all
university
Even
this has
who
are the
it is
all
children.
responsible for
as Latin.
assured to
all
possibility of learning
Greek
will
If it
be
were
classical
language only, as
is
is
is
already
proposed elsewhere.
first
Certainly
it
two conditions be
fulfilled
that
Greek
is
all
who
THE STUDY OF GREEK
are capable of profiting
we
by
its
it
its
much
may
it
17
of the
ground
it
has
is
lost,
What
not only work in concert with the Hellenic Society towards the
establishment of these favourable conditions, but should also
help in persuading the schoolmaster and the parent, upon
whom
and
and
for such
There
if
we do our
but of
all,
find in
it
There
is
no
all likely to
Professor Gilbert
am
and that
are in peril,
Gardner
is
with
me
in this.
It is
we were
if
am
at all
tempted
sure Professor
is
very
much
my own
part
Latin poetry,
poets.
But we are
in rather a
18
I
take
it
we are
all of
in the
is,
we can pass on
Now
to study the
wave
in
respect to
that
is
Education
education.
is
better
getting
examine
it, is
We
new
up on
universities springing
wave
rising
all sides.
we
is
have the
are on a strong
of education as a whole,
We
will
How
that
is
be enough to float
As
far as
we can make
now than
is made.
seem to show that more
ever before.
I find that
movement has
What
learning Greek.
Greek
I
we,
are
we
is
any lack
more people
of interest in Greek.
On
the
who
is
an actual increase
Now what
of interest in Greek.
?
Why are we in danger ? The
on the part of those other subjects scientific
subjects, modern languages, and the like
against the old classical
education is that it was firstly too narrow, and secondly too
uniform.
That is a just criticism.
But apart from that
are
we
to
do
real grievance
grievance there
and
is,
The
them both when they personally
happened to have a scientific bias or a bias for modern languages
or the like, have got to feel that Greek and Latin are actually
bad subjects in themselves and that if you can prevent people
from learning these wretched languages, or at any rate prevent
them from learning Greek, that in itself will be a good thing
of violent feeling against both classical languages.
people
to learn
19
who
feel that.
I believe that is
We
have got a
new
lot of
classes
classes.
It is
And
in Greek.
yet
we
is
actually
What we want
is a fair choice.
But if the form is such that they must
take Latin, that practically means they cannot take Greek,
that
means that a
certain
number
it,
so that
it is
want
is,
about uniformity
it offers
fair
chance
seriously to suggest
It
prefer Greek
the meeting
is
who would
What
we
of people
know
still
as gravely
mechanical convenience.
Organisa-
It
if
if,
after
to which
scientific bias or
a modern
20
if,
people
there should be
some
but
it
diversity.
is
You can
little
ance.
you
If
will
classical
Preserving
the
liberty
of students,
the number
is
and
besides,
as
may amount
5 per cent,
If
^reek,
if
there
is
is
to be learnt, I think
we
realise,
21
popularity.
It is
But
for privilege.
we plead only
and, in
may
be of
we turned out
if
It
would be a
"
I have, I
am
It
it
That would
22
we ask
that
is
not excessive.
is
would go
time-table.
I
"
many
and to children
a
little
age was IL
over
made a dash
stories they
room
the
so
did
ever3rthing
for
down
with
in Liddell
Homer
have me
and Scott
considerable
they turned
success.
me
out of
for themselves
Their
mistakes
and they
afforded
meaning of
as
'
'AXklvoc
Kpdov,
They knew
it
translation
but
it
paint
seeing for the first time his grandfather, dressed up in
'
TrairTros.'
//.ot
koXos
ws
6
w
iirrnp,
and jewellery, and exclaiming
:
you can
produce
the young
and
if
anything
in
should be glad to
is
there
Latin
know
as attractive
of
it.
23
as
appears
It
the welfare of
Such boys
the university.
it
enormous
if
there
is
It so
why some
happens that a
them
of
scientific
man was
who
my
is
friend said
'
:
it is
because he
had a classical education, but I think that has had a great deal
to do with it.' Well, this particular youth would have reached
the highest form in his school on his Classics alone. And I may
mention that his director of studies in science is a man who
came up to the university with a classical scholarship. Such
people in the future
will, it
more
particularly
am
professional
not nearly so
classical
is
considerable
much concerned
students
is
but
if
an
is
intelligent
youth,
movement
if
much
is
will
^4
then begin at
he
is
He
all ?
interested, time
will
is
for there
push on. His classical training will be omitted
an endeavour to postpone the study of Latin as well as Greek
and that, it seems to me, will be a grave misfortune for the
to
is
Greek
is
may
is
The
about text-books.
existing ones
Latin.
way
for the
;
is
of
your depths
simplified
grammar
altogether
but,
when
all is
said
and
amount
of learning
by
rote,
it is
of Greek
And
is
being attacked
the abolition
in this connection
it
interested
me
very much, a
little
while
a correspondent saying that Latin was rapidly becoming exclusively a girls' subject in America.
dictum
of
mine
It
Greek
is
to be an elegant
25
soon follow
hold
its
suit.
it
think
it
might lead to a
Mr.
Arundell Esdaile.
lift
"
venture,
my
up
as
that
despised
an
article
but
it,
of this
Greek, though
it is
ledge.'
fact,
young
'
all
branches of know-
been noticed.
But
would
like to
he is not
become classical scholars
from them, but is thrown into the same mill with
as he may. Could we not, at least in the larger
differentiated
them, to fare
who
will
26
period of public-school
life
by some such
sixteen or so,
him
Up
all,
who
are to be classical
and more slightly by those who need it as an instrument for some other specialization, such as mediaeval history.
These boys at present are the despair of schoolmaster and
don in turn, for they grow from the boys who do not into the
scholars,
think
if
my
when
taste
Professor Mackail.
think
it
is
runs
'
:
That
it
is
desirable
'
in
certain
conditions
'
that
That
is
and
in particular
this
is
my
point
2T
that
the one
Mr.
Now,
it
We
ignores history.
from Greek
we
descend from
Rome
it is
go
could remain.
The converse
But
it
namely, that
is
;
is it
'
it
we do not descend
Rome
do not
Now, when
as
if
the case
of course
it
for a
thousand years
was a great
loss
but
the world can get on, can do, without Latin in the same sense
That cannot
May
he wrote,
be, I think.
'
'
it
and as an element
in English
education.'
let
let
it
stantially
of
it is
a fact
I believe it is
practice.
It is
any large
it was
think,
28
possible
on your
it
That seems a nearer analogy than to speak of inwhich you have to choose between shirt and coat
that choice had to be made, I think I shall not be giving
possible.
stitutions in
yet
if
my
opinion alone
for, as
if
life
derives
will
It still, I believe,
Perhaps
may
be
pardoned if I recall that more than seven years ago, at the first
General Meeting of this Association, in speaking of the place
of the Classics of Latin and Greek in human life, I laid stress,
and the stress I laid was, I think, accepted by the Association
as justified, on the fact that the Latin achievement represents
all
life
of analysis
therefore,
necting
its
we adopt
this
and,
we
we
generally than
shall be doing
realise.
more injury
29
to the Classics
Rev. Professor
It is
am
in
Gardner made
it
very
and
clear,
think nearly
work
And
studies.
Murray
also
said, at least
present would
is
system as
all
elastic as possible,
make our
it
educational
hide-bound
modern
My own
view
is
that although
universities,
people, and, at
any
say
Well,
Latin
may
apparently
we can do
and though we are offered Greek as the alternative,
well, we may also perhaps prefer to take some other subject
instead.
Thus the impression created would be this, that
it
is
without
therefore
it
is
a thing that
30
Latin
is
and, conse-
of
general.
Rome
literatures
and cultures
of
Greece and
substitute for
proposal
However
it.
may
be, I
all
its
it will
motion, pointed out that the Greek question did not apply to
Is
not
Roman
culture Hellenism in
Roman
ment
Furthermore, has not the Renaissance come in, and was not
one of the chief features of the Renaissance the revival of Greece ?
not say that the change from mediaeval to modern
times has been in a very essential way helped on and extended
May we
by Greek culture
and contents
me
31
My
of the authors.
be, has already
it
ex-
convinced
this
as,
a sheer
impossibility.
'
it
'
"
Gardner.
Professor
" To
Mr. Headlam.
if
the proposal
is
only to
taught,
schools,
it
however,
is
less
what
apparently not
is
really
meant.
Then,
if
this
is
so, it
way
make it a
number
to a great
of
boys and
Surely for
girls.
is
probably
is
Others appar-
if
made by
you adopt
is
is
a serious
Dr. Eouse,
this resolution
and
prepared to recognise
Notwithstanding
this,
its
by Greek.
it
is
possible
to defend
the main-
is
if
and Modern
he desires
32
many
Europe,
We
unknown tongue.
if,
much
of the
is,
to him,
an
for instance, he
of French,
what
of the structure of
knew Latin."
unless he
Conway on the
would be a serious blow to the
the study of Greek, in my opinion, in England just
natural approach through Latin were denied. I have
subject of
growth
now,
of
if its
persuaded
'It
they were at
first
interested in Latin
and
one who was really interested in Latin who was not eager to
The Greek-less British parent, on the whole,
begin Greek.
realises the
it.
The enemy
English education.'
"
school.
My
committee
is
a well-known name,
Mr. E. D. Mansfield
and,
and meanwhile
all
through we
humane
curriculum.
The
subject
another.
girl
is
that it may
What might be
offered as alternatives to a
boy or
would
offer to
88
Latin
out.
On
if
it
because others
against us
may
Surely,
there
is
No
one voting
for the
Professor
Murray made
Some
Latin.
it
clear that
and
against
the point
is
not irrelevant.
to be
meant
to be a help to headmasters
them from
before
governing bodies
is
with those
and constructive
contend that
it is
professions of
'
'
who
of the great
life.
Is
it
how
conservative
not possible to
'
and new
5
life.
Is it
84
when reported
afraid that
in the
the argument
to give
it
is
newspapers we
think
let
us be
be giving
shall
may
fall
from passing
result
not be allowed to
not
scientific
them.
it
Do
girls'
its merits.
this resolution,
and
ponement
of the debate
me
I suggest to Professor
"
till
should
like to
forward on
the postIt is
But may
move
a future
occasion
confess
it
little
hard
if
you read
it
carefully
you
University of Birmingham
and
take
it
is
being studied.
we study both
At the
classical languages
it
already
is
;
at the Final
but that
is
'
when we should
motion
the
in a
revised form."
session
THE RITUAL OF DIONYSUS
On
and
their friends
8tli
Members
the
35
of the Association
met
Cheapside, where
hospitality provided
of the Mercers'
Company.
Murray
is
pher can derive from observing the curious things other people
are interested in. Well, a point in which a number of us Greek
much
scholars are
interested
just
now
is
tragedies
it is
very
Yet when
where
difficult to see
Dionysus comes
in.
As we all know, some recent writers, especiRidgeway, have been almost inclined to deny that
Dionysus had anything to do with it. They have laid great stress
on the part of Tragedy that comes directly from the heroic saga,
ally Professor
to-night a
way
Dionysus
that is to say,
in
lam
say that
that
all
it is
my
answer
is
is
connected with
some of
us.
really as conclusive
Now I do not at
and
satisfactory,
doors, as
confess that
it
seems to
when
it
me
did open
at the present
THE CLASSICAL
36
ASSOCIATIOxN
ease that a dreadful thouglit occurred to me. I thought to myI reaching just that stage of development and that
self
Am
men
It
is
me
to answer that
question.
Now I ought to
say
first
my
things like
am
Tragedy
is
it
little earlier.
As Vegetation
Spirit he
me Ah, yes
'
is
Dionysus
He is quite
of Orphism and the Zagreus mystery is not ancient.
say
that in
I
can
now
but
point
argue
that
I will not
late.'
points
to the
way,
other
the
points
evidence
the
my judgment,
Dionysus
case
particular
a
take
To
early.
conception being
;
group of Vegetation
Spirits,
It all
Frazer's book.
37
First
is
some
always
it is
And
death.
is
The Pharmakos
almost
nearly always of a
is
stoned,
This
Osiris, Pentheus, Zagreus and others are torn in pieces.
Sparagmos or tearing asunder is perhaps connected with the
At any
it is
rate the
Sparagmos
tioned in Frazer's
is
the great
dead
'
:
lamentation
it
men-
not enacted
is
in a
'
very great
of emotion.
The
is
pure
clearest
new
for that, is
rejoicings for
King, Theseus.
This
Osiris, and put them together.
Peripeteia.
or
Feeling
of
Change
a
by
accompanied
Discovery is
The last stage is the re-appearance or Epiphany of the god, risen
in glory
That
is
Now
I suggest
marked
look for
them
Well,
if
most
my bonnet,
is
left
Where
not, as
very
shall
my
we
fears
is
most
38
Is there
If
first for
anything of that
about 200
lines
there
is
He
power.
sists in
this is
it
announced, just in
its
right place.
When
it is
in the
is
in the
attested
the
is,
collection
The
and the Anagnorisis or recognition of him by Agave.
recognition is accompanied by a Peripeteia or great change of
Lastly comes the epiphany of Dionysus in glory.
feeling.
That
is,
we have
Spirit, of
in the
Bacchae
all
myth from
is
ritual into
drama.
torn to pieces
it is
It is
not
simply
THE RITUAL OF DIONYSUS
89
The hero
is
narrated by a messenger.
is
hymn
to Aphrodite
triumph
is
am
from some
We
or change of feeling.
me
Then
it
the
original ritual
at Roscher or
form of
to
life
Now
again.
a curious thing
If
is
in legend,
to
Artemis.
Next
moved
I will
There
is
now
40
all
You
my
have taken
Form
Well,
can be done, in
all
existing fragments.
Now
that perhaps
is
make
41
What about
pides.
the Persae
an exception.
is
each play.
he
In
In the
Aeschylus
he has an epiphany,
it
first play,
it would seem, in
our extant Persae, the hero, or as
is
'
evoked
is
rises
from
his holy
If it
called
As
Theophany*
fragmentary plays,
for the
my
I will state in
a very
study of them.
clearly,
'
many fragments
Bassarai
of the Edoni,
it
We have fortunately
see
from them
that the play followed very closely the same lines as Euripides'
Bacchae. You can see that (f. 61) it showed the disguised Dionysus
on the stage it had him imprisoned and liberated by an earthquake (58) under those circumstances I think one must assume
that at some point the god threw oE his disguise and appeared in
;
What about
a
Sophocles
little disobliging.
wish.
I get traces of
get
I could
them more
42
is
this I
lines
He
marked
off,
He
line,
and
way
the same
middle of the
On
and Euripides.
The
like free
artistic
and his clearest ritual forms only in the final play of each trilogy.
That left two plays over which were comparatively speaking
free from the ritual form and were moving in the direction of free
Sophocles, always moving towards a less stiff form of
fiction.
drama, may well have taken these plays as a normal or legitimate
model. Euripides certainly went back to the stiffer form. The
extremely clear-cut and articulate character of Euripides' art
will be admitted, I think, both by his friends and his enemies.
A word about the Theophanies in Euripides. They occur in
eleven of the extant plays, counting the Rhesus. And you will
The
find that they all are built up according to the same formula.
God
(1)
appears in glory,
worship.
I will
(2)
and
(3)
all
want
some
ritual
in
when we
some way or
It is
else
was
only intelligible
spell of
traditional form.
My
fixed ritual,
and that
is
in course of
If
we
find
any
of these
a fading
Yes
etc.,
43
that
everything exactly as
ends with
it
should be,
only there
'
rides off in a
tower
She appears
distributes
What
dragon chariot.
prophecies,
by the people
of Corinth.
and
blessings
ritual
worship
god acts
in the ordinary
Another
is
more faded
case,
had worship
like the
He
is
more human.
is
there
it
a hero and
comforts
little
He
settles everything
he
Heracles
worship of
Theophany.
I could run through other examples showing how you get
other ritual forms melting away into something like what we
should call ordinary drama. But before finishing I would
mention one result of this investigation on our view of the development of Greek drama. It is a result which I think I was getting
at
of the
it
human.
to Ritual.
44
into stages.
more
no Prologue
is
or, as I
If
falls
think
likely,
it
play began
Now
has
Aeschylus
disappears
altogether,
stage one
In Sophocles
these stages.
all
with an exposition-scene
it is
a part of his
scene
is
omitted, without
it),
it,
Now
natural cast.
ritual
was
With that
to be.
in
our mind
let us
supernatural,
all
Next
gods, or ghosts.
Heracleidae, Heracles,
an
altar.
band
of suppliants
Iphigenia Taurica,
unmistakable.
conditions of
It
life.
is
never an
is,
I think,
is
old sacer
The Prologue,
itself.
after
seems to
It
45
me
performance, has
that the
re-asserted
formality in Euripides.
The Chorus
Stichomythiae.
at
first
till it
dwindles to a thing of
bears upon
Something
something
seen,
that
little
we seem
God
And
at the end.
it is in
sequence
its
itself,
as
we have
contest,
tearing-asunder, lamentation,
which
It is a curious result
recognition,
resurrection
at
first
Greek Drama.
it will
.
be repugnant,
An
outer shape
share his
said.
'
bee
Many
translator of
'
Drama which he
has given to
us.
We
of us
know him
some
of our great
on the modern
That is a wonderful thing to do
and we know, some
of us, other books of his very well.
But we thai^k him for having
admitted us, so to speak, into his study to-night, and for having
communicated to us some of his dreams, some of his hypctbcEcs
and suggestions, which we are going to follow in order, if possible,
stage.
46
how it came
We
to be
what
it
was.
and
classical education
owes
it
labours."
not only for his translations, but also for his book The Rise of the
and if in that book he sometimes alarmed us, he
Greek Epic
;
has
good many
must be glad
to
my
lips
what
was going to
say.
