02 Pro Patria PDF
02 Pro Patria PDF
02 Pro Patria PDF
mmMA.BmmmimtiMin\
SAGE
ENDOWMENT FUND
THE GIFT OF
Hentrg
W. Sage
1891
.ijJ.fXJ/t
A..LU11II
University Library
arV11210
Pro
patria:
The
tine
original of
tliis
book
is in
restrictions in
text.
AD-IVGELAM- FACTVM-
PRO PATRIA A
:
LATIN STORY
FOR
VERSITY OF BIRMINGHAM
Qut procul
The
frontier grave
far
away,
Henry Newbolt
'Clifton Chapel.'
LONDON
CO.,
LIM^
CO.
THE MACMILLAN
1910
Reprinted 1907
Reprinted
1910.
Butler &*
Preface
The
idea on which
my
it-
its sequel,
the present
may
be a
grammar
is
sentences,
interesting
narrative
so
My
object, then, has been to write a book which should not only appeal to the minds of pupils through the interest of its subject matter, but also form as complete a grammatical ladder
as
Omne
tulii
punctum qui
In carrying out
to the ideal
which
programme for Pro Patria I have adhered up for myself in Ora Maritima, that should be classical in form, but modern in
this
I
set
'
house on the coast of Kent, and afterwards at Winchester, and the time of the action is the period from September 1899 to June 1900. I have thus been enabled to give unity of action to the two parts into which the narrative falls. The first part is taken up with a study of Roman Britain in coanexion witji a visit to Richborough Castle the second with the Boer War, the first news of which arrives soon after the conclusion of the summer holidays. It is my hope that my young readers may find in the first part a more vivid picture of the condition of Britain under the Romans than is contained in most school histories of England and in the treatment of the Boer War I have endeavoured to bring out its dramatic interest and heroic incidents. Party politics are, of course, kept out of view.
is
The scene
laid in a country
VI
PREFACE
The amount of grammar covered by Pro Patria may seem and, no doubt, some teachers disproportionately small if it had been my object simply to teach grammar, I might have made the text shorter. But a long experience in teaching Latin to pupils of very various ages and stages has made me
to
;
knowledge of grammar. one thing to learn declensions and conjugations out of a grammar or from grammar sentences, and quite another thing to know them as they appear in actual Ufe. How many boys and girls leave school without having acquired any real mastery even of the simplest kind of Latin or the power of making any practical use of the grammatical facts which they have so
sceptical as to the value of a skin-deep
It is
laboriously
learned the
That
is
result
outcry against Latin in schools is largely based. The great mistake seems to be that the elementary stages of learning are turned into a purely grammatical discipline and that the grammar ,is hurried over before the study of the language proper and the literature are commenced.
present
on which
Declensions and conjugations learned in this fashion find no real lodgment in the mind or, at best, the outcome of the
;
tedious process
is
'
but misses
'
them
It is against
this abstract
method
of teaching that
It
'
has been
my
which shall have a literary as well as a linguistic interest of its own, and from which the pupil shall gain something more than a bowing acquaintance with Nouns and Verbs. I have, therefore, not shunned repetitions and I have deliberately aimed at providing a certain
real book, '
;
in
The point from which Pro Patria starts is that which is reached Ora Maritima, and the pupil is carried on to the end of the regular
2
accidence.
Dann
Hand
Fehlt, leider!
nur das
geistige
Goethe,
Band.
Faust,
PREFACE
mass
Vii
of easy Latin Irom which he may acquire the habit of reading, as distinct from construing, Latin. If, at the end of two 1 years' work, the pupil has acquired this, together with
the fundamentals of Latin grammar, he will have spent his time to some purpose, and will be in a position to begin the study ol
a classical author and of the more difficult parts of the grammar with some hope of a happy issue. Or if, on the other hand, he drops the study of Latin at this point, he will still have acquired a working knowledge of the language up to a certain level. This is an aspect of the matter on which I desire to lay some stress.
There are
many
schools, or
modern
sides of schools, in
which
only a limited amount of time can be devoted to Latin ; and the problem is how can that time be spent so as to produce the most profitable result. It is my hope that the present book may contribute to the solution of this problem.
It is
not
my
intention
that
Some
of
f ) are unnecessary from the purely they exist for the purpose of carry;
ing on the story and providing material for rapid reading and where time presses they may be translated by the teacher to
the class. The exercises and conversations are intended to be used as the needs of particular classes may demand. For translation into Latin alternative passages are given, from which the teacher may select what best suits his purpose. Some
of them may be worked on paper, some viva voce, some may be omitted altogether. I have thought it better to give too much rather than too little. One of my young friends who was learning from this book made a criticism of it which will probably pass through the minds of other readers. " The Romans," he said, "knew nothing Exactly but it is possible that the best of South Africa."
;
' It is intended that Ora Maritima and Pro Patria shall jne year each.
occupy
Vm
way
to learn
PREFACE
an ancient language
is
to
study
it
as written at the
is
present
familiar
This
is,
of course,
but there are only a means to an end better attained indirectly than directly.
1
many
teaching,
have ventured on some novelties in the realm of grammar among which the use of the term Injunctive,' side
'
'
by side with Subjunctive,' calls for a word of explanation. The new term expresses the fundamental idea of what is comit is the mood of desire, monly called the Subjunctive Mood and should be introduced to the pupil in the first instance in connexion with sentences like God save the King.' ' For such meanings the term Subjunctive is quite inappropriate, and a
' '
'
it comes in, however, so soon as the a subordinate clause. And if the pupil subsequently abandons the term Injunctive altogether, it will nevertheless have served its purpose in introducing him to a right conception of the mood a conception which will serve him in good stead afterwards. My best thanks are due to Dr. J. E. Sandys, Public Orator in the University of Cambridge, for permission to quote some verses which originally appeared in his Latin speeches to the
mood appears
in
University,^
and
my
proof
Note to the New Issue. No changes have been made in the present issue, with the exception of the correction of a few misprints and the addition of a Summary of Grammatical Rules
(pp. 182
* 2
ff.)
See Preparations, 48, 49, 50. These are acknowledged in their places in the " Preparations."
Contents
PAGE
I.
Mensis September.
Britannia Libkrata.
ea, id
I.
is,
2.
is,
Singular
Number
III.
3, 4.
IV.
5. 6.
eius
ipse,
V.
Boadicea.
W. illud
7-9-
*'',
9
13
VI.
Britannia Pacata.
''*<',
10-13.
haec, hoc
VII.
Pax Romana.
15 15
;
14.
Comparatives of Adjectives
Superlatives of Adjectives Passive Voice of ist 17.
15. 16,
Present, Past
17
VIII. Castellum Rutupinum. Questions and Exclamations 18. qui, quae, quod and quis, quid 19.
;
^in
questions
...
.
.
20 20
21
qui, quae, quod in clauses which are not questions 20, 21. Present, Past Imperf. and Future, 2nd Conjugation 22.
23.
24
24
26
IX.
24-26.
27.
ANGti et Saxones. 2nd Conjugation Perfect Stem, Active Perfect, Pluperfect and Future Perfect Passive
;
28-30.
....
;
.... how
.
ex-
.28
29
31
X.
31.
Res Africanae.
32.
...
33
CONTENTS
PAGE
XI.
33-35-
...
.
.
33
XII.
Initium Belli. 3rd Conjugation Future, Active and Passive 3rd Conj. Perfect Stems Active formed with s 3rd Conj. Perfect Stems Active formed without any
; . ;
36
37 37 38
suffix
3rd Conj.
Perfect,
Pluperfect
and Fut.
Perf. Passive
MiLITES Reginae.
Conj. Conj. Conj.
; ; ;
Present, Active and Passive Past Imperfect and Future, Active and Passive Perfect Stem Active
39
40 40
XIV.
43.
Verbs in
with Infinitive in
ere
XV.
44-47.
Victoriae et Clades Britannicae. Same verbs continued, with Perfect Stems Active
42
XVI.
48.
49.
46 46
XVII.
50.
Present Subjunctive of
ist
Conj
47
XVIII.
51. 52.
Adamantopolis Obsidione Liberata. Pres. Sub], of sum and ist Conj. continued Present Injunctive and Subjunctive of the otherConjuga-
...
49
50
tions
XIX.
Dies Maiuben.sis.
53.
54.
55-
Past Imperfect Subjunctive of sum Past Imperfect Subj. of the four Conjugations
....
.
.50
,
52
XX.
Pax Britannica.
56.
Recapitulation
.
.
....
Preparations Exercises and Conversaiiq.ns God Save the King in Latin (Arranged Latin-English Vocabulary English-Latin Vocabulary Summary of Grammatical Rules
.
... ...
for
.
.
Smgiug)
.176
, , .
PRO PATRIA
^
P
A^" ^'
VKO^*
BRITANNIA
in
^
\j
ROMANA
Milid
PassiAum
tSegedunum
"
'HjuguKoUiiim.
Mil
^
EbjHocum
\
Oeva
I'^Oc
AV
C
t N
Camulodunu'
Vemlamiuni,
T',
vCdllevA
\/J
DuTDveTnuni
Vent&
Andeiidd
Victls
I,
GKavt^^
n^y;^^
hwJJBWAiij
^cj:
ANNO MDCCCXCIX.
I.
Mensis September.
is, .]
I. Kalendae sunt hodie Septembres. Primus i mensis feriarum elapsus est, et scholae instant. Nam ante finem mensis Septembris apud magistrum a meum ero. Et per ultimam partem feriarum necesse est libris duas horas cotidie dare. Sic imperat patruus meus. Mane igitur plerimaque lectito. Patruus autem mihi librum Taciti de vita Agricolae, ducis i Celebris Romanorum, dedit. Mu],ta insunt de Britannia nostra antiqua. Vita Agricolae multum me delectat. Nonnullis tamen in locis dif&cilis est et obscura. Sed animo alacri lectito, quia patruus meus h difficilia, et obscura explicat, et tabulis pictis
armorum, nummorum, viarum iUustrat. Ubi aliquid in Vita Agrrcolae deest, ibi patruut meus capita ex Annaiib'us Taciti vel ex Historia Anglica recitat. Amici mei, Marcus etJUexander, Narn saepe nos interdum adsunt dum recitat. Post prandium plerumque ambulamus, visitant. vel ludo trigonali operam damns, vel in mari
aedificiorum,
'
natamus.
4
II.
[is,
PRO PATRIA
Britannia Liberata.
ea, id.
Singular
Number.]
2. Gaius lulius Caesar, postquam copias suas pedestres et equestres.ex Britannia in Galliam trans-
Ab
8 '
victoriam reportaverat, ad flumen Tamesam penetraverat, oppidum Cassivellauni expugnaverat, magnum numerum captivorum in servitutem venumdederat, tributum Britannis imperaverat. Id ei satis erat. Sed
^0
"
magna fuerat. Tacitus eum non magnam victoriam reportavisse in capita tertio decimo Vitae " Divus lulius " inquit " BriAgricolae af&rmat. tanniam Romanis monstravit, sed non debellavit." Britanni autem viri animo forti erant. Tributum et servitutem non tolerabant. Et Romanis post
eius
16
tempora
tanniae.
eius belli
C.
lulii
Nam
per multos
annos
ticum civitatem
19 20
Romanam
erat.
vexavit.
22
intraverunt
cogitavit.
PRO PATRIA
III.
[et, eae,
Cunobelinus.
ea
Plural
Number.]
3.
Itaque
per
centum
fere
eorum regum erat Cunobelinus. Is revera "Britannorum rex" erat sic eum Suetonius, scriptor Romanus, nominat. Nam quamquam non omnes gentses Britartnicae ei subiectae erant, tamen magnam partem gentium Britanniae mediterraneae et ^ meridianae in unum regnum consociaverat. Caput ear^im gentium Camulodunum erat. Exstant
:
Romani Britannos
vexaverunt.
1
10
in eis nomen regis vel n Cunobelini litteras nonnullas eius nominis lectitare possumus 12
hodie
nummi
exstant quoiue
fratris
eius
;
regnavit
patris eius Tasciovani et Cunobelinus multos annos eo fere tempore rex Britannorum erat
nummi
13
Epaticci.
is
eum
et
Tiberius
et
Caligula
erant. Ei
17
natus erat morti datus erat Tiberius iniperitabat, ut Tacitus in capite quarto et quadragesimo libri quinti decimi Annalium commemorat. Inter filios Cunobelini erant CaracChristus
:
Romano
19
20
dum dum
23
tacus et Togodumnus.
O
I
PRO PATRIA
1 4- Is rex magnus et bonus erat, atque defensor acer libertatis Britannicae. Sed Romani tantum
regem
B 8
tolerare
non
poterant.
Itaque
de
nova
Poetae
insnlam nostram et incolas " Horatius eos " feros " " " " " remotos et intactos (id est non debelet
eius
Romani
aetatis
eius saepe
commemorant.
nominat : Vergilius eos " toto " (id est " separatos ") vocat. orbe terrarum divisos
Mare eos ab
II
aliis
Pro
in
bello
axis
et focis suis
contra
14
Romanos magna
hostibus
Romanorum
tolerabant.
subministraverant.
Itaque
Romani
liber tatem
eorum non
NUMMUS AUGUSTI
(CAPUT AUGUSTI)
(FIGURA SPHINGIS)
PRO PATRIA
IV. Caractacus.*
[eius
and
SMs, a,
um
contrasted.]
f 5. Post mortem Cunobelini, Claudius, quartus princeps Romanorum, expeditionem contra Bri-
Consilium eius erat totam Bri- 3 tanniam debellare et cum imperio Romano consociare. Itaque anno tertio et quadragesimo uni ex ducibus suis, Aulo Plautio, magnum numerum copiarum pedestrium et equestrium mandavit. Eae meridianam partem insulae nostrae facile a occupaverunt. Oppidum Camiflodunum expugna- verunt, ubi Romani post paucos annos coloniam veteranorum collocaverunt. Ea prima urbs Romana
Propter victoriam a Britannis Romanus filio suo nomen 13 Britannico dedit. Filius eius priore anno natus " erat. Sed Britanni nondum debellati erant. In silvas montesque Cambriae se occultaverunt, ubi is duae gentes bellicosae, Ordovices et Silures, per septem annos contra Romanos fortiter bellaverunt. Copiis Britannicis Caractacus, filius Cunobelini, 19 Nomen eius per totam Britanniam celebre 20 praeerat. Non facile erat eas gentes Cambriae debeUare. erat. Reliquiae castrorum Romanorum Viroconii, Devae, 22 Iscae hodie exstant. Sed legiones Romanae tandem victrices fuerunt, et Silures Ordovicesque magno proelio superaverunt. Deinde ducem eorum audacem 25 2e et insignem Romam captivum deportaverunt.
in Britannia fuit.
tannos paravit.
reportatam
princeps
* Tacitus
vocat.
WikJ
PRO PATRIA
[ipse,
ipsa, ipsum.']
6.
Nomen
erat
;
Caractaci
celebre
nam
novem annos
cTupidi'
retardaverat.
omnes homines
erant regem Britannorum ipsum spectaridi. Itaque Claudius populum ad grande spectaculum
convpcavit.^ 'Magna
multitude
captivorum
Bri-
tannicorurn
busque eius in catenis aderant. Tum ceteri captivi veniam principis imploraverunt. Sed Caractacus ipse animum audacem et vere Britannicum praestitit^ Ante oculos principis ipsius collocatus " Rex sum "
fuerunt mihi arma. Non mirum est si contra vos ROmanos pro libertate pugnavi. Vos toti orbi terrarmn imperitandi cupidi estis sed nobis Britannis non mos est servitutem tolerare. Morteni non formido." Tum princeps propter admirationem tantae. audaciae veniam libertatemque Cairactaco
:
viri,
ipsi et
in
capite
uxori fratribusque eius dedit. Sic Tacitus septimo et tricesimo libri duodecimi
narrat.
Annalium
V. Boadicea.*
[ilk, ilia, illud.]
7. Anno post Christum natum primo et sexagesimo Britanni rebellaverunt. Suetonius Paulinus, unus ex ducibus Neronia, quiijti principis Romanorum, Britanniae tum praeerat. Ille in Monam
numerum
JDruid-
10
PRO PATRIA
trucidavit, et fana
arum
7
eorum
vastavit.
Sed
dum
ille
in
Cambria
abest, Iceni
cum
Cassis et Trinoban-
Romanes
coloniam
consociant.
10
Non mirum
est si Britanni
illam
Camulodunum, ubi veterani illi Romani Nam veterani eos collocati erant, non amabant.
omnibus iniuriis vexabant. Uxores liberosque Viros ipsos eorum in servitutem deportabant. ignavos et servos vocabant. Oppidum iam viis et aedificiis Romanis ornaverant, sed muris non firma" verant. Inter ilia aedificia templum " Divi Claudii
erat
;
16
nam
principem
18
adorabant.
Et
in Hlo templo
collocatum erat. 8. Itaque Boadicea, regina ilia audax Icencrum, inter ordines Britannicos in essedo suo equitans, " AusculBritannos suos ad rebeUionem incitavit.
tate " inquit " Iceni et Cassi
;
auscultate Coritani,
11
Di nostri nobis victoriam, iHis cladem mortemque parant Ecce, colonia Camulodunum defensoribus nudata est Copiae Romanae in finibus Ordovicum lon^e absunt, ubi fana Druidarum Coloniam iUam, ubi pauci tantum veterani vastant. cum uxoribus liberisque suis habitant, facile erit expugnare. lUos nulla patria ad virtutem incitat nos patria et penates, nos libertas ad arma vocat.
Trinobantes
! ! !
'
Atque u erunt.
di ipsi nobis
omen
Nam
verunt.
17
adhuc ignotae Britannis aliquando subiectae erunt. Ubi Caesares numquam steterunt, ibi filii nostri vel filii filiorum imperitabunt. Vos coloniam illam
Pi:0
PATRIA
II
dei
illius
!
crudelem cremate
!
expugnate
Templum
falsi
20
2"
Illud
fortes
Num
vos
viri
minus
"
Coloniam Camuillud
Claudii, ubi
veterani
se
occulta verant,
insula
cremant.
Interea
Suetonius
ex
milibus
adTamesam properavit. Nam Londinium, quamquam nondum colonia Romana erat, tamen iam tum copia mercatorum et navigiorum celebre
virorum
erat.
clade
servare
non
poterat.
Britanni
13
et
12
<3
PRO PATRIA
Verulamrum
oppugnant,
septuaginta
milia,
Romanprum
trucidant, ingentem
praedam
captant.,
18
22 23
Suetonius suos prope silvam collocaverat, et se ad proelium parabat. Britanni Romanes numero virorum multum superabant, et exspectatione victoriae triumphabant. Sed pauci illi Romani magnam victoriam reportaverunt Britanni contra legiones Romanas stare non poterant, quia Romani eos pondere armorum et scientia belli multum superabant. In illo proelio Romani octoginta milia virorum et feminarum trucidaverunt nam Britanni feminas suas in vehiculis apportaverant, proelii spectandi causa. Boadicea ipsa se morti dedit.
; ;
VI.
Britannia pacata.
[Mc, haec, hoc.}
ID.
Hie
fuit
finis
rebellionis
Boadiceae.
Sed
Nam
Totam
ut Tacitus
victoriam
6
Romanorum adhuc
pacare
consilium
retardabant.
insulam
principis
erat
Vespasiani,
Romanorum.
Itaque
anno
noni duodeocto-
10
11
,
gesimo post Christum natum lulio Agricolae summum imperium legionum Britannicarum mandavit. Huius viri clari vitam Tacitus narravit. Uxor
Taciti
filia
Agricolae erat.
et
:
magnopere amabat,
pulchro
consecravit
monumentum
de vita eius. Vir iustus, humanus, clemens si testimonium Taciti verum est.
PRO PATRIA
,
13
II.
magnam
afl&rmat.
Hanc gentem
vera
Tacitus
Tum
;
Naves ei deerant sed sub" signis Romanis nonnullae cohortes Batavorum militabant. Hi periti erant natandi, et trans fretum nataverunt. Tertio anno Agricola contra Brigantes aliasque
occupavit.
gentes
septentrionales
Britanniae bellavit.
Sexto
10
11
timam Caledoniae
in
explorat, ipse
usque ad Clotam et Bodotriam Totam regionem castellis firmat. Sed penetrat. Caledonii trans Clotarn et Bodotriam, velut in alteram insulam, se congregant. Proximo anno
Caledoniara
Romani
Ibi,
prope Montem Graupiuin, dux Caledonius, Galgacus vel Calgacus nomine, suos ad proelium
his verbis incitat.
12.
^
20
causa libertatis Nobis Caledonibus perpetuae toti Britanniae erit. Hi montes, hae silvae, servitus adhuc ignota est; haec maria nobis libertatem dederunt. Sed nunc in hunc angulum remotum Britanniae Romani nee penetraverunt. Adsunt, velut lupi saevi Oriens nee Occidens eos satiavit. Ne mare quidem
ut
spero,
;
"
Haec pugna,
2 3 *
b
nostrum a periculo classis. Romanae tutum est. Terra marique hanc insulam oppugnant. Itaque nullam veniam exspectate, si illi in hoc proelio vicuxores Vos ipsos et reportaverint. toriam
liberosque vestros
12
"
14
13
PRO PATRIA
IB
deportabunt; et cum totam terram vastaverint, * solitudinem pacem vocabunt. Sed nondum pacata Iceni et Trinobantes Coloniam est haec Caledonia. Romanam expugnaverunt et cremaverunt. Femina
'
dux
erat.
Num
vos, viri
Caledonii,
minus
fortes
eritis ?
Hodie
pacem
a vobis ipsis et uxoribus liberisque Patria ipsa vos ad pugnam et vestris propulsate. victoriam vocat t 13- Interea Agricola quoque suos in hunc " Hie Septimus modum ad prodium incitat.
illam
!
Romanam
lavistis.
6
mUites, postquam Ordovices SebelHodie a Caledonibus victoriam reportate. Hi se in sUvis montibusque suis adhuc occultaverunt hos, homines ignavos, facile in fugam dabitis." Et signum pugnandi dedit. Tres legiones Romanae et undecim milia auxiliorum in
est
annus,
campo
lato stabant
Primo Caledones missilia Romanorum vitabant. Et ipsi multa missilia in Romanos iactabant. Sed tandem cohortes illae Batavorum ad coUes appropinquaverunt, et Caledones ex lo'co u propulsaverunt. Nam hi iustum proelium tolerare non poterant. Interea equites auxiliorum eos velut indagine circumdederant. Decem mUia trucidaverunt vulneraverunt. NonnuUi vel ex
caverant.
18
Caledonibus uxores liberosque suos ipsi morti dederunt. Nox finis iuit trucidationis. Postridie atrox spectaculum erat corpora inhumata, casae crematae, silentium, solitudo.
:
PRO PATRIA
VII. Pix Rotnana.
[Comparatives of Adjectives.]
14.
15
Postquam
:
hoc
caput
in
vita
Agricolae
" Haec narrat Taci" sed si testimonium eius verum tus ipse " inquit est, nullus victor Romanus humanior, nullus clementior fuit quam lulius Agricola. Nulla autem
lectitavimus, patruus
meus
4 b
provincia
turbulentior
fuerat
et
quam
Britannia.
et
Nulli hostes
fuerant
in hostes
fortiores,
nulli audaciores
Caledones
gentes
Quis ex omnibus Romanis se iustiorem debeUatos praestitit, quis clementiorem, quis minus saevum et crudelem, quam Agricola ? Sed quid inhumanius, quid saevius est quam
Cambriae.
12 is
beUum
Atque nulli hostes in bello crudeliores fuerunt quam Romani. Nihil minus clemens erat
?
quam
hostes
Nam
quam
servitus.
Omnibus hominibus
libertas carior est
quam vita. Atque nulli homines unquam acriores defensores libertatis suae fuerunt quam Britanni. Nihil pulchrius existimabant quam libertatem, nihil miserius quam servitutem."
[Superlatives of Adjectives.]
20
21
saeva et inhumana sunt. saevissima et inhumanissima fuerunt bella ilia temporibus antiquis pugnata. barbaras Romani contra gentes hostes crudelissimi plerumque fuerunt. Sed quid utilius fuit toti orbi terrarum quam imperium Romanum ? Et imperio Romano nullum mains periculum erat
bella
'
PRO PATRIA
17
ilia
quam rebelliones populorum barbarorum. Pax Romana etiam populis subiectis utilissima
Homines
feros
inhumanos a studio bellandi ad vitam humaniorerri et ad litteras, artes, scientias revocavit. Romani Britanniam viis optifuit.
et
'
12
mis et aedificiis pulcherrimis celeberrimisque, templis, basilicis, foris, villis, ludis litterariis, omaverunt. In ludis litterariis filii principum Britannicorum linguae Latinae operam dabant. Itaque Britanni iram iniuriasque suas paulatim oblivioni dabant. Libertatis suae defensores fortissimi et acerrimi Sed tributum Romantim tolerabant, si fuerant. Multae hodie exstant in Briiniuriae aberant. tannia reliquiae aedificiorum illorum Romanorum. CaUevae Atrebatum reliquias pulcherrimas basilicae, templi, amphitheatri, balneeirum, murorunj fori, spectavi; et in insula Vecti exstant pavimenta, primo saeculo post tessellata villae Romanae, Christum natum aedificatae. Sed iam ante tempora Agricolae nonnullae ex gentibus Britannicis medioIncolas Cantii Caesar in criter humanae fuerant. omnium Britannorum libro quinto Belli Gal^ici
'
13
is
22
21
a?
humanissimos
[Passive
'
vocat."
ist
Voice
of
Conjugation
FutiiieJ
Present,
Past Imperf.,
16. Medius erat mensis September cum patruus meus haec de Britannia Romana explicavit. Mar-
nam pridie Dubris adventaverant et apud nos pernoctaverant. Et patruo meo necesse erat eis de rebellione Galgaci et
cus et Alexander turn aderant
:
,
Caledonum narrare. Nam historia patriae suae magnopere delectantur. Turn ille " Nonne recte "
'.
PAVlMEmVM-TESSELLATVM-VILLAEROIWM
1N-IN5VLA-VECTI-51TAE
PRO PATRIA
inquit
aliis
19
10
" Agricola a Tacito laudatur ? Nam ab imperatoribus Romanis oppida expugnabantur, agri vastabantur, nationes barbarae debellabantur ; sed Agricola Britannos non solum debeUavit sed
etiam ad vitam humaniorem revocavit." Et Alexander " Magnopere delector " inquit " si victor iustus et clemens fuit. Sed num hie vir omnia ilia
aedificia
13
Romana
per
aedificavit
"
Et
ille
" Briis i?
tannia
ornabatxir.
aetatis sunt."
Num filii principum Britannicorum studio linguae Latinae delectabantur ? " inquit, Et iUe " Filii Britannorum antiquorum animo acri et impigro erant linguae Latinae
17.
Tum
Marcus
"
libenter
operam dabant.
pueros.
ad studia litterarum affirmabat quam GaUorum Et Martialis, poeta Romanus iUius aetatis, Britannos carmina sua cantavisse affirmat. Vos hodierni pila et foUe delectamini." Et ego
"
ipse,
Nonne tu delectaris ? Magna est scientia 11 certaminibus captare." Et iUe " Aduledextralaevaque pilam " " " scientia satis delectabar inquit iUa scentulus
10
;
non delectabor." Nos " patruus mens ludo trigonali Nam cachinnamus. mi patrue, huius ludi delectatur. Tu, magnopere
cum senex
fuero,
fortasse
peritissimus es
Nee tibi mobilitas minor est, si forte volantem Aut geminare pilam iuvat aut revocare cadentem
18 18 20
Mutato nomine de
i?0
PRO PATRIA
Vril. Castellum
Rutupinum.
t i8. Postridie inter ientaculum amita mea "our "Caelum hodie serenissimum est" inquit non Rutupias hodie ambulatis ? " Et ego " Cur
',
latis ?
non tu quoque, amita, et Lydia nobiscum ambu" "Nimis, longa est via" inquit. Sed patruus meus " Vehiculo commeare potestis. Quota hora nunc eat ? " Et ilia " Npndum tertia hora est." Tum ille " Quinta hoVa in viam vos date:
ante nos Rutupias adventabitis. Cum ruinas castelli spectayefimus, omnes in vehiculo una domum propefabimus." Turn Lydia " Quantopere delectabor
si
ruinas
!
Castelli
Rutupini
aliquando
spectare
Et amitae meae propositum gratissiH mum erat. " Sed nonne melius erit " inquit " in castello cenare ? Nam sic non necesse erit domum 18 festinare." Tum nos pueri exclamavimus " Euge post dptime prandium nobiscuni portabimus prandium ruinas casteUi visitabimus. Deinde in y casteUo cenabimus. Sic erit " Et amita mea " Quando in viam vos dabitis ? " inquit. Et nos 20 " Statim sine mora " inquimus.
potero
"
[qui, quae,
quod and
quis, quid
in
questions.]
2 3
I
viam Marcus patruum meum de vica Caledonibus reportata interrogavit. Marcus. Quis fuit iUe Galgacus ? Num rex antiquus Scotorum fuit ? Patruus meus. NuUi Scoti eo tempore in Caledonia erant. Nondum in Caledoniam migraig. Inter
toria Ula
verant.
PRO PATRIA
f.---Quid
(Jbniae,
si
21
ipcolarum
'
!
igitur
erat'
nomefi a
Cale-
^
aliisque
Pictis
gentibus Caledoniis habitabatur. M. Qui erant Picti ? P. Difficilis est quaestio. De origine Pictorum viri dpcti disputant.
"''
12!
,-,
M.^Quo
vepint
'P?
15
>
M.Qua
P.
Ex
is
ilf>r-Quem
^uisse affirmant
igitur
?
primum
regem.;'Scotorum
21
'
P.-^Eergus primus rex Scotorum nominatur. Cuu^ partis Caledoniae rex fuit ? P. Part^ meridianae. M. Itaque, Galgacus fortasse Pictus fuit. P. Fortasse"; sed nihil de eo notum est.
M-
24
[qui, quae,
quod-^n
>
20.
