GALE, CURTIS, AND FENNER, PATERNOSTER ROW; RODWELL, BOND STREET; BLACK, PARRY, AND CO., LEADENHALL STREET; AND ALL OTHER BOOKSELLERS. SCARCE TRACTS. THE PUBLISHED NUMBERS OF The Classical Journal Contain, among a variety of CLASSICAL, BIBLICAL, AND ORIENTAL, LITERATURE, I. THE FOLLOWING SCARCE AND VALUABLE GREEK, LATIN, AND ENGLISH TRACTS: CARMINA HOMERICA, Ilias et Odyssea a rhapsodorum interpolationibus repurgata, et in pristinam formam redacta; cum NOTIS ac PROLEGOMENIS, studio RICARDI Payne KNIGHT. 2d edition, with very many additions. **A copy of the first Edit. (of which only a few copies were printed,) was lately sold by Auc tion for unwards of £7. XI. Lamberti Bos regulæ præcipuæ accentuum. XII. Ruhnken's Animadvv. in Xenophontis Memorabilia. XIII. Oratio de Linguæ Arabicæ utilitate, antiquitate, et præstantiâ ; a Hyde. XIV. De Ludis privatis ac domesticis Veterum: a J. C. Bulengero. XV. Fontes quos Tacitus in tradendis rebus ante se gestis videatur sequutus paucis indicat J. H. L. Meierotto. This is reprinted from a scarce tract in folio. 1795. The Proprietors of the CLASSICAL JOURNAL have engaged a celebrated Scholar, resident in PARIS, to give them a critical notice of books of consequence that appear on the Continent. The Seven First Vols. may be had, price 41. 4s. in boards. Two Nos. to each Vol. The numbers are REGULARLY Published on the FIRST of April, July, October, aud January. Subscribers may, therefore, have them with their REVIEWS and MAGAZINES, by giving a general order to their booksellers. It is requested that all Communications be sent, one month at least, before the day of publication, and directed to A. J. VALPY, Tooke's Court, Chancery Lane, London. The above may ALWAYS be had of all Booksellers in Town and Country. Should any difficulty occur in procuring the above, a line addressed to: Mr. VALPY, shall remedy the defect. CONTENTS OF NO. IV. PAGE III. A Letter to the Officers of the Army, explaining the cause of the Plan for the Officer's Benefit Fund being for the present abandoned. By Lieutenant Colonel ROBERTS. V. Dramatic Emancipation; or Strictures on the State of the Theatres, and on the consequent degeneration of the Drama. On the partiality and injustice of the London Managers; on many Theatrical Regulations; and on the Regulations on the Continent, for the Security of Literary and Dramatic Property; particularly deserving the attention |