But there
is
to
me
for
many eminent
it is
in a rather
47
more humble
Classical
In presenting
more able
its
is
once
been formed, though the Council hears with pleasure that there
a prospect of a Branch being founded at Bristol. The vigorous
and successful work of the existing Branches is one of the chief
sources of the Association's influence, and the Council desires
to urge upon members the importance of promoting the formation
is
to the Association.
British School at
of the
of the
Rome
members, who
will
in
48
REPORT OF COUNCIL
to
members
49
and
Classical Review.
It also calls
tions of Scotland
of
more intimate
The
Classical Association
all
common
interests,
and
by
A memorandum
minology,
last
volume of
Proceedings.
THE CLASSICAL ASSOCIATION
50
its
original Council.
The Balance-sheet for the period Dec. 21st, 1909, to Dec. 17th,
was published on pp. 184-5 of the last volume of ProThe Balanceceedings, and will now be submitted for approval.
sheet for 1911 will appear in the ensuing number of Proceedings.
The Classical Journals Board makes the following report
" The hopes which the Board held out a year ago ^ were more
1910,
seen
way
its
is
Still
marked
more
number
increase in the
of subscribers to
both journals.
The Board is glad to say that the five editors of these journals
and The Year's Worlc have accepted ofiice again for 1912 and it is
sure that the Council and the Association will join in thanking
these scholars warmly for their services, especially in view of
the labour and anxiety of the time of transition now happily
;
past."
Dr.
Kenyon.
"
would
like to
call attention to
of the
in
between the
and has
Societies, because
to treat
them
in its
own ways
and suggestions
keep in friendly touch as much as possible
whereby this can be achieved have been made during the past
year, and the Council of the Association have fallen in with
;
them.
viii.,
p. 13.
and
am
glad
REPORT OF COUNCIL
to say
that
at
this
Meeting
representatives
and the
members
in this
The
first is in
For the
It is
loss,
satisfaction.
very satisfactory
difl&culties of
the
two items
will
through the
both
of
Classical Association
of the Association.
Keport which
51
the
way
but should now
made
their
to a
capacity
in their individual
is
them
it will
not
to
trouble or inconvenience."
Professor J. F. Dobson.
" As
am
institute a
may
its
adoption.
Branch
Perhaps
member
General Meeting.
You
from entrance
52
overpaid and returned, but that, of course, does not affect the
balance.
Turning now to the accounts for the past year we find the
receipts to be 446,
The
payment by members
i.e.
all
abolition
the Proceedings, be
mean the
of postage of
their subscription
all
The others
will get it
on payment
of such sub-
who do
and make
much
will
legal expenses in
we must not
glad to
Therefore
new members. I am
more members have begun to pay
it
REPORT OF TREASURER
During the past year
I received
53
then forgetting
doubt
have not been too scrupulous on this point. Of course
always prepared to return any overpaid subscription at
whether
I
am
I really
money
move
to
Flamstead Walters.
Professor
statement
in proposing the
"
it
back.
interest
in
balance-sheet.
In the
first
as treasurer
second
and
think
my work
wish to
acceptance by you of
of
some personal
place, I
was passed
in
my
my
beg
the
the
have
last
for the
like to
could
they want
Hon. Treasurer
for
if
This
audited
year as
it
now does
that
is
inevitable.
54
In looking
interest.
over the past history of the Association for the last eight
we must
and with
gratitude that our work has been materially helped, and our
consequence with the public in no small degree enlarged, by
the distinguished
many
We
ways.
and
civic
life,
all
have had
of public
It is a gratifying fact
that the study of the Classics has been thus seen to af?ect all
sides of national life, and to be an important feature of that
life.
It is not irrelevant to
President,
when the
Our
first
considering these
names what a
ofl&ce.
It is
obvious on
itself
and
in so
many
fields of life.
known
to all of
you that
it
He
is
recognised, I think I
may
say, as
ELECTION OF PRESIDENT
55
Mr. A. B. Ramsay.
Mr.
"
Dr.
Butler,
as
we
all
know,
who have
of half praise
which
is
is
and he
but
daresay
Dr. Butler
is
a great
When
unwillingly,
Harrovian
conferring
President.
the
Classics.
think
their
to
with
its
you to-day,
are experts
office
is
an
ideals.
their
of
to
many
acceptance
me
56
in the legal
in politics
and
in letters,
a high honour,
It is
may
be
think, to the
By
our own
day,
men
of affairs of
We may
continue amongst us
still
then express
should
still
and be
Professor Hardie.
"
I feel
on
behalf."
its
The
proposal happily includes the Bishop of Lincoln, and the new
Vice-Presidents proposed are Lord Morley and Lord Loreburn,
both from the same school and University, Cheltenham and
any further words to commend
Oxford.
We
it
to the Association.
much
by
to
assume
but we
may
upon
owe something.
to which they
An
is
taught by
many
England
its interest
people and
of a professional
many
There
is,
but an Association
Professor Sonnenschein.
" On
of such
57
men
as
The names
by the Council,
I give them in
selected
order
alphabetical
North
Professor
in
Connal,
number
for a great
Leeds,
Mr. D.
S.
whom
him
who has
of years.
brilliant
of
well.
Curricula
who know
Committee,
number
to
which
member
of years as a
she
contributed
service
of the
important
information.
many
think there
is
Council by one.
number
to
if
be
made,
viz.
of lady representatives
on the
of the Council
in future, if we reckon Miss Sanders
amongst the new members, there will be three. There is, I
think, a general feeling on the part of the Council that the
contingent of lady members might with advantage be increased
I beg to move the adoption of these names."
to this number.
Miss Jane Harrison. " I would second this proposal. I am
sure it will be generally agreed that Mr. Robertson will be an
members
three, after
all,
is
am
it
three to-day."
and
shall
58
Mr.
W.
which
for
there
it
The proposed
it was
in
were
certain
casus
omissi,
required
all
members.
The amended Rule now
notices
to our
proposed provides,
in
the
first
place, that the Council shall not only prepare the list of agenda,
all
was drawn
bring
business which
a provision
is
it
considers urgent.
The
desirability of such
it
in
proposed alteration
of
instead of three
is
I have mentioned,
and to this addition it
may
Then there
any way.
six
weeks'
trust
is
the
notice
proposed to add a
proposers.
AMENDMENT OF RULE
13
59
Association
of the
it
more
but rather
clearly,
and modify
change
it is
little easier
and more
effective."
shall be read.
"
It shall also
the names
The Rev. A.
too strict in
its
Geden.
"
is
rather
60
took part
members
W. R.
Resolution
and
J.
W.
Mackail, Esq.,
authorized
be
make the
to
its
to
regularize
funds.
When
the
the
very
little in
great
the
way
formality.
of capital to invest,
the Finance Committee for the time being to invest the money.
It is
merely putting
will
all
that into
and
legal
way.
make a proposal
If
in the matter,
now
is
the time."
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS
61
Mr. Sleeman
made
"
and
however,
but
if
left to
is
7th.
It
its
move
that the
carried unanimously.
as essential
in
62
are
what we
are,
Greek a compulsory
subject in
school or in college.
But we
in
tion
religious
life.
We
As
thought and of
religion,
owed
Very
and only
in
with
my own
a busy
Studies,
I
have
favourite studies, so
life
And
permit
all.
me
secondly,
to retain
amid the
around
rises
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS
63
Hellenism
is Hellenism ?
began with Alexander the Great.
like
He
a Themistocles or a Pausanias,
He annexed
the whole
No
queror.
West.
How far Hellenism reached the Indus I forbear to
enquire
the answer must be found, and is being found,
not in the vague traditions handed down by postAlexandrian writers but in the surviving monuments
in the
of India
itself.
But enduring
literary
monuments
belonged just as
much
to religion as to
which
patriotism.
64
dispersion,
when kindly
treated,
all
the peculiar
customs and fashions of their race. Antiochus Epiphanes, v/ho appeared to pious Hebrew minds as a
grotesque monster, as a horrible embodiment of satanic
wickedness, was quite honestly trying to civilize and
to him the unprogressive and
humanity centred in Jerusalem
but his good intentions provoked the Maccabean rising
we know what romantic and important results ensued
from that conflict, both immediate and ultimate.
And yet, though coercion failed, the pervasive influence of Hellenism had begun to make its way, and
We have the
profoundly modified Jewish thought.
outcome of this in the earlier Wisdom Literature of the
Old Testament. There are parts of the book of Job
Hellenize
what seemed
powerful
Jewish
some
We have
of Proverbs reveal this yet more.
unmistakable proof of this contact in the apocryphal
books of Ecclesiasticus and of Wisdom, of which the
former belonged to the early part of the second cenAnd then we come to Philo. Few things
tury B.C.
are more interesting than this strange and beautiful
development of Jewish Religion under stimulus of
Greek philosophy. To the Jew of the Pharisaic type
ters
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS
65
'
Greek
in
speech.
It
Roman
take
life
place
it
may
help us also to
than
fulfilled.
66
in the history
Hellenism
was
called
to take a
which
place more exalted and commanding than before.
Christianity was first presented and preached to the
world in Hellenic guise. It was in Alexandria, in the
third and second centuries, that the Old Testament books
were gradually rendered into Greek. From that time
of the world, in
many thousands
of
language of religion as well as of trade. Many thousands more were equally familiar with Greek, and with
St. Paul,
does the rest of the New Testament. And St. Paul, the
master spirit of the Church of the first century, has left
us precious records of his own religious thinking. We
lates,
commonplaces
May
name with
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS
to
upon the
lay stress
67
Hellenistic character
of
the
Christianity, because
Roman
culture.
destroying
two
It
certainly saved
all
of
philosophy.
Christian
teaching
It adopted Greek
assumed more than
rhythm and
fitness.
Latinized, the
was enchained.
regained
its
We
fitness, until
shall see
how
it
the Greek
afterwards
freedom.
68
unknown
in
Hellenic spirit.
Stranger
persistently
East,
sterilized
still,
neglecting
by monastic
of Hellenism
invaders.
But
over
if
these
priceless
treasures,
yet
those
treasures,
came
however forgotten, still
when they were rudely ransacked and by degrees were
were there
made known
to the West.
and Commentaries, as the learning and the speculations of the Moors invaded the Universities of Italy,
France and England. That is the first Renaissance, and
dates from 1200, or thereabouts. It was an age prolific
lation
of great scholars,
among whom my
great predecessor
much
of his
letters.
It
for
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS
69
fierce
knowledge
of Aristotle, Hippocrates
It
when Giraldus
Cambrensis writes to the Bishop of Hereford to recommend his friend Grosseteste to his notice, and then
adds
He is learned in medicine but withal a good
'
Christian.'
We know how
Friars,
the
we
call
the Renaissance.
How
largely this
movement
depended on a study of Greek and what were the enlightened aims of its leaders we best apprehend from
reading their actual lives and' words. There is an
autograph letter from Linacre, the physician, to
John Claymond, first President of Corpus Christi College,
Oxford, dated about 1520 from London. I copied it
forty years ago.
Bishop Linacre had been coaching
one of Claymond's undergraduates in Greek, of which
70
knew but
little,
this letter
with them
is
And now my
'
than a home
since I cannot
of
Greek learning.
Which purpose
come over
doing
am
;
nor
direction,
will
seeing that
it
is
made a
no very
difficult
in this
feat for
half done,"
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS
true learning everywhere
But
that, as
all
71
men know,
and
if
(to
'
Plutarch
and there
tells
is
and with good effect, when her sons were stalwart youths.
Like Plutarch I will close my discourse by quoting her
epigram, which was thus
:
'
'Tis true you have not, nor can have, children of your
own, tho' the having of children is held a benediction,
but you can adopt as sons the bright intellects you are to
train in Greek letters.
Farewell.'
I have ventured to translate this quaint letter,
although my poor English cannot convey to your ears
the ultra-Ciceronianism of its style, nor the writer's
simple joy in the newly discovered wonders. I must
confess, however, that the old Scholar's grip of Greek
prosody is inadequate.
If it was the discovery of Greek that created the
Renaissance, it was to the same source that we must
trace the springs of the Reformation Movement. Luther
would never have been what he was but for the study
of the New Testament in the original.
I am well aware
'
THE CLASSICAL ASSOCIATION
72
conscience
against
the
degenerate forms
of
religion
ultimately coalesced,
religion, with
the obedience of the law
We
is
nothing.
or
it
spontaneous,
St. Paul, must be
and
may be confident that as long as St. Paul is read
spirit as against
its
Paul.
The
later sixteenth
they were
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS
73
'
It
has
all
But Rousseau,
greatly on Locke,
in
his theories
education,
leans
And what
of
novels.
it suffices for
I am content with this
purpose to discover that the germ, and more than
metaphysics.
my
first
74
Let
It
is
me venture,
common to
as the
tionary period
and others
'
Classical
'
poets, such as
principiiim divisionis.^
And
claim
Who
all
Was
who gave
his life
classical
school
Hellenic in
its
English poetry,
of
is
fundamentally
in its love of
its
pre-
traditional
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS
and more
polite
75
What
tics of
Greece.
ways the
Nor can we
life
and
fail
art
and thought
ancient Hellas
of
it is
is
having
life.
music and in
and poetry, had
those old Greek virtues of beauty and
art, in
76
mind
so rational
Paul
of St.
and
practical
itself
men
am convinced
and
that wherever
wherever
to learn the thoughts
feel,
of the
dom
and
translators
But
of
Christen-
it is
It
translation.
and
affection of
human
is
enlightenment.
ever be a force in
human
Hellenism will
history.
to
one of
my recurring
welcome the
pleasures, which
which do not,
spirit
We
am
afraid,
home amongst
but
are, I think,
more
We
are
us in our buildings,
in their composition,
your presence
of the classical
very convenient.
modern
you.
life
And
of the University of
it is
do so to-day.
VOTE OF THANKS
77
it
And
life
Hebraism
is
And
a tendency to throw
is
and Hellenism.
are making a
made and
them
into alliance
we may perhaps
call
the
Roman
spirit, a
Greek
but
strongly,
and that
not only a
is,
humane
that I believe
we owe
I feel
very
think
78
there
is
the Latin
life.
have
We
have been
all
Address to us to-day."
Dr. Heard.
"
I feel it a
owe
it
and
think
member
of this
the North.
The whole
and
am
under a
sure
we
are
I confess
the very
delightful, because
I believe
though
powers
it
title of his
subj ect
was to me extremely
And
is
in rather a serious
way
I believe
lenism which,
I believe, will
prevent
it
this.
Some
We
VOTE OF THANKS
79
and
convert.
really
is
become
a national force
and that
men
would say
is
due largely to
available to you,
proposed."
The vote
of
gave you.
"
are
much
is
really
mine
am really
hear you have secured a very distinguished teacher and representative of the classics to be your President for the coming year
;
and
I shall
Mr. Page.
"
no advocacy
my peace.
This
fectly
generous hospitality.
if
am
we would
per-
believe
finally.
of
life
But when
members of
when they
'
80
Company should
and object
feel
germane
and
was excessively valuable. And I think
our meeting to-day here mid teeming London's central roar
is a witness that we need and that we mean to keep alive, and
that the work we have to do is one of advantage to this nation.
There is one point I would like to mention, and that is, much
as we owe to the Principal of King's College for his ever kindly
hospitality, I do agree with him in his remark that he is very
adequately remunerated for that hospitality by the admirable
speeches which he has the opportunity of hearing. For indeed
the Address to which we have just listened is one for which anybody would be glad to propose a vote of thanks and it is one
which ought to encourage us all to make the study of the classics
a thing which shall become a real part of national life, a study
of which we are not ashamed, and which we must push forward
as far as we can.
I spent last night, by the generosity of Dr.
Kenyon, in the British Museum, and I believe some of my friends
thought it would be a good thing if a superannuated classical
master could be kept there permanently as a specimen. But
even if the classical schoolmaster is going to become extinct,
when I look at this audience I am certain the public schoolmisof existence
Company gave
I feel the
to us
'
tress
is
Professor P.
Gardner
"Perhaps
may
be allowed to add
should
feeling in
find
it
to
whole of our
lives.
we have
listened.
try to express
my
so admirably ex-
Perhaps
him
to withdraw.
Now,
more
lofty position,
we hope he
will
perhaps
VOTE OF THANKS
resume
his useful
work
who were
as those
in that field.
81
The Address
of the Bishop,
very interesting way, and confirms what came out in the important discussion which we had in regard to the teaching of
Greek.
Roman
represent
I
civilization far
At the time
my
his-
said would have been almost completely true, that in those days
culture
was Rome which was spiritually and intellectuBut I think all that was changed. At the Renaissance learning, philosophy, poetry, art went back to Greece. At
the Reformation religion went back from Rome to the Greek
Testament. That has all been set forth so admirably by the
Bishop that I need not say a word more about it. Even in more
ideas,
but
still it
recent times
sents the
it is
principles
of
whereas
Rome repre-
and progress
Greece
life
progress
is,
I think,
motion."
Principal,
we
all
us this convenient
the centre of
Dr.
11
THE CLASSICAL ASSOCIATION
82
papers
On
in fact, it
me you
seems to
the afternoon of
Lecture Theatre of
Miss Mason.
that,
"
in the
am moving
texts
and
one which
For while
it is
absolutely
in Latin pronunciation,
least is being
increasing tendency
among
upon us a recognition
points.
attention
As
it is,
then,
and
upon
falls
of
we should not
And
Latin Texts,
was
it
laid
down
that
'
in texts of
Latin authors
marked, except in
Certainly
tative
'
the
syllables
difficulty
pronunciation
is
of
acquiring
My
view
is
correct
is
it
'
quanti-
but we
we
HIDDEN QUANTITIES
should take no steps to add to
it
in schools,
is
I wish,
if
may
be allowed,
my own
to speak briefly of
presume
it.
83
and
only one of
many
minimum
is
given to
carious existence.
In the
this question is
first
pre-
it is
especially to
one of importance.
oral,
its
them that
of time
and where,
it,
are
carefully
chiefly
is
considered,
repeated,
Even during
'
mensa longa
'
origin.
first
year should
my
opinion the
I repeat,
much time
But
his.