Turn Alexander""
inquit
:
" ut'
spero,
nunquam
subiecta
Romanis
nam
maiores mei ex Caledonia oriundi sunt." Nos cachinnamus. Et patruus mens " Caledones per quattuor iUa saecula saepe rebeUaverunt, et Romanes beUo vexaverunt. Itaque necesse fuit Hadriano, qui secundo saeculo post Christum natum princeps Romanorum fuit,, magnum iUud vaJQum inter
,
LuguvaUium
aedificare
;
et
Pontem Aelium
vel
Segedunum Et
10
mLLVM-HADRlANl
"
PRO PATRIA
23
11
Antoninus Pius, qui post eum princeps fuit, alterum vallum in ipsa Caledonia inter Clotam et Bodotriam aedificavit cui nomen hodiernum est Graham^ s Dyke. Initio tertii saeculi Septimius Severus, quem Romani paucis annis ante principem creaverant, maximam expeditionem contra Caledones comparavit postea autem ipse aegrotavit et Eburaci exspiravit. Quo anno quinquaginta milia Romanorum a Caledonibus. trucidata fuisse narrantur." Tum Alexander exclamat " Euge, optima 1 O si sic
: ;
13
14
ib
17 is
20
omnes
patruus meus " Tune, Alexander " Et iUe " Scotus sum " inquit. ? " " Et patruus meus Sed non Celtica origine es nam
f 21. Et
3 4
nomen tuum
et Scoti
illi
et fratris tui
Germanicum
est.
Picti,
qui in Caledoniam migraverunt Celtae erant." Et iUe " Nonne toti insulae nostrae nomen Nonne omnes Britanni sumus ? " est Britanniae ? " Et patruus meus Ita est " inquit ; " nomen Bri-
tanniae a Britannis oriundum est. Sed nos ipsi ex multis et diversis nationibus oriundi sumus. Maxima pars Anglorum et Scotorum hodiernorum Ger" manica origine sunt." Tum ego " Parentes mei " inquam Celtica origine sunt ; nam nomen nostrum Celticum est." Sed patiuus meus " Tu, Antoni, in a
Africa Meridiana natus es itaque Africanus es Et ego " Africa Meridiana pars imperii Britannici Et ille " Ita est " est ; itaque Britannus sum."
;
!
"
inquit
2^4
PRO PATRIA
, !
[Second Conjugation
:
-Present,
7 8
fc 10 11
Sed iam prope finein ambulationis nostrae efamus, cum Alexander " Ecce, Rutupias video " inquit. Et castellum noh procul abefat. Amita iiiea et Lydia, quae ante nos adventaverant, ciim- nos vident, "Salvete!" inquiunt "gaudemus quod ad tempus adestis. Sed nohne fatigati estis i"' Et" patruus meiis sic fespondefc: " Bene nos -habemus. Sed nos non pigebit hie paulum sedere et prandio nos recreaife. Hinp castellum in oculis habebimus.. Videtisne ruinas ? Ut aetas omnia delet !'"; lUae22.
!
rident
nam
revera
fatigati
eramus.
Castellum
Eutupinum, tertio saeculo a Romanis aedificatum, in promunturio litoris situm est. Hodie procul a
ihari
iacet sed temporibus Romanorum totus campus, qui nunc inter casteUum et oram maritimam iacet, pars maris erat. Post prandium ad casteUum ipsum ambulavimus. Ruinae praeclarae sunt. Pars
;
murorum
19
lateribus
spectat quadringentos quadraginta pedes longus est, viginti vel triginta pedes altus. Sed quondam
22
nam fundamenta
In angulis
murorum
fundamenta turrium
vides.
23.
Temporibus
antiquis
portus
celeter
;
hie
2 3
i
erat, cui
Rutupino naves ex GaUia in Britanniam navigantes ad hunc portum plerumque applicabantur. Nam omnium portuum Britannicorum hie optimus erat. Castellum in
erat Portui
npmen
26
6
PRO PATRIA
litore
portus stabat. Intra muros castelli est area In media area fundamentum aedificii antiqui Hodie Crux vides, quod formam crucis habet. Sancti Augustini vocatur, sed temporibus Romanis
lata.
'
'
12
13
fundamentum phari erat, ut custos castelli affirmavit. Sub hac cruce est aedificium subterraneum, quattuor quod intravimus. et quadraginta passus longum
;
18
17
tenebamus, quos custos dederat obscurus erat. Ab hoc aedificio cuniculus, nam locus in formam quadratam excavatus, sub magnam partem areae pertinet. Dum per cuniculum ambu" lamus, amita mea " Cui erat usui hie "cuniculus ? inquit. Et custos sic respondet " Piget me quod
Cereos in
:
manu
19
20
21
de usu cuniculi nihil affirmare possum. Usui fortasse ecce puteus altus, ex erat, si castellum obsidebatur
:
23
quo aqua praeberi poterat." Postquam haec spectavimus, iterum circum muros ambulavimus, Dum ad dextrum cornu casteUi stamus, patruus meus
nobis reliquias a,mphitheatri
aberat.
morum Romanorum in casteUo servantur ex quibus unum niihi custos venumdedit. Tum custodem
28
valere iubemus, et ad
cenam properamus.
Perfect
Stem, Active.]
24. Inter cenam nos pueri " Quis hoc castellum delevit ? " inquimus. Et patruus meus " De for-
tuna casteUi
muros
B
delevit.
nomen
hie
:
Cuius
Aqua
haerebat
nihil
habuimus respondere.
Et amita
PRO PATRIA
27
?
tenetis
"
iuquit.
Turn
Lydia, quae librum de historia Anglica in manibus nuper habuerat, " Angli et Saxones " inquit " in
hunc angulum Cantii cur sum tenuerunt." Et ille 10 " Verum est " inquit- " nam anno quadringentesimo quadragesimo nono Herigistus et Horsa ad insulam Tanatim, quae turn revera insula erat, naves suas 13 applicaverunt. Locus ipse duo tantum vel tria milia passuum a castello Rutupino iacet." Turn is ilia " Nonne ab angulo Cantii Angli nomen suum habuerunt ? " Nos pueri risimus. Sed amita mea " " Sic nuper affirmavit vir doctus. Atque nomen ipsum Cantii nihil aliud significat quam promunturium vel angulum." Tum patruus mens " Sed Tacitus populum Germaniae Inferioris commemorat pars Sueborum qui nomen habebat Anglorum erant." Et Lydia " Fortasse in angulo Germaniae habitabant " inquit. Et ille " In paeninsula Cimet duo Ola brica revera habitavisse af&rmantur verba angulus et Cantium Germanica sunt." ^e " Sed de Hengisto et Horsa " inquit f 25. " non cogitabam cum interrogavi. Quis alius vir
; ; ;
'
'
'
'
honore habetur ? " Aqua nos nihil respondimus. Sed iUe iterum haesit " Abhinc annos duos saecula tredecim fuerant, 6 ex quo Sanctus Augustinus, nuntius verbi divini, e cum parva manu ministrorum fidorum hue cursum Nam anno quingentesinio nonagesimo septenuit. timo post Christum natum Gregorius Primus, pontifex Romanus, Augustinum notitiam Dei veri in Anglia docere iusserat. Itaque Augustinus ex Gallia n in Britanniam navigavit, et navem suam ad insulam
clarus
hie
praecipuo
:
; ;
28
Tanatim
PRO PATRIA
applicavit.
Eo tempore
Aedilberctus rex
Cantii erat,
16 17
1
tam, habebat, filiam regis Francorum. Itaque rex Christianis benignus fuit, atque Duroverni, in capite
regni sui, eis
domum
praebuit."
:
dum in clivo
Sed antequam rex sermonem cum eis gramineo sedebant, unde urbem
poterant.
Vel, ut non-
10
ad ipsos Rutupini navem suam applicaverant, et per fenestram castelli cum rege sermonem habuerunt. Nam eo tempore aqua portus Rutupini usque ad muros castelli pertinebat. Rex Christieuiis Pulchra sunt in hunc modum respondisse narratur. verba et proMissa vestra ; sed nova sunt et incerta nee deos antiques, quos per multos annos ego et populus meus adoravimus, ohlivioni dare possumus. Sed, quia ex terra peregrina hue cursum tenuistis, et in animo
affirmant,
Christiani
muros
Castelli
non pro-
meo manere
et
docere. Itaque domum vobis Duroverni praebebo. basilicam Sancti Martini eis dedit."
[Perfect, Pluperfect
Et
^how expressed.]
;
Turn nos " Christiani igitur fuerant in " Britannia iam ante adventum Sancti Augustini ? " inquimus. Et ille Fuerant " inquit "nambasUicae a Christianis Britannicis iam temporibus Romanis
27.
5 6
erant, quarum reliquias vos Dubris ego Callevae vidi. Post principatum Neronis multi Christiani in imperio Romano fuerunt nam anno primo et sexngesimo post Christum natum
aedificatae
vidistis
et
PRO PATRIA
29
Sanctus Paulus Romam captivus deportatus est. Et uxor illius Auli Plautii, qui iam aetate principis Claudii Britanniae praefuit, Christiana fuisse exis.timatur.
est.
Nam
'
guperstitionis peregrinae
'
accusata
12
13
Nomeu
ei.fuit
Pomponiae Graecinae.
Sed
Angli et SaxoneS, qui multos deos adorabant, basilicas ChristiaiiaS plerumque deleverant. Basilica
ts
non
17
Durovernum
igitur intraverunt
19 20
sacrum cantantes
tua sancta remove,
et
a domo
alleluia J
Et amita mea,: " Cur non iUud in memoriam revocas, quod animum pontificis illius Gregorii misericordia Anglorum commoverat ? Nam multis
28.
3
4 6
Romano quondam
pulchra,
oculis
fuit,
cum
:
pueros
nonnuUos
facie
caeruleis,
Misericordia
in
commotus
est
Itaque
s
quorum
manu
"Quae est patria eorum ? " inquit. Et rogavit mercatores " Ex Anglia sunt " inquiunt, " cuius Jum Gregorius " Num ,n incolae huius faciei sunt." " " Non sunt " inquiunt. Et iUe Christiani sunt ? " "Heu!" inquit; quam pulchra est facies eorum w quos Rex Tenebrarum ministros habet " Deinde 14 " Quid est npmen gentis eorum ? " alia interrogavit
!
inquit.
" Recte
Responderunt eos esse Anglos. Et ille " inquit; " namangelicam faciem habent
:
le
i
30
18
PRO PATRIA
22
26
eos vocari oportet. Sed quid est nomen illius partis Angliae in qua habitabant ? " " Deira vocatur, quae pars Northumbriae est" inquiunt. Sed ille "Recte!" inquit; "nam da ira Dei ad fidem revocandi sunt." Postremo " Quis est rex illius partis Angliae ? " inquit. " Aella vocatur " inquiunt. Turn " Alleluia !" inquit "nam dies adventat cum carmen omnium carminum optimum in Anglia cantabitur " t 29. Sed finis diei illius belli iam adventabat,
; !
domum properare. Intra semihoram vehiculum paratum erat, et in viam nos dedimus. Dum in vehiculo sedebamus, muros castelli luna
et necesse erat
Pulchrum
erat specta-
eramus. Nos pueri longo die " Non pigebit vos " fatigati et semisomni eramus. inquit amita mea " ad lectum properare." Ea nocte Marcus et Alexander apud nos, manserunt. Postridie Dubras redambulaverunt. t 30- Hodie iam quinque dies post Idus Septembres elapsi sunt, et dies ille ater appropinquat qui ultimus ferianmi erit. Omnium dierum ille tristissimus est qui finis est feriarum. Nam triste
culum.
Mox domi
est
verbum
'
vale,'
cum
scholae
instatit.
Intra
instat
feriati,
Ille
Et qui
12
festus erit,
mane
profestas erat.
Nam
pila,
follis,
trigon.
PRO PATRIA
31
Res Africanae.
[Recapitulation of Verbs.]
Apud f 31. Kalendae sunt hodie Octobres. magistrum meum iam septem dies sum. Qui, cum me vidit, " Salve " inquit " ut vales ? Fueruntne Et ego " Satis recte " tibi feriae prosperae ? " " ille Ubi fuisti per ferias ? " inquam. Et "In " patruum apud meum, qui Cantio fui " inquam
;
2 s
te salvere iubet."
ferias vidisti
?
"
"
" vidi
"
" Recte " inquit " num ostreas iUic natas gusta" " " sed gustavimus " inquam Nullas vistis ? " " Quia temporibus antiquis interrogas ? cur ostreae Rutupiaae praeclarae fuerunt " inquit. Et ego ridens " Piget me " inquam " quod mihi ante hunc diem nihil de re notum fuit." Tum Ule " Num pater tuus " inquit " tibi ex Africa Meridiana " Non dedit " inquam. Et litteras nuper dedit ? " " inquit " inter Ministrum " discordia est Magna Ule
;
10
11
ts
t7
is
nostrum qui Coloniis praeest et Patruum Paulum, ut vocatur, cui cognomen est Kniger is praefectus est Reipublicae Africanae Batavorum."
:
c_;
PRO PATRIA
Third Conjugation^Present, Active and Passive.]
32. Turn, ego
33
" Quae est causa, quaeso, discordiae ? Et ille " Longum est dicere. Sed inter Britannos et colonos Batavos qui regipnem trans
"
Vahalem sitam colunt, multae fuerunt causae discordiarum. Nunc de peregrinis, qui Rempublicam
Africanam incolunt, disputatur. De hac re litterae a Ministro nostro ad Patruum Paulum et a,b hoc ad ilium iam per multos menses mittuntur, Sed aquam perdimus currit hora. Patruus Paulus in
:
e
7
s s
hunc
modum
scribit
'
Peregrinos
illos
'
inquit
'
in
civitatem non admitto, quia nimis multi sunt, et n quia non boni cives erunt.' Et re vera plures sunt 12
numero quam
cives Batavi.
in
'
Tantam
multitudi-
nem
'
iaquit
'
etiam Americani, Germani, Francogalli, Helvetii, ludaei, ceteri, in civitatem admittere non possum.' ' Oportet eos ad- ^^ Sed Minister noster sic dicit is qui in Coloniam mitti nam nos Britanni peregrinos, " civitatem admittimus, nostram migrant, omnes in 20 vestram Cur igitur Britanni qui in rempublicam admittuntur Sed migrant in civitatem non ? Patruus Paulus ' Haec omnia ad Britaimiam non Britannos res suas curare pertinent,' inquit : quaestio. Sed maxima causa Difl&cilis oportet.' est
:
:
'
'
irae est
iniuriis contumeliis-
que vexant
denegatus est."
XI.
33. Postridie
qui
classis
quartae
34
discipuli
PRO P ATRIA
sumus, magistrum de origine Reipublicae " Qui sunt Africanae Batavorum interrogavimus. " " illi coloni ? inquimus ; quid significat nomen ipsum Boer ? " Et ille " Coloni illi Africani " inquit
" originem
'
Caesar
'
insulam
in
libro
quarto
Belli
Gallici
com-
iacebat
in
12
nunc quoque
'
is
17
18
nominabatur. a nationibus feris barbarisque incolebantur, ut Caesar dicit. Martialis, poeta Romanus^ eos homines magnis et robustis membris, capillis flavis vel rufis fuisse dicit. Tacitus Batavos omnium nationum Germaniae InferioriS fortissimos fuisse dicit ex interioribus partibus Germaniae propter discordiam domesticani migraverant. Insula eorum pars imperii Romani erat sed Batavi acerrimi defensores libertatis suae fuerunt. Tributum Romanum non
dividitur,
quorum
unum
'
Vahalis
tolerabant."
[Imperative Active of the Third Conjugation.]
1
et
In
reservabantur, et in exercitibus
exercitu Agricolae militabat,
in
Monim
insulam natavit.
PRO PATRIA
35
f Nos Britanni quoque originem nostram praecipue a populis Germanicis ducimus nam Angli,et Saxones, qui quinto saeculo in Britanniam infunde- "
:
Et iam ante tempora C. lulii Caesaris multi Germani Britanniam meridianam migraverant in nam Belgas Germanica origine fuisse Gaesar dicit, et a is Belgis Venta Belgarum nomen suum ducit. Itaque nos Britanni cognati sumus colonorum Batavorum. animo quoque Origine et nos et illi Germani sumus oportet. Nam nomen German- i germanos esse nos
:
ifl
:
orum
valet
quam
'
fratres.'
Multum
communio
sanguinis."
Coloniam nostram Africanam quondam Sed abhinc annos quinque et sexaginta magna discordia erat et Batavi trans flumen illud Africanum migraverunt, quod ex flumine Europaeo Vahalem nominaverunt, et novam rempublicam sub
incolunt,
incolebant.
principatu
cui
et
patrocinio
Britannico
condiderunt,
'
s
Africanae dederunt. Ex quo tempore multae discordiae fuerunt inter nos et Abhinc annos duodeviginti bellum illos colonos.
nomen
Reipublicae
fuit,
in quo Batavi victoriam a parvo exercitu Qua Britannico in coUe Maiiiba reportaverunt.
ex re magnos sibi spiritus in re militari sumunt. 13 Dicunt se Britannos beUo vincere et in mare peUere u Haec somnia sunt sed periculum est belli posse. Nam multi ex Batavis qui Coloniam domestici. nostram incolunt novis rebus student. Societatem i?
;
quandam condiderunt
Africanae
;
cui nomen est Societati cuius consilium est omnes Batavos qui
18
36
PRO PATRIA
23 24
Africam Meridianam incolunt in unam Rempublidam Batavam eonsociare. Nobis Britannis necesse est principatum nostrum totius Africae Meridianae ebtinere, et imperium Britannicum, tantis laboribus eonditum, <iefendere."
XII.
Initium
Belli.
periculmn belli esse magister noster " inquit " quas praefectus Britannicus nuper ex Terra Natali dedit, Batavi magnas
36.
dicit.
Magnum
" In
litteris
tum
6 7
milia
mUitum
in Terra Natali
exercitu
Batavorum
9
JO
12
14 IB 18
19
maiores mox causa sed si Batavi exercitum suum in Terram Natalem ducent, quid prohibebit eos totam coloniam percurrere, dum copiae nostrae in mari erunt ? Magnum exercitum in India habemus sed is ad hoc beUum non mittetur." Sic dicit magister noster. Sed nos pueri bellum non, formidamus. Colonias nostras * robur et aes triplex navium longarum Britannicarum defendet. Etiam atque etiam pugnabimus et vincemus ' ut est in carmine nostro Britannia est domina undarum. Si Anglico. bellum erit, pater mens ex Colonia litteras ad me mox mittet, ut spero. Litteras quas scribet ad
;
;
'
'
20 21
patruum
meum mittam
nam
Postea has et alias litteras coUigam et in commentarios meos exscribam. En litterarum ipsarum
exemplum
PRO PATRIA
[Third Conjugation
37
s.]
37.
digit.
1
2
Si vales,
aliquid riovi !
est ego valeo. Ex Africa semper. Sic didebant Graeci, et hodie quoque
venani est. Nam Batavi summa audacia ad nos litteras ultimas miserunt, in quibus bellum nobis iridixerunt, nisi copias .nostras, quae in coloniis
nbstris Africanis
quaeque adhuc in mari sunt, intra dieln deduxe'rimus. O audaciam singularem Stephani
Joannis
!
>
Pauli, qui
praefectus
Reipublicae
;
respondebimus nullas maiores mittesmus. Quae est causa tantae audaciae, tantae stultitiae ? Sed bellum non parvum erit. Batavi sexaginta milia virorum habebunt. Nam Orangia, cui nomen est Liberae Civitati, se cum Republica Africana consociavit, et magnam multitudinem virorum ad beUum promisit. Mirum est quod haec civitas nobis bellum indixit. Nam nulla causa discordiae Amita tua tibi multam est inter nos et Orangiam. Die Vale. Cura te diligenter. salutem dicit.
Africana:e est
nihil
Nos
;
copias deducemus
immo
20
[Third Conjugation
without any
38.
digit. *
Si vales,
Num
quoque
*
legisti ?
Hodie
Duobus
Novembribus
Hae
38
s
6 7
PRO PATRIA
lit
imiis,
Primam victoriam die tertio decimo ante Kalendas Novembres ad Collem Talanam reportavimus, qui
Hostes copias in angulo Terrae Natalis situs est. suas in collem collegerant ; sed duae cohortes Hibemicae et una Anglica impigre procucurrerunt et hostes ex colle pepulerunt. Sed legatus Britannicus, graviter vulneratus, post
9
10 11
12
proelium exspiravit.
hostes
Postridie
alter
exercitus
Britannicus
ad
u Saltum Cervinum,
le
17
;
Talanam et Castra Mariana situm, vicit. Batavi turn quoque in montiper totum diem et nostri et hostes forbus stabant sub vesperum tres cohortes tissime pugnaverunt Anglorum et Scotorum una cum manu equitum
inter Collem
;
19
Africanorum
hostes in
levis
21
23 24
fugam dederunt. Batavi duo tormenta amiserunt una cum vexiUo in quo erat insigne Reipublicae Batavae Consociatae. Vale, mi carissime, Haec ex Colonia die et scribe mox ad nos. septimo ante Kalendas Novembres scripsi.
[Third Conjugation
Perfect,
39.
1
leges.
S.V.B.E.E.V. Has litteras, mi fill, non libenter Nam de fortuna mutata dicam. Nostri post victorias illas, de quibus in prioribus litteris
scripsi,
B
6 7
copiae
non poterant. Itaque reductae sunt et circum Castra Mariana collectae ubi die tricesimo mensis Octobris proelium ante oppidum commissum est. Quo in
loca
obtinere
nostrae
Sed opportune
accidit
PRO PATRIA
quod honnulla tormenta
nostri
in
39
navalia, quae classiarii tempore apporta^'erant,. nostris i" auxilio fuerunt. Post proelium autem magnum in- " commodum nuntiatum est. Nam prpxima nocte duae cohortes nostrorum in coUem, qui. ad $ep-. " tentriones situs est, missae erant, loci occup'andi " causa. Sed in itinere mulis, qui tormenta nostra
ipso
trahebant,
terror subito
incidit,
furore acti in
fugam
se dederunt,
tenebris praecipitantes.
Postridie
:
mane
nostri se
circumdati erant. Fortiter sed frustra se defenderunt, et tandem coacti sunt se dedere. Haec Nonis Novernbribus scripsi.
*
22
[Fourth Conjugation
Hodie dies est tertius rnensis Novembris. Nos pueri multa de bello audimus. Veniurit fere cotidie litterae ab amicis nostris, quae magno
40.
Magnopfere nos
audire et cantare.
in in
1 b a
?
Militibus Reginae
'
scholam
actis
venit'
pueri,"
inquit
"quod
nostras
diurnis
.
cifcumdederunt Castra Mariana duodecim milia nostrorum cusIn todiunt. Sed non facUe erit oppidum munire. campo iaeet, quern coUes undique circumdant. In coUibus Batavi tormenta sua magna posuerunt,
Batavi'
copias
missilia
-
s 9
'
12
unde
omnis generis
nostros
in
oppidum effundere
poterunt.
Numero
multum
in
SUperant.
Africam
40
[Fourth Conjugation
PRO PATRIA
Past
3
4
10
12
41. " Sed cur non multo ante " inquit " bellum paravimus ? Nam proverbium est in pace bellum para.' Crebri nuntii de periculo belli veniebant. Batavos enim bellum per multos annos urbes suas muniebant, milites parare audiebamus ex omnibus partibus Europae conscribebant. Sed nos nihil paravimus. Nesciebamus enim periculum verum esse. Nunc scimus sed num sero scimus ? Magnum exercitum nuper emisimus sed quando in Africam Meridianam adveniet ? Num ante adventum exercitus nostri de aliis victoriis Batavorum audiemus ? Quis Terram Natalem a Batavis custodiet, dum exercitus noster in mari erit ? Nam sex milia milium passuum sunt inter nos et Promunturium Spei Bonae. Hostibus autem tota
'
: :
18
regie
ubi pugnabitur,
sunt."
flu-
minum nota
[Fourth Conjugation
decimus mensis Novemde adventu in Africam Meridianam unius ex magnis illis navibus, quae * Castella nominantur, * audivimus. A portu nostro Anglico ad Promunturium Spei Bonae intra viginti dies navigaverat. Heri advenit, et statim ad Portum Natalem missa Sed Castra est, quo intra paucos dies perveniet. Mariana ducenta fere milia passuum a Portu Natali distant. In ilia autem navi est una cohors 0 eorum qui patriam vocantem audiverunt. Imperator cui cognomen est Butter, pridie Kalendas 11 noster,
42. Hodie, qui est dies
bris,
'
PRO PATRIA
Novembres
advenerat.
Interea
nostri
41
Castra
Mariana fortiter custodiverunt. Ea loca quae muniri 13 poterant muniverunt. Opportune vero accidit quod u tormenta ilia navalia, quae ad proeliutn a^te oppidum commissum in ipso tempore advenerunt, la nunc in oppido sunt.
BjAJtAvi^^^^li
mw
vsapfe.
CASTRA
MARIANA
Totmenl4..+ + +
T1u.niin.entA
UU-
iin&ExiUnnicA
^X.r..
tm^
Bat&vi
.'?-?
'\^^v
=5 fi
^M
>>Vi*,filW
Wumii"*
ft
X 'vSa
If
AVI Bl.
Imperfect
Filio suo Salutem Plurimam. Has litteras, quas S.V.B.E. Nos valemus. Nonis Decembribus scribebam, tu, mi Antoni, non
43.
Mater
et
omnia quae
scribere
42
PRO PATRIA
8 9
11
12
13
1*
18 17 18
poteram, iam ante adventum litterarum mearum ^udiveris. Sed pauca verba ad te mittere cupiebam. Cur tam diu nihil litterarum ate ? Ut vales ? Quid tu et condiscipuli tui, Marcus et Alexander, inter f arias facietis ? Mox a te litteras accipiemus, ut spero. Nos magnum dolorem. ex bello capimus. Batavi Castra Mariana iam plus quam triginta dies obsident. Oppidum capere magnopere cupiiint, et fortasse capient. Noctes diesque missilia omnis generis in oppidum iaciunt, et impetus in nostros faciunt. Nostri autem quid facere possunt ? Deficit cibus, deficit aqua. Vix somnum capere possunt. Necesse est eis cuniculos et puteos in terra fodere. Eo se recipiunt si tormenta Batavorum audiuntur Sic litterae, sed pauci tormentis interficiuntur. quae per columbas mittuntur, nuntiant. Et duo alia oppida Britannica, Adamantopolis et Static Bechuanarum, a Batavis obsidentur. Tu vero mox rescribe. Etiam atque etiam vale.
XV. Victoriae
1
et Clades Britannicae.
Perfect Stems.]
8 8
Decembrihus scriptum. Intra hos de tribus victoriis atque duabus cladibus Britannicis nuntium accepimus. Exercitus Britannicus, in quo octo milia virorum erant, per fines Orangiae iter faciebat, Adamantopolim obsidione liberandi causa. Via per campos latos et apertos ducebat -sed nonnuUis in locis tumuli erant, quos necesse erat superare. Hos Batavi,
viginti
velut
aquilae
nidos
suos,
insederant^
et
viam
custodiebant.
in eos fortissime
PRO PATRIA
fecerunt,
43
"
12
tumulos ceperunt, hostes in fugam coniecerunt. Quibus in proeliis, ad Montem Bellum et Lacum Gramineum pugnatis, Custodes Regales et classiarii nostri praecipuam laudem reportaverunt. Inde iter ad Flumen Turbulentum inceperunt. Dux autem Batavns, cui nomen est Cronje, in ripis fluminis magnas fossas puteosque foderat, in quibus copias suas et tormenta occultaverat. Ibi Batavi per totum diem acerrime pugnatum est. circiter quingentos ex nostris interfecerunt vel
vulneraverunt.
" "
=
Tandem
nostri
impetum
in
sinis22 23
et se traiecerunt.
Tum
Novembris reportata est. De qua patruus mens iihi " Victoria nostris non magno usui haec scripsit erat, quia hostibus instare non poterant. Nam
f 45.
:
Haec
Pedi-
ad huiusmodi bellum minus apti sunt. Batavis, sicut Britannis antiquis, non mos est iusto 7 Equites eorum arma peditum porproelio pugnare. tant et pedibus pugnare possunt. Itaque mobili- tatem equitum, stabilitatem peditum in proeliis prae- 10 stant." ExercitUs noster iam viginti tantum mUia u passuum ab oppido obsesso al)erat. Sed inter castra nostra et Adamantopolim mens erat, Macrifoijtium
nomine, quem necesse erat superare. Legatus noster quattuor cohortes Caledonum praemisit, loci occupandi causa. Sed Batavus suos in fossis, quas ante montem foderat, in insidiis posuerat De magna clade Britannica accepta in actis diurnis haec legi.
,
10
ts
44
PRO PATRIA
*' Silentio noctis per tenebras et imbrem 1 46. Caledones agmine quadrato ad locum iter faciunt. hostis autem Subito aer ignibus tonitruque tremit
;
nusquam
et
conspicitur,
Sed ex omnibus
fossis
imber
viris
mortifer missUium in
fortissimis
illis
In tenebris nee imperia in tanto tumultu audiri vel accipi poterant. Ordines u igitur nostri perturbati et confusi sunt ; arma virique, alius super alium, praecipitabantur non proelium 13 sed trucidatio fuit. Nostri ex loco mortifero, ut poterant, se receperunt, vel viam per medios hostes facere contenderunt. Plus quam septingentos viros ex -quattuor Dlis cohortibus amisimus." Haec dades mane diei undecimi mensis Decembris 18 accepta est. Pridie alia clades Britannica ex Colonia i nuntiata Alius exercitus Britannicus ad erat. Montem ProceUaruni in insidias inciderat, et victus 21 erat. Nihil eorum quae apud nos agebantur hostibus ignotum erat. Nam explpratores omnia
8
iacuerunt.
autem nullus
indicaverant.
apud patruum meum ero. Dulce domum Sed feriae non hilarae erunt. Nam de tertia dade, in Terra Natali accepta, acta diuma haec nuntiant " Mag:
nus Ule exercitus Britannicus, cui imperator noster praeest, plus quam viginti milia virorum numero, Castra Mariana obsidione liberare contendebat. Inter nostros et oppidum fluebat Tugela, quern Batavi oc-
PRO PATRIA
cupaverant et in
ripis fossas
45
Mane diei
Caelum caeruleum
solis.
serenum erat
magnus
;
calor
3
Legio Hibemica, quae in sinistro comu erat, ad ripas fluminis fortissime appropinquavit sed postquam quingentos vel sescentos viros amiserunt, se recipere coacti sunt. In dextro comu tormenta nostra defensoribus nudata sunt quorum decern ab hostibus capta sunt, postquam ei qui tormentis ministrabant paene omnes interfecti sunt. Sed duo ex tormentis parva manus nostrorum e loco mortifero recepit. Facinus pulcherrimum fuit. In ea manu fuit adulescens egregiae spei, nomine Roberts." Fuit nam is quoque, graviter vtdneratus, postero die exspiravit. In eo proelio mille ducentos viros amisimus.
;
:
"o
46
PRO PATRIA
XVI. Foedus nominis Britannici.
[Present Injunctive of sum.]