He
has too
at his disposal.
becomes
greater.
Less
reading
whole process
of
'
intelligent guessing
'
becomes a
real factor
in the work.
the
form
is
'
'
84
Then
regina.
it is
of Caesar,
But,
regina at
meaning of
have known many, alas who have
To
may
an explanation, but
it
refer
offer
real.
When
the time
my
common
foe.
pupils, a
return she told me, shyly proud, that she had learnt
it
too,
and was prepared to say it. The recitation was good, fluent
and vigorous. The false quantities were truly appalling, except
in the case of the words with which she was thoroughly familiar.
She told me afterwards that she had forgotten all about quantities.
I think it must be agreed, then, that considerable demands
are
great
demands
made upon
are
correction of mistakes,
the
We
hear,
we could
too,
that
wish.
the
Universities,
and
especially
the
Now,
in this
own.
troubled sea of
quantitative
But the
practice of
of
these hidden
HIDDEN QUANTITIES
quantities which
and
is
out of
is
85
placing, I believe,
all
quantities.
In another
Now
not
this does
mean merely
the
It
text.
But there
is
of opinion as to
cannot
fail
to
There
we
great diversity
is
are long,
and even
in
and make
darken counsel
confusion
worse
confounded.
In my own school I have actually in use books in which
vowels long by nature are marked, except where they are
also long by position,' others in which, say the authors,
we
'
'
still
universally mispronounced.
is
using, then
of the Gallic
in
proficlscor
and missum
Infelix
and posco
trdxi and trdxi
posco
;
mitto
86
Where
ingenious
mind
rule in his
as,
Where
not a mere
slip of
the tongue.
am
and that the teacher should not be compelled against his better
judgment to impose this extra burden upon his pupils.
Let me point out too, that the omission of the marking of
these quantities does not prevent a teacher with strong views
we could agree
to do
away with
this
marking
and
method of pronunciation
pronounce them any other way if
'
short
'
with Cicero
The boy or
'
'
himself
and
what then
will
to say
left to
no normal child
'tis
true, with
an incomplete knowledge
as
he
will
leave
HIDDEN QUANTITIES
do not
we
87
can afford to
And
are content to do
this,
indefinitely.
it
am
my
in stating
case.
I will
by
is
fall
of the pupil
it is
insisting
involved
is
is
now
the
error in pronunciation
and
so likely to ensue,
in this respect,
we
shall be in
danger of getting
still
farther
Association
is
A new
at present the
and
for a
'
certain un-
and
and
'
hidden
'
the
'
hidden quantities
'
(1)
as they
because
88
they are thrown into the shade by the consonants which follow
or shortness,
and
in
some
is
conflicting, so
That these
hidden
quantities
were
deliberately
excluded
is
The
and the question of practice, Mr. Butcher said
niceties and subtleties of pronunciation are not, in their opinion,
fitted for school teaching.
In practice we must be content with
what is approximately right. The Committee have gone as
science
'
essentials.
and
There
as
are,
touching
questions
controversial
knows,
everybody
Latin
I received this
many
difficult
pronunciation.
America who
in
insist that it
English pronunciation.
too
rigorous
for
human
demands which
Though he has no
scholars,
infirmity.
of
I
tell
spare you."
I,
HIDDEN QUANTITIES
Association, having added
my word
89
Had
of warning.'^
it
not
Some
to abide
deeper,
by the concordat
many
among them.
of 1906,
We may now
camps (1) those who ignore hidden quantities (2) those who
mark hidden quantities in texts (disagreeing among themselves as to the length or shortness of some of these vowels)
who mark
and reproduce them in pronunciation
(3) those
hidden quantities in texts, but calmly ignore them in actual
pronunciation. I am inclined to think from what some school
:
but surely
me
that this
is
a very
For
it is
common
it
practice
Some
action, then,
on the part
of
is
am
Personally
1906.
of practice
hidden quantities
which
(2)
arise
And
(1)
the
final
(3)
the fact,
is
no justification in
scientific
philology.
(1)
order.
word,
12
e.g.
defendo,
defendere,
defendi,
dejensum).
90
These figures are taken from the third edition of Anton Marx,^
No doubt this list includes many rare words, Lut it also includes
many
am
of the
commonest words
Germany
(to
but
may
in others it creates a
be a help to learning,
new
naturally infer
connexion with
in
e.g. rex,
e.g. rego,
difficulty,
In a few words,
referred).
rexi,
e.
is
especially
hidden quanthe
difficulty of
rego
rexi
rectum
tego
texi
tectum
cingo
cinxi
cinctum
coquo
is
also short in
is
is
fingo
finxi
fictum
traho
traxi
tractum
dico
dixi
dictum
duco
duxi
ductum
both
coctum
coxi
e.g.
long in both
e.g.
is
inspicio
inspexi
c)
authorities
inspectum
(Hale-Buck)
inspexi (Marx)
1
Hulfsbuchlein
fiir
die
Ausuprache der
Weidmann,
lateinischen
1901).
Vohale
in
HIDDEN QUANTITIES
adlectum
adlexi (Hale-Buck)
adlicio
91
adlexi (Marx)
flecto
To teach
(Marx)
flexum
egi
actum
feci
factum
pungo
pupugi
scribo
scripsi
scriptum
cessi
cessum
but cedo
the
(Hale-Buck)
difficulties in
ago
e.g.
flexi
flexi
this tangled
first difficulties of
pilnctum
mass of
Analogy breaks
down
all
And
of the anomalies,
if
(2)
must
the
treat
theoretical or
some
of the results
If
difficulties of
scientific
time permitted
should attack
abundantly
book, that
we
Marx's
is of
all syllables
long by position
for
some
sifted.
day
will
be upset
tions
now
accepted.^
3rd edition
all
points.
gn
is
in his
always long,
Priscian in support
93
but there
is
Who
Finally,
if
shall decide
our aim
is
of
consul, censor, etc., but Ijds, cosul, cesor, etc. (with a nasalised
shown very
by the statement of
is even some
evidence that Cicero himself, who tells us that the vowel was
The real
long, dropped the n (which he omits to mention).
pronunciation is indicated by inscriptions, and is explicitly
recognized by modern authorities on pronunciation (Hale-Buck,
Sommer, Handbuch der lat. Laut-und
Latin Grammar, 18
Formenlehre, pp. 254-6 Niedermann, translated by Strong and
Stewart, p. 30 and p. 85). To teach pupils to say infdns, consul,
etc., is to teach an incorrect pronunciation which was never
for the lengthening
heard at any period of Roman speech
and nasalising of the vowel in such words was of the nature of
long vowel).
This
is
clearly
Quintilian that
a compensatory lengthening due to the dropping of the consoin other words the vowel was not lengthened till the
n was dropped, just as happened in the English word five, which
comes from a Germanic word with an n and a short vowel
(something like the German word funf). Finf and five (O.E. flf)
nantal n
Similarly infdns
Roman
pronunciations,
infdns
just as
On
is
all
wrong
maximum
time, too,
with what
is,
to
is
a pronunciation
both real
but
Ifds are
periods
different
would be in English.
confess it seems to me that at
in Latin as finf
teach the
belonging
and
when every
of Latin in the
when many
to them, a
effort
has to be
minimum number
made
to
of hours
new pronunciation
it
is
unwise to
of the learner."
HIDDEN QUANTITIES
Professor
Flamstead Walters.
" As
93
perpetrator-in-part of
it is
necessary for
'
think
of
that c or a or
Imperfect
of the
is long
and I find people
and I also presume that when they
write their Imperfect of possum they would also pronounce it
The difficulties (raised by Professor Sonnenschein),
potebat.
disagreement
comes in, I leave for some one to deal with
where
myself
than
capable
but with regard to the difficulties
more
mentioned by Miss Mason, I should like to point out that if the
teacher or pupil have before them these quantities marked,
they have something to go upon and they have at any rate
i
before
them the
possibility of
and
is
and
less pleasure) in
in forming
wrong
habits.
forming
It is a
gently,
me
means
of a later reference to
some authority.
In fact,
But that
is
There
is,
knows the
himself, of course,
tion the
old formula
'
long
facts,
'
94
be avoided
long
and
quantities
telling
am
helps
us
of
avoid
to
But it is no good
when you don't
it.
long,
is
tell
him the
is
is
but
no good telling
you have first ex-
it is
long, unless
of the true statement with the old false statement that the
should
like
to
me
to hear
to
(It is
know
it is absolutely fatuous,
Greek as well as Latin talk of nosco
and yet you hear it over and over again. It reminds me of
manv of my friends among the Greek archaeologists, Greek
;
scholars,
The
who
Latin
if
is
Gnossos or Knossos.
many
people yesterday
it.)
HIDDEN QUANTITIES
When
the
come
students
remember, when
I first
to
tlieir
95
Greek
New
Testament
Testament, coming
word
across the
it
was, but
if
into Greek or from Greek into Latin, which are easily recognized
if
pronunciation
Now
me
let
Most
French,
is
properly attended
to.
uilla, ville
with
In after
bella, belle.
life
many
of these people,
even those who have not advanced very far in Latin and Greek,
would be exceedingly interested, I think, and perhaps proud,
when they see and could point out a tall I, for instance, in a
Roman
inscription
if
Finally,
i.
it
tall
/ represented
had
I will
it
knew from
habit."
But
'
seems to
me
this
case
if
all
all
the
would be the
grammars that they used had
96
The
difficulties
put forward by
reader and the seconder of the paper arise from the fact
If
when
other,
it is
e.g.
it is
in teaching
him
to say
marked.
when he grows
older.
There
are, of
no
difficulty
difficulty
is
There
absolutely
The only
are, of course,
they were always before the boys' eyes from the beginning.
And
the
number
occupied in drawing up a
list of
them, and so
consul
in ancient
alone,
it is
and
it is
it
way
them
out.
of
HIDDEN QUANTITIES
97
proportion
of
So
all
it
it.
hope this
incorrect pronunciation
it.
greater
is
think
young student and upon the teacher. At this time when people
are making a transition from the old pronvmciation to the new
I find it is difiicult to get both teachers and pupils to realize the
absolute necessity for accurate pronunciation within the limits
and considering
this, I
Two
me
our secondary
assumed she
was making the transition from the old to the new. I found it
was a question of hidden quantities, on which point the inspector
schools asked
had been rather severe with her. I regretted his sense of relative
and on that occasion I took refuge behind Professor
values,
Postgate.
Seeing
that
the
still
at the
moment, although
13
98
Professor Arnold.
" The
present hardly accords with the motion before us, because the
stress has
pronunciation in
attended
But the
to.
quantities,
that
among
and
sufficient to
of textbooks should
which
is in itself
a class
is
it
difficulties.
me
reasonable
But that
writers
right seems to
me
going too
comparatively unimportant
In teaching
far.
if
in writing a textbook
'
Long vowels
said that
the stroke
is
way
in the
are
you do not
in a year or two.
You put
it is different.
But
at the beginning
'
of a correct pronunciation.'
and
be
will
deftly
whilst
may
it
it
seems to
me
but at the
much
may
perhaps be allowed to
tell
HIDDEN QUANTITIES
99
and
in order,
I
pretended
I tried to
it
to be.
do not
I
let
us
have
often
me
with
regard
of
to
difficulties,
hidden quantities.
hidden quantities,
at once.
The
to
tell
is
o of 'pons
;
the o of
fontem
is
is
a child who has learnt the proper pronunciation of rex, with the
long vowel, will proceed naturally to the proper pronunciation
of the
genitive
expect,
regis,
genitive of pons
is
but pontis
so
He
Why
it
is
child never
accordingly
it
leaves
100
who
most impatient
is
of these things
attention
you
will find
that
is,
my
in the public
schools
an
in
efficient
to hidden quantities
way
We
selves.
new pronunciation
then,
we were
to
:
all."
Hardie.
Professor
do not think
seems to
me
I
it
believe
it
would help
Miss Mason's
that
is
important
" It
many
{nosse, audissem),
some
less
some
quite
It is not easy to
draw a
line of
insisting
result
simple
principle
separating
of
the
consonants
(con-stare,
i'm-memor)y
Mr.
Dingwall
it
there
was
o of consul
He
if
Latin
HIDDEN QUANTITIES
verse
became
neglected
hearing that,
after
101
although
pons
be pronounced
it
rex.''
to trouble
Latin pronunciation.
New
Latin Primer which saw the hght fifteen years before the
Classical Association
was founded.
Nor could he
see
any
when
diffi-
wag
was done from the beginning.
it
if it
such as
g,
when
t,
pro-
He would
to
two
like to
add
to their
where an originally
syllables
made the
regis,
exam-
trisyllabic
pristine
one unintelligible.
102
as the
an incorrect pronunciation upon those teachers who knew and wished to employ the correct one, he was against coercing those who did
proposed
contemplated, to
force
He
did
How
his pamphlet on
Pronounce Latin, that teachers could afford to wait until
admit that
it
was time
for this to
little
manual
in
facts
very
fitly
that Miss
promote.
Finally, he
expressed the
earnest
hope
Canon Sloman.
Rev.
" Would
the
cannot
it
The
but I
and no doubt a settlement has been brought nearer
feel that it would be better to refrain from pronouncing an
:
oflGicial
The Chairman
seconder of
Kenyon).
the motion have the
(Dr.
if
"
right to
they wish."
" Nothing
my
opinion.
My
motion
is
based on
with a
practical difficulty,
we
" It
and
we
if
any
The Association
decline to pronounce
stultify ourselves.
printing
ROMAN LONDON
month
or so).
103
We
light
the position."
"
should consider
it
alter
more wise
moment
is
but of expediency."
carried
by 30
to 24.
assembled in
Roman London."
give an
the chair.
" The
help
in teaching.
but not on
this subject,
Professor
methods
" It
is
of studying
it
ance,
and
me.
have been a
little
now
before
wholly
subjects which
it
it
antiquities.
made when
it
asked
must
fulfilled
Roman
It has not, I
non
est
me
to lecture.
Roman, and
The Greek,
I feel that I
Romano cuiquam
am
locus hie'
104
No doubt
have
and
my
in
beUeve
Grammar and
But
History,
it is
it is
Few
My own
theme
this evening
by some
history illustrated
student
classical
may
a corner of
is
Roman
provincial
think
The
Certainly he
a small subject.
it
it as negligible.
The teachers in our uniand schools have clung to the linguistic system of
classical education, even where it is astray, and have habitually
ignored not only Roman London, but every similar topic. Some
of them here and there have lately shown themselves better than
their creed, but the improvement is as yet sporadic and un-
versities
systematic.
serious thing.
man
or
of
woman
should know.
It
is
an
essential part of
its
is
will
has
It
On
any
also,
this point
venture a few
remarks which
will at
'
'
The
all, a linguistic method.
young man or woman learns about things which may sound
intelligible in the abstract, but which practically have no concrete
is
indispensable.
meaning
for him.
But
it
He
is,
after
studied
ROMAN LONDON
105
we cannot
words by things.
explain words
If I
to
me
may
They have
by words
;
quote a German
Vieles
The
real
this
and
as ingeniously as
This
subjects.
is
perhaps possible in
its
is
what
own range
of
want.
At present we
confine
things which
We
see,'
show how
we show
our pupils sets of mediaeval armour to explain what helm and
hauberk and the rest of it were, or we do any of twelve dozen
similar things.
But when the teacher comes to more complex
ideas, to those abstract terms which sum up whole groups of
human activities, he drops his archaeological illustration and
falls back on the old attempt to explain words by words.
Here he goes seriously wrong. It is just these abstract terms
which are especially hard to grasp in full, and which therefore
need especial explanation by archaeology. To put it briefly,
says.
Roman
it
up
to
demand
archaeological treatment.
The complex
activities
of
have to be studied by an
14
it
refers
106
we
to the present,
we
call
call archaeological
and
this evidence
it
in
Let
me
instances.
I remember a history
was long ago asked to learn about the emperor
was told that Hadrian had a special interest for
take a couple of
lesson which I
Hadrian.
was a
it
did.
had no
real idea
what
frontier
'
'
division of territory
or a green line or
Of
all
and
that a
'
'
printed letters
'
frontier,' I
But suppose
suppose
my
me
on
my
side of it
needed defence,
sites for forts,
the
it,
and beyond
tactical
to
it,
it
to
and
me
advantages
of
various
specific
and
definite ideas.
'
The
frontier
I
'
should
least
one
two
to Solway
ROMAN LONDON
Hadrian's Wall at
least,
the scenery
is
well
107
worth
all
admiration
thus,
in themselves
and what
'
forts
'
really
were
it.
Histories
talk
of
Few
towns.'
'
is.
age
its
its
unhappy poor
be made
selves.
real
are
too
They can
only by seeing and studying the things themdoubt, could usually be done in a modern
That, no
contemporary
It
is
really
to be able to
some gain
examine
to the student
us say our
town-system with some previous and unbiassed idea of what a
town is. That he can get best and surest by looking at actual
remains of ancient towns and realizing through them the items
life
let
city.
Perhaps
if
THE CLASSICAL ASSOCIATION
108
site like
city.
thing
is
illustrations of
Koman
will be.
frontiers will
be everywhere as handy
and New-
castle.
purpose as
well as frontiers,
The following
The Lecturer
is
first
Roman London,
inadequate.
Roman
The
may be
an abstract
at
impossible."
Address
any
earliest
graphical
Promotion
of
Roman
Studies.
ROMAN LONDON
109
Thames
able.
at Westminster
first
Roman
Roman
The
earliest
Roman
From
this the
was obvious.
its
importance
title
" Augusta."
history
it
contractors.
was
fortified
its
" It
is
ilO
for
it
ponent of
effective researches,
tion of brilliant
scintilla-
and
one wish that there had been time to write down all the
delightful sayings which he brought forth on the spur of the
for
moment.
profit
move
am
proud to be asked on
this occasion to
Roman London
somewhat
of a fresh
mind
to the study of
it
times
it
at
its
early remains
There
taken up.
large
amount
of
is
and
What he
but that
somewhat
is
the nucleus.
early date
reasons on which
made
was
is
to get
of London
As to the Roman
it is diflficult
which
although
hobby
its
my
is
inclined to
only wish
to death.
being early
One
is
is
to
of the
the fact
that
it
is
of stone
ROMAN LONDON
up the Thames
It
is
great
all
111
many Roman
Wall of London.