Ante paucos 48. Hodie Dies Natalis est Christi. Hies, novus imperator Britannicus ad Promunturium Spei Bonae navigavit. De quo patruus meus haec dixit " In^ hoc viro summa est scientia belli,
:
clarissima virtus,
egregia fortuna.
in India fecit
;
Magnum
sibi
nunc senex est, septem et sexaginta annos natus. Et pater est 7 adulescentis qui ad Tugelam cecidit dum 6 iUius pulchrum et periculosum facit. Pater g f acinus mortem filii sui deplorat sed patriam ipsam voSit in n cantem audivit. Sit ei iter prosperum illo nomine Spei Bonae omen rerum prosperarum nomen est omen, ut poeta Romanus dixit. 13 Nam u Quondam Promunturium Procellarum vocabatur. Exercitui maximo ducentorum milium virorum
; !
quondam nomen
praeerit.
Numquam
exercitus
post
hominum
memoriam
est,
tantus
13
trans
mare
transportatus
Quod
reipublicae nostrae
"
!
[Present
2 3
49. Postridie patruus meus haec ex actis diurnis recitavit " Ex Africa Meridiana nihil novi. Sed
:
magnitude populi Britannici prope admirabilior in rebus adversis quam in prosperis fuit. Opus magni
laboris erit, tot atque
tam
6 7 8 8
Sed etiam atque etiam pugnemus, donee vicerimus. Deus nobis fortunam det Ne desperemus Festinemus lente, sicut Fabius ille Maximus fecit, de quo poeta Romanus haec scripsit
!
PRO PATRIA
Unus homo
nobis cunctando restituit rem.
47
lo
Hoc bellum
Britanniam,
matrem
tot
filiarum
egregiarum, cum coloniis suis in unius et maioris " populi corpus consociavit.
est,
ii 15
liberae
numquam maximam
occidit.
sibi
laudem
is
posse
Filia matris in
dome,
20
Tu, Canada, duo milia filiorum tuorum misisti. cum Nova Zelanda et Tasmania octo milia misistis. Tu, Terra Natalis, quae filia Britanniae natu minima es, quinque milia dedisti. Quam vera sunt verba Horatii!
Vos, Coloniae Australienses,
Caelum non animum mutant qui trans mare currunt.
22
2b
=6 27
Et in Britannia ipsa magna multitudo voluntariorum nomina sua dederunt. Deus salvam praestet Reginam I "
29
lux.
sum and
First Conjugation.]
Batavos piget est novi anni. 50. Initium Castra Mariana iam duos menses obsidere nostrqs
;
quoque obsideri piget. Hostes igitur operam dant ut oppidum vi expugnent, et diem constituunt quo impetum in Caesaris Castra dent, quae ad meridiem oppidi iacent. De qua re patruus mens haeo
48
recitavit
:
PRO PATRIA
" Silentio
noctis
collem
nostri
10
11
ascendere
incipiunt.
Sed
ad arma volant.
Ad decimam horam
12
13
17 18 19
22
Turn impetum tarn acrem in Batavos faciunt ut eos propulsent et castra salva praestent. Pulcherrimum erat facinus. Sed in oppido summa inopia est, ut litterae, quae per columbas mittuntur, nuntiant. Cibus carissimus nuUi iam boves, nuUae oves, nulli porci in est oppido sunt. Came equina victitant. Multi homines aegrotant sed ubi nullae vaccae sunt, lac GaUinae denariis viginti constant, duodeest. decim ova triginta denariis, cetera grandi pretio. Navis aeria nonnumquam ex oppido emittitur, ut quae apud hostes aguntur explorentur. Ex qua
nebulis obscuretur.
; ;
PRO PATRIA
nostri feminas Batavas
49
cum
festo
omatu nbnnumas ae
quae via ferrata apportantur, ut obsidionem spectent." Navis aeria ita facta est ut ad terram applicetur, si necesse sit. Nam cum acre plena est, in caelum ascendit cum aer emit\'i(ient,
;
quam
titur, descendit.
Magnum
!
.
ei
incolis oppidi ignota erant. qui in statione ante oppidum erant " inquiunt; "sed qui estis ? unde w sitis " Et equites " Ex Australia venimus "
!
" ut oppidum vestrum obsidione liberDeo sit gratia" inquiunt illi; "nam obsidionem iam per tres menses toleravimus."
is 20
'
Omen
'
est
in
Nam
22
23
adamanta movere
proverbium
est.
50
[Present
PRO PATRIA
Injunctive and Subjunctive of other Conjugations.]
52.
digit.
S.V.B.E.E.V.
2
tuae
me
magnopere
delectaverunt.
De Adamantopoli
obsidione liberata
i 6 6
nos quoque gaudio triumphamus. In imperatore nulla est mora. Num acta diurna legis ? Noster
quinque et viginti milia virorum emisit, qui Batavum a meridiana parte oppugnent, dum equites illi
qui Adamantopolim obsidione liberaverunt
eum
septentrionibus
itinere
prohibeant.
Sed
ille
videat
8 10
imperator
capiat
coldni
!
noster
ne
quid
detriment! respublica
Nam
dies
Maiu-
bensis appropinquat,
illi Batavi exercitum Britannicum vicerunt. Dies erat septimus et vicesimus mensis Februarii.
I*
15 18
17
Deus prohibeat ne hie dies iterum ater sit Det ut hoc anno nos hostes vincamus Patruus tuus rogat ut tibi suis verbis salutem dicam. Tu cura ut valeas. Haec ego die vicesimo mensis Februarii scripsi.
!
nobis
53.
totum imperium Britannicum conclamatur Nam duas magnas victorias a Batavis reportavimus
4
' 8
In finibus Orangiae noster venit, vidit, vicit. Batavus castra sua ad Montem Equinum mover at, ubi in ripis Fluminis Turbulenti fossas cuniculosque more suo foderat, in quibus sui tuti essent. Ibi noster eum velut indagine circumdedit, ne evadere posset.
PRO PATRIA
M0N5
LQ\i\
51
52
[Past
PRO PATRIA
Imperfect
Third, and
2
3
4
12 13
14
eius diei in Terra Natali Fabius ille noster operam dabat ut Castra Mariana obsidione liberaret. Bis iam flumen Tugelam traieceral, ut hostes loco moveret et viam ad oppidum obsessum faceret. Sed bis coactus erat ut suos reduceret. De quibus expeditionibus patruus meus ad me haec scripsit " Via trans montes tam altos et difficiles ducebat, Sed ut pauci multos itinere facile prohiberent. nostri per tres menses tantam virtutem praestiterunt, ut calorem, pruinam, imbrem, inopiam, vulnera, mortem aequo atque hilaro animo toler54. Altera
victoria
reportata
est,
ubi
10 t7
montes altissimos ascenderent, loca iniquissima caperent, omnem vim et impetum belli sustinerent. Haec facilia ex difS&ciUimis magnitude animi reddidit ut omnes homines de tanta fortiarent,
;
tudine
cum
admiratione
audirent,
fortius
iudicarentque
nuUos milites
18
umquam
sanguinem suum
20
22
pro patria profudisse. Et quamquam ter frustra contenderant, ut hostes ex Ulis montibus pellerent, tamen audacia vere Britannica constituerunt ut etiam atque etiam pugnarent, donee vincerent."
t55-
Et
vicerunt.
Nam
postquam
die altero
flumen ab ofiente traiecit, ut collem Petreium, in quo Batavi stabant, caperet, die septimo et vicesimo
totus exercitus Britannicus traiecit et cum Batavis proelium commisit. Tam acriter pugnatum est ut ex nostris mille sescenti viri amitterentur. Tandem
PRO PATRIA
sub noctem
colles illos
53
et hostes in
omnes cepimus
die
fugam coniecimus.
Postero
manus equitum
Britannicorum in oppidum, iam quattuor menses obsessum, equitavit. Magnum erat gaudium et obsessorum et eorum qui oppidum obsidione
est gaudium diem pulchrum, quo " per virtutem militum nostrorum et oppido Uli Nobis pueris w obsesso et patriae nova lux affulsit propter duas Ulas victorias dies feriatus datus est, Noctu schola nostra 'b quo scholis liberi essemus.
liberaverant.
Et
niaius
fortasse
ignibus testis illustrata est; et magistri et pueri insignia triumphalia in memoriam Montis Equini et Castrorum Marianorum fabricata gerebant.
XX. Pax
t 56.
Britannica.
Pater Filio suo Carissimo Salutem. Hodie, mi fili, tibi longas litteras scribere in
Plus
animo habeo.
quam
tres
exercitus Batavus ad Montem Equinum captus est, et copiae nostrae victrices Florifontium, caput
Orangiae,
intraverunt.
in
Nunc
ipso
vexiUum Britancapite
e 7 s
Reipublicae Britannia Sed quanto gaudio nos, habitatis, gaudere scio. qui per tot annos hunc diem exspectavimus, triumphare putatis ? Narrabo tibi abhinc annos
Praetoriae,
nicum
Africanae, salutavimus.
Vos,
qui
in
undeviginti,
Britanni,
Britannicum velut mortuum humaverunt. lii mohumento inscriptum est Tn memoriam vexilli
Britannici carissimi,
octin-
54
PRO PATRIA
gentesimo octogesimo primo vita decessit, quatResurrexit. tuor annos natum. Resurgam.' Hodie omnia plena sunt laetitiae. Static ilia Bechuanarum, quae per septem menses obsidionem tanta fortitudine, animo tam hJJaro sus21
23
28
Tibi, dux foroppidum prospere defendisti, gratias agimus maximas. Bene vertat, quod agas Floreat Domus.Carthusiana, in qua educatus.es! Sed eos quoque memoria teneamus, qui pro patria pugnantes vitam exspiraverunt. Solum
tinuerat,
tissime, qui
-in
memoriam
filii
in
"-
KAU
t
39
Vita eius brevis sed non imperfecta fuit. Nam quid pulchrius est quam pro patria pugnantem vitam exspirare ? Tu, mi fill, exemplum tantae
virtutis
memoria
tene.
Ab
his et
huiusmbdi
viris
PRO PATRIA
imperium
55
Britannicum conditum est et conFloreat Etona, ubi adulescens ille fortissimus educatus est Societas Quid est imperium Britannicum ? populorum et nationum, quae communione beneficiorum officiorumque continetur. Bella enim pro
servabitur.
sociis coloniisque
sumuntur
et geruntur
coloniae
pro
Britannia,
parente,
Nam
tatem, res quondam inter se contrarias, consociat. Itaque iUud patrocinium orbis terrarum verius quam imperiiim nominari oportet. Videamus, mi fili, ne, ut maioribus nostris pulcherrimum fuit tantam nobis gloriam imperii tradere, sic nobis turpissimum sit id quod accfepimus obtinere et conservare non posse. IUud vero imperii nostri
firmissimiUB
fundamentum
est
quod
victos
in
lanua nostra possumus. civitatem admittere Batavis, igitur, sicut aliis aperta est. omnibus Britannicis esse licet. Ex civibus victis, populis hostibus socii aliquando fuerint, ut speramus quo tempore hanc sibi quisque maximam laudem iudicabit, ut de se dicere possit Civis Britannicus
;
'
ei
63
as
sum,' et de Britannia
Fecisti
unam
e7
Nam
Roma
licet
;
scripsit,
es
56
TO
PRO PATRIA
Haec
est, in
gremium
Humanumque
'S
'4
'5
civesque vocavit Matris non dominae ritu Quos domuit, nexuque pic longinqua revinxit. Huiul pacificis debemus moribus omnes Quod cuncti gens una sumus.
'
Nos,
igitur,
hodie,
sicut
olim
Camillus
ille
78
Romanus, templum Concordiae consecremus, in quo haec verba inscribantur paci et libertati
:
RESTITUTAE.
80
Bella vi nus
esto.
Sed cecidere
odia, et tristes
mors obruit
iras.
Tu
ama.
vero,
fill
mi
carissime,
Anno
VEXILLUn
BRITANNICUM.
are
on graanmatical points, and .thereforp contain only (i) words presenting some new grammatical feature not previously studied, (2) constructions, or phrases \i^hich call for special notice. In this respect these Preparations differ from those given in Ora Maritima. The pupil is now supposed to be capable of looking out unknown words in the Alphabetical Vocabulary (pp. 149-175). In connexion with each new grammatical feature introduced, the necessary grammatical rules and tables are. given ; so that the pupil using this book has no need of a separate grammar:.'
.
The amount of grammar assuined as known at the start is that contained in Ora Maritima, -viz., the first three Declensions of Nouns, Adjectives of similar formation (except those in of the Indicative is, e of the 3rd Declension), all the tenses Active of the ist Conjugation and of the verb sum, and a few isolated. forms of Pronouns (me, mihi ; te, tibi ; se, sibi ; nos, nobis : vos, vobis).
On the Pronunciation of Words. If the last syllable but one of a word of ,more than two syllables is long, it is also if short, the accent is thrown back on accented (thus remotus) to the last syllable but two (thus rimovet, rimove). Words of only two, syllables are always accented on the first ot.the two (thus: vires, vtrum). Very few Latin words are accented on the The only one that occurs in this book is adhuc. last syllable. This and similar words have lost a,syllable, which explains the accentuation adhuc stands for adhu-ce.
:
Syllables ending in two or more consonants are mostly long, as in Siperta,, ienestra, ; so too are syllables containing a double vowel, as in nautae. But many syllables ending in a single consonant and containing a single vowel are also long, because the vowel is itself a long vowel all such long vowels are marked in the {oUowing Preparations. Thus beaia and antiqua have the middle vowel long, and will therefore be marked bedta, antiqua : and it is because the middle syllable in each of these words has a long vowel in it that it is accented {bedta, antiqua). Vowels which do not bear any mark in the following Preparations may be regarded as short,: as in domina, amita, casa, quoque, mea, tua (accented ddmina, dmita, cdsa, qudqiie, mia, tiia].
:
58
!
PREPARATIONS
^^
important words
I.
are the
grammatically
is, e.
'September,' an Adjective agreeing with Kalendae and meaning seventh or belonging-to-the-seventh month.' The Roman year originally began with March ; hence September was then the seventh month. The literal translation of this sentence is 'To-day there are the September Calends,' =' to-day is the ist of September.' mensis Septembrls, 'of the September month '=' of the 3.
Septembres,
month
7-
of S.*
'celebrated,' agreeing with duds. Duds is Genitive, because it depends on de vita, just as Agricolae does; the meaning is 'about the life of Agricola, the life of the celebrated general.' A Noun standing in the same construction as another Noun to which it is adjectival is said to be 'in apposition' to it: thus ^mcis is here in apposition to A gricolae. But in English we should say,' about the life of Agricola, the celebrated general,' without a second ' of.'
Celebris,
II. alaeri, 'eager,' agreeing with ammo. The Abl. without a Preposition here means 'with,' as in magna audacia pugndbant ; see O.M.* p. 143. It will be seen that Adjectives like September, October, Novembor, December, celeber, alacer differ from Adjectives like foriis in having a separate form for the Masculine Nominative Singular. This case is formed without the ending -is, and therefore resembles a Noun Uke imber, rain (stem imbr-).
celeber, Celebris, celebre, celebrated.
SINGULAR.
Nom,
Ace. Gen. Dat.] Abl.i
Masc.
Neut.
celebre celebre
celebrem
Celebris
ceJebrium
celebribus
eelebri
2.
I.
[is,
'
ea, id.
Singular Number.]
'
'
later than =' after the after than or post-quam, lit. time when or simply when,' or after.' But it must be distincp. post prandium, p. 3. guished from the Preposition post, after
'
' '
'
'
'
The
letters
O.M. stand
for
PREPARATIONS
2. pedestres 8.
Id,
'
59
and
equestres,
'
from adjectives in
ei,
'
is, e.
'
that-thing,'
that.'
for that
'
man,'
for him.'
'
by
non reverd debelldverat. The so-called Conquest of Britain Julius Caesar ought rather to be called The failure of Caesar Britain was not conquered till nearly to conquer Britain.'
9.
'
of that-man,'
;
'
of
him/
'
his.'
eum,
'
that-man/
Infinitive formed from the Perfect tense reportav-l (the Perfect of reporto, ist Conj.) ;
reportdv-isse,
Tacitus declares him not to have won the literal translation is a great victory.' This construction of the Accusative with the Infinitive {eum reportdvisse) depending on a verb of ' declaring but English or thinking is found in English as well as in Latin generally prefers to use that followed by a Nominative and a Verb thus, Tacitus af&rms {or says) that he did not win a great Cp. O.M. 36, Britanniam esse insulam iudicdbant, victory.' ' they judged Britain to be an island.'
' ' ' '
;
'
'
'
14. viri
mind
'
cp.
animo forti, men with brave mind =' men of brave O.M. 43, viri membrls robusiis, fldvis capillts, oculls
'
'
caenilels.
The Ablative without a Preposition here denotes a quality of the person spoken of, and may therefore be called an
Ablative of Quality or Adjectival Ablative.
The coin 16. C. here stands for Gal (as though it were a G). of Caesar here shown has a head of Venus on one side and on the other the figure of Aeneas carrying Anchises from Troy. Caesar traced his descent from Venus and Anchises.
19. eius,
'
belli.
'
to him.' Britannia non curae erat, curae is Dative, lit. for a care =' a
'
'
' about it to-be-entered =' about entering about that-island.' ea agrees with insula understood, for Cp. O.M. 24, locus idoneus est ad ndvigia applicanda, vessels to-be-brought-to-land.'
22. de ea intrandd,
;
'
it
'
'
'
It will
(
be seen that
')
is, ea,
'
that
or as a
Pronoun (='
6o
PREPARATIONS
PREPARATIONS
his
6t
the invasion of Britain by Claudius in a.d. 43. Togodumnus met death in one of the battles fought in that year.
62
13. ifeportatam^ reporto, ' I win,' order of words
PREPARATIONS
"won/ an Adjective formed from the Verb and agreeing with victoriam. Note the Latin
('
the Britons won =' won from the English we may say " an exercise, neatly written, was handed in by me " ; the Adjective written his or hisbeing formed from the Verb I write.' su6, own,' agreeing with flKo, and referring to princeps Romanus. nomen Britannico, the name Britannicus but Britannico does not agree with nomen in Case ; it is a Dative, and agrees with ftlid-suo, so that the literal translation is gave the name to his son, to Britannicus ' cp. i, 1. 7 (duds). of that-man,' his,' referring to princeps Romanus 14. eius, in the previous sentence. themselves,' referring to the Britons (' they '). 16. se, 19. After the destruction of his dominion in the Eastern part of Britain in a.d. 43 Caractacus withdrew into Wales, where he gained many successes against the Romans. of that-man,' his,' referring to Caractacus in the 20. eius, previous sentence. 22. Virocdnii, at Viroconium (Wroxeter) ' ; Devae, at Deva Iscae, at Isca (Caerleon).' These Cases denoting (Chester) are called Locative Cases ; they are found chiefly in Names at of Towns, which accordingly have one more Case than other Nouns. But the Locative is always the same in form as one of the other Cases in the ist and 2nd Declensions, Singular Number, Note that there is no it is the same in form as the Genitive. Preposition used to express ' at before the Name of a Town. their,' referring to Silures in the of those-men,' 25. eorum, previous sentence. to Rome.' The Accusative of the Name of a 26. Romam, Town without a Preposition is used to express to so in O.M. to Dover.' To Wroxeter would be Viroconium 24, Dubrds, to Caerleon,' Iscam. to Chester,' Devam
from
'
Britons
').
Similarly in
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
"
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
eius and eorum, earum are Genitive Cases of is, ea, and therefore mean properly of that-person or of thatplural, of those-persons or of those-things.' Hence thing they generally refer to some person or thing mentioned in a previous sentence. The Adjective suus, a, um, on the other hand, means properly 'his own,' or 'her own,' or 'its own,' or their own.' Hence it naturally refers to the most important person for we do not often say or thing mentioned in the same sentence
id,
'
' '
The words
' ;
'
'
'
'
PREPARATIONS
' his own ' when we axe referring to a person or thing in a different sentence. For instance, we may say
'
63
mentioned
Claudius
name to his own son,' but not Claudius was the emperor of Rome. And the Romans gave this name to his own son.' The person or thing referred to by suus, a, um generally stands in the Nominative Case, but not always for instance, we may say I will visit him in his own house {domi suae eum vlsitabo, where suae refers to the Accusative eum) give to each man his own {suum culque da, where suwm refers to the Dative ctilque).
gave
this
'
'
'
'
'
6. [ipse, ipsa,
ipsum. Singular
and
Plural.]
regent spectandl, ipsum, ' himself,' agreeing with regem. of seeing the King ; cp. O.M 28, Romdnl cupidl erant insulam nostram visitandi et explorandl, of visiting and exploring our island ' spectandi is the Genitive of a Noun in -ndum, formed from the Verb specto. These Nouns in ndum are lilce the English Nouns in -ing, which are formed from Verbs (' seeing,' 'visiting').
4.
' ' :
7.
Jpso,
'
himself,' agreeing
"
with Caractaco,
of that- man,' of him,' ' his,' ; Mus, not suls, is used here, though it refers to Caractaco in the same sentence, because suis would naturally refer to muliiiudo, and this would make nonin catenis, in sense (' their own wife and brothers '). chains ' =' chained.' [So in Livy, xiv. 40. 6.]
8.
Hus,
'
'
9. ipse,
'
himself,' agreeing
with Caractacus.
'
agrees with principis. collccdtus . . . in quit, placed before the eyes of the Emperor himself, he said =' he, The placed befqjre the eyes of the Emperor himself, said.' Adjective c<ilocatus agrees with he in inquit, which might have been expressed by a separate word (Is, ante oculos . colloCompare in English " Driven out of its course catus, inquit). by adverse winds, the ship was cast ashore " =" The ship, driven winds, was cast ashore." The only difference is that the . . order of words in Latin would be " The ship, out of its course by adverse winds driven, was cast ashore."
II. ipsius
'
'
of giving orders to 14, 15. toti orbl terrdrum imperitandi, (= of holding sway over) the whole world," ; imperitandi is the Genitive of a Noun in -ndum formed from the Verb imperito The Adjective toti orbl is Dative, depending on imperitandi. totus, a, um is declined like other Adjectives in -us, a, um, except These forms in the Gen. Sing, tot-lus and the Dat. Sing, tot-i. are the same for all three Genders, like ips-ius, ips-i.
' :
19. ipsi,
'
himself,' agreeing
with Caractaco,
64
'
PREPARATIONS
'
'
It will be seen that the wdrd ipse, ipsa, ipsum is used like the herhim-self,' thy-self,' English word -self in my-self/ self,' it-self and in the Plural like -selves (our-selves, your'
' ' ' ' ' ' '
seives, them-selves).
It is generally
an Adjective, but
may
also
be a Pronoun.
ipse,
ipsa,
ipsum,
'
-self.'
PREPARATIONS
19.
illius,
65
Cp. ipsius, eius.
:
20. illud,
(counsel)
21.
is
'
that
is
num eritis, 'will you men be less hrave ? Num a word that turns a statement into a. question. The only English word by which it can be translated is whether.' But this use of whether is old-fashioned, and no word is necessary in English for num.
'
' '
'
It will
be seen that
ille, ilia,
'
may
'
be used
that
or as a
Pronoun {=
that -one,'
.66
10. 11.
PREPARATIONS
Huius,
of this,' agreeing with virt cldrl.
'
Hune,
11.
this,'
I.
prima anno,
'
15.
'
banc, this,' agreeing with gentem. fere totam, whole ; translate almost the whole of this tribe.'
3.
' '
almost
HI, these-men or the latter contrast ille, ilia, illud, former,' 7, 1. 4. perlti natandi. The Adjective peritus, 'skilled,' takes a Genitive (Engl, 'skilled in'); O.M. 15, ludorum peritus.
7.
'
' '
'
'
the
10.
haee,
'
this
'
or
'
stood.
11-14.
15.
=Agricola) penetrates.'
veliii
'
,
island
in alteram insulam, as (or as it were) into a second cp. O.M. 8, noctH pharos spectdmus, veliU stellds
'
cldrds in oceano.
Graupius, the proper form of the word Grampian,' which has come from a misprint in the earliest printed edition of But the Agricola of Tacitus, published in the 15 th century. for this we should have said My name is Norval on -the
18.
latter
'
Graupian Hills/
20. his,
'
etc.
'
with these
12.
I.
= the
'
haec,
'
this,'
2. toti
Britanniae,
'
to the
whole of Britain
haec,
'
cp.
;
11,
1.
3.
3, 4. Hi,
these,' agreeing
;
hae,
'
these,'
these,' agreeing
with maria
this,' agreeing with angtUum. mare quidem. not even the sea.' Note ne instead non, and the position of mare between ne and quidem. this,' agreeing with insulam. g. banc,
5.
hunc,
'
7.
ne
'
of
'
12.
liberos
vestros is masculine because it belongs to both the words and uxores, which loget|ier =homines, ' human beings '
;
and homo
13.
I J.
is
when they
shall
:
have
laid waste.'
'this Caledonia of
ours.'
PREPARATIONS
We, haeo, hoc,
'
67
this,'
'
this one.'
Nom.
Ace.
Gen.
Dat.
AM.
PREPARATIONS
-
,68
cruel,'
agreeing with
hostes
from
dear-er
'
'
from
4,
L
;
11.
from
acer^
4,
1.
2.
20. pulchr-ius,
'more
'
glorious,'
um,
10,
'
13.
from miser, miser-a, um. be seen that the Comparative of an Adjective, which
more miserable
formed in English by adding -er or by the use of 'more,' is formed in Latin by adding -ior (or, for the Neuter, -ius) to the part of the Adjective that remains when the ending -us or -is or -s alone of the Nominative Singular MascuUne is cut ofi.
Thus :
Comparativb.
car-ior, car-ius fort-ior, fort-ius
-um)
carfort-
audax,
=audac-s
the
clementaudacis
When
there
is
Nom.
Sing. Masc.
off
nothing to cut
from
'
this Case.*
Thus
misqr
^(niiser-a,
-um)
miser-
miser-ior, miser-ius
is
e that comes before the r is dropped whenever it dropped in the Feminine and Neuter (and in the other Cases the Masculine) of the Adjective itself. Thus
:
But the
of
pulchracr-
therefore, may be found most easily by cutting off- the ending of the Feminine, and adding -ior or -ius. It will be seen also that the Comparative of an Adjective is itself an Adjective ; it can be declined (like a Noun of the 3rd Declension, such as Masc. scriptor, Neut.. coy^Ms), and must agree
The Comparative,
with the Noun to which it belongs. Its Feminine is the same as its Masculine but its Neuter is different in the Nominative
;
already dropped
ending.
PREPARATIONS
Declension of Comparatives.
.
_
69
'
70
27. mediocriier
lized.'
PREPARATIONS
humdnae,
'
moderately
civilized,'
'
pretty
civi-
'
xeTy dvHizeA.'
'
It will be seen that the Superlative of an Adjective, which is formed in English by adding -est, or by the use of most,' is formed in Latin by adding -issimus, -isslma, -issimum to the part
of the Adjective that remains when the ending -us or -is or Thus alone of the Nominative Singular MascuUne is cut off.
-s
Superlative.
-
carfort-
car-issimus,
car-issima,
car-issimum
fort-issimus, fort-issima,
clement-
Sing. Masc.
is
formed by doubling the last letter of Nom. Sing. Masc. and adding -imus, -ima, -imum. Thus we (with rr)
the Superlative
is
-us or the
get
Superlative,
miser (miser-a, -um)
pulcher (pulchr-a, -um)
acer (acr-is, -e)
e before
the r of the
Nom.
Sing. Masc.
is
never
same way
as other Adjectives
[Passive
Voice ol 1st
Conj.
Present,
Past
17).]
'
Imperfect,
Future
(conjugated at end of
' ' '
they are delighted,' they are interested ' ; 7. delectant-UT, Passive of delectant, they delight,' they please.' The word suae in 1. 6 is emphatic, ' their own ' ; these two boys are Scots.
8.
laudat-ur,
1.
'
is
praised
'
Passive of laudat,
;
'
praises.'
Non-ne in
simply the word non with -ne tacked on to it to turn the statement into a question compare O.M. 19, non-ne in oppidts habitdbant ? did not they live in towns ? The word -ne, like num ( 8), need not be translated by any
7
is
'
PREPARATIONS
'
71
used to be taken by storm ' ; Passive of 9. expugnabant-ur, expugnabant. Similarly vastabant-ur and debellabant-ur in 1. 10. Note that the Person by whom the action is done is expressed by the Preposition a or ab with the Ablative Case ; thus a, Tacito and ab aliis imperdtoribus.
1
3.
delecto-r,
'
am
'
'
Passive of
of
(1.
'
delecto.
17. ornabat-ur,
aedificiis
17.
2.
Romanls,
'
with
'
Roman
Passive ; buildings
ornabat.
16).
used to be delighted (oj- pleased).' with ( =of) keen and active mind 4. animo acri ei impigro, Ablative of Quality, used like an Adjective {keen-minded) after the verb to be.' Cp. 2, 1. 14.
delectabant-ur,
' '
8.
2,
1.
10.
9. delecta-mini,
delecta-tis.
you ' ; Passive of are delighted,' with vos, Translate you boys of the present day take pleasure
' '
'
in
.'
kindest,' most like a kind uncle,' is the 10. patru-issime, Vocative of patruissimus, a Superlative invented by the poet Plautus as a joke. It is formed not from any Adjective, but from the Noun patru-us ; as though we were to say in English uncle,
'
uncl-er, uncl-est.'
"you are deUghted,' 'you take pleasure'; Here it stands in a question non-ne corporis certdminibus, delectdris ? are you not delighted ? by contests of the body =' by athletic sports.'
11.
delecta-ris,
Passive of
'
delectd-s.
'
'
'
13. delectaba-r,
'
'
used to be delighted
'
I shall
be delighted
' ;
Passive of delectabo.
There are two lines of verse by a poet of the first Nor hast thou less mobility =(quickness of movecentury a.d. ment), if perchance it pleases thee either to double (=to return)
18, 19.
'
it) falling.' volant-em Adjectives formed from the Nom. volan-s, Verbs void (ist Conj.) and cado (3rd Conj.) caden-s, Uke monstran-s in O.M. 41 , digiio ad orientem monstrans.
it
up (= to catch
Sing, of
the story is told about you with 20. mutdto nomine, etc., changed name (= under a different name).' This is a quotation from Horace ; it means the cap fits you.'