The vote
am
of thanks
Headlam
its
for
sessions
General Meeting.
Discussions
....
13-35
82-103
61-76
103-109
1-11
35-45
B.ACTA
Alteration of Rule
58-60
.
53-58
53
61
60-61
Report of Council
48-51
Treasurer's Report
51-53
Votes of Thanks
To
To
To
To
To
To
....
the President
Professor Haverfield
76-79
109-111
Miss Lorimer
11-13
45-46
46-47
79-82
112
INDEX
C NAMES
Adam, Mrs.
Anderson, W.
Arnold,
C. F.
Prof. E. V.
Baynes, N. H.
Browne,
Prof.
Burrows,
H.
Prof. R.
Case, Miss
M.
J. E.
Caspari,M. O. B.
Dingwall, W.
DoBSON,
F.
Prof. J. F.
ESDAILE, A.
J.
K.
Gardner,
Prof. E. A.
Gardner,
Prof. P.
Geden,
Rev. A. S.
Hardie,
Prof.
W. R.
Harrison, Miss
Haverfield,
J. E.
Prof. F.
Headlam,
Rev. Dr. A.
Headlam,
J.
Heard,
W.
Rev. Dr.
W.
Jex-Blake, Miss K.
Jones, Fr.
Kenyon,
Dr. F. G.
113
DECLARATION OF TRUST
Prof. R.
J.
S.
CONWAY,
W. MACKAIL,
KENYON,
G.
F.
Esq., and
Association
MOUR CONWAY
Professor
One thou-
Latin
of
first
in
part
the
Victoria
FREDERIC
and
the
said
(hereinafter
called
" the
Association ")
was
hereto
AND WHEREAS
in or about
Review " were purchased from Alfred Triibsum of Three hundred pounds by Samuel
Henry Butcher M.P. (since deceased) and the said Robert
Seymour Conway and they were registered as the proprietors
of the said copyrights and by an agreement dated the Third
day of December One thousand nine hundred and nine and
made between the said Alfred Triibner Nutt of the one part
"
The
Classical
is
list
114
DECLARATION OF TRUST
115
Conway
sum
Conway
as Trustees for
AND WHEREAS
and on behalf
of the Association
AND WHEREAS
Second Schedule
WHEREAS
sum
AND
of
Council ") the periodical preparation publication distribution and sale of " The Classical Quarterly " and " The
Classical Review " are managed by a Board called " The
consisting of seven
names
of the said
Seep.
119.
116
AND WHEKEAS
ciation
declarations stipulations
it
and provisions
shall be
made and
NESSETH
NOW
make such
and
declarations of
resolution
all
profits to arise
and
Second Schedule
as regards
and
sale thereof to be
DECLARATION OF TRUST
117
and control of the Board and may permit all proceeds income or
therefrom to be received by the Board.
profits arising
2.
The Trustees
shall at
of the
capital in their
IT IS
HEREBY FURTHER
for
5.
Any
may
6.
of
them
shall
be respectively
118
signing any receipt for the sake of conformity and shall respec-
tively be answerable
any investments
through their
happen
nor for any other loss unless the same shall
own wilful default respectively. And the Trustees and each of
them may reimburse themselves or himself or pay and discharge
out of the trust premises all expenses incurred in or about the
7.
new Trustees
of appointing
of these
duly made shall be conclusive as regards the surviving or continuing Trustees or Trustee and the Executors and Administrators of a last Surviving or Continuing Trustee.
IN WITNESS whereof
hereunto set their hands and seals the day and year
above
first
written.
the-j
(Sd.)
R.
S.
Conway
/^
^x
J-
Conway
in the presence of
l.S.
of
Manchester,
Professor of Greek.
DECLARATION OF TRUST
Signed sealed and delivered by the]
Kenyon
in the presence of
(Sd.)
119
Frederic G.
Kenyon
I
J
Caspari,
University College,
London, W.C.,
Reader in Ancient History.
the"j
John William
y' \
Mackail
(Sd.)
LS
New
Zealand 3
IO5.
300
100
133
Bank
of India, Australia,
Debenture Stock.
and China.
Company 4
per
cent.
120
STATEMENT OF ACCOUNTS
lieceiptfi.
Entrance-fees (94)
Life
Members
(10)
Libraries
1909
1910
1911
1912
1913
1914
(29)
(165)
(1,115)
(50)
(8)
(3)-(l,374)
...
...
...
...
Odd Sums
Donations
...
5.?.
6.v.
\d.,
less
3r/.
100 on Deposit
Balance from 1910
at Chartered
Bank
...
STATEMENT OF ACCOUNTS
DECEMBER
18th,
DECEMBER
1910, to
18th,
121
1911.
Expenditure.
s.
25 19
Postage
24
48
...
...
...
Clerical assistance
of
...
...
Bombay
Liverpool
...
...
Council
4 17
s.
...
...
15
...
...
5 15
...
...
Manchester
42 18 11
8 19
Birmingham
d.
d.
15
10
8 15
Proceedings, vol.
(1910)
vii.
77 16
90 13
2
7
341
4% Deb. Stock
(Signed) R. C. Beaton,
Hon. Treasurer.
16
9
149 19
89 8
580 17
...
...
7
5
APPENDIX
123
PRESIDENT
The Very Rev. Henry Montagu Butler,
VICE-PRESIDENTS
The Right Hon. H. H. Asquith,
: :
APPENDIX
126
Professor
Edward
J. P.
Sir
J.
of
HON. TREASURER
R. C. Seaton, Esq., M.A., Woodburn, Reigate.
HON. SECRETARIES
J. H. Sleeman, Esq., M.A., The University, Sheffield.
M. 0. B. Caspari, Esq., M.A., University College, London, W.C.
COUNCIL
Professor R. C. Bosanquet, The University, Liverpool.
C. D. Chambers, Esq., M.A., The University, Birmingham.
Professor B. M. Connal, M.A., The University, Leeds.
Professor F. Granger, M.A., University College, Nottingham.
Miss Jex-Blake, Girton College.
R. W. Macan, Esq., D.Litt., Litt.D., Master of University College,
Oxford.
W.
D.
S.
Professor
J. P.
New
South Wales
; ;
RULES
first General Meeting of the Associatum, May 2%th, 1904
at the General Meetings of January 5th, 1906, October lOth
Adopted at the
Amended
1908,
1.
January
The name
January
9th, 1912.
of
be
"The
Classical
Association."
2. The objects of the Association are to promote the development and maintain the well-being of classical studies, and in
pai'ticular
(a)
To impress
studies to
claim of
such
of
education
(b)
To improve the
(c)
and methods;
To encoui'age investigation and call attention
practice of classical
teaching by free
to
new
friendly intercourse
and
discoveries
{d)
To
create
opportunities
co-operation
among
for
learning in
this country.
the Council.
4.
The Council
shall be entrusted
any
special
The Council
upon due
shall
notice issued
127
APPENDIX
128
rules for its
own
General Meeting.
The
8.
may
be
filled
up temporarily
by the Council.
The President
9.
The
10.
Members
11.
on retirement
its
original
previous notice
13a.
desire to propose
a resolution or
Rule
least six
shall be circulated to
Members
Membership
of either sex
who
open to
all
persons
its objects.
15.
16.
of 5s.
RULES
scription shall be
5s.,
129
each year.
17. Members who have paid the entrance fee of 5s. may
compound for all future subscriptions by the payment in a single
sum
annual subscriptions.
of fifteen
The Council
18.
shall
the Association.
member
at
least a fortnight
meeting.
The
20.
relations with
office
associated
Classical
body shall
Association,
privileges of
members
of this
rule.
The
any body
If the President
number 15 mentioned
17
in
Rule
3.
of
as
to
a
to
W.
Agar,
T. L.,
M.A.,
11,
chester.
S., M.A., Tettenhall College, Wolverhampton.
AiLiNGER, Rev. A., S.J., St. Xavier's College, Bombay.
*Alder, Miss, M.B., 65, Francis Road, Edgbaston, Birmingham.
*Alpord, Miss M., 51, Gloucester Gardens, Bishop's Road, W.
Ager, R. L.
W.
0.,
131
Manchester.
9,
I.C.S.,
The
Common,
Mortimer, Berks.
Wycombe, Bucks.
Arnold, A. J., Pupil Teachers' Centre,
*Arnold, Prof. E. V., Litt.D., Bryn
Sheffield.
Seiriol,
Bangor, North
Wales.
W.
APPENDIX
182
Atkinson,
Ilkley,
Yorks.
S.W.
Baines, Miss K. M,, M.A., High School for Girls, Birkenhead.
2Irs.
T.
133
Manchester.
M., The Ladies' College, Cheltenham.
Barnard, P. M., M.A., B.D., 10, Dudley Road, Tunbridge Wells.
Barnard, Miss H.
Birmingham.
Barrows, Miss
M. M., Hampton
School,
Malvern P.O.,
Jamaica.
High Court,
Bombay.
Bate, R. S., M.A., King's College, London, W.C.
Battiscombe, E. M., Eastwood, Weston-super-Mare.
Baugh, Miss E. M., King Edward VI.'s High School for Girls,
New
Street,
Birmingham.
S.W.
Beaumont, 3Iiss, 16, Alexandra Drive, Sefton Park, Liverpool.
Beaven, Rev. A. B., M.A., Greyfriars, Milverton, Leamington.
Beck, Eev. Canon E. J., M.A., 4, Scroope Terrace, Cambridge.
*Beckwith, E. G. a., M.A., The Army School, near Maidenhead.
Beeching, Very Rev. H. C, M.A., LL.D., The Deanery,
Norwich.
Beggs, Miss J. W., Hazeldene, King's Road, Wimbledon, S.W.
Behrens, N. E., M.A., 16, Queen's Gate, S.W.
Belcher, A. Hayes, M.A., The College, Brighton.
Belcher, Miss E. M., B.A., High School, Bedford,
Belcher, Rev. T. Hayes, M.A., Bramley Rectory, Basingstoke.
Bell, Edward, M.A., York House, Portugal Street, W.C.
Bell, Rev. Canon G. C, M.A., 19, Cowley Street, Westminster,
S.W.
Bell, J. Murray, B.A., Merchiston Castle School, Edinburgh.
Bell, W. M., Yacht Club, Bombay.
APPENDIX
134
W.
S., 99,
S.E.
3,
7,
Bethune-Baker, Rev. J.
*Bevan, Eev. C. 0., M.A., Eton College, Windsor.
Bevan, Miss F. E., 16, Alexandra Drive, Sefton
Park,
Liverpool.
J.,
Bombay,
BowEN,
C.
church,
New
Zealand.
Christ-
J^AMES
135
Boyd,
C, I.C.S., Ahmednagar, Bombay Presidency.
Boyd, Miss H., Astell House, Cheltenham.
Bradley, A. C, 9, Ed ward es Square, Kensington, W.
Braham, H. v., BA., I.C.S., Godhra, Panch Mahals, Bombay
Presidency.
Bramley,
Bramley-Moore, Miss,
Street,
Livei'pool.
Brown,
Wellington,
New
Zealand.
W,
APPENDIX
186
Bull,
W.
Rev.
R. A.,
St.
Andrew's,
Southborough, Tunbridge
Wells.
W.C.
Butler, Rev. H. Montagu, D.D., The Lodge, Trinity College,
Cambridge.
Butler, Mrs, Montagu, Tiinity Lodge, Cambridge.
3Iiss
137
Cameron, Eev.
J.,
Carson, H.
J.,
Sussex.
J2ev. T. N., M.A., The Grammar School, Manchester.
Cartwright, Miss M., M.A., 18, Ashfield Road, Abei-tillery.
Casartelli, Bt. Rev. L. C, M.A. See Salford, Bishop of.
Case, Miss Esther, Chantry Mount School, Bishop's Stortford.
Case, Miss J. E., 5, Windmill Hill, Hampstead, N.W.
*Caspari, M. O. B., M.A., University College, London.
Caton, R., M.D., Holly Lee, 3, Livingstone Drive, South
Carter,
Liverpool.
18
APPENDIX
138
Charlesworth, G.
Northampton.
L.,
M.A.,
Masetti,
Church
Avenue,
Malmesbury.
Chettle, H., M.A., Stationers' School, Hornsey, N.
Chilton, Rev. A., D.D., City of London School, Victoria
Embankment, E.C.
J., B.A., Eton College, Windsor.
Cholmeley, R. F., M.A., 7, Gray's Inn Square, London, W.C.
Church, Rev. A. J., 12, Denbigh Gai-dens, Richmond, Surrey.
Church, H. S., B.A., Ellerslie Preparatory School, Fremington,
N. Devon.
Churchill, E. L., B.A., Eton College, Windsor.
Clapham, Miss G. E,, B.A., Municipal High School for Girls,
Chitty, Rev. G.
Huddersfield.
N,W.
Warkworth
Street,
Cambridge.
3,
139
W.
CoLSON, F. H., M.A., 3, Grange Terrace, Cambridge.
OoLViLE, Prof. K. N., B.A., Queen's University, Kingston,
Ontario, Canada.
S., M.A., British Museum, W.C.
CoMPSTON, Rev. H. F. B., M.A., 2, Woodfield Avenue,
Streatham, S.W.
CoMPTON, Rev. W. C, M.A., Sandhurst Kectory, Hawkhurst,
Kent.
CoNDEE, Miss E. M., Milton Mount College, Gravesend.
CoNNAL, Prof. B. M., M.A., The University, Leeds.
CoNNELL, Rev. A., 22, Linnet Lane, Liverpool.
*CoNWAY, Miss A. E., Clough Hall, Newnham College, Cam-
CoLvm, Sir
bridge.
Conway, Prof. R.
Braintree, Essex.
APPENDIX
140
Cran, Miss
Uxbridge.
Secondary Council
L.,
R,
Crawford, G.
School,
The Greenway,
Cromer,
Rt.
Eon.
C.I.E., 36,
the
Earl
of,
Wimpole Street, W.
H. S., M.A., B.D., Willowbrook, Chaucer Road,
Cronin, Eev.
Cambridge.
CuRZON
of Kedleston, Rt.
E.R.S.,
1,
Dakers, H.
J.,
chester.
T.,
141
Davis, Miss M.
(No address.)
Dawes, Miss E. A. S., M.A., D.Litt., Heathlands, Weybridge,
Surrey.
Dawkins, Prof. W.
Boyd,
D.Sc,
F.R.S.,
The University,
Manchester.
S.J.,
Dublin.
Staffs.
De
APPENDIX
142
Sheffield.
*Dymond, Miss
O.,
High School
St,
23,
Cheshire.
R.
H.,
Rishworth
Grammar
School,
143
Eishworth,
Halifax.
T., M.A., 26, St. Michael's Street, Oxford.
Ellis, Prof. Robinson, M.A., LL.D., Trinity College, Oxford.
Ellis, 3frs. W., Weetwood, Ecclesall, Sheffield.
Elliott, R.
Ellibton,
W.
Ipswich.
Miss M.
E.,
M.A.,
St.
Ives,
Waverley Road,
Enfield.
S.W.
Faulkner,
Felkin, F.
E.,
School,
Frognal,
N.W.
Fenning, Rev. W. D., M.A., Haileybury College, Hertford.
Ferard, R. H., M.A,, The Academy, Edinburgh.
Ferguson, Miss J. S., Christ's Hospital, Hertford.
Ferguson, Miss M., B.A., L.R.A.M., 20, Beech House Road,
Croydon, Surrey.
Ferrall, C. N., B.A., Rockville, Dundrum, Co. Dublin.
Field, Rev. T., D.D., Warden of Radley College, Abingdon.
Finlay, Sir R. B., K.C., LL.D., 31, Phillimore Gardens, W.
APPENDIX
144
FitzGeeald, Miss A., B.A., 19, Merton Hall Road, Wimbledon, S.W.
*FiTZHuaH, Prof. T,, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va,,
U.S.A.
Flather, J. H., M.A., 90, Hills Road, Cambridge.
Fleming, Miss A., M.A., Milham Ford School, Oxford.
Fletcher, C. R. L., M.A., Magdalen College, Oxford.
Fletcher, F., M.A., Head Master, Charterhouse, Godalming.
Flood, 3Iiss M. L., St. Elphins, Darley Dale, Matlock.
Florian, a. R., The County Secondary School, Shrewsbury.
FooTNER, n., Berkhamsted, Herts.
Forbes, H. T. S., B.A., Balholm, 17, Beverley Road, Barnes, S.W.
Forbes, K., 135, Chatham Street, Liverpool.
Ford, H. J., M.A., 3, Edwardes Square Studios, Kensington, W.
Ford, Eev. Lionel G. B. J., M.A., Head Master, The School,
Harrow.
Forrest, E. Bruce, M.A., County School,
Wood
Green, N.
S.,
FuRNESS, Miss
Cannon
Street, E.G.
145
3fiss E.
Sir Archibald,
D.C.L.,
LL.D.,
F.R.S.,
Shepherd's
mingham.
Gerrans, H.
John
Street, Oxford.
Ghey, Miss F.
L,,
Emmanuel
College,
Cam-
bridge.
Warwickshire.
Gladstone, R., Wool ton Vale, near Liverpool.
Glazebrook, Rev. Canon M. G., D.D., The College, Ely.
Glover, T. R., M.A., St. John's College, Cambridge.
Godfrey, C, M.A., Royal Naval College, Osborne.
God LEY, A. D., M.A., 4, Crick Road, Oxford.
Goode, a. G., B.A., 323, London Road, Lowestoft.
GooDELL, Prof T. D., Ph.D., 35, Edgehill Road, New Haven,
Conn., U.S.A.
Goodhart, a. M., M.A., Mus. Bac, Eton College, Windsor.
Goodrich, W. J., M.A., Hesketh, Bui-ley-in- Wharf edale.
Goodwin, Miss U. M., 99, Iffley Road, Oxford.
Goodyear, C, 39, Lincroft Street, Moss Side, Manchester.
Gordon, R. G., B.A., I.C.S., Ahmedabad, India.
Gordon, W. M., M.A., School House, Tonbridge.
Gore, Rt. Rev. Charles, D.D. See Oxford, Bishop of.
19
Grammar
School, Newark-on-Trent.
APPENDIX
146
[Redhill.
Goss, W. N., The King's School, Canterbury.
GouGH, A, B., M.A., Ph.D., Sandcroft, Upper Bridge Road,
GouGH, Miss M. M., M.A., 39, Avenue Road, Newport, Salop.
GouGH, Rev. T., B.Sc, Grammar School, Retford, Notts.
Gould, T. W., M.A., 5, Kensington Crescent, W.
Gow, Bev. J., Litt.D., 19, Dean's Yard, Westminster, S.W.
Grafton, Rev. F, W., S.J., St. Stanislaus College, Tullamore,
[Nottingham.
King's County, Ireland.
Granger, Prof. F, S., M.A., Litt.D., University College,
Grant, Prof. A. J., M.A., The Univei-sity, Leeds.
Graves, Rev. C. E., M.A., St. Martin's, Grange Road, Cambridge.
Gray, Miss F. R., St. Paul's Girls' School, Brook Green,
Hammersmith, W.
Gray,
Griffin,
Grigg, E.
F.,
W.
Grundy, G.
B., D.Litt.,
Grundy, W. W.,
GuBBAY, M.
S.,
chester.
69,
69,
147
*Hadow, W.
Manchester.
Liverpool.
W.
APPENDIX
148
Henry,
Prof.
R.
M.,
Belfast.
Hewart,
G., M.A.,
Manchester.
Bank
of
149
KW.
Hicks, Bt. Rev. E. L., D.D. See Lincoln, Bishop
Hicks, Mrs., Old Palace, Lincoln.
of.
Hicks,
D., M.A., Fossedene, Mount Pleasant, Cambridge,
HiGGS, Miss M. K., MA., Slater Ing, Heptonstall, Hebden
Bridge, Yorks.
Street,
W.
mundham,
Suffolk.
N.W.
Holland, W.
West Kirby,
Cheshire.
Holme, A.
bury.
E.,
M.A,, Wheelwright
Grammar
School,
Dews-
APPENDIX
150
of
HoYLE,
F.,
S.
B.A.,
Wingfield
House,
Sherborne,
Dorset.
Hull, RL Rev.
the
Lord Bishop
of,
The Vicarage,
Hessle, near
Hull.
W.
S.,
B.A.,
Guildford
Grammar
School, Perth,
Australia.
HuTTON, Miss
S.W.
C. A., 49,
151
Image,
Irvine, A. L.,
James,
Rev.
L., B.A.,
S.
*Jasonidy, 0.
Jelf, C.
li.,
R., M.A.,
J.,
The
College, Malvern.
Limassol, Cyprus.
Durham.
Jewson, Miss D., Tower House, Bracondale, Norwich.
Jex-Blake, 3Iiss H., Principal, Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford.
*Jex-Blake, Miss K., Gii^ton College, Cambridge.
Jex-Blake, Very Rev. T. W., D.D., 13, Ennismore Gardens,
S.W.
Johns, Miss E. L., M.A., Queenwood, Eastbourne.
*JoHNSON, Afiss B., 32, Nelson Square, Blackfriars Road, S.E.
APPENDIX
152
Jones, F.,
King Edward's
School, Aston,
Birmingham.
Jukes,
J. E.
C, B.A.,
I.C.S.,
ham.
Kempthorne, Rt. Rev. C. See Hull, Bishop of.
Kendall, G., M.A., Charterhouse, Godalming.
Kennedy, Rt. Hon. Lord Justice, LL.D., 23, Phillimore Gardens,
Kensington,
Kennedy, B.
Bombay
W.
C.
A. Calcraft,
I.C.S.,
District
Judge,
Nasik,
Presidency.
Hyde Park, W.
Kingdom,
Tower Bridge,
S.E.
153
Club, Pall
Mall, S.W.
La Touche,
Canada.
Langley, J.
E.,
S.
Australia.
20
APPENDIX
154
Common.
University.
W.
G.,
M.A., The
Grammar
School, Bolton.
155
Pendlebury, Manchester.
LoANE, G. G., M.A., Knockaverry, Linnell Close, Hendon, N.W.
Lock, Rev. Canon W., D.D., Warden of Keble College, Oxford.
Lodge, J., Junr., BA., Highfield, Ha warden, N. Wales.
LoEWE, H., M.A., St. Catharine's College, Cambridge.
LoLY, G., B.A., Queenmore School, Bromley, Kent.
Longman,
Long WORTH,
LoREBURN,
Row, E.C.
F. D.,
Rt.
8,
Eaton
Square, S.W.
*LuBB0CK,
LuNN, Miss A. C. P., Brighton and Hove High School, Montpelier Road, Brighton.
LuPTON, Miss E. G., Springwood, Roundhay, Leeds.
Luxmoore, H. E., M.A., Eton College, Windsor.
Lys, Rev. F. J., M.A., Worcester College, Oxford.
Lyttelton, Rev. the Hon. E., M.A., Eton College, Windsor.
*Lyttleton, Hon. G. W., B.A,, The Old Christopher, Eton
College, Windsor.
Macalpine, B. I., 145, Dickenson Road, Rusholme, Manchester.
*Macan, R. W., D.Litt., Master of University College, Oxford.
Macfarlane, W. a., Wadham College, Oxford.
Macfarlane-Grieve, W. A., M.A., J.P., Impington Park,
Cambridge.
APPENDIX
156
Magrath,
Rev.
R.,
J.
D.D.,
Provost
of
Queen's College,
Oxford.
Manley,
Mann,
J.
Rev.
H. H., M.D.,
H. K.,
St.
20,
New
Cuthbert's
Street,
West Bromwich.
Grammar
School, Newcastle-
on-Tyne.
N.W.
Marrs, R., B.A,, Elphinstone College, Bombay.
Marsh, W., M.A., 11, The Crescent, Bedford.
Marshall, Miss A. M. C, Far Cross, Woore, Newcastle-underLyme, Stafls.
Marshall, Rev. D. H., M.A., Ovingdean Hall, Brighton.
Marshall, Mrs. D. H., B.A., Ovingdean Hall, Brighton.
Marshall, Rev. G. A., M.A., 7, St. Matthew's Drive, St.
Leonards-on-Sea.
J. H., CLE., M.A., F.S.A., Director-General of
Archaeology in India, c/o Messrs. Grindlay & Co., 54, Parlia-
Marshall,
of
Wales,
Aberystwyth.
S.J., St.
Xavier's
High
School,
Bombay.
3,
157
*Mayor, R.
J. G.,
6,
Inverness Gardens,
Campden
W.
McKay, H.
O.
Eastbourne.
St.
Peter's
College,
Adelaide,
S.
APPENDIX
158
McMuRTRiE, Miss B.
S.
B.,
M.A.,
40,
Eversley Crescent,
Isleworth, Middlesex.
159
Zealand.
Welwyn, Herts.
Prof. H.
Naylor,
Darnley,
The
University,
Adelaide,
S.
Australia.
Neild, Miss H.
T.,
Newcomb, Miss
Newman, Miss
Sheffield.
Newman, W.
Newton,
3Iiss
A.,
B.A.,
The
Lawn, Cheltenham.
Grammar
School,
Witney,
Oxford.
*Newton,
C.
APPENDIX
160
T.,
Birmingham.
NixoN, J. E., M.A., King's College, Cambridge.
Nolan, Very Rev. Monsignor E., M.A., 21, Oxford Terrace, W.
Nolan, Rev. T. V., S.J., Clongowes Wood College, Sallins, Co.
Kildare.
the
Duke
of,
W.
Oakeley, Miss H.
Square,
D.,
M.A., King's
College,
Kensington
W.
St.
Thomas's College,
St.
Paul,
the
Lord Bishop
of^
161
Cuddesdon, VVheatley,
W.
Albans.
W.
21
APPENDIX
]62
Campden
Hill,
Kensington, \V.
N.W.
Plater, Rev. C. D., S.J., St. Mary's Hall, Stonyhurst, Blackburn.
Platt, Prof. A., M.A., 5, Chester Terrace, Regent's Park, N.W.
Plunkett, Count, F.S.A., 26, Upper Fitzwilliam Street,
Dublin.
*PowELL, Miss M. H., St. Michael's Hostel, Grove Park, Lee, S.E.
PoYNTER, A. M. (No address.)
PoYNTER, Sir E, J., Bart., D.C.L., Litt.D., P.R.A., 70, Addison
Road, W.
Pratt, E, M., Judicial Commissioner of Sind, Karachi.
163
Preedy,
J. B. K.,
W. W.
W.
APPENDIX
164
New
Cross, S.E.
N.W.
Richardson, Miss E. M., B.A., Wyss Wood, Kenley, Surrey.
Richardson, G., M.A., Felbrigge, Lichfield Road, Sutton
Coldfield.
W.
RiGBY,
JRev.
R.
C, M.A.,
St.
Edward's
College,
Everton,
Liverpool.
Germany.
Roberts, Rev. E.
Cambridge.
S.,
165
D.
S.,
Cardiff.
&
Oxford.
N.W.
RoMANis, Rev.
W.
F. J.,
RooKE, Miss, 7,
RoscoE, H. W. K.,
RusHBROOKE,
W.
G.,
M.A.,
St. Olave's
Grammar
School,
Tower
Bridge, S.E.
Russell,
B.
W.
N.,
M.A.,
St.
Mary's
Lodge,
Knighton,
Leicester.
Girls,
Tunbridge
APPENDIX
166
Bombay.
Sandford, Miss E. H., B.A., 5, Hartley Road, Exmouth.
Sands, P. C, M.A., 36, Cautley Avenue, Clapham Common,
S.W.
Sandys, Sir J. E., Litt.D., Merton House, Cambridge.
Sargeaunt,
J.,
2,
Shepherd,
Sheppard,
Sheppard,
W. C,
J. T.,
S.
Bombay.
Shewan, a., Seehof,
St.
Andrews,
Road,
Fife.
N.W.
SiMPS0N,P.,M.A.,St. Olave's
Grammar
School,
167
Hunts.
Smedley, I, F., M.A., 12, Newton Grove, Bedford Park, W.
Smiley, Miss R., B.A., Southlands College, Battersea, S.W.
Smith, A. J., Grammar School, Darlington.
Smith, D. Riicker, M.A., King's College School, Wimbledon,
S.W.
Smith, Miss E. M.,
Smith, Prof. G.
St. Christopher's,
O., M.A..,
Madabegh, Cairo.
Southwark, Rt. Rev. the Lord Bishop of, Bishop's House,
Kenniugton Park, S.E.
Sowels, F., M.A., The Rookery, Thetford, Norfolk.
SowELs, Miss G. R., 31, Kittsbury Road, Berkhamsted, Herts.
Sowerby, Mrs., Pali Hill, Bandra, Bombay.
Spalding, K. J., M.A., Whitburgh, Northwood, Middlesex.
Spenser, Dr. H. J., University College School, Frognal, N.W.
*Spilsbury,
a.
J.,
M.A., City of
London
School,
Victoria
Embankment, E.C.
Spooner, Rev.
*Squire,
S. G.,
W.
A., D.D.,
Warden
of
New
College, Oxford.
APPENDIX
168
Steele,
J. P.,
W.
p.,
Stocks, J. L.,
St.
J.,
Oxford.
Strong, Mrs.
Dover
S.
Street,
W.
*Stuart, Miss
W.C.
Summers, Prof. W. C, M.A.,
Road,
Sheffield.
B,A.,
Bank
England Chambers,
of
169
Tib Lane,
Manchester.
C., I.C.S.,
Poena,
Bombay
Presidency.
S.W.
Symes, Miss A., Victoria
Women's
Liverpool.
Tabor, A.
Talbot, J.
M.
S.,
E.,
F.,
Dunmarklyn, Weston-super-Mare,
Talyarkhan,
Green, Surrey.
TcHiRKiNE,
Korea.
22
Serge,
Service
consulairo
de
I'empire
russe,
APPENDIX
170
*Tennant, Miss L. E.,
Terry, F. J., Dial
19,
The
S.W.
Kewferry Road, Northwood,
Boltons, London,
Cottage,
Middlesex.
hampton.
2, Selwyn Gardens, Cambridge.
Titherington, Eev. A. F., M.A., Bramshott Rectory, Liphook,
Hants.
Tombs, J. S. O., M.A., 30, Old Elvet, Durham.
ToMPSON, Miss L. G., 17, Stradella Road, Heme Hill, S.E.
Tottenham, Miss E.L.,c/o Messrs. Thomas Cook & Sons, Bombay.
*TowER, B. H., M.A., 16, King's Gardens, Hove, Sussex.
Unwin,
S. R.,
West Horsham.
S.J., St.
171
Nottingham.
Rev. J.
Walters,
Manchester.
APPENDIX
172
Hall,
Ware.
Ward,
Ward,
C. H.,
J.
F.,
S.
Australia.
Yorks.
Ann
Arbor, Michigan.
173
* Whitehead,
W.
Whyte,
WiCKSEY,
J. T.
Isle
Man.
Wigglesworth, 3fiss E., 102, Greengate Street, Oldham.
Wild, A. C, I.C.S., Hyderabad, Sind, India.
of
Yarra,
Victoria, Australia.
APPENDIX
174
Willis,
Wren,
P.,
Wright,
Hutton Grammar
School,
near Preston,
Lanes.
Wright, W.
Wye,
J.
NAMES AND ADDRESSES OF MEMBERS
175
New
Cross, S.E.
Yule, Miss A.
F., F.S.A.S,,
Tarradale, Ross-shire.
LIBRARIES
Public Library, Newcastle-upon-Tyne.
Lake Forest
College,
Lake
Massachusetts,
U.S.A.
Mount Holyoke
College,
South
Hadley,
Massachusetts,
U.S.A.
University of California, Berkeley, California, U.S.A.
New
Jei'sey,
U.S.A.
NOTICE
The Hon. Treasurer
will
M.
Harper, Miss E. B.
Kelaart, W. H.
Melhuish, J. E.
poynter, a. m.
Shepherd, W. 0.
Tanner, Miss L. K.
Davis, Miss
be
glad
Members
to
receive
the present
(^Tlds is
Buckinghamshire continued
ENGLAJSTD
Bedfordshire
Bedford
Beaconsfield
Warner,
Eton College
Belcher, Miss E. M.
Davies, E. J. Llewel-
Edghill, Miss.
Blakiston, C. H.
Brinton, H.
Channon, Rev. F. G.
lyn.
Sandy
Broadbent, H.
Cattley, T. P.
Chittv, Rev. G. J.
Churchill, B. L.
Cornish, F. W.
Grace, J. F.
Duckworth, F. R. G,
Durnford, R. S.
Goodhart, A. M.
Headlam, G. W.
Impey, E.
Kiudersley, R. S.
Lubbock, S. G.
Luxmoore, H. E.
Lyttelton, Rev. the
Hon. E.
Lyttelton, Hon. G. W.
Westaway, F. W.
Edmonds, Miss U. M.
Wol)urn Sands
Whibley, C.
Berkshire
Gibson, H. H.
Layng, Eev. T.
Moore, Kev. W.
Stone, Rev. E. D.
Abingdon
Tatham, M.
Bradfield
T.
Irvine, A. L.
Coll.
J. H.
Beckwith, E. G. A.
James, E. I.
Keeling, Rev. \V. J.
Oldershaw, L. R. F.
Anderson, W. C. F.
Bingham, H. B.
Cobbe, Miss A. M.
Sharwood-Smith, E.
Devine, Alex.
Field, Rev. T.
Vince,
Maidenhead
Mortimer
Newbury
Pangbovrne
Badley College
Reading
.
Sir G. F.
Austen-Leigh, E. C.
Bevan, Rev. C. O.
Macnaghten, H.
* Ramsay, A.
Billson, C. J.
G William,
Rev. G. H.
Eppstein, Rev. W. C.
Mnsson, Miss
I?.
Rawlins, F. H.
Sheepshanks, A. C.
Slonqh
C. J.
Roscoe, H. W. K.
Svmes, Miss E.
Ure, P. N.
William, Rev. G. H.
Wellington Coll Upcott, E. A.
Stoke Poges
Wycombe Abbey
Slater, E. V.
Stone, E. W.
Vaughan, E. L.
Wells, C. M.
Whitworth, A. W.
Leary, Miss B. A.
Strong. Prof. H. A.
Parry, E. H.
Daniel, Miss C. I.
Lang, Miss H. M.
High Arnison,
G.
W.
Vaughan, W. W.
Wokingham
Mansfield, E. D.
Cambridgeshire
Cambridge
BUCKINQHAMSn IRE
Aylesbury
23
Caiv^ College
Coles, P. B.
177
:
.
APPENDIX
178
cojitinued
cmitiniied
Cambriogeshiee
Camhridgp
Caius College
(^conUniied)
Christ's College
Clare College
Ridgeway, Prof. W.
Roberts, Rev. E. S.
Campbell, 8. G.
Ingle, N. S.
*Rackham, H.
Cambeidgeshiee contintied
CamiHdge cooitinusd
Selwyn College * Williams, W. N.
Sidney
Sussex
*Edwards, G.
College
.
Trinity College. Butler, Rev.
.
Corpiis Christi
College
Streane, Rev. A, W.
Emmanuel Coll.*G\\es, P.
Greenwood, L. H. G.
.