'
'
n
^n
It will
PREPARATIONS
Formation
of the Passive Voiee.
fti
be seen that the Passive of the Present, the Past j^K^ Imperfect and the Future Tenses is formed from the Active " h (i.) by adding -ur in the 3rd Persons Sing, and Plur. (ii.) by adding -y in the ist Persons Sing, and Plur. 1-1 which r displaces the last letter of the Active if
; ;
it is
(iii.)
a consonant,
^2
by changing the -s of the 2nd Person Sing, into -ris, and the -tis of the 2nd Person Plur. into -mini. Thus we get (with some changes in the quantities of the
:
vowels)
PREPARATIONS
19.
2.
73
in
[qui,
quae, quod
and
;
quis,
quid,
11.
questions.]
a,
a Caledonihus reportdta
quis,
'
cp. S,
12, 13,
Britannis repor-
tdtam.
3. 8.
('
Galgacus was
who
? ').
quid,
'
'
agreeing
'
with tempore;
terra.
cp. eo tempore,
IS-
18.
qua
10.
ex=ex
'
qua,
'
21. quern,
whom
to
fni.
Cp.
2,
1.
24. ciiius,
wUl be seen that qui, quae, quod is used as an Adjective, what ? or which ? In the Nominative Case Singular there is also a Pronoun, quis (Masc. and Fem.)= who ? quid (Neut.) =' what ?
It
= English
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
74
PREPARATIONS
20. [qnl, quae, quod,
7. qui,
'
of
which
'
or
'
13.
14.
cm,
quem,
whom,'
' by a few years 15. paucis annls ante, ' a few years before,' Ut. before {or previously) ' ; ante is here an Adverb, not a Preposition.
17.
1.
Eburdci,
'
'
at
York
'
5,
22.
'
fruciddta fuisse
20. killed
si sic
them
all
'
oh,
if
thus
all
'
'
oh,
if
they had
It will be seen that qui, quae, quod (but not quis or quid) may be used without any questioning sense, just like the English who or which.' Sometimes it begins a separate sentence, as in the last instance above {Quo anno quinqudgintd nalia
'
' '
truclddta fuisse narrantur), which is just as much a separate sentence as if it were a question {Quo anno narrantur ? in which year are fifty thousand Romans said tohave-been slaughtered ? '). But generally qui, quae, quod begins a little sentence which is only a part of a bigger sentence, as in Septimius Severus [quem Romdni paucis annis ante principem In such cases credverani] maximam expeditionem compardvit.
Romdnorum
'
the Uttle sentence, here printed in square brackets, is called at Subordinate Clause. But if you examine it, you will find that whom the Romans had created emperor it is complete in itself is like whom had the Romans created emperor ?'' {Quem Romdni principem credverant ?), except that it is not a question. This helps us to see the reason for the Case and the Gender and Number of quem. It is in the Accusative Case because, if the clause were turned into a separate sentence, the word for whom would have to be in the Accusative Case it is in the MascuUne Gender and the Singular Number because it refers to Septimius Severus which stands in the other clause of the sentence. Thus in order to find the Case of which turn the clause into a separate sentence in order to find its Gender and Number think of what is meant by the word.
: '
' ' '
:
'
'
PREPARATIONS
RULE.
sentence;
it
75
when
It
and
which it would stand if the Clause were a separate agrees in Gender and Number with the Noun to which
refers.
to
Note that the Case of the Noun to which it refers may happen be the same as the Case of qui, quae, quod itself, as in An.
seel. ii.
'
tu-ne Pictus es ? are you a Pict ? ' The -ne turns the statement into a question, as in i8, 1. 14, non-ne melius erii ?; and the word tu is put in because it is emphatic. ' Are you a Pict ? (without emphasis) would be Picius-ne es ? Are you not a Pict ? ' would be Non-ne Pictus es ?
21.
I.
' '
3.
Celticd orlgine,
'
4. et frdtris tul,
6. 7. toil
is
cp. animo forti, 2, 1. 14. and your brother's (name).' insulae nomen est Britanniae, to the whole island there
'
of Celtic origin
'
'
the
name
5,
1.
Britain,'
'
name
Britain
'
cp.
on
13
(nomen Britannico).
14. Antonl, Vocative of Antonius (the writer of these mentaries) ; cp. fill. Vocative of fllius.
Comis
18. uhi llbertas, ibi patria est, 'where (or wherever) there freedom, there is the fatherland.'
Carefully note the endings of the Verbs in black print below, and compare them with the endings of the AH Verbs of the 2nd Conj. will be found in the Vocabuist Conj. lary with the ending eo.
Tided,
'
I see.'
5.
Tident,
'
they
'
see.'
'
salvete
' !
hail
'
lit.
'
be safe and
sound.'
7.
'
gaudemus,
repUes,'
we
' '
are glad.'
respondet,
we have
8.
ourselves well
'
'
= we
responds.' bene nos habemus, lit. are all right ; nous nous porions
'
bie'iu.
nos non
'
pigebit,
is
it
will not
vex us
'
= we
'
it rains,' etc.
to sit down.'
9.
habebimus,
10. vldetis-w,
have.' see
'
in oculls
ut
.
='in
'
sight.'
delet,
how time
1.
destroys everything.'
11. rident,
'
laugh,'
smile
'
cp. cachinndre,
17,
15.
7t
14. lacet,
'
PREPARATIONS
it lies
'=
'
it is
'
situated
'
(situm
est).
19. deletus,
a,
um,
ad,
deled.
spectat
'
it
used to have/
' '
it
'
had.'
you see = one sees ; cp. O.M. 11, ex castello fretum GalUcum spectds, one looks at the English Channel.'
It wUl be seen that the Present, the Past Imperfect and the Future Tenses of the 2nd Conjugation differ from those of the ist Conjugation only in having an e instead of an a in the endings. (In the ist Conjugation the ist Pers. Sing, of the Present has specto is for spectao). lost its a
:
Second Conjugation
Active Voice.
PREPARATIONS
13. in manu, 'in the hand'='in our hands.' ienebamus, we held,' or we were holding,' from feneo.
'
n
is
').
'
16. pertifiet,
'
extends,'
'
stretches
lit.
'
'
;
teneo,
hold through
'
17. Usui, ' for use ' (Dat.). is also literal translation of the sentence is To
'
'
for a use ? or To whom In English we should say, To whom was it of use, or useful ? This example throws light upon the meaning of the Dative in such sentences as el Britannia non curae erat (2, 1. 20), where we should naturally say in English, to him Britain was not an anxiety but the Latin means properly to him Britain did not serve as an anxiety = was not a cause of anxiety.'
' '
a Dative, so that the this tunnel did this tunnel exist for a purpose ?
Cm
whom was
'
'
'
'
19. de usu,
about
if (=if at any time) the castle was besieged Passive of obsidebat from ob-sideo (which is a Compound of ob and sedeo, lit. I sit down against ').
'
21. praeberi,
vide.'
'
to be provided
is
Praebeo
' Passive of praebere, to pro; contracted from prae-hibed, lit. I hold forth
' '
(-hibed=habeo).
23. ad dextrum cornii, at the right wing ; cornU is (not Abl. but) Accusative Singular of a Neuter Noun of the 4th Decl.
' '
28. custodem
(lit.
valere iubemus,
'
we
to-be-in-good-health).'
78
PREPARATIONS
Second Conjugation
Pres.,
Passive Voice
(see Rule,
PREPARATIONS
It will
79
:
be seen that the Perfect Stem Active of the 2nd Conjugain several different
ev;
tion
(i)
ways
thus delev- from deled, which is like spectav- from specto. But this way is not common in the 2nd Conj.
in u;
(2) It
may end
This
is
the com-
monest way.
(3) It (4) It
may end in s- thus ris- from video (the d being dropped). may be formed without any suifix thus respond- from,
;
responded (25,
Second Conjugation
1.
4).
Tenses from
the Perfect
Stem
Active.
80
PREPARATIONS
26.
I.
'
before than ' or ' earlier than," ante-quam, lit. the time when or simply ' before.' But this before,' which is followed by a Verb in a Subordinate Clause (praebuit) must be distinguished from the Preposition 'before,' which in Latin is ante cp. ante finem, i, 1. 3. See note on post-quam and post, 2, 1. i. Ante-quam and post-quam join on a little sentence which forms part of a larger sentence, and are therefore
= t before
'
'
'
called Subordinating
10.
'
Conjunctions
;
'
:
cp. note at
end of
20.
13,1. i. I shall forbid you to remain,' 16. pro-hibebo vos manere, like Augustinumdocereiusserat, 25, 11. 10, 11. Pro-hibeo is a compound of habed, lit. ' I for-hold (' I hold away,' cp. for-bid '); Prohibeo often takes the Infin. quite different from praeheo.
cp.
' ' '
in hunc
modum
27,
5.
is
'
[Perfects
aedificatae erant,
had been
built.'
The
literal
translation
were
meaning built,' which would be aedificabantur in Latin. Aedificatae erant means were already built,' just as we might say My letter was written before yours arrived here was written = had been written.' Notice, then, that English phrases like was written,' were built,' etc., may be used in two different senses, which in Latin are expressed by two different tenses (the Pluperfect and Dubrts, .the Past Imperfect^. at Dover Locative Case of Dubrae. The Locative of a Plural Name like Dubrae or Rutupiae is the same in form as the Ablative. Contrast Vlroconii, Devae, etc. ( 5, 1. 22) and Callevae below (1. 6). 6. vid-istis and vld-l are Perf. Act. of video. The Pronouns vos and ego are put in because they are emphatic you have seen at Dover and I at Silchester.' was carried-off.' Note the translation was 9. deportatus est, carried-off,' where the Latin is literally is carried-off.' But the would naturally mean is generally English is carried-off carried-off,' which would be in Latin deportdtur (Present Tense) so we use was in such cases. With the whole sentence compare the Active construction in 5, 11. 25 and 26. she was accused,' lit. she is accused.' 12. accusata est, compare 21, 1. 7, and 23, 1. 2. 13. Pompdniae Graechiae they had destroyed cp. delev-it, 24, 1. 2. 15. delev-erant, had been destroyed here we might say 17. deleta erat, was destroyed.' For the Adj. deletus, a, um, see 22, 1. 19.
'
{erant) built {aedificatae')' but this would not give the in English ; for it would naturally mean ' used to be
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
PREPARATIONS
8l
19. tenenies, ' holding,' and cantantes, ' singing,' are Active Adjectives formed from the Verbs teneo and canto. The vowel before the -nt is e when the Adjective comes from a Verb of the 2nd Conjugation, a when it comes from a Verb of the ist Conj.
20. a domo tud sanctd, from Thy holy house domo is the Ablative of the Feminine Noun domus, which belongs partly to the 2nd, but mainly to the 4th Decl., and which has a Locative Case ( = at home ').
' '
'
82
28.
PREPARATIONS
[Nouns
ot the 5th
'
Declension.]
pity.'
1.
3. fnisericordia com-mov-erat,
4.
5.
15.
j
pulchra,
14.
'
with (or
'
handsome
cp.
6.
8.
com-motus
est,
quorum in manu,
haius
faciei,
'
in
whose possession
(lit.
hand).'
II.
same
the
13. tacies,
.
face,'
. .
'
appearance
'
Nom.
habet, 'whom the King of Darkness (=the 14. quos Devil) has as ministers (or servants).' These are the words of Gregory, as reported by the Venerable Bede. The phrase Rex Tenebrdrum could not have been used by a classical Latin writer
in this sense.
16. eos esse, 17.
'
them
to be
'
'
cp. 2,
1.
10.
angelicam faciem,
an angelic face
(or appearance).'
'
they ought to be called,' lit. it behoves Oportet can only be used in the 3rd Pers. to be called.' Sing. ; cp. piget, 22, 1. 8.
18. eos vocarl oporiet,
'
them
from fides, to the faith 22. ad fidem, fhe word is here used in a specially Christian sense in classical Latin it means 'loyalty' or 'allegiance.'
' ' ; ;
25. dies,
'
the day
'
Nom.
Sing.
PREPARATIONS
f
3.
83
'
29.
I.
vehiculum pardium
was ready).'
' :
the Pluperf. Pass, may sometimes be translated literally by ' was but here too it may be translated had-been prepared.'
6.
domi. Locative
see on
27,
1.
20.
longo die
Abl. =
'by.'
9.
1.
16), as rls-,
from
rldeo.
f 30.
as of
post Idus,
'
after the Ides.' The Ides of September, Roman year, fell on the 13th. But
May
'
2.
The Ides were on the fifteenth day. are elapsed,' = have slipped away elapsi sunt, cp. i black.' The Romans called unlucky days black dter,
'
'
'
days.'
5.
verbum
'
vale
'
= the
word 'goodbye'
'
or
'
fare-well,'
from
'
vale, lit. 'be well,' be safe and sound,' from be used for how do you
;
'
good-bye
cp.
'
(which =Goc? be
vuith you).
iubebo
is
'
from in-the-morning,' but may be translated simply from the morning ; cp. the phrase mane erat, lit. it was in-the-morning' ='it was morning.'
lit.
' ' '
mane a mane is
8.
thus
9.
(Jeriae).
days of
festivals
is
pro-festus
the
festal.'
imitation of tv/o well-known lines of Ovid [Fasti Line 11 means And the day, which will be a a description of holiday, was in the m.orning a working-day In 1. 10, silent-ur (Passive of silent, from sileo) a half-holiday. almost = are silenced.'
i.
An
47 and
50].
'
'
'
The metre
is
'
'In the hexameter rises the fountain's silvery c61umn 'In the pentameter aye falling in melody bdck.
12. tres res,
'
the
important
three things,' ' three realities ; Nom. Plur. of Noun res, Sth Decl. (whence Engl, 're-al').
'
84
PREPARATIONS
t 31, 1. septem dies, "for seven days.' Time how long is genera'ly expressed in Latin by the Accusative without a Preposition, and often in English without for.' iayn sum, lit^ ' I am now =' I have now been and stUl am ' ; cp. in EngUsh
'
'
'
Over the great restless ocean Six and twenty years I roam'
'
still
am
roaming.'
'
ut vales
'
how do you do
lit.
how
well are
you
7. te solvere iuhet,
23,1.28;
'
'anything of new = anything new,' any news novl is Gen. Sing, of the Neuter Adj. novum, a new thing.' Latin is very fond of such Genitives where we in EngUsh do not generally say of thus in O.M., 30, aliquantum temporis, 'some time,' lit. 'a lot of time.'
30,1.7. quiA novi,
'
'
'
'
ID. illic
ndtds,
'
produced
'
(lit.
born)
there
'
cp.
'
native
oysters.'
14.
ridens (rldent-),
1.
laughing
'
from rideo
cp.
tenent-es,
27,
19.
15. de re,'
'
1.
12.
has sent
letters,'
has given
letters.'
18, 19. Ministrum nostrum qui Coloniis praeest=' out Secretary of State for the Colonies.'
21. Reipublicae, ' of the Republic,' from respuhlica. This is really two words, (i) res, the Noun of the jth Decl., (2) publica,
an
Adjective
' :
wealth,' or
agreeing with it. Both together =' commonre-public' In declining the word, both parts must
be changed
thus
SINGULAR.
respublica
PLURAL.*
respublicae
respublicas
rempublicam
reipublicae
rerumpubliearum
rebuspublicis
republica
'
or
'
republics,'
and should
PREPARATIONS
32.
'
85
and Passive.]
'
[Srd
'
Conjugation,
'
Present,
'
Active
1. quaeso, I ask often used like please (= please tell me)., ; Carefully note the endings of the Verbs in black print below, and compare them with the endings of the ist and 2nd Conj. The 3rd is the most dif&cult of the Conjugations, and will require special attention.
2.
longum
is
is
dicere
the r
4.
est dicere, it is a long story (lit. a long-thing) to tell the Present Infinitive of died note that the e before short, whereas in the 2nd Conj. it is long.
' ;
'
eolunt,
cultivate,'
'
till
'
in-colunt
(1.
6),
'
inhabit.'
is.'
6. disputdtur, 'it is
7.
8.
ah hoc ad ilium,
per,
'
from the
'
for,'
how long;
cp.
another way of
'
expressing time
sent,'
'
'
Passive of mittunt, they are sending,' from mitto, I send 'I let-go '). For the Present Tense with iam see on 31, 1.
g.
(or
2.
perdimus, "we waste the water = we are losing see note on the water-clock, 24, 1. 6. Per-do is a Compound of per and do note that nearly all the Compounds of do (and they are many) belong to the 3rd Conj. Do itself belongs to the ist Conj., and has. the Infin. dare ; but observe that the a is short (unlike any other Verb of the ist Conj.). Two Compounds of do which have the Infinitive -dare (not -dere) are circum-do and venum-do. eurrit hora, time flies,' lit. 'the hour is running.'
aquam
;
'
time
'
'
'
admit
'
lit.
'
'
I let-go to,'
'
'
I let in.'
'
in reality,'
17.
really.'
'
ad-mitti,
of admitto.
is
Pres. Infin. Pass, to be admitted,' to be let in Note the peculiar way in which the Passive Infinitive
this
formed in
1st
Conjugation
Active Active Active
Conj.
..
-are,
-ere.
2nd Conj.
3rd Conj.
oportet eos
..
. .
-ere.
1.
-dri
-eri
-i
(not
-erT).
admiUl;
cp. 28,
Angelas.
18, 19.
20. vestram,
'
86
PREPARATIONS
Third Conjugation
PresoEt Tense.
PREPARATIONS
34.
1, 2.
87
of their axicient
4.
legite,
'
'
read
' ;
Imperative Plural of
lit.
I read.'
II. in-fundebant-ur,
"were poured
in
'
'
poured
1.
them-
selves' in.'
15.
16.
Germanicd
nos
21,
3.
The Belgae
of Britain
'
18. et 19.
et Hit,
both we and
'
nomen Germdnorum,
the
name
of
Germans
'
=' the
name
Germans.'
Third Conjugation
Imperative
Active.
2 P. 2
S.
'
88
38.
I, 2.
PREPARATIONS
[3rd Conjugation,
Future, Active
'
and Passive.]
' ;
magnum
'
to exist,' or
4. 6.
periculum esse dtcit, declares a great danger declares the danger to be great cp. 28, 1. 16.
'
con-scrlbere nuntiantur
are reported to be
lit.
'
e'^iroUing.'.
' :
multo
plur-es,
'
far
more-men,'
'
more by much
cp.
I.
many
'
years before,'
28,
4.
for the sake of defending the 7. coloniae defendendae causa, colony,' lit. of the colony to-be-defended ; compare proelil spectandl causa, 9, 1. 23. Note the Adj. in -endus, a, -andus, a, in the ist Conj.
'
um=
um
'
9. ducent, 9,
shall lead
'
from duco,
33,
1.
6.
prohibebit eos per-currere, ' will prevent them from overrunning,' lit. ' will prevent them to overrun.' The Infinitive is used as in 26, 1. 16, prohibebo vos manere, I will forbid you to
lb.
'
remain.
12.
14.
frorti
mittet-ur,
'
will
be
sent,'
'
from
mitto.
robur et aes triplex, oak and triple brass,' a quotation Horace, here applied to British ironclads, as in O.M. 41.
delendet,
'
15.
will defend,'
'
16. vincemus,
we
shall conquer,'
19. mittet,
will send.'
'
14.
20. mlttam,
I shall send.'
'
leget,
'
he
will read.'
'
I shall col-lect.'
ex-scribam,
I shall write
Third Conjugation
Future
Tense.
PREPARATIONS
37.
1.
89
Si
vales, etc.
the regular
'
way
hope you
2.
If you are weU, it is well I am well ' of beginning a letter in Latin, like the English are quite well.'
'
cUiquid novi, 'something new,' like quid novi, 31, 1. est, there is.' The Greek proverb is mentioned the Latin writer PUny (Historia Naturalis, viii. ch. 17, 42).
7.
Understand
4. litterds
'
by
ultimas,
'
matum.'
5.
mis-erunt,
'
ulti-
'
in-dix-erimt,
(1.
they
us.'
'
have
declared,'
from
in-died,
nobis
7.
4),
'
upon
we shall have with-drawn,' from de-dUco. auddciam. The Accusative is often found in Exclamations without a Verb cp. O.M. 2, bedtas ferids I
de -dux-erimus,
;
'
greater,' agreeing
virorum,
1.
'
cp. 9, U. 12
'
and
I
21
24,
IS'
16. pro-mis-it,
lit.
let-go
forth.'
20. scrips-i,
'
have
from
scribo.
It wiU be seen that some Verbs of the 3rd Conjugation form thus, scrib-, scripsthe Perfect Stem Active by adding an -s mitt-, m.is(the b being turned into a p) ; die-, dix- ( = dies-) These are like mans-, ris-, (the tt being dropped before the s). etc., in the 2nd Conjugation.
:
Third Conjugation
Tenses
from the
Perfect
Stem
Active.
go
38.
PREPARATIONS
(Note.)
Idibus, 'on the Ides,'
Cape
2.
to England.
Abl. of Time when. A about eighteen days to travel from the red-ditae, Passive Adj. from red-do.
to Africa.
(The metre
is
4. Tic-imus,
J.
'
'
have you read,' from lego, 34, we have conquered,' from vinco.
'
1.
4.
defend-imus,
as.'
we have
defended,'
from defendo.
ut,
so far
6. The thirteenth day before the ist of November is October 20th, if we count in the ist of November itself. The Roman months had the same number of days in them as ours. 7.
ad,
at
'
or
'
near
'
a meaning very
collected,'
Case of
Names
of
Towns.
9. col-leg-erant,
'had
"
from
'
col-ligo,
36,
1.
21.
10.
pTd-cucurr-eiunt,
;
ran forward,'
1.
advanced at a
1.
run,' from
pro-curro
g._
11. pepul-erunt,
drove,'
from
:
pello, 35,
14.
General Sir
W. Penn Symons.
vulneratus, an Adjective to legatus Britannicus. Cp. ante oculos Similarly in 1. 15 below situm is principis collocdtus, 6, 1. 11. an Adjective to Saltum Cervmum.
14.
etc., see
Vocab.
lit.
'
(Nom.
'
ours.'
cohortes, here
battaUons
'
army).
19. ascend-erunt,
let-go away').
see
34 (end).
from Cape Colony (Colonia, 1. 23) was written days after the battle of Elandslaagte. It will be seen that some Verbs of the 3rd Conjugation form the Perfect Stem Active without any suffix this is specially the
case with stems ending in nd, like defend-, ascend-. Indeed all Verbs with stems in nd-, to whatever Conjugation they belong, form the Perfect Stem without any suffix (for instance, in the 2nd Conj., responded, Perf. Stem respond-).
PREPARATIONS
Some
:
gi
of these Verbs, however, prefix a syllable to the Perfect thus curr-, cucurr- ; pell-, pepul-. This extra syllable is called the Reduplication ' ( = doubling). Others of these Verbs change the Stem of the Present in some other way ; thus, leg- (' read '), leg- ; col-lig- (' collect '), col-leg- ; vine-, vie- (here a letter is dropped). There are other ways in which the Perfect Stem may be formed ; instances will occur in the following sections.
Stem
'
39.
I.
[Perfects
S.V.B.E.E.V.
re-duetae sunt,
' '
37.
have been led back,' from re-duco. collected,' from col-ligo. 6. eol-leetae, die trlcesimo, on the 30th.' This way of expressing dates in Latin is far more convenient than the old Latin way (cp. 37, 1. 20 38, 1. 6), and is generally used in Latin letters written at the present day for instance, letters sent by Universities and intended to be read all over the world. It will be employed in the rest of this story; except when a date falls exactly on the Kalends or Nones or Ides of a month, or on the day immediately preceding 01
5.
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
1.
22 below).
com-missum
'
est,
'
was
fought,'
mitto,
1 let-go together.'
with proelium.
10.
'
in ipso tempore,
'
at the time
itself,'
"
cp.
on Usui
an
aid,'
'served as an aid'
cp. nostri,
13.
nostrdrum,
collem,
of our-men,'
'
'
of ours
'
38,
1.
16.
14.
17.
missae
aeti,
'
'
mitto,
;rom ago,
driven,' Nom. Plur. Masc. of the Passive Adjective omnes mUlt). I drive ; agreeing with omnes (
'
like
eum
10.
20. circum-dati
had been surrounded,' from on 32, 1. 9. co-acti sunt, were driven (= compelled),' from cogo = co- ago. Nonis, on the Nones,' Abl. of Time when. See Vocab.
erant,
'
they
see note
'
92
40.
2.
PREPARATIONS
[4th Conjugation, Present,
'
'
audimus,
veniunt,
from audio.
4. custodiunt-ur,
5.
audire,
'
to hear,' Infinitive.
The Present Tense is here used with the 6. venit, ' comes.' sense of a Past (' came '), as so often in narrative ; cp. inquit, he says =' he said.'
' '
7. audite,
'
'
hear,'
'
Imperative Plural.
Perfect
quod = id quod,
that which,'
8.
what.'
lego, 3rd Conj.
;
leg-i,
from
Stem formed by
length-
are guarding.'
10. munire,
'
to fortify,'
from miinid.
'
12. posu-erunt,
from pond,
Perfect Stem
irregularly formed.
It will be seen that the Present Tense of Verbs of the 4th Conjugation differs from that of the ist and 2nd Conjugations only in having an i instead of an a or an e in the endings cp. 22 (end).
;
Fourth Conjugation
Present
Tense.
PREPARATIONS
41.
3.
93
veniebant,
were coming/
;
'
4.
enim =nam
but
it
always stands
'
in
the sentence.
on this Verb we heard/ we kept hearing 5. audlebamus, depends the Accusative with Infinitive (Batavos parare). muniebant, they were fortifying/ from fnunio.
' ;
'
7.
nesciebamus,
'
'
we
'
did not
I
it
we-,
not,'
and
scio,
'
of
will
'
arrive,'
from ad-venio
audio.
custodio.
'
(lit.
'
come
to
').
shall
we hear/ from
from
'
will guard,'
lit. 'it will be fought = the war will be 3rd Person Singular of the Passive Voice is often used without any Noun in the Nominative Case to which it belongs. A Noun of similar meaning to the Verb is understood thus here pugndbitur, it will be fought,' means the fight will be fought.' The nearest thing in English to this Passive construc= the rain tion with a vague subject is the Active it rains rains it thundered and lightened = the thunder thundered and the lightning lightened.' Cp. 32, 1. 6.
16. pugndbitur,
'
fought.'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
is
It will
tained
is re-
(i) before
the
same
Conjugations.
(2) before
Otherwise am, es, et, etc., in the Future Tense. Tense is the same as in the 3rd Conjugation.
Fourth Conjugation.
Past Imperfect.
Future.
94
42.
4. audlv-imus, 6. ad-ven-it,
'
PREPARATIONS
[Tenses from the Perfect Stem Active, 4th Conjugation.]
we have
heard,'
missa
est
1.
10.
39,
'
1.
I4-
vocant-em, have heard.' or heard 'calling,' Accusative of the Active Adjective formed from the = heard their heard the country calling Verb voco, I call cp. I2, U. 20, 21. country's call Accusative 11. prldie, 'on the day before,' may take an
10. audiv-erunt,
' ;
'
' '
'
'
(Kalendds).
' have guarded,' from custodio, 40, 11. 4, 9. 13. eustodlv-erunt, munin, Infinitive, Passive of munlre, 40, 1. 10.
they have fortified.' muniv-erunt, com-missum. Passive Adjective from com-mitto ( 39, 1. 7), agreeing with prodium (translate 'for the battle iEought In front of the town' ) cp. 5, 11. 12, 13 ; 15, 1. 4It will be seen that the Perfect Stem Active of most Verbs of the 4th Conjugation is formed in the same way as that of specto cp. spectdv-, delev-, audiv-. (ist Conj.) and deled (2nd Conj.) The only difference is that in the 4th Conjugation the vowel
14.
'
16.
before the v is i. But there are some Verbs of the 4th Conjugation which do for instance, venio not form the Perfect Stem in this way forms ven-, without any suffix ; cp. lego, leg- (3rd Conj.). Note that in no Conjugation do all verbs form the Perfect even in the ist Conjugation, which is Stem in the same way far the simplest, we have do, ded- and sto, stet-.
;
:
Fourtli Conjugation
Tenses
formed tiom
tlie
Perfect
Stem
Active.
PREPARATIONS
43. [Verbs
95
in
6re,
and Future, Active and Passive.] you will re-ceive 3. ac-eipies, with fu, from Compound of ad and capio (' I take to myself,'
'
'
ac-cipio, a I ac-cept,'
'
I re-ceive
5.
').
'
audiv-eris,
you
'
eupiebam,
will have heard,' Future Perfect of audio. I desired,' ' I wanted,' from cupio. Note the
Past Imperfect Tense, which is here used just as we might use the Past Tense in a similar passage of an English letter. In a similar way we have scribebam in 1. 2 and poteram in 1. 4.
6. nihil Utterarum
8. taeietis,
;
1.
7
'
aliquid novl,
37,
1.
2.
with tH
'
condiscipuU im,
shall receive,'
'
will
do
'
from
'
facio.
accipiemus,
9. caplmns,
we
from
"
accipio.
'
with nos,
'
we
take,' here
= we feel,' or we suffer
from capio
11. capere,
from capio
'
cupiunt,
12. capient,
'
they
desire,'
(it).'
nodes diesque
see Vocab.
' '
they make facdre, to do both from facio. is running short,' from de-ficio (a Compound of
' '
'
de,
'
away,' and
fodSre,
'
facio).
1 6.
to dig,'
from
fodio.
17. se re-elpiunt (a
Compound
'
of re-,
'
back,'
and
capio),
'
they
be-take themselves.'
18. inter-ficiunt-ur,
(lit.
'
make
away with
').
It will be seen that Verbs like capio, cupid, facio are conjugated in the Past Imperfect and Future Tenses exactly like audio that is, according to the 4th Conjugation. In the Present Tense the ist Person Singular and the 3rd Person Plural are also according to the 4th Conjugation and the other Persons of this Tense differ from the 4th Conjugation only in having a short i where the 4th Conjugation has a long i. But in the Infinitive these verbs have the endings of the 3rd Conjugatiop (Active, -ere, not -ire ; Passive, -i, not -iri). So toe. in tb Imperative,
; ;
96
PREPARATIONS
Active Voice.
PREPARATIONS
11. fSc-erunt,
'
97
irom capid.
1.
cep-erunt, 'took,'
12. con-iec-erunt,
threw,'
from
con-iicio),
which
is
'
a Compound
of-
'
43,
13.
I take
on
').
43,
1.
16.
'
;
see note
20,
erunt,
'
pugnatum est, it was fought -' a battle was fought on pugnabitur, 41, 1. 16. se tra-iSc22. inter-fec-erunt, killed,' from inier-ficto. threw themselves across = crossed tra- = trans.