Image,
Girton College
*Jex-Blake, Miss K.
Jones, Miss E. E, C.
Shillington, Miss A,
Jesus College
King's College
Abbott,
E.
Richmond, O. L.
Sheppard, J. T.
*Lawson, J. C.
Mason, Rev, A.
Petcrhouse
W,
Queens' College
J,
Whibley, L.
Barnes,
Rev,
Prof.
E.
Coll.
Johns
Coll.
Trinity Hall
Training
.*Wood, Miss M. H.
Coll.
Cambridge
Adam, Mrs. A. M,
Appleton, R. B.
Beck, Rev. Canon E.
J.
Burkitt, Prof. F. C.
Bury, Rev. R. G.
Butler, Mrs. H. M,
Byrne, Miss A. D,
Collins, A. J. F,
Colson, F. H.
Edmunds,
M.
J.
Flather, J. H.
Frazer, J. G.
Gibson, Mrs.
Giles, Prof. H. A.
Gwatkin, Rev. T,
Hayes, B. J.
Cook, Prof. A. B.
Grav, Rev. J. H.
Plaistowe, F. G.
Lewis, Mrs.
.* Jones,
Lamb, W. R. M.
Morris, G. G.
Parry, Canon R. St. J,
Robertson, D, S,
Stanton, Rev. Prof.
V, H.
Stobart, J. C.
Stuart, C. E.
Verrall, Prof. A. W.
Wright, W, Aldis.
Angus, C. F.
Crouin, Rev, H. S,
Kennedy, Miss J. E.
Kennedy, Miss M. G.
W. H,
S.
Loewe, H,
St.
M.
Edwards, H. J.
Ward, Dr. A. W.
Catharine's
St.
J.
Jackson, Prof. H,
Jenkinson. F. J. H.
Adcock, F. E.
Bury, Prof. J. B.
Durnford, W.
Nixon, J. E.
Tilley, A. A.
Waldstein, Prof. C.
Wedd, N.
Magdalene Coll. Benson, A. CDonaldson, Rev. S. A.
Gaselee, S.
*Peskett, A. G.
Vernon-Jones, V. S.
Newnham Coll. Conway, Miss A. E.
Gardner, Miss A.
Harrison, Miss J. E.
*Matthaei, Miss L. E.
Sharpley, Miss E. M.
Wedd, Mrs. N.
Pembroke Coll. Bethune-Baker, Rev,
J. P.
H. Mon-
tagu.
Cornford, F. M.
Duff, J. D.
* Harrison, E,
Hicks, R. D.
M.
Glover, T. R,
Graves, Rev. C. E,
Sandys, Sir J. E.
Sikes, E. E,
Stewart, Rev. H. F.
Macfarlane
Grieve,
W. A.
Mason, Rev. W. A.
Mayo, C.
I'eskett, Miss S. M.
Rapson, Prof. E. J.
Rouse, W, H. D.
Steen, W. P.
Taylor, J, H.
Thompsou, E. S,
P,
continued
Verrall,
Bampton
H. W.
Miss
Exeter
deG.
M. de G.
Walker, W. W.
Waterlow, S.
Chase, Rt. Eev. F. H.
(Bishop of Ely).
Buller, Rev. F, G.
Mills, E. G.
Bar/istaplv
.
Abel, H. G.
Trenerry, Miss E. L.
Sandford, Miss.
Church, H. S.
Verrall, Mrs.
Ely
Glazebrook, Rev.
Canon M. G.
Kirkpatrick, Very
Exmoxvth
Fremington
.
Thompson, J.
Plymouth
West Buckland Evans, W. H.
Dorset
Sherborne
Bensly, Rev. W. J.
Hoyle, Miss S. F.
King, Rev. H. R.
Smith, N. C.
Bernard, Rev. Canon
Rev. A. F.
Fen Ditton
Ridgeway, Prof. W.
Wimborne
Cheshire
Alderley Edge
Altrinoham
Birkenhead
Bowdcn
Cheadle
Chester
Williams, L. Stanley.
Johnson, Miss L. A.
Baines, Miss K. M.
Richards, Miss F. G.
Gray, Mrs.
Lang, Miss E.
Earnshaw, Miss B. M.
E.
Durham
Darlington
Fuller, Miss B. B,
Smith, A. J.
Durham
Bramwell, W. H.
Cruickshank, Rev. A.
H.
Day, Miss K.
How, Rev.
Jenkins, Miss R. H,
Riley, Miss M. E.
Trayes, F. E. A.
Jones, H. L.
Suiiderland
Danson, F. C.
Davies,
M. L.
Essex
Griffin, F.
Sale
Wallasey
West Kirby
Hebblethwaite, D.N.
Morgan, Miss B. H.
Limebeer, Miss D.
Semple, Miss B.
HoUowell, Rev. W.
Baton, A. V.
COR>fWALL
Falmouth
Braintree
Ashbee, J. H. N.
Bean, Eev. E.
Chigivell School Swallow, Rev. R. D.
Bourne, Miss M. E.
Colchester
Rendall, Rev. G. H.
Dedham
Valentine, J.
Doveroourt
Stephenson, Rev. F.
Felsted
Rhoades, J.
Kclvedon
Saffron Walden Hirst, Miss M. E.
Waltham Abbey Johnson, Rev. G. H.
Guy, Rev. R. C.
Walthamstow
.
Williams, Rev. G. H.
Hutchinson, Sir J. T.
Thompson,
Gloucestershire
C.
Bristol
Derbyshire
.
Moxon, Rev.
T. A.
lood. Miss M. L.
Barley Dale
Qlossop
Brentwood
Ward, W. W.
Lorton
Whitehaven
Alfreton
H.
Cumberland
Carlisle
J.
Jevons, Principal F. B.
Smith, Miss M. L. S.
Tombs, J. S. O.
Walker, Rev. D.
Hughes, Miss M. V.
Ermen, W.
Holmes Chapel
Nantvnch
Oxton
179
Matlock Bath
Repton
.
Wood, Mrs. A. K.
Watkins, Miss L. B.
Cattley, Rev. A.
Wilson, T.
I.
W.
Brooks, Prof. F.
Cowl, Prof. R. P.
Dobson,
Prof. J. F.
Dobson, Mrs. J. F.
Elliot, C. H. B.
Gunter, Miss L. M.
King, J. E.
Muschamp, J. G. S.
Ncwcomb, Miss B.
Norwood,
DevonshieeAshburton
Cobham,
C, D.
C.
Stenhouse, Miss
S.
E.
APPENDIX
180
GhoucESTEUSniUEcontmued
Cheltenham,
Thornton, C.
Towers, E. M.
Waterfield, Eev. R.
Bea/iCloseSch.Cade, F. J.
Judson, W.
Ladies' Coll. Barnard, Miss H. M.
Faitbfull, Miss L. M.
*Purdie, Miss E.
Saunders, Miss M. B.
Banks, Miss E. J.
Cheltenham
Boyd, Miss H.
The
College,
R'EB.TFO'RDBHI'REOontinucd
Covernton, A. L.
Berkhamsted
Evans, Lady.
Footner, Harry,
Greene, C. H.
Hopkins, T. H. C.
Sowels, Miss G. R.
*Walde, E. H. S.
Bishop's
ford
Stort.
Case,
Haileybury
Fenning, Rev. W. D.
Kennedy, W.
E.
Exton, G. F.
Horsfall, Miss.
Latter, H.
Miles, Miss A. N.
Qloucester
Milford, Rev. L. S.
Vaughan, M.
Hertford
L.
Wishart, Miss J. R.
Baker, A. B. L.
Bramley,
Stanton, C. H.
Hammans, H.
Bournemouth
Waters, G. T.
Wright, Rev. H. C.
Curtis, Miss K. M.
Ferguson, Miss J. S.
King, J.
Miall, Prof. L. C.
Nowers, G. P.
Ashworth, Miss H. A.
Drysdale, Miss M.
Stonehouse
Stroud
Hitchin
Letchworth
Crees, J. H. E.
Kemerton
St.
J.
Albans
Papillon, Rev.
T. L.
Trollope, A. H.
Wace, A. J. B.
Hampshire
Andover
Basingstoke
Fleet
C.
T.
Davies, R.
Prickard, A. O.
....
S.
Coll. Coleridge, E. P.
EUam,
Newman, W.
Esther.
T\Iiss
Young, F.
Ware
....
Watford
Canon
Whishaw, Miss E. H.
May ling
Island Bryans, C.
Isle of Wight,
Godfrey, C.
Osiorne
.
Lijjhook
Petersjield
Portsmouth
Southampton
Southsea
Winchester
Huntingdonshire
Godmanchester
Titherington, Rev. A,
F.
Badley, J. H.
Williams, A. M.
Nicol, J. C.
Ellaby, C. S.
Kent
Beelienham
Blackheath
Berridge, Miss E. H.
See London.
Veysey, W. B.
Barker, Rev. Canon P.
Brock, Miss M. D.
Heppel, Miss Mary L.
Layman, Miss A. M.
Loiy, G.
Broadstairs
Holder, P. J,
White, Miss E. L.
Bramston, Rev. J. T.
Crawford, E. R.
Helbert, L.
Kirby, W. R.
Moor, Mrs. E. S.
Bromley
Bowen. H.
Canterbury
Moor, Miss M. F.
Rendall, M. J.
Heeefoedshiee
Hereford
Leominster
Heetfoudshiee
Sald^ch
Charing
Chapman, P. M.
Newton, C. W.
Ragg, Rev. W. H. M.
Sharpley, H.
Neild, Miss H. T.
Hall, MJ-gs
M,
L.
Chislehurst
Eastry
Elthaui
Folkestone
Fuotscray
Gravesend
Hawkhurst
C.
Burnside, Rev. W. F.
Goss, W. N.
Purton, G. A.
Barker, E. J. P. Ross.
Myers, Ernest.
Northbourne, Lord.
Rubie, Rev. A. E.
Jelf, C. R.
Pearce, J. W. E.
Burton, Miss A. L.
Conder, Miss E. M.
Compton, Rev. W. C.
liANCASniUEcontimied
Sittingbourne
Tonlridge
Liverpool
Ritchie, F.
Hooper, Miss E. S.
de Winton, A. J.
Gordon, W. M.
(^continued)
Hodge, H.
C. F.
Linton-Smith, Rev. M,
Macnaughton, D. A.
Mason, Miss D.
Moore, Miss B.
Muspratt, B. K.
O'Malley, B. F. K.
Ormerod, H. A.
Pallis, Alexander.
V.
S.
Lowry, C.
Stokoe, H. R.
Tancock, Rev. C. C.
Tunbridge Wells Barnard, P. M.
Bull, Rev. R. A.
Sanders, Miss A.
E.
F.
Postgate, Prof. J. P.
Prideaux, W. R.
Rigby, Rev. R. C.
Robertson, A. J.
Robinson, Miss
B.
Sing, Miss E. J.
Smith, Miss B. M.
Lancashire
Ashton-under-
Lyne
Blackjjool
Bolton
Dover, Miss M.
See Stonyhurst.
Sarson, Arnold.
Archer, F.
Smith, Miss
Dymond, Miss O.
Lipscomb, W. G.
Goodrich, W.
Great Crosby
Lancaster
Bunce, Miss M.
Watson, Rev. H. A.
Beasley, H. C.
J.
Woodard, E. A.
Woodward, A. M.
Woodward, A. W.
Henn,
Rt,
Rev. H.
(Bishop of Burnley).
Liverpool
Beaumont, Miss.
Bevan, Miss F. E.
Bosanquet, Prof. R. C.
Bramley-Moore, Miss,
Bridge, Rev. J.
Brockman, Rev. R. T.
Brown, A. Theodore.
Brown, Miss L.
Campagnac, Prof.
Caton, Dr. Richard.
Coghill, Mrs.
Collie, Miss F. A.
Connell, Rev. A.
Cradock-Watson, H.
W. W.
Dale, Sir A.
Downie, Miss C. G.
Forbes, Kenneth.
Frisch, E.
Rev.
Gibson-Smith,
Canon.
Gladstone, Robert.
Gwatkin, Miss E. R.
Hardeman,
J. T.
Hartley, Rev. E.
Hubback,
F.
W.
Jones, Miss A. B.
W.
Stewart, H.
Symes, Miss A.
Thorneley, Miss B.
Watts, A.
Burley-in-
Wharfedale
Burnley
Keen, Miss E. M.
Kipling, Mrs. P. F.
Lancelot, Rev. J. B.
Lehmann-Haupt,Prof
Herman, G. L.
Blackburn
181
Manchester
Agar, T. L.
AUen, Ven, W. C.
Ashton, Mrs.
Barlow, T. D.
Barlow, Mrs. T. D.
Brooke, Mrs.
Burrows, Prof. R. M.
Burstall, Miss S. A.
Campbell, H. E.
Campion, Rev. C. T.
Carruthers, G.
Carter, Rev. T. N,
Clarke, Miss E. M,
Codd, A. E.
Conway, Prof. R.
Conway, Mrs.
Dakers, H.
Dawkins,
Boyd,
Dawkins,
Boyd,
S.
J.
Miss
Prof,
Domaille, Miss M,
Donner, Sir E.
Eckhard, Mrs.
Edwards, S.
Ewart, Miss E.
J,
Fry, C. E,
Goodyear, C.
Greenhalgh, J, A.
E,
APPENDIX
182
LAi^CASni'RE continued
Grensted, Rev. L. W.
Manchester
Gnppy, H.
(^continued)
.
LEICESTERSniBB Leicester
Rudd, G. E.
Hall, Joseph.
Hartley, S. B.
Russell, B. W. N.
Sloane, Miss E. J.
Henry, Brother E.
Herford, Miss C.
Hewart, G.
Hopkinson, Sir A.
Hopkinson, J. H.
[NCOLNSHlKi!;-
Horsfall, Rev. A.
Boston
Went, Rev.
Lutterworth
Howarth, Miss A.
Kelsey, C. E.
M.
Llewellyn, Miss G.
Macalpine, B.
Massey, Mrs.
I.
May, T.
Mead, P. J.
Montague, C. E.
Montague, Mrs.
Moulton, Rev. J. H.
Paton, J. L.
Peake, Prof. A. S.
Roby, A. G.
Simon, Mrs. H.
Sinclair, Prof. Sir
W.
J.
Sutton, E.
Taylor, Mrs. M.
Taylor, Miss M. B.
Warburton, F.
Warman, A.
Welldon,
J.
S.
Rev,
Rt.
E. C.
Williamson, H.
Wood, H.
Neiotoii
Heath
Oldham
Ormskirk
Preston
Rainhill
Rossall School
.
Salford
Wigglesworth, Miss E
Green, P. C.
Stoneraan, Miss A. M.
Wright, A.
Pilkington, Mrs.
Fumeaux, L. R.
Nicklin, Rev. T.
Taylor, G. M.
Casartelli, Rt. Rev. L.
G. (Bishop of Salford).
Southport
Stonyhurst
Kidd, E.
S.
Davis, Rev. H.
Plater, Rev. C. D.
Scoles, Rev.
Harper, G. P.
Maclnnes, J.
I.
C.
Darlington,
J.
W.
S.
Univerdty
Oakeley, Miss H. D,
Spalding, K. J.
Turner, B.
(co7itinue(V)
Walters,
Prof.
W.
C. F.
Lewkhavi High
School
Adams, Miss
E.
M.
Mary Datchelor
School
and
Training
Eeeve, Miss J.
Coll.
Butler, Prof. H. E.
Caspari, M. 0. B.
Gardner, Prof. E. A.
Piatt, Prof. A,
Solomon, L.
Univ. Coll. Sch. Felkin, P. W.
Spenser, Dr. H. J.
Westfield Coll. . Alford, Miss M.
Coll.
McDougal, Miss E.
J.
* Parker, Miss C. E.
Merchant
Taylors' Sch.
Bampfylde,
F. G.
Rev. F.
Masham, Rev. J. G.
Nairn, Rev. Dr. J. A.
Wells, G. H.
McClure, J. D.
Richardson,
fll mil
Sch.
London
Hill
School
Islington
Queen's College
.
Paul, Miss A. S.
Wimbledon :
Miss W. M.
St.
Olave's
School
Kingdom,
T.
Bell,
Bell,
Powell, Miss M. H.
Purdie, Miss F. M.
Tollington H. S. Martin, Miss A, P.
School
Sydenham S. Sch.
ff.
W.
Edward.
Rev. Canon G.
C.
Bennett, Mrs. A. H.
Benson, Godfrey R.
Benton, Miss S.
Bland, Miss E. D.
Blundell, Miss A.
Bonser, Right Hon.
Sir J.
Streatham High
W. M.
Beggs, Miss J.
Behrens, N. E.
Balfour,
Hon.
Rt.
Gerald.
Barker, Miss E. Ross.
Barnett, P. A.
Watson, Miss E,
Baker-Penoyre, J.
Balcarres, Lord.
Sotting, C. G.
Gould, T. W.
Hillard, Rev. A. E.
Jones, A. Melville.
La Motte, D.
Loane, G. G.
Mathews, L. H. S.
*Pantin, W. E. P.
Sotithlands Coll. Smiley, Miss R.
Stationers' Sch. Chettle, H.
Stookwell Sec.
School
Mason, Miss L. G.
Training Coll. Richards, Miss S. E.
Bailey, J. C.
Paul's Girls'
Gedge, Miss E. C.
School
Gray, Miss F.
Rogers, Miss M. D.
Gavin, Miss E.
Lewis, Miss M. E.
Baillie, A.
St.
Anderson, Y.
Antrobus, Sir R. L.
Armstead, Miss H.
Asquith,Rt.Hon.H.H.
Rushbrooke, W. G.
Simpson, P.
Witton, F. \V.
.
Wotherspoon, G.
Green,
County School Forrest, E. Bruce
London
Abrahams, Miss E. B.
Or.
.
J.
Wood
Cholmeley, R. F.
Harper, Miss B.
Lewer, Miss C. E.
Gow, Rev.
Ecclesbourne
School
Beasley, T. E.
King's Coll. Sch.^mith, D. R.
Crofts, T. R. N.
Mary's Coll.*Powel\, Miss H. L.
Wood, Miss M. H.
.
Sargeaunt, J.
Smedley, I. F.
School
Wimbledon High
Owen's School,
St.
Armstead, Miss H.
Holding, Miss G. E.
Slater,
A.
Skeel, Miss C. A. J.
Westminster
School
Col-
legiate Sch.
High
Miss
W.
* Conway,
Netting
188
S.
W.
Bradley, Prof. A. C.
Branford, Mrs.
Bridge, Admiral Sir C.
Brodribb, C. W.
Browne, Very Rev. J
APPENDIX
1S4
London continued
London continued
Loiidon
{continued^
.
Browning, Judge
W.
Ernst.
Bruce, Hon. W. N.
Burge, Kt. Rev. H. M.
(Bishop of Southwark).
Burne-Jones, Sir P.
Butcher, J. G.
Calthrop, Miss C. M.
Campbell, Miss E. I.
Campbell, Mrs. L.
Chambers, E. J.
Chapman, John.
London
(continued)
Hodd, Miss M.
Hodgson, S. H.
Holmes, Dr. T. Rice
Houghton, A. V.
Hiigel, Baron F. von.
Hulton, A. E. G.
Eutton, Miss C. A.
Hutton, Miss E. P. S.
Jex-Blake, Rev. T. W.
Johnson, Miss B.
Johnson, C.
Kemball, Rev. O.
Kennedy,
Hon.
Sir
Cohen, C. W.
Cohen, H.
Collins, V. H.
Kensington, Miss F.
Kenyon, P. G.
Collison-Morley, L. C.
Colvin, Sir S.
Cooke, Miss V. B.
Ker, W. C. A.
Knight, Miss C.
Langridge, A.
Mudie.
Cromer, Rt. Hon. Earl
Lattimer, R. B.
Leader, Miss E.
Leaf, Walter.
Lee, Rev. R.
Lee, Sir Sidney.
Liberty, Miss M.
Lindsell, Miss A. C.
W.
of
Crosby, Miss A. D.
Curzon, Rt. Hon. Earl.
Dale, F. H.
Davidson, D. D.
Davidson, M. G.
De Gruchy, W. L.
Dill, R. T. Colquhoun.
Dingwall, W. F.
Droop, J. P.
Dunlop, Miss M. M.
Easterling, H. G.
Esdaile, A. J. K.
Farside, W.
Farwell, Lord Justice.
Finlay, Sir R. B.
Fitzgerald, Miss A.
Forbes, H. J. S.
Ford, H. G.
Garnsey, E. R.
Gilson, J. P.
Greene, H. W.
Grigg, E.
W. M.
J.
W.
Heath, H. F.
Hetherington,
J.
N.
Heward, G. A. L.
Hicks, Miss A. M.
Hildesheimer, A.
Hill G. F.
Linnell, MissB. M.
Longman, C. J.
Loreburn, Rt. Hon.
Lord.
Loring, W.
Mackail, Prof.
J.
W,
Macleod, Miss E.
Macmillan, G. A.
Macnaghten, Rt. Hon,
Lord.
Mc Anally, H. W. W.
McCormick, Rev. J. G.
Magnus, L.
Marillier, H. C.
Marshall, J. H.
Matthews, Miss M. W.
Mattingly, H.
Gurney, Miss A.
Gurney, Miss M.
Haigh, Mrs. P. B.
Halsbury, Earl of.
Haydon, J. H.
Haynes, E. S. P.
Headlam,
R.
Mavrogordato, J. N.
Mayor, R. J. G.
Meiklejohn, R, S.
Menzies, Mr. G. K.
and Mrs.
Merrick, Rev. G. P.
Michael, Miss E. McL.
Miller, A. W. K.
Millington, Miss M. V.
Milman, Rev. W. H.
Milner, Rt. Hon.
Viscount.
Minturn, Miss E. T.
Mitcheson, R. E.
{contimied^
IjQ'&'dot^ continued
Morison, L.
Morley, of Blackburn,
Et. Hon. Viscount.
Morton, Miss M.
Muir-Mackenzie,SirK.
Mumm, A. L.
London
Waters, Miss E. M.
Watson, A. R.
Watson, Miss J.
(continued)
White-Thomson,
Whitehead, Miss T. G.
Whitestone, R, A. W.
Whyte, Miss
J.
Wilkinson, H. Spenser.
Williams, A. F. B.
Willis, J. A.
Wi ter, G.
Wood, R. S.
Woolrych, H. R.
Wye,
Plaskitt, W. L.
Pollard, A. T.
Pollock, Sir F.
J.
M,
Middlesex
Enjield
Pooley, H. F.
Poyoter, Sir E. J.
Preedy, J. B. K.
J.
Fairbairns, Miss M. E.
Pontet, C. A. A.
Ford, Rev. L.
Hallam, G. H.
Hort, Sir A. F.
Hopkins, G. B. Innes.
Virgo, Miss E. M.
Burrell, A.
McMurtrie, Miss B. S.
B.
Du
Ilarnnv School
Harrow
M.
Radford, Miss
Kendall, V.
Richard, Miss K. A.
Richmond, B. L.
Richmond, Sir W. B.
Ridding, Miss C. M.
Romania, Eev.W. F. J.
Rooke, Miss M.
Sale, Prof. G. S.
Sands, P. C.
Simmons, Miss N. J.
Stawell, Miss F. M.
Stevenson, W. E.
Storr, F.
Strong, Mrs. S. A.
Stuart, Miss J. J.
Stuttaford, C.
Sullivan, Ca^jt. G. A.
Sykes, A. A.
Sykes, J. C. G.
Talbot, .J. E.
Taylor, Miss A. M.
Taylor, Miss E, M.
Taylor, Miss G. M.
Tennant, Miss L. E.
Thackerav, H. St. J.
Thomas, F. W.
Thomas, H.
Thompson, F. E.
Thomson, PI. R.
Tompson, Miss L. G.
Vaisey, H. B.
Ideioorth
Nortliwood
Pinner
Ponder' s
Baynes, N. H.
Terry, F. J.
Adshead, F.
LJtid
Tiviclienham
Uxhridye
Seebohm, H. E.
Hodgson, F. C.
Gran, Miss L.
Raleigh, Miss K.
Norfolk
Diss
W.
Green, Rev.
Marhet
Bagge, Miss L. M.
Great Cressing-
ham
Yarmouth
Norwich
(ft.
Heseltine, M.
Haig, Miss A. C.
H. C.
Thetford
Clark, Rev. R. B.
Deeks, Miss B. C.
Jewson, Miss D.
Sowels, F.
NORTHAMPTONSHIBE
Brixtoorth
Northampton
Oundle
.
Varley, R. S,
Vincent, William.
Walters, H. B.
C.
Doxonham
Hulbert, H. L. P.
Charlesworth, G. N,
Nightingale, A. D.
Sanderson, F. W.
Squire, S. G.
Vaughan, Miss E.
24
R.
W.
Murray, John.
Nicholson, Miss M.
Nolan, Mgr. E.
Rackham, Miss
185
NORTHUMBEBLANDBeal
Hodgkin, T.
APPENDIX
186
Oxfordshire continued
J^OB.TB.ViiBEB.i.AyiD continued
Newcasth'-on-
Tyne
Bell,
W,
S.
Hadow, W. H.
Mann, Rev. H. K.
Hertford
Nottinghamshire
Neivark-onTrent
.
Nottingham
Jesus College
Qorse, Rev. H.
Barker, E. P.
Blunt, Rev. A. W. F.
Granger, Prof. F. S.
Coll.
Houston, Miss E. C.
Leman, H. M.
Keile College
Henderson, B. W.
Keatinge, M. W.
Wright, Prof. J.
.Burroughs, Rev, E. A.
Williams, Rev. H. H.
.*Genner, E. E.
Hughes, Rev. W. H.
Cooper, H. B.
Lock, Rev. W.
.
Owen, A.
Hull
Argles, Miss E.
Jex-Blake,
Russell, J.
Strangeways,
Walker, Miss C. G. W.
Woodward, Miss A.
Gough, Rev. T.
McCutcheon,
Brackley
Charllury
Cuddesdon
.
Oxford, :
All Souls
Rudd, Rev. E. J. S.
Ashwin, Rev. R. F.
Magdalen
Coll.
Robertson, M.
Rev. C.
Rt.
Gore,
(Bishop of Oxford).
Geldart,
.*
W. M.
Webb,
.
How, W. W.
Joachim, H. H.
J. L.
Wood, H. McKinnon.
Coll.
Christ Church
Haverfield, Prof. F. J.
Heberden, C. B.
Anderson, J. G. C.
Neto College
Blagden, Rev. C. M.
*Dundas, R. H.
Murray, Prof. G. G. A.
Owen,
G.
Sanday, Dr. W.
Stewart, Prof. J. A.
Rev.
Strong,
Very
T. B.
Warner, Rev. W,
College
Miles, J. C.
Scott, G. R.
Scott, Walter.
Brown, A. C. B.
Henderson, H. L.
Hunter, L. W.
Joseph, H. W. B.
Matheson,
S.
Corpus Christi
Grundy, G. B.
Livingstone, R. W.
Sidgwick, A.
Whitwell, R.
J.
Allen, P. S.
*Fyfe, W. H.
Garrod, H. W.
Lindsay, A. D.
Pickard - CamVjridge,
A. W.
Strachan - Davidson,
Brasenose
C. C. J.
Wilson, Rev. H. A.
Mcrfon College
Bailey, Cyi-il.
Marchant, E. C.
Merry, Rev. W. W.
Munro, J. A. R.
Benecke, P. V. M.
Brightman, Rev. F. E.
Cookson, C.
Cowley, A.
Godley, A. D.
Smith, Prof. J. A.
Warren, T. H.
Greene, W. A.
Balliol College
Miss
Fletcher, C. R. L.
Anson, Sir W. R.
H.
K. H.
Lineuln College. Fowler, W. Warde.
Gardner, Prof. P.
OXFOBDSHIRE
Banhvry
M.
Miss
(Principal).
L. R.
Betford
S.
Lady Margaret
Oriel College
Queen's College
P. E.
Spooner, Rev. W. A.
Wilson. Prof. J. Cook.
Phelps, Rev. L. R.
Richards, Rev. G.
Shadwell, C. L.
Allen, T.
W.
Clark, A.
C.
Grenfell, B. P.
Hunt, A. S.
Magrath, Rev.
J. R.
Walker, Rev. E. M.
Somersetshire continued
Legard, A. G.
Bath
continued
....
Ball, S.
*Hall, F. W.
Powell, J. U.
Snow,
Bruton
Weston
Lorimer, Miss H. L.
Penrose, Miss E.
Trinity College *Coupland, E.
Ellis, Prof. R.
Prichard, H. A.
University Coll. Macan, R. W.
*Stevenson, G. H.
Wadham Coll. Drewitt, J. A.
Macfarlane, W. A.
Pope, G. H.
Richards, H.
.
Webster, E. W.
Coll.
Oxford
R.
Luffenham
TTppingham
W.
Mare
Mills,
Myres, Prof. J. L.
Peacock, M. H.
Poole, Miss D. J. L.
Pope, Mrs.
Rhys, Miss M.
Robinson, G. G.
*Rogers, Miss A. M. A.
Schomberg, Miss I.
Worley, Miss M. L.
Newton, Miss A.
Battiscombe, E. M.
Syson, Miss M. P
Barton . wider
Needwood
Denstone
Coll.
Farley.
Handsworth
Lichjield
Holland, W. R.
Clark, Rev. R. M.
Denman, Rev. C.
Clendon, A.
Genner, Miss G. B.
Hodge, Miss D. M. V.
Bakewell, Miss D. L.
Marshall, Miss A.M. C.
Powell, Miss M.
McCrea, Miss G. J.
Stafford
Barke, Miss E. M.
Stoke-on-Trent
Sutton Coldfield Richardson, G.
Daniel, A. T.
Uttoxeter
West Bromwich Manley, Dr. J. H. H.
.
Pearse, P. J.
Wolrerham2>to7i Ager, R. L. S.
Caldecott, W.
Luce, Miss S.
Pearman, Miss C. G.
Tildesley, Miss B.
Tildesley, Miss E.
Suffolk
Richards, Rev. J. F.
Mackenzie, Rev. H. W.
Taylor, A. C.
Newport
Shifnal
Elliston,
Shrewsbury
Gough, Miss M.
.
W.
Lowestoft
Phillips, Rev.
Bath
Ealand, Mrs.
J.
M.
W.Rich-
mond.
Silcox, Miss L.
Hogarth, Miss M.
South wold
I.
Surrey
Burgh Heath
Charterhouse
School
.
Langdon-Davies, B. N,
Knight, R.
Watkins, Rev. P. M.
Bryant, Rev. E. E.
Fletcher, F.
Kendall, G.
Longworth, F. D.
Tressler, A.
Somersetshire
E.
Watson, A. R.
Goode, A. G.
Camberley
Caterham
Yate, Lt.-Col. A. C.
Alington, Rev. C. A.
Florian, A. R.
Pickering, T. E.
Hamlet, Rev. J. G.
M.
M.
Ipsioieh
WcstleUm
.
Miss B. T.
Staffoedshire-
Shropshire
Wellington
s?/per
under-Lyme
RUTLANDSHIBBS.
Newcastle'
Cooper, Miss A. J.
Cowell, W. H. A.
Fleming, Miss A.
Goodwin, Miss N. M.
Grenfell, Mrs. A.
Hogarth, D. G.
Jerram, C. S.
Lewis, Miss E.
Moss,Rev.Preb. H. W.
Witney
Richards, F.
Norton, D. E.
Phillips, Rev. L. A.
Wells, J.
Elliott, R. T.
Gerrans, H. T.
Lys, Rev. F. J,
Chapman,
Milverton
T. C.
Somerville Coll.
Worcester
(^continued)
Stocks, J. L.
187
Cheatn School
Claygate
.
Tabor, A.
W.
S.
Armitage, N. C.
APPENDIX
188
Surrey
Suss EX continued
Eastbourne
Johns, Miss E. L.
{continued^
McKay, H. G.
continued
Cranleigh Soh. Antrobus, G. L. N.
Croydmh
Tyler, C. H.
Ferguson, Miss M.
Mainwaring, C. L.
Paine,
W.
L.
Godalming
Guildford
Haslemere
Hindhead
Kenley
Eew
....
Kingston Hill
lA-mjJsfield
Oxted
....
Redhill
Reigate
Richmond
Surliton
Hove
....
Woodward, Prof. W. H.
Lancing
Carlisle, A. D.
Linzell, Miss E.
Mayfield
Maunde.
M.
Page, T. E.
St.
Leonards
Rawnsley, W. .
Stey7iing
Geikie, Sir A.
West Horsham
Selwyn, Rev. E. C.
James, Miss L.
Richardson, Miss E.
Worthing
Warlingham
Pearson, A. C.
Weyhridge
Dawes, Miss E. A.
Brighton
Birmingham
Bayliss, A. E.
Burrows, Ven. W. O.
Chambers, C. D.
Chapman, Rev. Dom.
Gilson, R. C.
Harris, J. Rendel.
Heath, C. H.
Hobhouse, Rev. Canon.
Jones, Frank.
King, Mrs, Wilson.
Lee-Strathy, Miss J. L.
Lewis, Miss D. A.
Lewis, Dr. 0. R.
Measures, A. E.
S.
Nimmo,
Ledgard, W. H.
W.
S.
King, F. L.
Lunn, Miss A. C.
Buxted
P.
Marshall, Rev. D. H.
Marshall, Mrs. D. H.
Ryle, Miss E.
Hussey, Rev. A. L.
Miss.
Orange, Miss B.
Quelch, Miss K.
Sonnenschein,
Prof.
E. A.
Stock, St. George,
Swann, Miss M. G.
Ghey, Miss F, L.
Hett,
Alder, Miss M. B.
Archibald, Miss E.
Ball, Miss M. G.
Ballinger, Miss I. M.
Barrett, Miss H. M.
Baugh, Miss E. N.
*Belcher, A. Hayes.
Davies, Miss C. H.
Dawson, Rev. W. R.
Moore, E. W.
Upcott, Rev. A. W.
Winbolt, S. E.
Bennett, G. B.
WAKWICKSHIEB
Sussex
Bognor
Marshall, Rev. A. G.
Lea, Rev. E. T.
M.
Bernays, A. E.
Mayor, Rev. Prof, J. B.
Jackson, C.
Hardcastle, H.
Gough, A. B.
liatham, Mrs.
Martin, Miss M. K.
Rundall, G. W.
Seaton, R. C.
Brownjohn, A. D.
Church, Rev A. J.
Geden, Rev. A. S.
Dawes, Rev. J. S.
Dawes, Miss M. C.
Millard, V. C. H.
Zimmern, A. E.
Zimmern, Miss D. M.
.
Saunders, T. B,
Williams, C. A.
Williams, Rev. F, S.
Worters, Miss E. B.
Carson, H. J.
Oke, A. W.
Thring, L. T.
Tower, B. H.
Bowlby, Rev. H. T.
Thompson,
Sir
E.
Leamington
3Iarston Green
Rugby
Vince, C. A.
Williams, Herbert.
Beaven, Rev. A. B,
Loveday, Miss A,
Turner, Miss E.
Gilson, Mrs, R. C.
Cole, E. L. D.
David, Rev, A. A.
(continued)
Strafford - on
Avon
G.
Ambleside
(rrasmere
Kendal
Kirkby
dale
Hodgson, Rev. F. H.
Esholt.
Kirby Stephen
Milntliorpe
Wiltshire
England, E. B.
Lewis, Rev. F.
Haslam, Rev. A, B.
Roby, H. J.
Moor, S. A.
Chavasse, A.
S.
Penny, Miss D. A. A.