'
'
'
'
23. se re-cep-ernnt
cp. se re-cipiunt,
43,
1.
17.
The dates
Nov.
It will be seen that capio, facio, iacio and fodio form their Perfect Stems -without any suffix, and with a lengthened vowel, Cupid, on the other hand, forms the Perf. oep-, fee-, tec-, fod-. St. cupiv- (like audiv-, from audio).
t 45.
5.
legatus Britannicus,
'
Lord Methuen.
just-as to the ancient Britons.' Caesar tells us that the Britons were not accustomed to fight regular battles in the Roman style.
7. slcut Britannls antiquls,
9, 10.
Cp. O.M.
tantum
'
cp.
duo tantum
'
1.
14.
Batdvus,
the
Dutchman
from
'
=' the
Dutch
general,'
here
Cronje.
18. acceptd. Pass. Adj.,
accipid, agreeing
with
clade.
t 46.
7. legato, 8.
4. con-spicit-ur ,
is
discerned,'
from
con-spicio.
General Wauchope.
contrast iec-erunt from iacio. from iaceo Perf. Pass. were thrown into disorder other over other =' one over the super alium,
;
' ' ; '
'
iacu-erunt,
cUius
other.'
13, 14. ut poterant
;
cp. ut poteramus,
38,
1.
5.
commanded by General
Gatacre.
The
disaster of
?j.
gS
f
13. legio,
47.
5.
PREPARATIONS
imperator noster
;
see 42,
11.
10, 11.
6. milia, in
apposition to exercitus.
'
here
;
brigade
cp.
'
army)
see Vocab.
20.
nostrorum
39,
13.
48.
[Present Injunctive of
'
'
sum.']
'
before a few days I. Ante paucos dies, {Ahhinc is not used with dies.']
'
'
a few days
ago.'
'
'
ad
cp. 38,
1.
7.
ce-cid-it,
is
from cadd.
9. facit.
13. poeta
Civ.
be.'
'
The
Persian
'
4, 73).
'
14.
i486
The Cape
Storms/ so called by
its first
discoverer in
great,'
18.
but
may
f.
quantum, Accus. of quantus, which means 'how be translated as after tantus so great (1. 17).
' ' '
may which-thing be helpful = and may it pro-sit, The verb pro-sum means literally I am for,' I am on-the-side-of,' and takes the Dative Case (relpublicae nosirae).
18,
quod
'
'
'
be helpful.'
'
'
differs
be seen that sit differs from est in the same way as be from is in English cp. it is so with be it so or so Est and is express a fact sit and be it.' be express a desire or command. They are therefore very like Imperatives in meaning.
It will
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
We may
Injunctives,' understanding by that name call them a form of the verb which enjoins or expresses an injunction for an injunction is very much the same as a command. Injunctive forms exist in all Persons, Singular and Plural, and in several different Tenses. The whole group of injunctive forms might be called an Injunctive Mood ; just as the whole group of imperative forms is called the ' Imperative Mood,' and the whole group of forms which state facts is called the Indicative ( = indicating) Mood.' But the Mood here called 'Injunctive is commonly called 'the Subjunctive Mood' from a use of it explained below ( 50).
' ' ' ' ' ;
' '
'
'
PREPARATIONS
Present Injunctive of
'
99
sum.'
S.
100
1
'
PREPARATIONS
unlus
et
2.
'
the
body
of one
'
The metre
is
'
me
hre a
little,
while as y6t
early
m6m."
may
'
here be translated
to set,'
')
'on which'
'
comes
'
occidens,
the set-
sun
'
the West.'
it
judge 18, 19. maximam laudem . . . posse, greatest praise to themselves to be able to say.'
20, 21. Lines
to
be the
of
Rudyard
" I
a translation
am
daughter in
is
my
'tis
my
own.''
The metre
Hall
" while
trochaic,
as y6t
22-26..
afterwards.
25. ndtu,
See Vocab.
cp. quod = id quod, 40, 1. 7. 27. qui = ei qui, ' those who ; who sometimes means he who ' ; thus, In English, too, Who steals my purse, steals trash ' (Shakspere, Othello'). The metre of the line of Horace is dactylic ; cp. on 30, 1. 10.
' ' '
'
may God render safe = God prae-stet, Notice that God save the Queen may also be translated Deus salvam fac (Imperative of by an Imperative in Latin God make safe the Queen.' The English facio) Reginam, lit. save in God save is an Injunctive.
29.
Deus salvam
'
'
'
save.'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
PREPARATIONS
Present Injunctive ot the First Conjugation.
lOI
s.
r02
PREPARATIONS
20/-'-= "cost
"stand at 19. denarils vtgintl constant, lit. 20/-.' For the Abl. in this sense, cp. O.M. 9,
magno
pretio
venumdant.
22. ut
. .
.
expl6rent-ur,
enemy may be
cp. nos agebantur.
'
which
that what is being done among the investigated quae= ea quae, those things 49, 1. 27j and contrast 46, 1. 21, eorum quae apud
' ' '
:
25. ut spectent,
'
may
see.'
2^,26.
It will
ita
...
applicetur,
if it
'
'
in
such a
'
way
that
it
may
be brought.'
differ in
'
be.'
be seen that the Subjunctives of this section do not that is, the form from the Injunctives of 48, 49 same words {sim, sis, sit, etc., pugnem, pugnes, pugnet, etc.) may be used either as Injunctives or as Subjunctives.' The name Subjunctive is here given to an Injunctive when it stands in a But there is also a difference of meaning, Subordinate Clause.* which in some cases is important
' ' ;
'
'
'
(i) Instead of
'
may
'
I,'
'
may
' '
you,'
'
may
'
he,' etc.,
the Sub-
junctive
(2)
is
translated
I may,'
you may,'
'
he may,'
etc.
may seems to disappear altosee 1. II, obscuretur, 'is darkened' ; 1. 12, propulsent, they repel ' ; 1. 13, praestent, they render.' [At first sight it is difficult to see why Subjunctives are used in these sentences at all ; they seem not to differ in meaning from Indicatives. Perhaps applicetur in 1. 26 may help to explain the difficulty may be brought,' but it might be translated is it means Similarly ut propulsent (1. 12) means properly as to brought.' repel,' rather than 'that they repel' ; ut sol obscuretur (1. 11) is rather more difficult, because it is Passive, but we may translate ' as for the sun to be darkened ' ; and this ' for the sun is not so very different from ' that the sun may to be darkened
In some cases the meaning
;
gether
'
'
'
'
'
'
be darkened.''^ f
Sub-junctive ' in itself means nothing more than as though the Subjunctive Mood were the Mood of sub-joined or sub-ordinate clauses. But it is best to understand it that is, Subordinate Injunctive.' as short for Sub-injunctive This attempt to' explain the Subjunctive in Clauses denoting f Result may be omitted, if too difficult of comprehension for the pupil. He wiU then have to regard the Subjunctive in such Clauses as having no special meaning, and as a. merely formal substitute for the In*
The word
'
'
sub-joining,'
'
'
'
dicative.
PREPARATIONS
t 51. 4-14.
4.
3.
IO3
;
vincere scit,
knows how
to conquer,'
lit.
'
knows
;
48, 1. 2. to conquer.'
11.
cp. 50,
7-12.
4, 5. 6.
who
'
shall deliver
:
'
=' to deliver.'
=' to ride.'
6, 7. ui equitent,
13. solito
densiorem, 'denser than usual.' In this phrase the Ablative of the Adjective solitus means ' than.'
17. Salvl sitis
!
common form
day
'
safe-and-sound
19,
='
'
=' good
of greeting, to you.'
lit.
'
may you
be
that {or in order that) we may set-free ' 20. ut liberemus, The proper English, however, to (or in order to) set-free.' for the phrase oppidum obsidione Hberare (lit. to set -free a town from siege ') will be found in the Vocab. Deo sit gratia, ' thanks be to God,' thank God.'
' '
the name of A.' ; cp. 22, 23. nomine Adamantopolis (Gen.), nomen Germanorum, 34, 1. 19. adamanta movere, to move adamant,' means to bend a thing that is inflexible. Adamanta is the Greek Accusative of the Greek word adamas (adamant-).
' '
be seen that Subjunctives and Injunctives may often be by the word shall in English and ut or qui followed by a Subjunctive may be conveniently translated by the Infinitive see lines 4, 5, 6, 7, 19, 20 above. with to,' -or in order to
It will
translated
'
'
'
'
'
and Subjunctive
8.
51, U. 4,
'
5.
eum itinere prohibeant, while the cavalry shall prevent him from the march ( = from marching).' a septen6-8.
equites
trionilus,
8. vide jt 9, 10.
'
dum
on the North.'
imperdtor noster,
. . . '
let
our general
see-to-it.*
that the State shall suffer no harm ' ; ' that not or lest ; cp. the ne in 49, 1. 7, quid detrimenti ; cp. quid novi, 31, L 7. For capio -' suffer,' see 43, 1. 9.
capiat,
'
'
'
'
11
I04
lo. anxia, fern, of
14.
Preparations
anxius
;
because
avert.' not,' or
'
I
'
'
is
here a
woman.
'
:
Dens
avertat,
'
may God
. .
.
may he prevent lest may he prevent that but the meaning is God forbid that.' It is a special idiom in Latin to use ne instead of ut after prohibeo, as though the Subordinate Clause were a separate sentence (Ne sit hie dies ater, let not this day be a black one ').
'
'
15, 16.
Det ut vlncamus,
'
may
'
he grant that we
may
conquer.'
on
'
that I send greeting,' dependirg 16, 17. ut saliitem dieam, rogat. ut valeas, ' that you be-well,' depending on citrd,
' ' '
take care.' Note that the Latin Subjunctive is here translated by an English Subjunctive, instead of by may,' let,' or shall.'
It will be seen that the Present Injunctives of the 2nd, 3rd and whereas in the ist 4th Conjugation have an a in the ending Conjugation the Present Injunctive has an e.
;
4tli
Conj.
Active Voice.
PREPARATIONS
68.
IO5
'
sum.']
vidi,
vici
7.
came, saw and conquered.' Venl, was what Caesar wrote in one of his despatches.
in quihus sui tutl
essent,
'
in
' ;
cp.
8.
52, U.
s, 6.
'
ne
pos-set,
. .
posset =
pof-esset.
way
. . ,
that
they
applicetur.
Vocab.
1.
Perfect of de-do
35,
7.
1.
23.
'
by
hastening,'
by
acting rapidly
cp.
It will be seen that the Past Imperfect Subjunctive differs from the Present Subjunctive just as should differs from shall,' or might ' from may.'
'
'
'
'
'
'
sum.'
s.
io6
4. trd^ecerat, tra-iecerat^ ' he
'
PREPARATIONS
he had crossed much commoner than se had thrown himself across,' 44, 1. 22. ut that he might dislodge move from the (lit.
'
loco
moveret,
').
'
'
'
place
5. et {ut
understood)
'
taeSret,
'
6. Mi re-duc6ret, lit.
Cogo
may
that he should lead back =' to lead back.' also take the Infinitive in Latin, as in 39, 1. 21, coactl
'
sunt se dedere. that a few men easily pre9. ut paucl facile piohibeient, so high ' ; we might translate vented,' depending on tarn altos, high enough for . . to prevent.'
'
'
..
tolerarent,
.
. .
'as to endure.'
ascendSrent, '(as) to ascend.'
understood)
14. (ut understood) . . . capSrent, sus-tinerent, ' (as) to sus-tain,' . 16. red-didit. Perfect of red-do
;
'
(ut)
16, 17. ut
all
men
Perfect
'
Infinitive
of
pro-fundo.
'
ter,
47.
20. ut
pellSrent,
depending on contenderant
cp.
viam
46,
1.
14' . . .
pugndrent, that they should fight depending on constitu-erunt, they resolved.' until they should conquer.' erent,
22. ut
' '
'
to fight,'
donee vinc-
Active Voice.
PREPARATIONS
Passive Voice (Rule,
17).
107
ro8
'^jj.
PREPARATIONS
K.'S>.
= Anno
Salutis,
'
in the year of
'
Grace
' ;
cp.l. 83.
39.
Take pro
'
patria pugnant-em,
die.'
referring to principatus Britannicus, but agreeing (according to a common idiom) with patrocinium, protectorate.'
'
54-58. The skeleton of this long sentence is Videdmus ne (55) turpissimum sit (57) non posse (58). Cp. 52, 11. 8,9, videat ne capiat. turpissimum sit, it may be a most in. . .
'
glorious tiung.' After non posse take obtinere et conservdre, and then id quod accepimus. The words from ui to sic (55, 56) may be left out till the rest of the sentence has been translated ut= ' as,' and.sic, so ; pulcherrim,um fuit, it was a most glorious thing ; tantam goes with gloriam ; and nobis is Dative after
:
'
'
'
'
trddere.
58. Illud, that,' 1. 59.
'
that,'
'
61, 62. Baidvis licet, ' it is allowed to {or lawful for) the Dutch,' to be,' civibus Britannicls, British subjects.' Licet, like piget and oporiet, can only be used in the 3rd Person.
esse,
'
'
6^. ui
be able to say
67.
dlcere possit, ' that he shall be able to ' cp. 49, U. 18, 19, dicere posse. ;
say
'
'
to
tUius
a.d.
(Claudius Ru-
68. quae
ea
= ea
quae.
70-75. Lines of Claudian, a poet of the fourth century a.d. [De Consulatu StUichonis, iii. 150 foL], in dactylic metre. She it is who.' 70. Haec est quae,
'
=eds quos
'
74, 75.
family
B.C.,
'
or
we owe
it
that.'
one
76. Camillus, the great Roman statesman of the fourth century who built a temple to Concord in honour of the reconciliation of the Patricians and the Plebeians.
78. in-scribantur ,
'
shall
be inscribed.'
;
80, 8 1 . Lines of Statins, a poet of the first century a.d. [Thebaid, esto, 'granted,' lit. 'be it so' xii. 573 f.]. cp. 49, 1. 15. ce-cid-ere is a poetical form of ce-cid-erunt, from cado ; cp. 48, 1, 8.
EXERCISES
I.
& CONVERSATIONS.
is,
e.O
(A) Conversation.
[The questions in this and similar Conversations are supposed to be asked by the teacher, and the answers to be given by the pupil, except where the contrary is indicated.]
Ubi est villa patrui tui ? Villa patrui mei in Cantio, inter
Dubras et Rutupias, Cur non apud patrem tuum nunc es ? Quia pater meus in Africa Meridiana habitat.
Patruusne tuus
Ita est.
sita est.
tibi loco parentis est ? Inter ferias apud patruum meum sum. Ubi eris post finem mensis Septembris ? Post finem feriarum apud magistrum meum, ad Ventam Belgarum
ero.
Ubi habitant amici tui, Marcus et Alexander ? Amici mei prope Dubras habitant. Quid nunc lectitas ? Vitam Agricolae nunc lectito. Agricola dux celeber saeculo post Christum natum fuit.
primo
(S) Oral Drill. Decline the Latin for the month of September ' in all Cases of the Singular ; and the Latin for the ist of September in all Cases of the Plural.
' ' '
month of-September. After the month ofshall be m-the-house-of schoolmaster. In ^ the month of-Octobear I shall give many hours every-day to Before the end of the month of-December there-will-be lessons.
(C) It
is
the
September
my
holidays. I am now reading about Agricola, the famous ^ general of the Romans. The lives of famous generals delight me much. I like to ^ read about famous generals and about our famous island. In ' the times of Agricola our island was not famous.
1
'
Time when
'
is
expressed
Preposition,
as in
2
10,
in the
2nd century.'
In
('
Use celeber, Celebris, celebre for famous throughout this exercise. what Case must the famous general be ? Think of the meaning about the famous general '), and compare Preparations i, 1. 7. 3 Say, I like to I gladly (Ubenter) read,' and so wherever
'
'
'
'
'
no
there were ou^y ten
EXERCISES
months
first king ' of thei Romans, in the Roman year. The name of the first month was Martius, of the second Aprilis, of the third Mdius, of the fourth lunius, of the fifth Quintilis, of the sixth Sextilis, of the seventh September, of the eighth October, of the ninth November, of the tenth December.
(E) But Numa, the second king, gave two new months to the year. He called the first Idnudrius,^ and the second Februdrius. After the times of Gaius Julius Caesar the Romans used to call the seventh month luKus ; and after the times of Augustus, the first emperor,* they used to call the eighth month Augustus.
2.
\is,
ea, id
Singular
Number.]
' '
(A) Oral
island,'
'
Drill.
^Decline
all
that name,' in
that
him,'
In the following exercises of this section translate he,' by Cases of is (' that-one '=' that-man '), and 'she,' by Cases of ea (' that-one ' that woman ').
'
'
'her,'
(B) Gaius JuUus Caesar was the first conqueror of Britain. My uncle has told me ^ about him. Tacitus mentions his victory in the Life of Agricola. That book tells about another * conqueror of Britain. His name was Agricola. He was-in-commandof ^ Britain during * seven years.
(C)
Roman
The Emperor Vespasianus created him general forces in the year 78 a.d.,'^ and gave him ^ great
' '
of
the
forces.
1 In what Case must the first king be ? The meaning is ' in the time of the first king.' Compare C, note 2 above. ^ The word ISnudrius must agree in Case with the word first (the first month). Similarly Februdrius. ^ Say to me (Dative Case).
' ' '
*
fi
uhi 40 quaituor regis Britannls prae-erant (' were-in-command-of the Britons,' were-commanders to the Britons'). or
:
Use alius, which is regular in most of its Cases. Use prae-sum, which takes the Dative Case. See O.M.
Use per. Wherever the
'
8
">
letters a.d. (Anno Domini) occur in these exercises and wherever the letters B.C. ( before say post Christum ndtum Christ) occur, say ante Christum ndtum. And in each case say in the 78th year (instead of ' in the year 78 '), in the 55th year ' (instead of in the year 55 '), and so forth. 8 What Case ? Think of the meaning (' him here' to him 'j.
;
'
'
'
'
'
EXERCISES
III
His daughter was the wife of Tacitus. Her ' name was Julia. Tacitus loved her much, and gives her great glory in the book about Agricola.
(>) In the month of-August my uncle had told us (Dat.) about the expeditions of C. JuUus Caesar against Britain. He transported the Roman forces into Britain in the year 55 B.C. and won a victory over ^ the southern Britons. One cause of that expedition was the expectation of booty. In the next year Caesar prepared a second and greater expedition, and won a second victory. But that victory too was not great. Tacitus does not praise it.^
3.
[is,
'
Drill. ^Decline the Latin for ' those emperors,' those islands,' ' those names,' in all Cases of the Plural.
(A) Oral
ea, id
Plural
Number.]
their
In the following exercises of this section translate by Cases of ei, eae, ea.
'
'
they,'
'
them,'
(B) Accordingly after those victories of C. Julius Caesar the Britons were free, as they had been before them.* The midland Britons had not fought against Caesar. Caesar did not subdue them. The Romans had not sold their children into slavery. The father of Cunobelinus was their king in the first century B.C.
(C) The name of that king was Tasciovanus. His son was Cunobelinus. The names of those kings were famous through the whole island. Cunobelinus was king not only of the midland Britons, but also of the southern Britons. He had united them into one people. Some ^ of those tribes were Celts, but some of them were Germans or Belgians. The name of their city stands on coins of that age.
4. [is, ea, id
continued.B
(^A) Conversation.
Quis
'
fuit pater
Cunobelini
Say of that-woman (Genitive of ea). Say 'from.' 3 It means that victory. What, then, must be the Gender of the Pronoun in Latin ? * 'Them' means those victories. What Gender, then, in Latin;^' 5 Some of those tribes' means some tribes of those tribes.' What Gender, then, in Latin? Compare nonnuUa ex navigils (O.M. 11), nonnulU ex Britannls, etc.
'
'
'
'
'
112
Is rex
EXERCISES
fuit frater
Tasciovanus fuit. Cunobelini ? Unus ex fratribus eius Epaticcus fuit. Unde ea nomina nobis nota sunt ? In nummis Britannicis ea lectitare possumus. Ubi regnabat CunobelLnus ? In Britannia mediterranea et meridiana regnabat
Quis
eius
caput regni
Camulodunum
erat.
Quando regnabat Cunobelinus ? Eo tempore regnabat cum Tiberius et Caligula principes Romanorum erant. Ei primo saeculo post Christum natum imperitabant.
(B) During the reign of Cunobelinus Tiberius and Caligula were the Roman emperors. They thought about an expedition against our remote and unconquered island. But they never entered it. Its inhabitants did not love Roman emperors, and Roman emperors did not love them. The English Channel ^ had given them freedom. .
"^
5.
[eius
and suus,
a,
um
contrasted.]
In doing the exercises in this section remember carefully the explanation of the difference between Uus and suus, a, um given in and remember also that eius, being the Genitive the Preparations ( 5) Case of is, ea, id and meaning of that-one,' is unchangeable, and does not agree with the word to which it belongs, as the Adjective suus, a, um does. Thus his uncle will be either patruus eius or patruus suus
; ' '
'
(A) Oral Drill. Decline the Latin for 'his uncle,' 'his aunt,' her uncle,' her aunt,' using (i) eius, (2) suus, a, um.
'
(B) Caligula was the third emperor of the Romans. His father was Germanicus, a brave and good man. The Romans had given him that name because he had won a victory over the Germans. Germanicus had named his ' son Gaius, but the soldiers used-to-call him Caligula. Caligula was a coward. His mind was full of
folly.
(C) Once he not only thought about an expedition against He prepared his expedition in the Britain, but also prepared it. year 40 a.d. But when he arrived at * the English Channel he
^
2
3
*
Say free or untouched (intactus, a, um). Say the Gallic Channel (fretnm Gallicum), as Think whose son is meant. Say arrived to (ad\.'
'
'
'
'
'
'
in
O.M.
'
EXERCISES
was-afraid,
113
and hurried homewards with his legions. He captured some shells, and called them the booty of the conquered ocean.
6.
[ipse, ipsa,
ipsumj
'
'
the emperor himself,' the wife herself,' the town itself,' death itself,' in all Cases of the Singular ; and the Latin for the Britons themselves in all Cases of the Plural.
Decline
'
'
'
(B) Caractacus himself was brave, but some of the other captives feared death. The Roman emperor had carried-off the captives to Rome.^ Caractacus did not fear the emperor himself ; he did not fear death itself. To the emperor himself he exhibited^ a brave mind. By ^ his courage he won* freedom for himself and for his wife and his brothers. He weis a true son
of Cunobelinus himself.
illud.]
'
(A) Oral
colony,'
'
Drill.
^Decline
all
7.
[ille,
ilia,
that town,' in
the Latin for that soldier,' ' that Cases of the Singular and Plural.
this and the two following sections (8, 9) by Cases of ille, ilia, illud. Sing, or Plur. (B) The Romans had placed a colony of veteran soldiers at Colchester .8 That town was not any-longer ' the capital of a British kingdom. For the Romans It was a Roman colony. used-to-call towns where soldiers lived colonies.' ' That colony was the first Roman town in Britain.
'
(C) That town was not any-longer^ dear to the Britons. For those Roman veterans had won victories over the Britons, and had sold many British captives into slavery. Those: captives
See Preparations,
'
5,
1.
26.
Use
'
praestd.
'
3
*
By
?
here means
by means
of
'
how
will it
be translated
'For'
is
in
Latin
here
(as generally) to be translated by the Dative, without ^ Locative Case see Preparations, 5, 1. 22. * ' Any -longer after not ' is iam.
' '
a Preposition.
'
Make
'
colonies
'
'
towns.'
114
EXERCISES
were the sons or the daughters of Britons. The fathers and mothers of those captives did not love those veterans. At Colchester the Romans had set-up an image of Victory. The Britons did not love that image of Victory.
8.
[tile,
ilia,
illud
continued.]
? ?
{A) Conversation.
Quid
fuit
nomen dat Boudiccae. Quid fuit verum nomen duci audaci Silurum Tacitus illi viro nomen dat Carataco.
Tacitus
Uli
Ubi de ilia regina et de illo duce lectitavisti ? In historia Anglica de Ulis lectitavi. Quid significat verum nomen UUus reginae ? Verum nomen illius reginae lingua Celtica Victoriam significat.
Unde
Quid
illud tibi
notum
est
In indice verborum
lectitavi.
significat verum nomen filii Cunobelini ? Significatio illius nominis mihi non nota est. lUud nomen lingua Celtica carum significat. Quid autem significat falsum illud nomen Caractaci
Nihil significat. Sed cur ilium virum plerumque Caractacum nominamus ? Quia in uno ex libris manuscriptis ilia forma nominis stat sed error est.
(B) " Those ^ Roman forces," said Boadicea, " are-away in Walos. That city where the veterans live is without walls. We do not fear those veterans they are cowards. Listen to me, Britons We shall take that city by storm.^ We shall bum the temple of that emperor Claudius, the new god ^ of the Romans."
;
!
9.
[ille, ilia,
illud
continued.]
legions hastened from Wales to London.* And, although they were not able to save that city from disaster, they won a great victory over the forces of Boadicea. In those legions there-were only ten thousand men.^ And, as one writer
1
2 3 *
For the order of words in Latin, see Preparations, To take by storm is expugnare.
' '
7,
1.
16.
Case ? Preparations, i, 1. 7. See Preparations, 5, 1. 26. "Imitate the construction which occurs twice in ('seventy thousands of Komans'), and U, 20, 21,
What
11,
11,
12
EXERCISES
aflSrms,
115
Boadicea was-in-command-of a hundred and twenty thousand men. But, if Tacitus tells the truth/ those ten thousand Romans slaughtered eighty thousand Britons.
10. [hie, haec, hoc.l
(A) Oral
'
Drill.
'
this distinguished
all
man/
this fine
monument,' in
Cases of the
(B) This victory of the Romans was the cause of death to Boadicea, the queen of the Iceni. To her ^ life was not dear One of the Romans too, after this victory of the Romans. the prefect of the camp of the second legion, put himself ?, to deiath after this battle. He * had-been-away in Wales with the second legion while Suetonius was-winning this victory. Accordingly to him * too life was not dear.
II. [hlc, haec, hoc
continued.]
of the generals of the emperor Vespasian. The daughter of this famous man was Julia, the wife of Tacitus. Tacitus praises the father of this woman, as a just and merciful man, in the book about the life of Agricola. This For after the times of book tells about Britain subdued.'^ Agricola there was a long peace in this island.
Julius Agricola
was one
'
continued.]
We
' '
In the seventh year of his command Agricola defeated the Graupian mountain.' This ' is the Caledonians, near the
'
of the mountain in the Life of Agricola. nowadays Grampian mouncall this mountain, or these mountains, the But we are mistaken. The real tain or the Grampian hUls. name of these hUls was the Graupian hUls.' This ^ is the form of the name in the book of Tacitus.
'
' '
name
* ' * ^
Say affirms true-things (neut. plur. of verus, a, um], Use a Case of haec (' this-woman '). Use SB, as in . 9, 1. 23. Use a Case of Mc (' this-man '). For subdued use the Adjective debelldtus, a, um, formed from
'
'
'
'
Think what
'
this
'
means.
it
' ;
and
in
Il6
iZ-XMc,
EXERCISES
haec, hoc
continued.]
These Highlanders ^ were not cowards, as Agrico'Ia declared they were ready to die for ^ their country. To free their country from the Romans, and to repel ' slavery from their wives and children, this * was the purpose of these Highlanders. " Drive ^
these Romans into the sea " said Galgacus. But the Dutch cohorts drove the Highlanders out-of the mountains. These cohorts were-serving under the Roman standards.
!
14.
[Comparatives of Adjectives.]
the
'
(A) Oral
'
Drill.
^Decline
death,'
a more miserable
'
and the Latin for juster men,' "keener ; defenders,' more savage wars,' in all Cases of the Plural. (B) No soldiers were ever braver ^ than the ancient Romans. But they were cruel. They used to slaughter the unhappy barbarians and their cottages. And nothing is more-cruel * and children of the enemy into than to sell the wives slavery. But what was more dangerous to the Roman
'
bum
than other
Roman
victors.
the bravest soldier,' the most miserable death,' the most beautiful building,' in all Cases of the Singular ; and the Latin for the justest of all men,' ' a very merciful man,' in aU Cases of the Singular and Plural.
' '
(B) The fate of the slaughtered Britons was unhappy ; but the fate of the captives was more-unhappy. For slavery is more-miserable ' than death. To the Highlanders, as to all
'
2 2
Say Caledonians. Translate for by pro, with the Ablative. The s^me Latin ve.b (meaning ' drive-ofE ') may be used for 'repel,*
' '
and
*
for
'
drive.'
Use the Neuter Singular. " Remeniber that the Comparative of an Adjective must agree with the word of which it is said, just like the Adjective itself. In what Gender, Number and Case must braver be ? 8 What Gender ? 1 Use miser, a, um for miserable,' as well as for unhappy.'
' '
'
'
'
EXERCISES
men, wives and children were
most-dear.*'
117
And
to' all
bra,ve
the fatherland is very-dear.^ But of all Roman conquerors Agricola was the justest, the kindest, the most-mercifUl. And Britain had been a most-turbulent province.
cruel.
men
The Romans were veary brave soldiers but they were very C. Julius Caesar was a more cruel conqueror than Agricola, but he was less cruel than many of the Romans. In the civil wars he showed himself ^ a very merciful conqueror of his enemies.
(C)
;
He won a very famous victory over Pompeius, but he did not put Roman captives to death after the battle. In Gaul, however, he was most inhuman, and slaughtered a large number of the'
Helvetii, the Nervii,*
16. [Present,
and other
Gallic tribes.
(A) Oral
' '
I am often praised by (ab) I used to be praised by ' I used to be delighted with in all Persons of these tenses. (In friends,' in the 3rd Person ' by his
Conjugate
my
'
ist Conjugation.]
friends,'
my
firiends,'
this book,' the 2nd Person say. 'by your friends,' and so forth.)
(B) The courage of the Nervii is mentioned by Caesar in the second book of his GalUc 'War. He declares them to have fought^ with the greatest ^ pluck. And in other books ot"her barbarous " Our lands are-beingtribes of Gaul are praised by him. " our men are-beingdevastated by the Romans," they said slaughtered ; our women and children are-being-carried-oE into slavery. Death is less miserable than slavery."
;
:
(C) In Britain, too, after the victory of Suetonius Paulinus the lands of the inhabitants were-being-devastated, and the inhabitants themselves were-being-carried-ofE into slavery. At Colchester ^ the TrinolDantes used-to-be-annoyed with most-cruel injuries^ by the Roman veterans, and used- to-be-called cowards
1 2
'
'What Gender ? {Uxor is fem., Itbert niasc.) See 12, 1. 12. For ' very dear use the Superlative, as for most dear
' '
'
and
dearest."