Smyth, C.
Edwards, W.
Elliott, R. H.
Hebden Bridge Higgs, Miss M. K.
Halifax
Hessle
Sharp, Rev. D. S.
.
Kempthorne,
Rt. Rev,
C. (Bishop of Hull).
Hull
Clapham, Miss G. E.
Hughes, Miss J. G.
Pearman, J. O'H.
Ward, C. H.
Huddersfield
Leach, Miss A. K.
Tayler, Rev. C. B.
Hamilton, J.
Malmesbi/ry
3Iarlborough
A. F.
Claxton, J. A.
Evans, S. E.
*Lewis, L. W. P.
Boncaster
Lons-
....
Yo'RKSuiRE continued
Bewsbury
Holme,
White, A. H.
Westmorland
IlJiley
Leeds
Allwood, Miss.
Saunders, J. V.
Atkinson, C. W.
Clark, E. K.
Connal, Prof. B. M.
Croft, Miss A. M.
Marlborough
College
Pewsey
Salisbury
Swindon
Atkey, V. A. H.
Branfoot, Rev. W. H.
Dale, F. R.
Dodd,
Derriman, Miss M. K.
Mackesy, Rev. T. L.
Impey, R. L.
Furness,
Dudley
Kidderviinster
Malvern
Northfield
Shipston - on
Dix, C. M.
Stour
Stourbridge
Wyse, W.
Wordsworth, Miss E.
Price, A. C.
Wynne-Edwards, Rev
J.
Northallerton
Oswaldkirk
Jiipoti
Sedbcrgh
Baldwin, S.
Chappel, Rev. Canon
W. H.
Moore, Miss M. A.
Morris, H. H.
Beuerley
Settle
Sheffield
Pickard, Miss E. M.
Arnold, A. J.
Barber, Miss G. M.
Couzens, Miss F. M.
Dudley, L. C.
Eliot, Sir C.
Ellis, Mrs.
YorkshireBradford
R.
Zachary, Miss K. T.
Wood, Rev. R. G.
Mathews, Rev. J. E.
Barran, Sir J. N.
Dowson, F. N.
Harrison, B. C.
Malim, F. B.
Weech, W. N.
C.
Stourport
Worcester
W.
Lupton, Miss B. G.
J. R.
Mayall, A.
Burke, Miss M. E.
Adam, Miss M. E.
Krause, Mrs.
Nicholson, Miss J.
House, H. H.
James, Rev. S. R.
Salmon, H. G. C.
W.
Lidderdale, E.
E H.
Hendy, F.
P.
Gillespie, C. M.
Grant, Prof. A. J.
Libbey, Rev. E. Jackson.
WorcestershireAlve church
Sromsgrove
189
Rossiter, Miss G. M.
Broadbent, C. H.
Falding, Miss C. S.
Keeling, Rev. W. H.
Pickard, Miss K.
Roberts, Miss M. E.
Taylor, Miss M. A.
Escott, Miss A. E.
Forster, E. S.
Gibbons, W, M.
Green, Prof. J. A.
Johnson, Robert.
Leahy, Prof. A. H.
Newman, Miss M. L.
APPENDIX
190
Yo'RK.BUi'RE continued
Sleeman,
Sheffield
Pembrokeshire c(ii^m?/e(^
J.
Salva
Stokes, J.
(^continued)
* Bummers,
Wakefield
Pembroke
H.
Trof.
W.
(Bishop
of
Wake-
field).
Yeadon
York
Eckerslev, J. C.
Heathcote, W. E.
Phipps, Miss M. E. A.
I.
A.
Williams, R.
C.
Ashforth, Mrs.
Eden, Rt. Rev. G. R.
Perman, Miss
....
IRELAND
Belfast
Henry, Prof. R. M.
Laurie, Geo. E.
Clongowes Wood Nolan, Rev. T.
Allen, S.
Dervock
Pooler, Rev. Dr.
Bflwnjiatrick
Alton, E. H.
Dublin . .
*Beare, Prof. J. 1.
Browne, Rev, Prof. H.
Delany, Rev. W.
Keane, Rev. J.
Keen, Miss E. A.
La Touche, C. D.
Plunkett, Count.
Purser, L. C.
,
ISLE OF
Castletown
Wicksey,
MAN
J. T.
W.
WALES
C 1EDIGAN
Aberystwyth
Anwyl, Prof. E.
Bensly, Prof. E. von B.
Brighouse, T. K,
Grundy, W. W.
Marshall, Prof. J. W.
Thompson, John.
Dundrum
Ferrall, C. N.
Allen, J. E. R.
.*Exon, Prof. C.
McElderry, Prof. R. K.
Pye, Prof. J.
Willis, Miss M.
Grafton, Rev. F. W.
,
Enniskillen
Galway
.
.
Roberts, Principal.
Carnarvon
Bangor
SUgo
-
Arnold, Prof. E. V.
T.
Prof.
*Williams,
SCOTLAND
Hudson.
Criccieth
Tullamore
Williams, W. G.
Jones, C. C. Lloyd.
Aberdeen
narrower, Prof.
Blairgorvrie
Denbigh
Coltvyn Bay
Wrexham
Edinburgh
Osborn, T. G.
Davies, G. A. T.
Flintshire
Hawarden
Lodge,
J.,
Junr.
Glamorganshire
Jcnkyns, Miss C.
Cardiff
Norwood, Prof. G.
Pearson, Miss M. B.
Reynolds, F.
Robertson, Rev. W. L.
*Slater, Prof. D.
Thompson,
Penarth
Swansea
F. C.
AbertUlery
Monmouth
Glasgow
Glenalmond
Montrose
St.
Andrews
Whitefield, Miss E. G.
Benger, Miss L. M.
Monmouthshire
.
Cartwright, Miss M.
James, L.
Prof. G. G.
Atkinson, Miss A. L.
Bell, J.
Leckenby, A. E.
Stornoway
Tarradale
J.
Ramsay,
M.
Ferard, R. H.
Green, G. Buckland.
Hardie, Prof. W. R.
Heard, Rev. W. A.
Stevenson, Miss B.
Davies, Prof. G. A.
Rennie, W.
Clarke, Rev. E. W.
Hyslop, Rev. A. R. F.
Taylor, Rev. A. F.
Abernethy, Miss A. S.
Burnet, Prof. J.
Pearson, Miss E. R.
Shewan, A.
Dodd, E. B.
Yule, Miss A. F.
EUROPE
Belgium
Pembrokeshire
Haverfordwest
Henson, Rev.
J.
Louvain
Carnoy, Prof. A.
J,
EvnoFH continued
France
Paris
New York
Djelal Bey.
* Hirst, Mis's
Cowperthwaite, Miss
E. E.
Gebmant
Halle - an der-
Poughkeepsie
SaaU
Munich
U.S.A.
Italy
Rome
Benn, A. W.
Ashby, T.
Mbditebranban
Cyprus
Montreal
Toronto
Anderson, Prof. W. B.
Colville, Prof. K. N.
.
W.
H. W.
Peterson, Principal
*Auden, Prof.
Langford, Prof. A. L.
Robertson, Prof. J. C.
Smith, Prof. G. O.
Nova Scotia
Halifax
U.S.A.
Ne7v
Connecticut
Haven
Goodell, Prof. T. D.
op Columbia
U.S.A. District
Washington
U.S.A. Illinois
Hale, Prof.
Chicago
.
J.
U.S.A. Mabsachusetts
White, Prof. J. W.
Cambridge
Wallace, Miss I, M.
Nen-tonHlle
.
U.S.A.
U.S.A.
St.
Kelsey, Prof. P. W.
Wenley, Prof. R. M.
O'Brien, Rev. P.
New Hampshire
Exeter
U.S.A.
Minnesota
Paul
U.S.A.
Michigan
An?i Arbor
Kirtland, Prof. J. C.
New York
Ithaca
Boyd, G. C.
Major
J. S.
Ambala
Knight, H. A.
Drummond, Maj.-Gen.
Bombay
F. H. R.
Ailinger, Rev. A.
Anderson, G.
Barlee, K. W.
Batchelor, Hon.
Mr.
Justice.
Beaman,
Hon.
Mr.
Justice.
Bell, W. M.
Boyd, C. C.
Bright, G. E.
Burns, Mrs. C.
Cameron, Rev. J.
Carmichael, Hon. Mr.
G.
Chandavarkar, Sir N.
G.
W. G.
Merrill, Prof. E. T.
G.
Fitzhugh, Prof. T.
Gallie,
NORTH AMERICA
Canada
.
S.
India
A hmednagar
Kingston
Oliphant, Prof.
ASIA
Jasonidy, O. J.
U.S.A. VlRQINIACharlottexville
Steele, J. P.
.
G. M.
Hodges, A. L.
MacVay, Miss A. P.
Wyse, Miss T.
*Leach, Prof. Abby.
Macurdy, Miss G. H.
Pennsylvania
Grove City
Florence
191
Elmer, Piof. H.
C.
Chatfield, H. S.
Cordue,Lieut.-Colonel
W. G. R.
Crerar, J.
Cuvelier, M.
M.
De Quadros, J. P.
Drummond, Capt.
Elliott, R. A. E.
Faulkner, E.
Cubbay, M. S.
Haig- Brown, W. A.
Haigh, P. B.
Hart, Mrs.
Hotson, J. E. B.
Johnston, D.
Kincaid, C. A.
Kitchin, G.
Lamb, Sir. R. A.
Larbolette, Rev. F. X.
APPENDIX
192
Asia
continued
continued
Asia continued
India conti?iucd
India
Madan, D. M.
Marrs, E.
Martin, Rev. A.
Meyer, Dr. F. A.
Palmer, Rt. Rev. E.
Bombay
(^continued)
Simla
Rainy, G.
Thana
Korea
Percival, P. E.
Pigott, R. E. R.
II.
Allison, F.
.
SlAM
Banyhoh
Martin, A. T.
AUSTRALASIA
0.
New ZealandC'hristchurch
Russell, E. C.
Sale, E. L.
Bunedin
Sanderson, P. M. D.
Sheppard, S, T.
Sowerby, Mrs.
Stephanos, A. D.
Swann, Major-General
McLean, Miss M.
Brown, Prof. J. R.
Bousfield, F. S. N.
Coghill, D.
S.
Shannon, G. C.
Rothfield, 0.
Jukes, J. E. C.
Macnaghteu, H.
Braham, H. V.
Bijaxnir
Broach
Calcutta
Oodhra
Hyderahad
Karachi
.
Adelaide
Karrvar
Kathiawar
KolhajniT
Is'asik
Poona
P.
W.
Roughton, N. J.
Kennedy, B. C. H.
Maconochie, A. F.
Bolus, E. J.
Swifte, L. C.
Wren,
Satara
Shahjehanpur
.
Claremont
Perth
W. H.
Leeper, A,
Williams, Miss
S. J.
Hubback, Miss
Hutchison, C.
C. J.
M.
S.
NORTH AFRICA
Furness, J. M.
Sonnenschein, E.
Cairo
J.
SOUTH AFRICA
C.
Cape Colony
French Hock
Pretoria
Lewis, J. G. R.
Paterson, Prof. A. C.
WEST INDIES
P.
Brayne, A, P. S.
Fremantle, A. F.
Williams, Prof.
W. Austealia-
Corley, F. E.
EaYPT
G.
Reilly, Lieut. B. E.
Owen, W.
Madras
Naif pur
Mclhourne
South Yarra
Wild, A. C.
Pratt, E. M.
Monteath, G.
Monteath, J.
M. R.
Hollidge,D. H.
Langley, J. E.
McMillan, G. A,
Naylor, Prof. H.
Ward, J. H.
AUSTEALIA-
Hobart
Victoria
Wiles, G.
J.
Tasmania
Willis, R. A.
.
W.
Queensland
Vakil, F.
Vernon, C. V.
Wadia, B. J.
Wadia, C. N,
Whitty, R. F. L.
C, C.
T. D.
Wellingto^i
BrishaJie
Talyarkhan, F. S.
Tarachand, R. K.
Tottenham, Miss E.L.
Vaeth, Rev. A.
Bowen,
Adams,
Morrell,
Otane
J. C.
Belgaiim
W.
Tchirkine, S,
J.
(Bishop of Bombay).
Pavri, N. P.
Enthoven, R. E.
Barbadoes
Jamaica
.
Dalton, Rev. H. A.
Barrows, Miss M. M.
:::
;
;
Edward Donner,
Sir
Vice-Presidents
The Right
S.
Warre
G.
Secretaries
Hon.
J,
Chairman
Esq., M.A.
Rees, B.A.
B.A.
The
A.
year's
S.
Miss H. V. Schmidt,
25
193
APPENDIX
1^4
On July
member
of the
Branch
Lord Bishop
Arch,
Newport
the Branch, the
On
was present.
Members of the Branch
Public
"
University
Lectures
one by Professor
Mackail
two
on
An Arabian Romance
of the
and a plan.
(Manchester
at
the
University
Press.)
The
and over 60
associate
members.
viz.
over 60 regular
::
::
195
1911-12
is
as follows
President
M.A.
Hon. Treasurer
Miss E. M. Baugh, King Edward VIL's High School
New
for Girls,
Street.
Hon. Secretary
R. W. Reynolds, Esq., M.A., King Edward's School,
Hon. Registrar
New
Street.
Hon. Secretary
of the
Reading Circle
Miss Alder
Miss Baugh
The Rev.
A. P. Beaven, M.A.
Miss Brock
The Rev. A. Cattley,
Miss M. Bentley
A. Clendon,
The Rev. W. H. Chappel, M.A.
M.A.
;
Esq., M.A.
Esq., M.A.
H. Heath,
Miss
Miss Nimmo
C.
LovEDAY A. E. Measures,
St. George Stock, Esq., M.A.
Esq., M.A.
D.Litt.
Professor Sonnenschein,
APPENDIX
196
as follows
Lecture
Mr. St.
by-
Conception of Fortune in
Greek Writers."
Friday, October 20th." Life in Ancient Egypt in the Feudal
Age." Mr. Aylward M. Blackman (of Queen's College, Oxford,
Two
with the
Socratic Society of
The membership
The Reading
lUO.
Birmingham
Branch remains slightly in excess of
has
met regularly and has been well
Circle
University.
of the
attended.
Professor R.
C.
Bosanqdet.
Vice-Presidents
Professor P.
Hebblethwaite The Rev. J. B. Lancelot J. G. Legge,
The
Esq.
Professor C. F. Lehmann-Haupt, LL.D.
Rev. M. Linton-Smith
E. K. Muspratt, Esq., LL.D.
Professor J. L. Myres A. Pallis, Esq. A. V. Paton,
Gladstone,
Esq.
Esq.
Griffin,
F.
Esq.
Hon. Treasurer
J.
Montgomery, Esq.
Hon.
Kenneth Forbes,
Secretaries
Esq.
Hugh Stewart,
Esq.
LIVERPOOL AND DISTRICT BRANCH
There are now 112 members of the Branch, of
full
members
whom
197
63 are
of the Association.
October
Character
as
revealed
by
November
18th.
" Man
and Nature
in the
Augustan Poets,"
by Professor Conway.
1911
May
" The
in Classics,"
site.
Legal
Cambridge.
::::
APPENDIX
198
Lord Savilb.
Vice-Presidents
C. G.
W. Walker
Mr. E. Francis
Secretary
Mr. E. p. Barker.
Treasurer
Dr. F.
S.
Chairman
Dr. F.
of
S.
Granger.
Committee
Granger.
Committee
Preedy.
May
S.
Granger.
::
::
199
(in
BOMBAY BRANCH
Patron
I.C.S.
Vice-Presidents
Hon. Treasurer
G. Anderson, Esq., M.A., I.C.S.
Bon. Secretary
The Rev.
Committee
G. Anderson, Esq., M.A.
B.A.,
LL.B.
Sheppard, Esq.
J.
N.
P.
G.
R. F. L. Whitty, Esq.,
Cameron, M.A,
;
Chandavarkar,
S.
t!
The Rev.
APPENDIX
200
in
Bombay,
as
No
and Present."
July 5^;?. Paper by the Rev. A. Vaeth, S.J., on " The Influence of Geographical Conditions on the Civilization of Greece."
Some Classical Novels," by Mr. 0. Rothfeld,
August
m.
'
I.C.S.
Hon. Secretary.
its first
::
:::
201
CLASSICAL ASSOCIATION OF
19101911
President
The Hon.
W.
Sir
P.
of
New
Vice-Presidents
Edmund Barton,
Sir
G.C.M.G.,
M.A
LL.D.,
Hon. Treasurer
Professor W.
J.
Woodhouse, M.A.
Hon. Secretary
F. A.
The Rev.
L. B.
Radford, M.A.
J.
T. A. H.
26
APPENDIX
202
in
modern
life.
in order
The papers
to give more ample opportunity
"
its Monuand
Forum
Roman
The
(1)
read were as follows
means of
by
illustrated
was
ments," by Dr. F. A. Todd. This
Mr. R.
by
Critics,"
his
and
the lantern.
(2) "Demosthenes
was
meeting
this
at
attendance
Franklin, B.A. Although the
for
discussion.
not large, the paper provoked an interesting discussion. (3) Professor MacCallum read a paper on the Epistulae Ohscuronm
life will
up
to date.
The prospects of theAssociation from thepoint of view of membership and in respect of the interest taken by members in its work
are encouraging.
(Cantab.).
:.
(Cantab.),
SOUTH AUSTRALIA
Hon. Treasurer
203
D. H. HOLLIDGE, M.A.
Hon. Secretary
Executive
Mrs. Dorsch.
At
a meeting convened
it
formed."
rules to be
submitted to
a General Meeting.
The
10th,
1908.
and four in
The members number 36.
The following papers have been read and discussed
1911.
B.A.
M.A.
"
;
The Cretan
Inscription," Professor
H, Darnley Naylor,
PRINTED BY
H4ZKLL, WAISON AND VINEY, LD.,
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