2
See
14, U.
9 and
10 and
a,
;
10.
1 1.
;
* ^ 8 ^ 8
What
See
Case
11.
2,
Use summus,
um
cp.
10,
1.
8.
Locative Case see Preparations, 5,1. 22. In this and the next two sentences imitate 7, lines ii-ij.
Il8
and
slaves.*
EXERCISES
The town
itself
buildings, although it was not being strengthened with walls. In the times of Boadicea, Colchester was a Roman, not a British town. Accordingly it was not loved by the Britons.
beautiful
Roman
continued
same
Tenses.]
Conjugate the Latin for (y4) Oral 'I shall be praised by my friends,' ' I shall be delighted with this book,' in all Persons of the Future tense.
Drill.
(B) After the times of Agricola the Britons took-pleasure in * buildings and Roman baths. During the second and the third and the fourth century a.d. temples and countryhouses and schools were-being-built in Britain, and the towns were-being-strengthened with very-good walls. Colchester wasbeing-surrounded * with walls during the first and the second century a.d.
Roman
(C)
liberty
The life of the Britons was then more civilized. But was gradually being forgotten.* Accordingly in the
fourth century a.d. the Britons were less brave soldiers than they had been in the times of Cassivelaunus and Caractacus. Remains of very-fine amphitheatres and baths are-seen at the present day at SUchester and at Colchester.
(D) Conversation, bella hodierna minus saeva sunt fuerunt ? Minus saeva sunt.
Nonne
quam
bella
antiqua
Bella antiqua saeviora fuerunt quam bella hodierna, quia temporibus antiquis captivi a victoribus trucidabantur vel in searvitutem venumdabantur.
* In what Case must ' cowards and ' slaves ' be ? They must agree in Case with the Noun of which they are said (the Trinobantes). ' ' * For to take pleasure in say to be deUghted with** throughout this exercise, and use the Past Imperfect tense (Passive) wherever the tense is Past in English. 3 Use the Passive of circum-dd, ' I surround.' ' * For was-being-forgotten ' say ' was-being-given to oblivion
' '
IS.
1.
17).
EXERCISES
Veram est. Nos hodiemi, quam Romani antiqui
Clementiores sumus
tur,
;
119
igitur,
fuerunt
trucidan-
Num
Non
Romani milites fortiores fuerunt quam nostri ? fortiores fuerunt ; nuUi milites fortiores fuerunt quam nostri. Nonne Romani milites fortissimi fuerunt ? Fortissimi fuerunt ; sed nostri quoque fortissimi sunt. et Romani et nostri fortissimi esse possunt ? Possunt ; sed neque Romani fortiores fuerunt quam nostri sunt, neque nostri minus fortes sunt quam Romani fuerunt.
umquam
Num
18.
(A) Conversation.
Mark. At what o'clock shall we play * tennis to-day ? Antony. At 12 o'clock/ and perhaps at 3 o'clock and at 6 o'clock. Alexander. Do you not sometimes play tennis before breakfast? Antony. Yes,^ but not often. My uncle does not like * to play
tennis before breakfast.
Mark. How-many * hours have you given to studies to-day Antony. Not yet two hours. Alexander. How glad I shall be* when it is^ 12 o'clock
I
(S) Conversation cxynHnued.. Mark. Do you like to read the Agricola of Tacitus ? Antony. It is too dif&cult. Mark. When shall we swim in the sea ? Alexander. Won't it be better to swim in the sea before lunch Mark. At what o'clock will your uncle arrive home ?
Antony. At
Alexander.
o'clock.
?
Antony.
Mark
*
don't we walk to the sea at-once 12 o'clock. and Alexander. Bravo, hurrah
It is
Why
now
in the morning ; 12 o'clock will be the sixth hour. (The Latin number of the hour wiU always be exactly opposite to that indicated by the hour-hand of a modern clock.' ^ Say ' So it is ' or You tell the truth {vera narras), * Use libenter, as in Ex. i (C), note 3. * QiMt (indeclinable). ' Say ' how-much I-shall-be-delighted.' * Say shall-be ' (Future tense).
*
' '
Use operam dare with the Dative Count the hours from 6 o'clock
i,
1.
19.
'
120
(C) Conversation.
EXERCISES
inter ferias
maxime delectat ? maxima delectamur. Quid, cum Ventae Belgarum eritis, vos maxime delectabit f Cum Ventae Belgarum erimus, per hiemem foUe, per aestatein
Quid vos pueros
Inter ferias ludo trigonali
pila delectabimur. scholis at studiis delectabimini ? Nonnulli ex pueris scholis et libris delectabuntur, sed
Nonne
non omnes. multi ? Fortasse non multi. Magistrine ludis pilarum delectantur ? Nonnulli ex magistris ludis operam dant non sine scientia pila dextra laevaque captatur. Num sine scientia foUis volans geminatur et resvocatur ?
Num
Magna
est scientia
19.
[qui,
et revocare.
{A) Oral
eral
?
' '
Drill.
^Decline
quae,
quis,
quid
^in
questions.]
Which Roman
'
Which Roman
Roman town
'
genin all
and cavalry forces for-the-sake of subduing Britain ^ ? Aulus Plautius was the commander of the Roman forces in Britain in the ye(ar 43 a.d. Which Roman legions were in Britain in that year ? The Second, and the Ninth, and the Fourteenth and the From which part of Europe did the Twentieth^ legions. emperor transport these four legions into Britain ? From
Germany, where they were serving. (C) The general of the Second legion was Vespasianus. Who and after was Vespasianus ? He had been praetor at Rome the death of Nero the Romans created him Emperor.-' In which land did he win his first victories ? In Britain, where he is
;
reported
to-have-fought
thirty
battles,
to-have-taken-byIsle of
Wight.
9, ^
^ * 5
Imitate the construction in 6, 1. 4 {regem spectandl), or ihat in U. 22 and 23 (proelil spectandl). Remember that legio is Feminine. Compare 2, 1. 19, and Ex. 7 {B), note 7. Use the Passive of narro. cp. 2, 1. 11. Perfect Infinitive, ending in -isse
;
Omit
this
'
and
'
in translating.
EXERCISES
By whom
is
121
he said
quod
without
questioning sense.]
brackets in the following exercise are to be translated into Latin, together with the rest of each sentence. The reason for putting them in brackets is to show that they make a complete little sentence within a larger sentence, Uke one Chinese box within another. The Case of the word qui will be seen by thinking of the little sentence as if it were a separate sentence. Thus whom the Romans created Emperor is like him the Romans created Emperor or the Romans created him Emperor.'
in
'
'
'
'
'
(A) Oral Drill. Translate the following pairs of into Latin, using is for he,' and qui for who.'
'
sentences
first
'
first
Roman Emperor)
Britain.
Roman Emperor)
Britain.
Tiberius (him the Romans created Emperor in a.d. 14) did not enter Britain. Caligula (his father was Germanicus) did not enter Britain.
Tiberius (whom the Romans created Emperor in a.d. 14) did not enter Britain. Caligula (whose father was Germanicus) did not enter
Britain.
Claudius (to him Germanicus was father) was the conqueror of Britain. Nero (about him we read in the Annals of Tacitus) was the fifth Roman emperor.
Claudius (to
nicus
whom Germa-
was
Roman
emperor.
(B) In thefollowing pairs of sentences translate 'it' by the Feminine or Neuter of is, and ' which ' by the Feminine or Neuter oi qui.
Britain).
we
call Britain).
of
of
of affirmo.
122
EXERCISES
(C) Vespasianus (whom the Romans created Emperor after the death of Nero) was the ninth emperor of the Romans. For between Nero and Vespasianus there-were three other Emperors. What were their names ? Their names were Galba and Otho and ViteUius. Galba (who had served in Britain under Claudius together with Vespasianus) was-emperor ' for six months in the year 69 a.d. Otho (whom the soldiers of the Germanic legions had created Emperor) was-emperor ^ for only three months, and then put himself to death. ViteUius (whom his-own soldiers murdered after he had-been-emperor ^ for eight months) was very-
?mo? continued.]
'
(A) To whom did the Emperor Vespasianus entrust the chief command * of the British legions after the rebellion of Boadicea ? The-man ^ (to whom Vespasian entrusted the chief command of
the British legions) was Agricola (whose daughter was the beloved wife of Tacitus). The British legions ' were the Roman legions (which were-serving in Britain). And the Roman legions (of which Otho had-been the general) were-called the Germanic legions,' because they were-serving in Germany.
' '
(B) After the victory of the Romans a Roman writer called the ^ the western boundaries of the Roman Empire were surrounded) the Roman Ocean.' In the second century A.D. Britain was a Roman province. And before the end of the fourth century the Britons (who had fought with so-greiat pluck against C. Julius Caesar and Aulus Plautius and Agricola) were not any-longer desirous of liberty. For the delights of the Roman peace were dearer to them than liberty.
Ocean (by-which
'
'
'
(C) Conversation.
magnum
aedificavit,
?
quod
inter
Luguvallium
Segedunum situm
'
erat
Use the Verb imperito, I am emperor Use the Perfect tense. What word for
' '
3,
?
1.
21.
See Preparations,
2, 1. I.
In this exercise it will be seen that subordinate sentences introduced qui, quae, quod (and here enclosed in brackets) are sometimes necessary to the sense of the principal sentences to which they belong. ^ See 10, 1. 9.
'
by
^ ^
Preposition.
EXERCISES
123
Ei qui illud vallum aedificavit nomen fuit Hadriano, Quid fuit nomen ei qui vallum inter Clotam et Bodotriam situm
aedificavit
?
Nomen
Antonino Pio. Qui homines fuerunt contra quos Agricola in Caledonia bellavit ? Homines contra quos Agricola in Caledonia beUavit Picti fortasse
ei fuit
fuerunt.
fuit nomen coUibus in quibus victoriam magnam reportavit ? CoUibus in quibus victoriam magnam reportavit nomen fuit Monti Graupio. Verane est haec forma nominis ? Vera est ; nam haec est forma nominis quae in libro Taciti de
Quid
vita Agricolae stat. Cur, igitur, nos hodierni coUes Grampios Nomen quod nos hodierni iUis coUibus
22. [2nd Conjugation
est.
Present, Past Imperfect and Future (A) Oral Drill. Conjugate the Latin for I see Richborough,' I used to see many ancient buildings,' I shall see my friends to-morrow,' in all Persons of these tenses.
Active.
' '
'
the very-beautiful Roman villas, whose foundasee * at-the-present-day in Britain, was the villa which was situated in the Isle of Wight. This villa, which the Romans buUt in the first century a.d., has three parts. In the part which looks ^ to the West you see a vestibule and a hall and a diningroom and a kitchen. The vestibule and the hall have tesselated pavements. The pavement of the vestibule is made of ' red and white cubes. The cubes of the hall are red and white and blue and black. In the part of the vUla which looks to the North the slaves used-to-live.*
(B)
Among '
tions
we
Nonne
Say For
'
'
in the number of.' to see ' use video throughout this exercise
for
'
to look
'
use
speclo.
^ *
Say
'
'
To
live
{a,
urn) ex.
'
124
EXERCISES
Romani
fbf
Fuistine in insula Vecti ? Numquam fui ; sed reliquias Ulius villae quam aedificaverunt aliquando videbo, ut spero.
Num
;
prop*
Oram maritimani
iacet
Temporibus Romanis prope Oram maritimam iacebat sed nun< procul a mari iacet. Nonne tibi aliud aedificium notum est, quod quondam prope mare iacebat sed nunc procul
abest ? Castellum Rutupinum quondam prope mare iacebat et hodie procul abest nam temporibus antiquis totus campus, qui nunc inter castellum et oram maritimam iacet, pars maris
:
erat.
Quid tibi de villa Romana in insula Vecti sita notum est ? Vestibulum et atrium et triclinium et culinam habebat. Quid est in vestibule et atrio ? Vestibulum et atrium pavimenta tessellata habent. Num pavimenta tessellata in Castello Rutupino videmus Nulla pavimenta tessellata in Castello Rutupino videmus.
23. [4th Declension
'
(A) Oral Drill. Decline the Latin for 'a British harbour,' the right hand,' the left wing,' in all Cases of the Singular and
'
Plural.
(B) The wholei villa is buUt in a square shape,' of which only three sides have buildings. Between the three wings lies a large open-space. In the northern wing there-is a well, from which water used-to-be-provided by the slaves. About the use of the southern wing nothing is known. But at ^ the eastern end of this wing there-are the remains of baths. You do not see these baths in the picture which stands on page 16 ^ of this book. Roman officer once used-to-live in this villa.
(C) In Roman times this vUla lay not far from the sea. For the sea used-to-stretch to the place where the villa stands. The place now lies two or three miles * from the sea. There-was once a harbour near the vUla, as the keeper affirms. Many Roman coins of Domitianus, the son of Vespasianus, and coins of Hadri-
Imitate
23,
1.
15.
For
2 ^
*
ad.
'
'
EXERCISES
125
anus, and of Antoninus Pius and of his wife Faustina, are dug-up near the villa. Many very-beautiful urns too and glass-vessels lay under the soU. The Saxons are-said* to-have-burnt the vUla in the fifth century a.d.
24. [4th
Declension
continued.]
was Richborough Harbour distant from the Gallic port whence vessels mostly sailed to Britain ? It was distant about forty mUes. The name of this Gallic port was
(A)
port has ^ the name mentions Richborough Harbour ; and the poet Juvenal * praises the oysters of Richborough Harbour. He declares them to have been very-good.
Gessoriacum.
Boulogne.
At-the-present-day
this
(B) There were other very-famous ports on the coast of Southern Britain in Roman times. Among ^ these ports was the port ofLymne,^ in which the fleet of Agricola used-to-have its special station. In the second century a.d. there-were Roman ships in all the British ports. The Romans used-to-call the Roman ships which had their station in British ports the ' British fleet.' Even ' before Roman times ships used-to-saU from Gaul to these ports for-the-sake of commerce.
25.
[2nd Conjugation
Conjugate
Perfect
Stem
Active.]
'
'
'
I shall I have
had provided water,' have held the coin in my hand,' had the book in my hands,'
(B)
Roman
2
3 * ^
LuQdnus.
luvenalis. Say ' in the
number
of.'
Partus Lemanis.
Say
'
already.'
126
They landed
EXERCISES
their ships in ' the Isle of Thanet. When did they hold their course to Britain ? In the fifth century a.d. In what land had they had their home (domum suam) ? In Jutland.
did the Britons provide a home for the Angles and Isle of Thanet ? Why did Hengist and Horsa hold their course to Britain ? Why did they not remain ^ in Jutland ? When the Romans recalled their legions from Britain in the fifth century a.d., the Britons were not able to drive-off their enemies, the Picts and Scots, who were-devastating the lands of northern Britain. Accordingly they implored the help of the Angles and Saxons against the Picts and Scots.
(C)
Why
Saxons in the
(D) But afterwards the unhappy Britons were sorry that' they had provided a home for these mei^ in Britain. Aftefr a few years the Angles and Saxons were not any longer the friends of the Britons. They fought against the Britons, and devastated their lands. GUdas, a British writer of that age, calls the Angles and Saxons barbarians and savage wolves.'
' '
'
26.
[2nd Conjugation
Perfect
Stem Active
continued.]
(A) The Romans had taught the Britons (Accus.) the knowledge
But the Angles and Saxons used-to-worship of the true God. many gods. Accordingly they destroyed the Christian churches which the Romans had buUt in Britain. The Britons did not rejoice that {quo(r) the Romans had not remained in Britain. For the Angles and Saxons were more cruel enemies than the
Romans had
been.
(B) When the Britons implored the help of the Romans against " We are the Angles and Saxons, the Romans answered thus not able to lend you * help." The Britons were very sorry ^ that they had not forbidden the Angles and Saxons to land their ships in the Isle of Thanet.
:
(C) Conversation.
Quid in Castello Rutupino vidisti ? Muros castelli vidi, et Crucem Sancti Augustini sub magnam partem areae pertinet.
1
'
;
et
cuniculum qui
cp. I 23, 1. 3, and 25, 1. 12. Say to The Perfect Stem of maneo is mans- see Latin Vocabulary. ' Say 'it vexed the Britons that {quod)' cp. 23, 1. 18. * Say to provide help for you.' " Say cp. i, 1. 9. it vexed the Britons much
'
'
'
'
EXERCISES
Nonne muri
altiores
127
'
quondam
alte
Quam longus est ille cuniculus ? Aqiia haeret. Nonne per totum cuniculum ambulavistis Ita est ; sed memoria non teneo.
Quid vidistis in cuniculo ? Locus obscurus est ; sed cereos
castelli praebuerat.
in
manu
Cui erat usui puteus ille in cuniculo situs ? Ex Ulo puteo aqua praebebatur si castellum obsidebatur. Quando castellum obsessum est ? De fortuna castelli nihil constat. Sed fortasse Angli at Saxones castellum deleverunt, postquam Romani copias suas ex
Britannia revocaverunt. piguit Britannos quod Anglis Saxonibusque domum in insula Tanati praebuerant ? Piguit. Nam ut Romani primo saeculo post Christum natum, sic quinto saeculo Angli Saxones'que totam insulam vastaverunt.
Nonne
27. [Perfect, Pluperfect and Future Perfect Passive.] (A) Oral Drill. Form Passive Adjectives from the following Verbs, using the English words in brackets as a guide
accuso [accusation]
illustro [illustration]
video [vision]
habeo
[habit]
pro-hibeo [pro-hibition]
Give the Latin for The church had been buUt by the Christians. The castle has been destroyed by the Saxons. A conversation wiU have been held between us.
The castle was destroyed in the third or fourth century a.d. The missionaries were not forbidden to land their ship. Water was provided by the keeper of the castle. Give the Latin for I have been accused by you and you
. '
'
'
have been accused by me,' according as the person speaking and the person spoken to are (i) men, (2) women. What is the Latin
I2S
for I had shall have
'
EXERCISES
been praised by been praised by
my schoolmaster my schoolmistress
'
'
'
(B) The villa, of which you have not-yet seen the remains in the Isle of Wight, was built* by the Romans. It was burned by the Angles and Saxons in the fifth century a.d. When was Richborough Castle destroyed ? Nothing is known about the time when this very-fine castle was destroyed. Perhaps the Saxons
destroyed
(C)
it.
if a conversation was held between the King of Kent and St. Augustine through the windows of the castle, as is affirmed by some writers, the castle had not been destroyed at the ^ time when St. Augustine with his forty attendants sailed from the Gallic port to Britain. The castle had been buUt two or three
'
But
centuries
before.
28. [Fifth Declension.]
for
all
hope
{spes,
th Decl.),' in
(B) Gregory had been moved with pity on-account-of the verybeautiful faces of the boys whom he had seen in the forum. The boys with the beautiful faces were captives. He declared that the boys had ^ the faces of angels. " They ought to be Christians," * said he ; " for now they have no hope ^ of a better life." From
that day Gregory was desirous of teaching true God in England.
29. [5th Declension
continued.]
Castle
That
1
jolly
day on which
''
we saw Richborough
was the
at that (eo) time, when." See Preparations, 20, 1. 15. The Abl. of duo is duobus, and that oi tria is tribus. 3 Say he declared the boys to have.' * Say it behoves them to be Christians,' and make Christians agree in Case with ' them.' ^ Hope is spes, 5 th Declension. Form a Noun in -ndum from the Verb doceo and remember that the vowel of the 2nd Conjugation is e where the 1st Conjugation has a. ' Notice the different Prepositions used in English to express Time when'; 'on this day,' 'in this year (or month or century),' at Has hour.'
'
Say
What Case?
' '
'
'
'
'
'
'
EXERCISES
139
sixteenth day of the month of September. Within seven days the end of the holidays will have arrived. There-will-have-been fifty-four ^ days from the beginning of the holidays. On the twenty-third ^ day of the month of September I shall be in-thehouse-of my schoolmaster. On the next day there-wUl-be the beginning of lessons.
30.
Conversation.
Quae sunt
res quibus pueri maxime delectantur ? Feriae, vel inter scholas dies feriati. Quibus rebus per ferias vel per dies feriatos plerumque
operam
dant ? Ludis pUarum. Quae sunt genera diversa pUarum ? Unum est genus follium, alteram trigonum tertium est genus earum quae lingua Latina nominari non possunt. Cur lingua Anglica nominari possunt, lingua Latina non possunt ? Quia res ipsa Romanis non nota fuit. Qua ex his rebus tu ipse maxime delectaris ?
;
quam
follis.
Sed
tum quoque operam das cum apud magistrum tuum es. Nonne verum est ? Responde mihi. Verum est sed nonnuUis diebus scholae sunt a mane usque ad
his rebus
;
vesperum.
31.
Portrait of Boadicea.
historian,^ declares Boadicea to have been a great stature, with a warlike face, blue eyes, and ^ long and yellow hair. She had ' an emfcroidered tunic, over which there-was a cloak. In her hand she held a spear. Thus she stood in her chariot, riding among the ranks of her Britons. See the picture which stands on the nth page of this book.
woman
''
Say four and fifty.' Say third and twentieth.' ^ Say the writer of things.' * Use the Ablative Case. 8 Omit this and in translating. * Use the Past Imperfect tense for
1
'
'
'
'
'
this
and
all
which follow in this exercise. ' For this and other new words in T^atin Vocabulary.
t30
It is
EXERCISES
not strange
*
that the Britons loved and feared their queen. in ^ the Celtic tongue nothing
than Victoria.^
Latine mihi ? responde, Quinque sunt declinationes, prima, secunda, tertia, quarta, quinta. Quot coniugationes verborum Latinorum tibi notae sunt ? Duae coniugationes, prima et secunda. Suntne aliae coniugationes verborum ? Aliae sunt coniugationes, sed non aliae declinationes. Recta cuius declinationis est nomen miles ? Tertiae declinationis. Recte. Declina mihi hoc nomen in Numero Singulari. MUes, militem, mUitis, militi, cum milite. Recte. Quae sunt terminationes duarum illarum coniugationum? Terminationes primae Personae Numeri Singularis sunt o et eo. respondisti. Coniuga mihi tempus Praesens verbi Optime
:
video.
Video, vides, videt, videmus, videtis, vident. Tempus Praeteritum-imperfectum coniuga. Videram, videras Non recte. In omnibus coniugationibus tempora Praeteritaimperfecta terminationes 6am, bus, bat habent. Videbam, videbas, videbat, cetera. Recte cur terminationes eram, eras dedisti ? Fortasse quia verbum sum in tempore Praeterito-imperfecto eram, eras, erat habet. Quae sunt nomina aliorum temporum ?
:
et
Perfectum Futuri.
Active and Passive.]
Conjugation
{A) Oral
'
Drill.
Present
^Dic
Latine
Activi, et
7, 1.
in
1
1.
Say
i
18;
2
1.
13
for
'
that
'
see
23,
3Cp.
EXERCISES
'
131
in
do you not admit the Outlanders to the citizenSo our Minister writes. The Boers answer thus " We do not admit them because they will not be loyal ^ citizens of our Republic. We are not able to admit a multitude of new
:
Why
our Republic." The Boers say that the Outlanders are too many.* In the African Republic, which is situated across the River Vaal, the riumber of the Boers is smaller than of the
citizens into
Outlanders.
33. [3rd
Conjugation
(A)
cum
Oral Drill. Die Latine sententias Exercitii 32 (A) tempore Praeterito-Imperfecto pro Praesenti.
Past
(S)
century b.c. there-was a Spaniard, to whom Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus, a very-famous Roman general, gave the Roman citizenship. After that time he was called Lucius Cornelius Balbus. While Caesar was-leading ^ his forces against the Celtic and Germanic tribes which inhabited * Gaul, Balbus was with him. Balbus used-tQ-write letters for ^ Caesar about public affairs.' These letters used-to-be-sent to Cicero and other
In the
very-distinguished men.
34.
[3rd Conjugation
Present
continued.]
;
(A) The names Gains and Balbus are very-famous for they stand in a book which used-to-be-read by aU English boys. The book says that Gaius and Balbus built a wall.'' But who was Gaius, and who was Balbus ? Lucius Cornelius Balbus was a friend of Gaius Julius Caesar.
Say faithful {fidus, a, um). Use the Accusative with the Infinitive (' the Outlanders to be too many '), just as if declare had been used instead of say {died) and make many agree with the Outlanders.' 3 Use duco (3rd Conjugation). * Use incolo (3rd Conjugation). 5 For here means instead of therefore translate it by pro (with
1
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
the Ablative).
'
Say
'
about the Republic' (Singular Number, cf. Note on p. 84.) (Accus.) to have built (Perfect Infin.)
132
is-said
EXERCISES
(B) But this Balbus and this Gaius never built a wall, as in the very-famous book which we have mentioned. And Balbus is a surname ; but Gaius is a fore-name. The Romans used-not-to-say " Balbus and Gaius buUt a wall," just as we ' in the English language do not say." John ^ and Jones buUt a wall."
Present and Pa^t Imperfect, continued.] 35. [3rd Conjugation (A) In the times of Caesar the Rhine usd-to-divide Gaul from Germany. Read the first chapter of the first book of the Gallic War, where Caesar says this.^ He also says this ^ " The Germans inhabit the lands which lie across the Rhine." The region which used- to-be-inhabited by' the Belgae was a part of Gaul. For Gaul used-to-be-divided into three parts, of which one used-to-be-called Belgium.
:
(B) But even * before the times of Caesar many German tribes used-to-inhabit lands which lay in Gaul. Caesar himself says that * German tribes had migrated across the Rhine. Thus * in very-ancient times a part of Gaul used-to-be-inhabited by Germans. The Belgians themselves were-said ' to be of Germanic
origin.
(C) At-the-present-day the Rhine does not divide France from Germany for some of the provinces which lie across the Rhine are part of Germany. In the year 1870 ^ there-was a war between the French and the Germans about this matter.' Before the war the French used-to-say that these provinces were theirs 1 and in-fact ^ the people '^ by whom these provinces were-inhabited were mostly French.
; ;
the Pronoun in Latin, because we is emphatic in the English. the English names, as they stand. ^ the Neuter Singular (' this- thing ')< ' * aheady.' * the Accusative with Infinitive. So in all future passages where the English has that depending on the verb to say.'
1
'
'
'
'
'
* ^ ^
Use itaque. Use the Past Imperfect tense. Say in the year thousandth eight-hundredth seventieth
'
'
cp.
25,
1.
8.
' 1"
11
res for
'
matter.'
SHus,
'
u,
it
agree with
"
provinces.'
re vera.
*^
men
'
EXERCISES
36. [3rd Conjugation,
133
Die
cum
mother
which father or my Africa, if there is ^ war. Will my father himself serve against the enemy ? If father is-sent ^ to ^ Natal, or into the Dutch Republics of South Africa, for the sake of fighting, mother will write to me.
I shall like
my
will
send
me ^ from South
my
my
(C) The British forces will not be driven into the sea by the Boers, even if they are fewer in number than the enemy. They will defend our Colonies. If the Boers overrun ^ Natal, as our master says, greater forces will be sent from Britain. If these do ^ not conquer the enemy, we shall enrol other forces. Some day, perhaps, the letters which will be sent me ' about this war will be read by other boys.
(C) Conversation.
Respublica Africana Batavorum trans Vahalem flumen sita est. Cur Ulam partem Africae Meridianae incolunt coloni Uli L'alavi ? Coloni Batavi, qui Rempublicam Africanam nunc incolunt, Coloniam nostram Anglicam in Africa Meridiana sitam
incolebant.
Cur ex Colonia nostra Africana migraverunt ? Quia magna discordia fuit inter nos et colonos Batavos.
est ilia discordia
?
Haeret aqua.
tibi dicam ex manumissione servorum nata est. Sed unde nata est discordia quae nunc est inter nos et illos ? peregiinis illis nata est, qui Rempublicam Africanam incolunt.
:
Ex
urbi quam peregrini uicolunt ? urbi est Johannesburg. Ita est ; Urbs Aurea interdum vocatur, quia multum auri sub solo est. Quid est nomen Ministro nostro qui Coloniis praeest ? Cognomen ei est Chamberlain praenomen ei est losepho. Nonne cognomen illud Latine reddere potes ?
Quid
est
nomen
Nomen
ei
Non possum.
* ^
Say Say
'
to
me
'
Da tive
into.'
134
Forma Latina
illius
EXERCISES
sexto decimo post Christum
nomen nomen
nam saeculo cognominis Camerarius est natum vir doctus ^ fuit cui atque parentibus eius Latinum erat Camerario
;
fuerat
quam
Chamberlain.
Conjugation
37. [3rd
^Dio
have written a letter,' had said something new/ shaU not have declared war,' in omnibus personis horum temporum.
1 I I
(B)
My
I
A Letter from Antony dearest Mother,* hope you are quite well.^
to his
Mother,
a letter
" The African RepubUcs," he in which he says strange things. Please " write to me soon, says,' " have declared war upon us." Have' the Boers sent an army Qtdess you have already written. father serve against the enemy ? Rgainst our Colony ? Will Perhaps before the arrival of this letter we shall have led our forces against the enemy. I write on the 12th day of the month
my
of October.
38. [3rd
Farewell.
Conjugation
-Perfect
^Dic
Latine
' '
in
have read the letter,' I had defended the land,' I shall have conquered the enemy,' omnibus personis horum temporum.
I
1 Joachim Camerarius the name of his family had once been Kammermeister, which means chamberlain.' ^ Say Antony sends greeting to his dearest mother." ' This may be translated literally (' I hope you to be well '), or the beginning of the letter in 37 may be imitated. * Say ' to me (either the Dative or ad with the Accusative).
; '
' '
6 *
te (lit.
'
I shall
2:,
to
me soon,'
as in O.M.
it
after
'
write
EXERCISES
135
(B) My mother wrote to me on the nth day of the month ol October. She told ^ me that the Dutch Republics of South Africa had declared war upon us. How glad I was to read ^ the letter which my father sent after the victories of our forces You, most-brave Irish battalions, ascended Talana Hill and defeated ^ the enemy. And you, English and Scottish battalions, charged most-bravely at Elandslaagte.* The Boers have not yet driven the Britons into the sea.
I
Conjugation Perfect, Pluperfect, and Future Perfect Passive.] {A) Oral Drill. Form Passive Adjectives from the following Verbs, using the English words in brackets as a guide
39. [3rd
Give all the Persons of the Perfect, Pluperfect and Future Perfect Passive of diicd, mitto and vinco ; and the 3rd Persons Sing, and Plur. of the same tenses of scribo.
(B) Three letters have been sent to me from South Africa about the war. Of these letters, two * have been written-out by me into my note-book. Three battles have been fought. In two ^ of these battles the Boers have been defeated but in one battle we " have been defeated. Nevertheless the British flag has been bravely defended. New forces have already been enrolled. They will soon have been sent to ^ South Africa. The forces of the enemy have been collected around Ladysmilh.
;
40. [4th
Conjugation
{A) Oral
'I
'
Drill.
am am
Die
Present
tense, Active
and Passive.]
' * *
'
Use died for tell,' and note that 'me' = to me." Say How gladly I read (Perfect tense). Use vinco here and in all future exercises for defeat.'
'
'
'
'
Imitate
38,
11.
13,
('
14.
'
What Gender
two
'
two
letters
').
For declension of
duo,
duae, duo, see Latin-English Vocabulary. * Say ' engaged-in (Pass, of committo). ^ Use the Pronoun in Latin, because we * in with the Accusative.
'
'
'
is
emphatic.
136
in
'
EXERCISES
omnibus personis Praesentis Activi ; et I am being guarded by our soldiers,' omnibus personis Praesentis Passivi.
in
(B) I hear that ^ our men are-guarding Ladysmith, and that * the Boers are besieging the town. Ladysmith is not a fortified ^
it has no walls. Accordingly it will not be easy to the place. But a very-great store ^ of arms and of food is " Do you hear," says our master, " that the in the town. have placed ^ their biggest guns on all the hills by which smith is surrounded ? " But new forces are-coming
;
town
Ladyfrom
Britain.
41. [4th Conjugation
(A) Oral
'
'
Drill.-
I
I
I shall I shall
I
'
'
in
et Futuri
et
{domum),' in omnibus personis temporis Futuri ; et I know that ^ there is danger of war,' in omnibus personis temporis Praesentis.
shall arrive
'
home
(S) In the times of Boadicea, Colchester was not a fortified town. The Roman veterans who were-guarding the place did not know that * there was danger of a British rebellion. " The Britons," they said, " will never come for the sake of attacking Colchester." But the Britons were-coming with a very-great army. Why were we not fortifying Ladysmith before the war ?
as
2 3 *
'
.' is expressed in Latin by the same construction hear that .' say (or declare) that Use the Passive Adjective munitus, a, um. Use copia for very-great see 20, 1. 16.
'
'
'
Use
custodid.
5 Form the Perfect Infinitive by adding -tsse to the Perfect Stem cp. 40, I. I2< Active of pond, which isposa.' is expressed in Latin by the same construction ^ I know that In English, too, we as I say (ir declare) that and ' I hear that.' may say I know him to be a friend,' as well as I know that he is a
;
'
'
'
'
'
friend.'
EXERCISES
When
will
137
?
in
South Africa
We
shall
soon know.
4?. [4th Conjugation
(.4)
' ' '
Oral Drill.
I
Perfect
'
Stem
Active.]
^Dic
Latine
in
have heard my country's call (imitate I have arrived home (domum),' I came, I saw, I conquered,' omnibus personis temporis Perfecti.
42,
1.
10),
(S) Have you heard the very-famous song about the fifty thousand horse and foot ^ who are sailing to the Cape of Good Hope ? " The British soldier," it says,^ " has heard his country's call." I have heard and I have sung this song. We have also heard the song about the Soldiers of the Queen. Some of these men have already arrived in South Africa. At the * time when they sailed from our southern port they had not heard the news about Ladysmith. Whe!n they have arrived ^ at the Cape of Good Hope, they wEl be sent to* Natal. (B) Conversation. (The first speaker is the pupQ.) quid novi hodie ex Africa Meridiana audivisti ? Nihil novi audivi. Nostri Castra Mariana ut possunt custodiunt sed post proelium illud quod die tricesimo mensis Octobris pugnatum est nihil novi est. Quot sunt nostri qui ibi obsidentur ? Nescio sed audio eos circiter duodecim mUia esse numero. Quot sunt Batavi qui eos obsident ? Nemo scit ; sed numero nostros multum superant. Sed tum cum quinquaginta Ula mUia virorum, quos nuper emisimus, in Africam Meridianam advenerint, numero nos non superabunt, ut spero. Nescio ; nam Batavi sexaginta mUia virorum habere dicuntur.
Num
* Use ad-venio and for 'in ' say ' into,' as in 41, 1. 10. Note that the Romans spoke of ad-venio takes the same construction as venio arriving to a place, not of arriving at it. ^ Say agree in of cavalry and infantry forces,' and make who
;
: '
'
'
Gender with forces.' 3 Use inquit. * Say at that (eo) time, when.' * Say (Future Perfect shall have arrived * Say into.'
'
'
'
'
tense)<
'
138
EXERCISES
heri
ad Promunturium Spel
numero.
Quando
ceterae cohortes advenient ? Intra tiunc mensem, ut speramus. Sed non statim cum Batavis pugnabitur ; nam ducenta fere milia passuum sunt inter Portum Natalem et Castra Mariana. Atque cum exercitus contra hostem mittitur, non universi milites pugnando operam dant ; maximae parti eorum necesse est vias custo dire, castella munire, pontes defendere, ceteris rebus operam dare.
43. [Verbs in id with Infinitive in ere
^Dic
Latine
'
'
I desire to talie the camp,' I desired to take the camp,* I shall desire to arrive home,"
in
Praeteriti-imperfecti,
'
Futuri Activi.
Redde
doing
(B)
?
'
Latine'
'
What
are
?
'
you doing
'
?.'
What
will
you do
Many
received
by me
every-day.'
My
5tti * arrived yestervery-great grief on-account-of the reverse of * which you speak. We read in the newspapers that ' the Boers greatly desire to take Ladysmith. When shall I receive another '
A Letter from Antony to his father. dearest Father,' The letter which you wrote on November
I
feel
'
day.
letter
What
are
from you ? I desire to hear more about Ladysmith. you yourself doing ? What will you and my mother
''
*
^
'
'
greeting.'
*
5
of
I-
'
.' is expressed like ' I say that,' ' I hear that,' This sentence, then, wiU have two Infinitives in it, the second depending on the fir.st. '
read that
that.'
'
know
Use Say
'
''
alter,
'
altera,
alterum.
'
more things
(plum), cp.
?2,
1.
12.
EXERCISES
do, if the Boers overrun ' our Colony Farewell. the 24th of November.
?
139
I write this letter
on
Oral Drill. Die Latine I have received a letter from (ex) South Africa/ ' I have made an attack on {in) the enemy (Accus.),' ' I had put {conieceram) the enemy to flight,' I shall have dug a pit,' in omnibus personis horum temporum.
'
Perfect Stems.]
(S)
surrounded Kimberley with their forces, and had dug trenches round the town. On October i6th they began to bombard * Mafeking. They did not bombard Kimberley before November 8 th. Although the Boers have thrown an immense number of missUes into these towns, they have not killed many of our men. On October 27th our men made a very-brave attack upon the Boers who were besieging Mafeking, and took one of the
trenches.
45. [Verbs in io
with Infinitive in
ere
continued.!]
The trenches which the Boers had dug round Mafeking were only a mile distant * from the town. And they had brought-up
very-big guns for the sake of causing ^ panic to the inhabitants. But the British Colonel who is-in-command-of the town does not fear the Boers; When the Dutchman bade him surrender the town for the sake of avoiding slaughter, he answered, laughing,^ " Please,' when will the slaughter begin ? " ^
* 3
* 5
20,
I.
Say
'
to
throw
'
'
after
'
will
be
post.
Imitate
thus in io end in -iendum the making,' the causing.' faciendum, ^ The Active Adjectives formed from Verbs of the 2nd Conj. end
;
The Nouns
45, in
1.
in -ens.
" *
Use quaeso, and put it after the other verb, as Use the Passive (' will be begun '\.
in 32,
1.
i.
140
EXERCISES
46. [Verbs in id with Infinitive in ere
continued.]
:
Afterwards he wrote to the Boers in ' the following fashion " This town cannot be taken^ by sitting-down ^ and looking at it.* Why do you not come and take it ? But you cannot. Go ^ home, therefore, to your farms. You will be sorry some day, if you do not listen* to me. For we shall soon have taken the capitals of your Republics." On October 21st he sent this message to our commander-in-chief " All is well.'' They have bombarded ^ the town for four hours. We have lost one dog."
:
47. [Verbs in io
with Infinitive in
of our
ere
continued.]
?
(A )
What
is
the
name
The
first
holidays,^ when the Boers do not bombard the town, our men play cricket and football.^" When the Boers begin to bombard, a signal is given by a bell, and all the inhabitants of the town, men, women and children, retire " into pits, which they have dug in the earth. There are only about nine hundred soldiers in the town, which is besieged by about Sometimes our men make very-brave five thousand Boers. attacks upon the Boers and drive them out of their trenches.
letters of his
name
are B.P.
On
(B) Conversation. (The first speaker is the pupU.) quid novi est hodie ex Africa Meridiana ? Nonne audivisti de tertia clade, quam nostri acceperunt ? Non audivi. Die mihi, quaeso. Ubi accepta est ? Non plus quam sex dies sunt ex Hie mensis nobis, ater fuit. quo duae clades nuntiatae sunt hodie de tertia et fortasse maiore clade ex Terra Natali nuntium accepimus. Sed dc
Num
Num
1
hac re non libenter dico. In actis diurnis legere potes. nostri non bene pugnaverunt ?
Imitate
13,
11.
i,
2.
2 3 *
Use capio (Passive InfinitiveJ. Use the Ablative of the Noun in -ndum formed from sedeo. Say by looking (without at it '). Similarly in the next sentence
'
'
'
omit
5 ^ ' 8 ^
'it.'
' ' '
betake yourselves (' yourselves vos). shall not have listened (Future Perfect). all-things have themselves well ' cp. 22, 1. 7, See Ex. 44 {B), note 3. Use the Ablative of dies feriail, without a Preposition.
' '
; ' ;
1 Say ' give attention to the ball and the football ludo, 3rd Conj.) with the ball and the football.'
11
or
'
play (use
Say
'
betake themselves,'
EXERCISES
141
;
sed
Tugelam non
traiecerunt.
Plus
quam
mille viros
amisimus.
Magnum capio dolorem. Nondum omnia audivisti. Batavi decem men tis nostris cepearunt.
Quomodo
Fossas
in
vel
undecim ex
tor-
foderant,
in ordines nostros coniecerunt. defensoribus nudata sunt. Nonne nostri tormenta receperunt ?
missUium
Duo ex
Nescio.
tormentis parva manus nostrorum summa virtu te recepit sed cetera non recepimus. Num Castra Mariana iam obsidione liberari poterunt ?
(^) Oral
' '
Drill.
May May
I
I
^Dic Latine be victorious (victor, Plur. victores), be helpful (prosini) to the republic,'
omnibus personis Praesentis Iniunctivi. (B) During the siege the ColoneF does not take much sleep.' In the silence of the night he often walks round the town or in
in
the veldt, for the sake of exploring.^ He has written these verses If we go forward,^ we die ; ' If we go backward,^ we die ;
die.'
!
May
with
''
it
be well with
little
!
the victorious
May we
all
Say much of sleep,' like aliquid novi, 37, 1. 2. Use the Noun in -ndum formed from the Verb exploro. ^ For go forward say advance (procurro). Use the Present tense, because if means if at any time or whenever.' ^ Say we are killed (Passive of interficio). ^ For go back say retire (' take ourselves back nos recipimus). ^ Say It is better to advance and to be killed cp. 18, U. 14, 15. ' Use the Dative Case (' to you instead of with you '), 8 Say a concjueror,' a victor.'
1
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
142
EXERCISES
49. [Present Injunctive of the ist Conjugation.]
(A) Oral
' '
Drill.
I
^Dic
Latine
May
in
our army soon raise the siege of Mafeking and Kimberley and Ladysmith May the brave defenders of these towns endure the siege untU help arrives ^ Let us not fear Let us await the victory of our men with a calm mind And in distant lands, where Britannia's sons have founded great colonies, let all men with one voice exclaim, " Rule Britannia I' Long may our Empire stand Long may our Queen reign "
!
! ! ! !
May
50.
[Present Subjunctive of
Drill.
sum and
ist Conjugation.]
{A) Oral
' ' '
^Dic
Latine
I shall try
the
in
nisi
omnibus personis horum temporum Indicativi et Subiunctivi, quod in tertia sententia una tantum persona Subiunctivi
dici potest.
marching in-order-that Kimberley may is fighting on * the Tugela in-order-that the siege of Ladysmith may be raised. The Dutch general who is besieging Kimberley says " Surrender the town, in order that the slaughter of women and children may be
(B)
British
army
is
be saved.*
And
avoided."
"
is
Come and
Colonel, who is defending the town, says take it,'' if you can." The Dutch general, however, not trying to ^ storm the town. His plan is to starve out
But our
the inhabitants.^
^ ^
* ^ '
^
8
Say free Mafeking from siege,' as in 44, 1. 6. Say shall have arrived (Future Perfect of advenio). Say let Britannia be mistress of the waves.' Use salvus, u, um for saved.' Use ad with the Accusative. Say in-order-that Ladysmith may-be-freed from siege.' Use the Imperative for come and take and omi t 'it,' Use operam do ut, as in 50, II. 3 and 4. Say to conquer (Infinitive) the inhabitants by want.'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
EXERCISES
51. [Present
143
Conjugation
ist
continued.]
(A) Meanwhile our men who are defending Kimberley are manufacturing a cannon in-order-that they may be able * to throw missiles against the big cannons of the Boers. Food is so dear that eggs cost twenty-five shillings a dozen,^ and a fowl costs twenty shillings. So great is the want that the inhabitants are living on horse-flesh. Sometimes they climb-up onto ^ towers or other high buUdings of the town in order that they may watch * the veldt. For they hope that help is-at-hand.^ Sometimes they see a cloud-of-dust, sometimes the balloon of a British army.
() Conversation.
^Antony
and
Mark.)
Salvus
sis,
Marce
Num
obfeidione liberata est ? Obsidione liberata est. Euge, optime Quis liberavit ? Dux noster cui cognomen est French. Quomodo liberavit ? Nonne scis eum iam multos dies ei rei operam dedisse ? scis eum virum esse qui hostes superet cum ei rei
I
Nonne
operam
det
Scio.
Non
Victor
Spero. Vale. Vale.
se
recipere
antequam Batavi obsidionem inceperunt. omnium hostium Castra Mariana quoque obsidione
1
liberet
J Form
simus,
'
possum by adding
sim,
'
sis, sit,
sttis,
* Say that twelve eggs stand at five and twenty shillings the construction in 50, 1. 19.
^
*
imitate
'
ascend onto
'
cp. 50,
1.
27.
'
specto.
'
[ad-esse),' as after
I say,'
'
I hear,' etc.
144
52.
'
'
EXERCISES
[Present Injunctive and Subjunctive of the other Conjugations.] (A) Oral Drill. Die La tine ' Let me see-to-it (videam) that the army be saved (salvus),' May I conquer (vincam) the enemy,' ' May I soon hear about a victory, ' May I receive news about a victory, May I be there to see,'
'
'
in
Iniunctivi,
(B) May our commander-in-chief conquer the enemy I May he capture ' their whole army He is sending-out men who shall-make ^ an attack on them from the North, and others who shall block their way ^ from the East. He himself is coming with a very-large army, in order that they may not * march to the May South.^ Let the Boers see-to-it that they be not* captured Majuba day be not unlucky for us this year * May we soon hear
I
!
May Ladysmith
never be taken
(A) Oral
'
Drill.
Die
Latine
'
dug a trench
the enemy,'
was marching in order that the town might be safe,' in omnibus personis horum temporum Indicativi et Subiunctivi, nisi quod in ultima sententia una tantum persona Subiunctivi
'
dici potest.
(B) Our commander-in-chief had sent-out a body of horsemen order that Kimberley might be saved.' The inhabitants had But they endured the siege so long that food was very-dear. had endure:! want most-bra vely in-order- that the name of Kimberley might be great and famous. On December loth a British army was only twenty mUes away from the town, so that the inhabitants were-able ^ to see the balloon. But on Dein
1
^ *
^ ' 8
Use capio. Use facio. Say who shall prevent them from-the-march,' as not say lest {ne). For in order that cp. 52, 1. 6. Say the southern part Time when. Use salvus, a, um.
'
' '
. .
in
52, 1. 8.
'
'
'
'
Form
ses, -set,
possum by adding
-sem.
EXERCISES
cember nth the army
necessary to retire^
54. [Past
145
it
suffered"^
was
to the
Modder River.
ist,
Imperfect Subjunctive of
2nd, 3rd,
the town,'
'
' '
'
might dislodge Qoco movereni) the enemy,' I was trying (operam dabarn) to conquer the enemy/
I crossed the river in order that I
I I
had resolved to take the town,' marched in order that I might guard the town,' in omnibus personis horum temporum. (B) WhUe one of our generals was fighting on the Modder River in order to surround the Boers as^ with a net, the other* was trying most-bravely to raise the siege of Ladysmith. He had fought three great battles with the Boers in order to drive them from the hUls Which lie to the north of the River Tugela. And although he had not fought successfully, he had resolved to lead^ his men to the besieged town. The Boers were fighting in order that they might block his way.* But our men very-cheerfuUy'' endured toU and death in order that Ladysmith might
not^
be taken.
55.
{A) The Boers, too, had tried for four months to take Ladysmith. On January 6th they made a great attack in order to take the town by storm.^ But the brave men who were defending Caesar's Camp compelled them to retire.^" On December 8th six hundred of our men performed an act of great gallantry."
*
Say Say
'
^velut
* alter
'
Either say
'
54, U.
Infinitive.
*
' ^ '
1"
11
Say might prevent him from the march,' as in 52, Say with most-cheerful mind,' as in 54, 1. 12. For in order that not use ne {' lest '), as in Use expugno for to take by storm.' Say that they should take themselves back,'
' ' .
8.
'
53,
1.
8.
'
'
Imitate
48,
1.
9.
146
They marched out
stood.
EXERCISES
of the town by night in order to destroy one of the biggest guns of the Boers. Under the light of the moon,
and with naked feet, they ascended the hUl on which the gun Suddenly the air trembles with fire and thunder.' The gun is nowhere seen,'' for it has tumbled into the pit which the Boers had dug. Only one of our men was wounded on that night.
Marcus.
I
(S) Conversation. Salvus sis, Antoni Audivistine de Castris Marianis obsidione liberatis ? Antonius. Salvus sum, Marce nam audivi. Omnes pueri audiverunt. Sed ecce Alexander ad nos currit. Alexander. Audivistisne, Marce et Antoni, Castra Mariana obsidione liberata elsse ? M. et Ant. Audivimus. Alex. Magister classis tertiae mihi dixit et imperavit ut vobis dicerem. Marc. Non necesse erat ut imperaret. . Nonne dies feriatus nobis dabitur quo liberi simus scholis ? Alex.
;
Marc.
Alex.
Dari oportet.
Nonne
dicis
tota:
?
Quid
Ant.
Fortasse. Sed ecce magister classis quartae ad nos venit. Salve, magister schola hac nocte ignibus festis illustrabitur ? Alexander scire cupit. Mag. Nescio. Castra Mariana per quattuor menses ignibus illustrata sunt, sed non festis. Nunc festis illustrabuntur. Sed quis ea obsidione liberAlex. avit ? Mag. Fabius Ule noster qui
!
Num
restituit rem. liberavit ? Mag. Consilium cepit ut Tugelam ab oriente traiceret et impetum in coUem Petreium faceret. Atque rem tam bene gessit ut heri manus equitum nostrorum in oppidum equitare finis obsidioni factus est. posset. Batavi se in fugam coniecerunt cum tormentis, vehiculis, ceteris.
Ant.
Quomodo
Tum
Nam
Alex.
Ant.
Floreant Castra Mariana Vivat BuUer Marc. Vivat Robertus noster, qui Unus homo nobis properando
I
!
restituit
rem.
Imitate
Pse
46, conspicio.
1.
3.
EXERCISES
56. [Injunctive
147
and Imperative.]
God save * our gracious " Queen, Long live ^ our noble ' Queen, God save the Queen.
Send
*
her victorious,^
glorious,
:
Happy and
Thy
On
her be pleased to pour,^ Long may she reign.' May she defend our laws,!" And ever give us cause'' To cry with loud applause" God save the Queen.
1 Use the Injunctive op. 49, 1. 29. [For live in 1. 2 use floreo, 2nd Conj., or vipo, 3rd Conj.] ^ Use benignus, a, um. ' Use optimus, u, um. * Use the Imperative or Injunctive of reddo (' render '). ^ Use victrix (viotrlc-). ' Say in order that she may long reign (imperito) over-us (Dat.).' ''Say 'thy best gifts,' using donum (2nd Decl., neuter) for 'gift'; and leave out in store.' ^ Say mayest thou give to her.' ' Use regno.
'
; '
'
'
'
for 'law' is lex (leg-), 3rd decl., fem. say in-order- that always (semper) exclaim.' 12 For ' with loud applause ' say ' with one voice.'
11
i"
The Latin
For
'
'
we may
;;
r48
PRO PATRIA
God save
Vivat
Rex optimus
Fao
nobis, o Deus,
Regem
Illi sit
'^alvuni.
gloria,
Regem nostrum,
Exsurgas, o Deus,
Hostes ut dissipes,
Et pessum
Vindex
sis
des.
fraudium
Cantemus
publico,
sit
Salvus
Rex.
*
its
The metre of this Latin version is the same as that of the original : and quantities correspond to those of the musical notes of the familiar tune.
The following words, which have not appeared in the text of Pro Patria, are used :
Vivere, to live ; fac, imperative of facio ; sospitare, to preserve, protect ; exsurgere, to arise ; dissipare, to scatter ; pessum dare, to make to fall (lit. to send to the to^om) ; vindex, avenger; fiaXLS {fra.\iii-), fraud, in/urj' ; munus (mimei-), gift ; late, widely, far and wide; lex (leg-), law; defendito, 3rd publicus, a, um, public. Pers. Sing, of the imperative of defends
;
ALPHABETICAL VOCABULARY
I.
LATIN-ENGLISH.
The words printed in ordinary type are words which have occurred in Ora Maritima and which will therefore be familiar to pupils who have used that book. The words printed in black type are the new words which occur in this book. The references put after each word (whether
printed in black tjrpe or not) are references to those sections of the present book (Pro Patvia) in which the word or meaning occurs for the These references will be found useful in recovering the first time. meanings of words which have been forgotten. A second reference is given in some cases for special reasons. Words with no reference given are words that occur only in the conversations or in maps or English words in square brackets [and ordinary type] are -pictures. words etymologically connected with the Latin words but not intended The Principal Parts given in the case of as translations of them. verbs are the ist Pers. Sing, of the Present and Perfect tenses and the Passive Participle (Adjective) where it exists. Words of the third declension have the stem inserted in brackets, To words except where it is the same as the Nom. Sing. ( e.g. sol ). Genders are given where irregular like navis the Gen. Plur. is given. according to the rules given in Ora Maritima, p. 75 and p. 129 (m.= masculine, f.=feminine, n.=neuter). The figures i,2,3denote the declension or conjugation: 'pi.' or 'plur.' denotes plural.
,
A.S.
Anno
;
aeer,
aeris,
acre,
3,
keen,
4;
grace, 56
ab or a (with Abl.) from, 2 6y, ab oriente, from the 16 east, on the east ab occidente, from the west, on the west,
;
51; compare 52, 11. 7, 8 abhinc, adv. ago, 25 ab-sum, ab-esse, a-fui, I am distant, I am absent, 7 ac-eidit, 3, -cidit, it happens, 39 ac-cipio, 3, -eepi, -eeptus, a, um, I
acerrimus, a, um, very keen, 33 acerrime, very keenly, 44 acta diurna, 2, plur., the newspapers, % 40 actus, a, um, driven, 39 see ago ad (with Ace), to, 2 for,,^ 9, 17 towards, 39 a< or near,
;
38
Adamanto-polis, 3, (Ace. -polim, Abl. -poll), Kimberley, 43 [the diamond city, from adadiamond, adamant, mas,'
'
receive,
43
accuso,
I,
/ accuse,
27
51]
: ;
150
ALPHABETICAL VOCABULARY
alacer, alaeris, alaere, 3, eager,
i
49
admlratio
(-ion-),
3: misl,
3,
admiration,
Alexander, Alexandr-um, -i, -0, 2, Alexander, i aliquando, sowe day, 8 ; o< /oi/,
6
ad-mitto, -missus, a, urn, / admit (lit. let go to), 32 ad-oro, i, I pray to, adore, worship. 7 ad-esse, ad-fui, I am present, i ; / am here, 12
4,
18
aliquis (m., f.), aliquld (n.}, some one, something, i, 37 alius, alia, aliud, other [Gen. Sing.
alius, alius,
. . .
Dat.
.
.
Sing,
alius,
alii],
ad-sum,
the
one
adule centulus,
ad-venio,
41
advento,
I,
arrive,
16
second,
draw near, 28 adventus, 4, arrival, advent, 27 adversus, a, um, adverse, 49 aedificium, 2, building [edifice], i aedifico, i, I build, 16 Aedilberetus, 2, Ethelbert, 25 aegroto, i, / fall sick, 20 aequus, a, um, even, calm, equal,
altitudo (-tudin-), 3, height, altitude, 22 altus, a, um, high, lofty [altitude], 22 ; deep, 23
3,
i
walk,
22
54
aer (aer-),
3,
m.,
air,
46
^as,
50
aerius, a,
um,
3,
of the
air, aerial
am5,
I,
50 copper or brass,
amor
(amor-),
49
amphitheatrum,
amphitheatre,
36
aestas (aestat-), 3, summer oW , aetas (-tat-), 3, age, 4 Wwe, 22 affirmo, i / affirm, state, declare, 2 af-Iulgeo, 2, -fulsl, / shine on, I
;
,
15
ampllus (Neuter Comparative of amplus, a, um), more, 2 angelicus, a, um, angelic, 28
angelus, 2, aM^ai, 28 Anglia, i, England, 25 Anglicus, a, um, English,
dawn
Africa,
I,
on, 55.
Africa, 31 Sfricanus, a, um, African, 31 Africander, 35 ; levied in Africa, 38 agar, agr-iim, -i, -6, 2, ;fieW, 16 agmen (-min-), 3, column, army
on
ago,
the
march,
46
Agricola
(lulius),
i
governor
of
Britain,
i, 24 Anglus, 2, Englishman, 21 Angle, 24 angulus, 2, angle, corner, 12 animus, 2, mind, i Annales, 3, pi., the Annals, a work of Tacitus, i annus, 2, year [annual], 2 ante (with Ace), before, i as adverb, 20 antequam, before=before the time when, 26 antiquus, a, um, ancient, i
;
ALPHABETICAL VOCABULARY
Antonius, 2, Antony (the writer of these commentaries), 52 anxius, a, um, anxious, 52 (animo anxius, anxious in
ater,
151
ill-
atra, atrum, dark, omened, 30 atque, and also, aye and, 4 atrium, 2, hall
mind)
apertus, a,um, open, 44, 56 applico, I, I bring to land [apply],
atrox
(atroe-),
i,
3,
adj.,
horrible,
.13
audacia,
courage, audacity,
3,
23
1, 1 bring up, 8 9 appropinqu5, i, / approach,
audax (audae-),
adj., audacious,
ap-porto,
13
a, um, fitted [apt], 17 apud (with Ace), in the house of (=French chez), i jk the
aptus,
writings of, 17 ; among, 46 aqua, i, water [aquarium], 23 ; of the water-clock, aqua haeret, the clock stops, 24, 25 ; aquam perdo, /maste time, 32 aquila, i, ag/, 44
ara, i, altar, 4 area, i, open space [area], 23 argenteus, a, um, made of silver, ^27 arma, 2, neut. plur., arms, i
hold, courageous, 5 audio, 4, 7 Aaar, 40 Augustlnus, 2, Augustine,' first archbishop of Canterbury, died A.D. 604 Anius Plautius, a Roman general of the time of Claudius, 5 aureus, a, um, golde'h ausculto, I, / listen, 8 Australia, i, Australia, 51 Australiensis, Australian, e, 3,
49
aut, or
;
aut
aut, either
armatura,
ars (art-),
i,
armour,
38
3, art,
a-scendo, 3, / ascend, 38 (lit. c/i>n6 M^ to, from ad- and scando cf. descendo)
;
15 -scendl,
17 autem, however, moreover, and, i auxilium, 2, help, aid ; auxilio esse, to be a help, 39 ; auxilia
or,
a-verto,
3,
balneae,
basilica,
i, pi.,
baths, 15
15
barbarus,
a,
i,
um, barbarous,
basilica,
;
church, 15
belle], 29 Mens Bellus, Belmont, on the frontier of the Orange River Colony,
;
Batavus,
11
;
44
bene, well,
the
37
2, benefit,
Dutchman
Beda,
i,
[Cronje], 45
beneGeium,
service,
56
Bede,
27
Belgae,
i, pi., Belgians, a tribe in the north of Gaul and also in South Britain (Hamp-
25
shire), %
34
bellicosus, a,
bello,
I,
um,
warlike,
5
um,
jolly
[French
bel.
bis, adv., twice, 54 Bodotria, i. Forth (firth of), 4 bonus, a, um, good, 4 b5s (bov-), 3, irregular in some cases m. or f., ox, 50 Boudicea, i, the proper form of the name Boadicea, queen
;
152
Boudicca
ALPHABETICAL VOCABULARY
8.
of the Iceni,
In Celtic
'
means something
' VicVictorina ' or like ' toria brevis, e, 3, adj., brief, shorl, 56 Brigantes, 3, a tribe in the north of Britain, 11
Britauuus,
2,
Bnton,
C.=Gaius (Gaium,
Gai, Gaio),
captivus,
2, captive,
prisoner,
cachinno, i, I laugh, 17 cadens (eadent-), 3, falling, 17 cado, 3, cecidi, I fall (of rain,
53
I,
I catch,
3
;
3,
9
n.,
(capit-),
Asad!, co^ii
50);=/ am
56
2,
killed,
48; /
tal,
chapter,
cease,
caelum,
sky, climate, 18
;
caeruleus, a, um, blue, 28 Caesar, 3, Caesar, 2 emperor, 8 Caledones, 3, the Caledonians, 12 Caledonia, i, Caledonia, Scotland,
Caiataeus, 2, the correct form name Caractacus of the The (Celtic Caradog), 3. form Caractacus is a mis-
11
Caledonius,
Caligula
'
same
a,
Tacitus. Celtic
'
We
root
3,
have
in
'
the
Mac17
;
um,
Caledonian,
Carthy
Scottish, 12
i,
Caligula,
the
third
poem,
-^ (from a soldier's boot) Silchesier, Calleva Atrebatum, near Basingstoke, 15 calor (calor-), 3, heat, 47 Cambria, i, Wales, 5
Roman Emperor,
caliga,'
card (earn-), 3, f., flesh, 50 Carthusianus, a, um, Carthusian: Domus Carthusiana, Charterhouse School, 56 carus, a, um, dear, 4 expensive
;
51
casa, I, cottage, 13 Cassi, 2, a tribe in
shire, 7
campus,
2,
plain,
2,
13
campi
latl et aperti,
Camulodtinum,
Essex,
3
Hertford-
Canada, 49 Canadensis, e, 0/ Canada, 53 cantans (cantant-), 3, singing, 27 Cantium, 2, Kent, 24 canto, I, 7 sing, 17
Canada,
i
,
Cassivellaunus, 2, King of the Cassi in Hertfordshire, 2 castellum, j., fort, 11; castle, castle-liner, 42 18 castra, 2, neut. pi., camp, 5
; ;
43
de-
suffer
harm,
52
Mariana, Ladysmith, for the explanation of 38 the Adjective 'Mariana' see Caesaris under the letter M. Castra, Caesar's camp, an outpost of Ladysmith, 50 catgna. i chain, 6
Castra
; ,
1 ;
ALPHABETICAL VOCABULARY
causa, I, cause, reason, 12 causa, by reason, for the sake,
;
153
9
celeber, Celebris, brated, I
celebre,
;
3,
cele-
crowded,
fre-
co-actus, a, um, compelled, 39 (see cogo) cogito, I, I think, meditate, 2 co-gnatus, 2, Aiw^waM, 34 (co-, with, gnatus natus, born) C0-gn5men (-min-), 3, sur-name, additional name (co-, with,
um, Celtic. 21 supper, late dinner, 24 I, / sup, dine, 18 centum (indecl.), a hundred, 3
Ceiticus, a,
i,
cena, ceno,
cogo
co-
um, / compel
with
centuria,
i,
company
(of soldiers),
100
men
[century],
53
cereus, 2,
wax
taper, candle,
certamen (-min-),
cervinus, a,
'
3, contest,
23 17
um,
'),
of a stag
(Dutch
6
;
eland
38
500 men ; one-tenth part of a legion), 11 battalion companies ( eight about 800 men), 38
;
col-ligo,
3,
-legi,
-lectus,
a,
um,
lego,
Eng.
'
etcetera,' 32
I
collis
/ gather),
(Gen.
hill,
PI.
36 coUium),
3,
m.,
43
13
Denmark,
24
;
circiter, about,
eol-locatus, a, um, having been placed, 6 col-loco, I, / place [locate], 5 cold, 3, colui, eultus, a, um, /
cultivate,
or
32
settlement,
colonia,
i,
;
colony,
circum-do, -dare, -dedi, -datus, a,, um, / surround, 13 civis (Gen. Plur. civium), 3, citizen, 32
civitas (-tat-), 3, state [city], 2 ; citizenship, 32. clades, 3, disaster, 8 clarus, a, um, famous, 6 [Clara] classiarii, 2, plur., seamen, men of the fleet, marines, 39, 44 classis (Gen. PI. classium), 3, fleet, II ; class, 33 Claudianus, 2, a Roman poet of the 4th century a.d.
Cape Colony,
commemoro,
i,
memorate], commentariT, 2,
mentaries,
notes,
com-
36
com-meo,
i,
Claudius,
2,
Roman
Clemens
emperor,
I travel, 18 com-mitto, 3, -misl, -missus, a, um, I engage in [commit, commission], 39 eom-moveo, 2, -movi,-motus,a, um, / move, stir [commotion], 28 com-mSnio (-ion-), 3, community,
partnership, 3^, 56 com-miinis, e, 3, common, 56 com-paro, i, 7 get together, prepare, II
(clement-), 3, clement, merciful, 10 clivus, 2, AW, (Zot, 26 Clota, I, Civde, Firth of Clyde, 1
154
ALPHABETICAL VOCABULARY
together,
teneo,
hold)
con-clamo,
53 con-cordia,
i,
40 I proclaim aloud,
concord,
um,
contrary, con-
i,
harmony,
friendliness, 56 con-discipuliis, 2, school-fellow, 43 con-do, 3, -didi, -ditus, a, um, / found (con-, together, do, / put), 35
.
copia,
confusus, a, um, confused, mingled together (from con-fund5), 46 con-grego, i, I gather together [congregation], II con-ielo ( con-iicio),
-lectus,
a,
3,
-leei,
:
2 Coritani, 2, plur., a British tribe in Lincolnshire, S eornu, 4, horn, wing (of a building, 23 ; of an army, 47) corpus (corpor-), 3, body [corporal], 13 ; a political body,
um, I throw
-scrips!,
in
49
fugamcon., I put
con-scribo,
a,
3,
to flight,^
44
um, /
36
i,
enrol
'
(lit.
creber, crebra,
gether,
hence
conscript
crebrum, crowded (kbLwith), frequent, 41 crematus, a, um, burned, 13 cremo, I, I burn [cremation], 8
con-secro,
talize,
/ consecrate, immor10
eon-servo,
creo, I, / create, 2 crudelis, e, 3, adj., cruel, 8 erux (cruc-), 3, cross, 23 crux Victoriana, the Victoria Cross,
;
56
i, hitchen (with Abl.),
5
;
culina,
cum
together
with,
with, s
cum, when,
-spexi, -spectus, a, catch sight of, discern,
3,
cunctando,
cunoti,
um, /
see,
46
3,
a,
plur.,
all
together
con-stituo,
-stitui, -stitutus,
fix,
a,
(from co-iuncti),
eunlculus,
hole),
56
um, /
determine
[con-
stitute, con-stitution],
50
tunnel,
constituo
ut (with Subj.),
resolve that, 54 con-sto,-stare, -stiti, I consist [con, I cost, together, sto, T stand']
;
Cunobellnus,
Cymbeline,
50
constat
(3rd person)
British king, 3 cupidus, a, um, desirous, eager, 6 cupio, 3, cupiTi, cupitus, a, um,
I desire,
cura, euro,
S
I,
I,
43
cur, why, 18
care, 2 7 cafe for, attend
;
46
eon-tineo,
32 52
ALPHABETICAL VOCABULARY
3, cu-currl, I run [current running water], 49 (of Time), run out, pass, 32 cursus, 4, course, 24
155
eurro,
custodlo, 4,
serve,
40
down
con 4 2
28
um,
defeated,
quered
deporto, 1, I carry off, deport, 5 de-scendo, 3, -scendT, I descend, lit. climb down, 50 with de-spro, i, I despair, 49 Accusative, / despair of, ^ $$ de-sum, de-esse, de-fui, I am wanting, i
;
de-cedo,
3, -eessi, / depart, decease with Abl. from, 56 decern (indeclinable), ie, 9 December, brls, bre, 3, of Decem;
detrlmeotum, 2, loss, harm, detriment quid detrlmenti, any harm, lit anything of harm, anything in the way of harm,
:
l^
2, god, 7;
1.
deus,
deus(VGc.
27,
21, di
(Nom.
5
Sing.), Plur.), 8
right,
[decor-ation], 56' de-do, 3, -didi, -ditus, a, um, 7 surrender, 39 de-duco, 3, -duxl, -ductus, a, um, I draw away, withdraw [deduct], 37 de-!endo, 3, -fendi, -tensus, a, um, / defend, 35 defensor (defensSr-J, 3, defender,
Deva,
dexter,
I,
Chester,
dextra,
dextrum,
4
3,
23 dextra, i, right hand, 17 die, say (Imperative of died) dico, 3, dixi, dictus, a, um, / tell, / declare, say, speak, 32 34 dies, 5, generally m., day, 29 Superdiificills, e, 3, difficult, i
; . ;
de-flcio,
lative
difficillimus,
a,
um,
54
person)
to
an end,
5.
runs 43
short,
comes
next,
leinde,
adv., 18
i,
thereupon,
i
;
33
discordia, i, quarrel, discord, 31 disputo, I, / dispute, 19
di-sto, I, I distant, 42 diii, long, for a long time, 43 diurnus, a, um, of the day, 40 diversus, a, um, diverse, diffevent,
delecto,
am
delight, delighted,
Passive,
am
inter-
am
a,
um,
denarius,
2,
Roman
silver coin
one
denego, densus,
deploro,
i,
shilling,
50
dlvido,
I
um,
a,
i,
4 (Adj.
48
156
divus, a,
ALPHABETICAL VOCABULAR V
dSnee, until, 49 Druidae. i, pi., Druids, 7 Dubrae, i, pi., Dover, 16 ducenti, ae, a, tivo hundred,
um, divine, deified, 2 : adje^-tive applied to emperors after their death the
an
;
Romans
to
worship
due 6,
3,
duxi,
do, dare, dedi, I give, i ; 7 put (morti, to death, 3 ; in fugam, in viam, to .to flight, 13 I send the road, 18, 29) (litteras, a letter, 31) ; I de; ;
diicit, the way ; leads, 44 dulcis, 3, adj., sweet, pleasant, 47 dum, while, i
liver
(impetum,
an
attack,
duo,
duae,
duo
50)
2,
duarum;
duodecim
doeui, doctns, a, um, / [doctor teacher], 25 doctus, a, um, learned, taught [doctor], 19 dqlor (dolor-), 3, grief, 43 domesticus, a, um, internal [dom-
doceo,
duabus), two, 36
teach
(indeclinable),
twelve,
10
a,
estic]
civil
bellum domesticum,
duodetricesimus,
eighth, 45
um,
twenty-
war,
domi, at home, 29, 49 domina, i, mistress [dame], 36 domo, I, domui, domitus, a, um, I subdue, 56
Durovernum,
2,
Canterbury,
25
i
dux
home,
27
E
Eburacum,
2,
York,
20
i),
ecce, behold, 8
enim,
for,
educatus, a,
um
41
(from educ5, 56
Epaticcus,
2,
brother of Cunohorse-soldier,
um,
belinus,
eques
3 (equit-), 3,
tris,
eMundo,
3,
I pour
fuse], ego, /, 17.
38
equester,
tre,
3,
cavalry
40
(used as
2
excellent,
an
adj.), equestrian,
egregius, a,
um,
47
equlnus, a, equina,
um,
of
a horse
card
horse-flesh,
away,
e-mitto,
-misi,
out,
-missus,
a,
let
um,
out,
/ send
SO
40
Mons
50
error,
mistake
ALPHABETICAL
esse (Pres.
to be,
VOCABULARY
exemplum,
2,
157
Infin. of
sum, / am),
example,
36
17
essedum, 2, chariot, 8 esto (Imperative of sum, / am ; 2nd or 3rd pars, sing.), be or let there be, 49 granted,
;
explico,
I,
et,
56
.
and
.
3,
scout
also, etiam 15 atque etiam, again and again, 36, 43 Etona, I, Eton, 56
;
et . 3tiam,
both even,
and
I in-
50
expugno,
3uge, bravo
(e in
Plautus).
18
Euiopa, I, Europe, 41 Europaeus, a, um, European, 33 evado, 3, evasi, I escape, 53 ex (with Abl.), out of, from, 1, 9 (servo ex clade) since, 35 ; instead of, 54, 56, 1. 26 ex quo, since, 25 5xcavo, I, / excavate, 23 exclamo, i, / exclaim, 18
;
I, / storm, take by storm, 2 ex-scribo, 3, -scrips!, -scriptus, a, um, / write out, copy, 36, exspectatio (-ion-), 3, expectation, i, I expect, await, 12 exspiro, i, 7 expire, die, 20 ; / breathe out, 56 ex-sto, -stare, -stiti, Z sotV^, remain, am extant, 3 9 exspecto,
Punic
tor,'
War
the
fabrico, i, cate], 55 fabula, I, story, drama [fable], 17 tacies, 5, face, form, 28 tacile, adv., easily, 5 lacilis, e, 3, easy, 5 ; superlative facillimus, a, (cf. difficillimus) [acinus (facinor-), 3, deed, achievement, exploit, 12 ; f acinus
fenestra, i, window, 26 fere, almost, about, 3 feriae, i, pi., holidays, i f eriatus, a, um, unemployed
dies
um
leriatus, a holiday, 30 ferox (feroc-), 3, adj., warlike ferratus, a, um, fitted with iron,
via
f errata,
um,
i,
savage, fierce,
4
dies
;
pulchrum
do, (alsus, a,
43
7 perform,
false, 8
48
um,
fanum,
2, shrine,
fatigatus, a,
um,
tired [fatigued],
fagged, 2a
28
158
fnia,
I,
ALPHABETICAL VOCABULARY
forte, adv.,
daughter, lo 2 (Voc. fill, 39), son, 5 finis, 3, end, J I ; Plur. fines, m., (Gen. finium), boundaries, territory, 8 firmo, I, / strengthen [make firm],
filius,
by chance, perchance,
17
Dfyy bravely,
fortitiido
38
3,
7 firmus, a,
fortitude,
more
fate,
bravely,
54
i,
fortiina,
fortune,
24
goO(i fortune,
48
forum,
forum,
2,
market- place,
Colony, 56
44 (from fodio,
3,
river, 2
djg') f otus, a,
flow,
47
foveo, 2, fon,
um, /
foster,
focus, 2, hearth, home, 4 fodio, 3, todi, fossus, a, um, 7 ^t'g, 43. Hence comes the worcl
'
56
Franci, 2, plur., Franks, 25 Francogallus, 2, a Frenchman,
f rater
fossil
'
=a
32
foedus (feeder-),
feder-ation],
lollis
49
m.,
air,
fuga,
I,
/?ig'A,
fuisse (Perf.
to
Inf.
2,
have been,
3,
football,
fundamentum,
furor (furor-),
madness
[fury],
39
Germanicus,
a,
um,' Germanic,
34
;
fretum Gallicum, the English Channel gallina, r, hen, fowl, 50 gaudeo, 2 (Perf. Irreg.), I rejoice,
Teutonic, 21
germanus,
2,
i,
brother,
sister
ger-
mana, Germanus,
2,
a German, Teuton,
22
(a
32
baU), 17 gens (gent-), 3, tribe [gentile:], 3 nation, 56 genus (gener-J, 3, kind [gener-al], race, 56 40 Germania, i, Germany, 33; the name of a work of Tacitus, 34
;
gero, 3, gessi, gestus, a, um, / wear, carry, 55 ; / wage, carry on (bellum, war), 56
gloria,
2,
I,
glory, fame, 56
a,
Graecus,
um, Greek
Graecus,
26
3,
adj.,
big,
grand,
ALPHABETICAL VOCABULARY
grStIa, I, gratitude, thanks, 51 ; grat!as ago, / return thanks,
i59
severely.
56
11
Gregorius,
2,
2,
Gregory,
25
gratus, a,
gremium,
gusto,
I,
bosom,
taste,
56
31
H
habeo,
I
2,
/ have,
am
24
nowadays,
habito, I, / dwell, 8 haereo, 2, haesi, 7 stick, 24 Helvetius, 2, a Swiss (noun), 32 heri, adv., yesterday, 42 heu, interjection, alas / 28 Hibernia, i, Ireland, 19 Hibernicus, a, um, Irish, 38 hie, adv., Asye, a< Mzs place, 23 hi 10 hie, haec, hoc, this, />^ /r () viginti dies, these ( twenty days, 44 hiems (hiem-), 3, winter
;
honor
o>'
honos
(honor-),
3,
hilarus, a, nm, cheerful, merry, hilarious, 47 hinc, adv., hence, from this place,
honour, 24 hora, I, hour, i, 18 (o'clock) time, 32 Horatius, 2 (Quintus Horatius Flaccus), a Roman poet of the age of Augustus, 4 horridus, a, um, rugged, savage [horrid], 38 hospitium, 2, inn hostis (Gen. Plur. hostium), 3,
;
enemy
[hostile],
4 to this place,
25
22
;
huiusmodi, of
hiinianus,
a,
this kind,
45
civilized,
humo,
I,
/ hury,
56
(am
a,
situ-
ibi,
there,
um, /
throw, 43
13
any longer (with non iam, no a negative) longer, not any longer nuUus iam, none any longer, 50
then ( time),
even
9
; :
that
early
a British tribe in Norfolk, 7 Idus, 4, plur., /(Zes (about the middle of a mouth the 13th or isth day), 30 ientaculum, 2, breakfast, 18
leeni, 2, plur.,
;
ignavus,
a,
flash,
46
ignore,
1,
r6o
ignStus, a,
ille, ilia,
ALPHABETICAL VOCABULARY
nm, unknown,
the yon, that, 7 great, the well-known, 56 illlC, there, yonder, 31 illustro, I, / illustrate, i light
illud,
;
in-die6, 3, -dlxl, -dlctus, a, um, I declare (bellum, war), 37 inferior (inferior-), 3, comp. adj.,
in-flu6, 3, -fluxi,
33 in-fundo,
up,% 29
imber (imbr-), 3, shower, rain, 46 immo, adv., on the contrary, 37 imperator (imperator-), 3, commander, 16 commander-in;
I pour in 34
chief,
42
imperfectus, a, am, imperfect, incomplete, 56 imperitS, i, / am emperor, 3 7 AoW smay, 8 with Dat. (=over), 6 imperium, 2, empire, 3 coW'
;
;
human,
14
uncivilized,
15
a,
In-humatus,
13 in-iquus,
um,
un-buried,
a,
am,
un-favourable
mand,
10, plur.
;
46
;
impero, I order, i (with Dat.), I impose (upon), 2 impero ut (with Subjunctive), I order that (something shall
51 4, assault, attack, 43 ; charge, 44 ; fury, 54 impiger, impigra, impigrum, active (not sluggish), 17 impigre, actively, bravely, 38 imploro, i, / implore, 6 in (with Ah\.), in or om, i (with Ace), j/o or onto, 2 in-certus, a, um, un-certain, 26 in-cldo, 3, -cidi, / fall upon (with Dat.), 39 [hence English ' incident I fall into (ir. '] ;
be done),
impetus,
un-, aequus, equal, favourable), 39 initium, 2, beginning, 20 iniuria, 1, injury, wrong, 7 inopia, i, want, 50 inquam, say I, I say, 21 ; inquit, inquisays he, he says, 6 mus, we say, 18; inquiunt, 22 they say,
(in-,
;
in-scilbo, 3, -scrips!, -scriptus, a, nm, / inscribe, write an inscription, 56 insidiae, i, plur., ambush, trap,
46
3,
in-sldo,
-sedl, -sessus, a,
um,
settle
on,
am
perched on,
44
insigne,
insidias), 46 In-cipio, 3, -cepi, -ceptus, a, ; begin, 44 incite, I, / urge, incite, 8 incola, i, inhabitant, 2
34
um,
am
in-coI5, 3, -colui,
I inhabit,
32
re-
in-sum,
am
in,
incommodum,
verse,
2,
misfortune,
39
um, untouched,
intact,
8,
indago
index
indlco,
(-gin-), 3, nt, 13
inde, thence
(indie-),
3,
inter
index-,
index
46
during, 18 ; among, 7. 19. 32 ; inter se, one with the other, mutually, 56
ALPHABETICAL VOCABULARY
interdum, sometimes, interea, meanwhile, 9
i
Ibl
Isca,
1,
Caerleon,
far
from
Cardiff,
um,
21
in such a way,
/ kill (lit. make away with) , 43 interim, meanwhile (interior-j, interior interior, 3, inner, 11 interrogS, i, I ask, enquire, 19 intra (with Ace. J, within, 23 ; (of time), 29 intro, I, I enter, 2 invlctus, a, um, unconguered, invincible
. 53 Italia, I, Italy,
6 39
;
ipsum, -self, 6 ; in ips5 tempore, at the very time, in the nick of time, 39 ira, I, anger, wrath, 15, 27 is . . . qui, is, ea, id, that, 2
ipse, ipsa,
;
iterum, a second time, 23 iubeo, 2, iussi, iussus, a, um, / bid, command, 25 ndaeus, 2, Jew, 32 iiidico, i, / judge, 49 liinius, a, um, of June, 56 proper, iustus, a, um, fust, 10 regular, 13 (iustum proelium, a pitched battle) iuvat (3rd pers. sing., present
;
he
those
who, ei who, 51
. .
qui,
tense,
17
K
Kalendae,
i,
day
of each
month,
39
Lacus
lieutenant - general, legatus, 2, general [legate], 38 (about legio (-ion-), legion 3, brigade 5,000 men), 9 (consisting of four battalions,
;
Gramineus, Graspan ( Grass Pond), on the frontier of the Orange River Colony, 44 laetitia, i, delight, happiness, 56
laevus,
later,
3,
47
read,
um, /
34
lente, slowly,
levis, e, 3,
49
:
a,
um,
left;
laeva,
left
light
equitgs Atricani
hand, 17
levis
Light
Latinus,
latus, a,
libenter, gladly, willingly, 17 liber, libr-um, -i, -o, 2, book, t liber, libera, Ifberum, free (some-
29
l62
liberi, 2, pi.,
ALPHABETICAL VOCABULARY
litterarius,
letters
children (properly an " free meaning adjective ones," 1.6. children of freeborn parents), 7 liber 0, I, I liberate, set free ; UTbem obsidione libero, / raise the siege of a town, 44 libertas (-tat-), 3, liberty, freedom,
a,
locus,
2,
place
;
(pi.
loca,
.),
or
passage of a book
I
loco,
2,
in place, instead
(with Gen.)
Londinium,
London,
longe, far, R
lieet
(3rd pers. sing., 2nd Conj. ; Perf. licuit), it is allowed (Dat., to), it is lawful (Dat.,
for),
'
56. licence.']
I, i,
[Hence
licentia,
longinquus, a, um, distant, 56 longus, a, um, Zowg, 2 lonum, a ioMg story, 31 liidus, 2, game, i ludus litter;
lingua,
littera,
tongue, language, 15
letter (of
the alphabet),
literature,
luna, lupus,
I,
moon,
3,
29
12
2,
wolf,
letter an
lux
(liic-),
light,
55
epistle,
31
M
MaoTifontium,
2,
Magersfontein
mane
(indeclinable),
i
;
properly
morning,
30
45 ma"ister,
I
2,
schoolmaster, teacher,
3,
magnitudo
magniopere),
magnopere
greatly,
magno
49
10
magnus, a, um, great, large, 2 maior (m., f.), mains (n.), (maior-)
greater [major, major-ity], Maior Britannia, 15 ; Greater Britain, 49 maiores (plur.), ancestors, %20
3,
manuscriptus, a, um, manuscript {written by the hand) Marcus, 2, Mark, i mare, 3, sea, i Marianus, a, um, Marian Castra Mariana, Ladysmith, the headquarters of the British forces in Natal so called after the wife of Sir Harry Smith. Her Christian names
; ;
35
3, of Majuba, 52 e, 3, of Manchester
;
Maiubensis, e, Mancaniensis,
maritimus,
(Mancunium)
Mancuniens
es the Manchesters,
50
mando,
l,
I commit,
entrust, 5
17. 33
1 ;
ALPHABETICAL VOCABULARY
Harttus, a,
163
um,
of
3,
March,
mater (matr-),
mother,
53 38
very
greatest,
great (Superlative of
magnus,
mediocriter, moderately
tolerably,
IS
a, 3
;
mediterraneus,
inland,
pi.,
um, midland,
minister, ministr-um, -I, -5, 2, servant, minister, 25 ; Minister of State, 31 ministro, i, I attend [minister], 1 47 (tormentis ministro, serve the guns) minor (m., f.), minus (n.), Comparative of parvus, smaller, less, 17 minus, adv., less, 8 ; not very,
n.,
the
mediterranea, midlands
45
medius, a, um, mid, middle, 16 melior (m., f.), melius (n.), better. Comparative of bonus, a, um,
18
a, um, wonderful, strange, 6 miser, misera, miserum, unhappy, miserable, wretched, 14 misericordia, i, pity, 28
mirus,
membrum,
in
mittd,
um,
in
Gen.),
mensis (Gen. Plur. menaium), 3, m., month, i mercator, 3, merchant, 9 mereo, 2, merui, meritus, a, um, I merit, earn, 56 merldianus, a, um, southern Qit. of
the mid-day ; seemeridies). 2 meridies, 5, m., South (lit. midday), 50
send (sometimes/ lei go), 32 mobilitas (-tat-), 3, mobility, 17 modus, 2, manner, way, 13 Mona, I, Isle of Anglesea, 7 mons (mont-), 3, m., mountain,
.;
monstro,
i,
monumentum,
wowMwew/,
3
10
17),
mea, meum,
etc.)
/ migrate,
19
mortuus,
a,
um,
(ieflif,
mihi, to me, i miles (mllit-), 3, soldier, 13 milia, 3, thousands, 9 militaris, military res e, 3, mllitaris, warfare, 35 milito, I, I serve (as a soldier), 1 mills (indeclinable in the Singular Plural milia, declinable, 9), a thousand, 5 5 millesimus, a, um, thousandth,
:
mos
7
;
53
2,
moveo,
/
movi, motus,
;
a,
um,
move [motion] hostem loeo moveo, / move the enemy from his position, I dislodge
the
enemy,
54
(soon),
3,
29
multitude,
56
;
minimus,
a, um. Superlative of parvus, smallest, least minimus natu, youngest (lit, least by birth), 49
things,
multum
i
;
(adv.), very.
164
ALPHABETICAL VOCABULARY
34
;
more, lit. more multo ante, by much, 36 much before, long before, 41) mulus, 2, mule, 39
plus,
;
much
munio, 4, / fortify, 40 murus, 2, wall, 7 mutatio (-ion-), 3, change, 30 mutatus, a, um, changed, 17 muto, I, / change, 49
N
nam,
narro,
natalis,
/or,
i,
i
tell,
narrate,
e, connected with birth Terra Natalis, the land of the Natal, so called Nativity, because discovered on Christferiae mas Day, 36 NatalSs, Christmas holidays, 43 natio (-ion-), 3, tribe, nation, 16,
;
ne-scio, 4, / do not know, 41 nexus, 4, 6ow(f [con-nexion], 56 nidus, 2, Mgrf, 44 nihil, nothing, 2 nihU Utterarum,
;
no
nimis,
nisi,
letter,
43
.
.
too,
18
not,
37
21
nato, I, / swim, bathe, i natus, 4, fejVtt, 49 produced, natus, a, um, 6o', | 3 31 (cp. native oysters)
;
nomen
(nomen Britannicum),
nomino,
non, not,
i,
48
ante Christum natum B.C. post Christum natum a.d. sexaginta annos natus, sixty years old, 48 nauta, i, sailor
navalis, e,
3,
/ name,
call, 3
^
not
any
naval,
belonging
to
i (lit.
23
nonnumquam,
not never),
navis
navium), 3, ship, 11; navis longa, ship navis aeria, of war, 36 balloon, 50 -ne marks a question, 16, 21
(Gen.
Plur.
; ; . .
sometimes 50
;
Nonae,
plur.. i, Nones (from nanus, a, um lit. the ninth day before the Ides, according to the Roman method of reckoning or the fifth seventh day of the month), 39
;
ne nebula,
. .
qwiem, not
i,
cloud,
even 50
.,12
nonagesimns,
a,
um,
ninetieth,
2S
nee, nor,
and
.
nee
nor,
nonus, a, um, ninth, 10 nos, we or us, ourselves, i noster, nostra, nostrum, our,
ALPHABETICAL VOCABULARY
notus, a,
165
um, known,
19
novem
novus,
um (Gen. Sing, nullius, Dat. nuUi), not any, no, 8 num, whether, marking a quesnullus, a,
tion, 8
38
um, new,
quid
Humerus,
2,
number,
31 ; aliquid novi, 37; nihil novi, 49 ; novae res, yewoZM/jOM, 35 aox (noct-), 3, night, 13 ; noctes diesque, day and night, 43 nudatus, a, um, denuded, stripped, 8 niido, I , / strip, denude ( Abl. of),
novi,
nunc, now, 12 nuntio, i, I announce, 8 ; report, 36 nuntius, 2, messenger (nuntius verb! di vini, wssjowayy, 25)
messai^e,
41
lately,
8,
47
bare,
nuper, recently,
24
nudus,
a,
um, naked,
50
46
O
oblivio (-Ion-), 3, oblivion, forgetfulness, 2 ; oblivioni do, / consign to oblivion, I forget,
15
ob-ruo, 3, -rul, I bury, 56 obscuro, I, / obscure, darken, 50 abscurus, a, um, obscure, dark, I. 23 ob-sessus, a, um, besieged, 43 (heading) ob-sideo, 2, -s^, -sessus, a, um,
I besiege, 23
ob-sidio
lit. sit
down
against,
(-ion-), 3, siege, 50 / libero, raise the siege of a town, lit. / free a town from siege, 44 ob-sto, -stare, -stiti (with Dat.), / stand against, resist ob-tineo, 2, -tinul, -tentus, a, um,
;
sun, moon and stars ; from ob- and cado, I fall), 49 occulto, I, I hide, 5 occupo, I, / seize [occupy], 5 octavus, a, um, eighth [octave] 38 octingentesimus, a, um, eight hundredth, 56 octingenti, ae, a, eight hundred octo (indeclinable), eight, 44 October, bris, bre, 3, of October, 31 octogesimus, a, um, eightieth, 56 octoginta, eighty, 9 oculus, 2, eye, 6 in oculis, in
;
urbem obsidione
sight,
22
I retain, maintain, keep hold of, 35. [The English word ob'
comes from obtineo, but to' does not mean the same
tain
' '
odium, 2, hatred, 56 officium, 2, duty, 56 olim, adv., long ago, in the olden time, 56 omen (omln-), 3, omen, sign [omin-ous], 8 omnia, Neut. Plur. of omnis, all things, everything
omuino
omnis,
opera,
altogether,
27
Plur. omnes,
n., all, 3
3, adj.,
f.,
every
m. and
i,
omnia,
12
I try
to,
50
i66
ALPHABETICAL VOCABULARY
orbis,
oportet (3rd pers. sing., 2nd Conj.; Perf. oportuit), it behoves, it oportet me, / ought, befits
:
3,
orbis
28 oppidum,
opportune,
2,
town, 2 fortunately
Ordoviees,
,
2,
a tribe of North
East [orien19
oppor-
Wales,
oriens
tal],
tunely, 39
attack, 9 optime,, excellently, hurrah
I,
5 (orient-), 3, the
oppugno,
12
18
origo
opus
(oper-), 3,
worh [oper-ation],
oriundus, a, um, sprung, 6 ornatus, 4, adornment, attire, 50 ornatus, um, ornamented, a, dressed, 50 orno, I, J equip, ad-orn, 7
ostrea,
i,
ora,
Orangia,
the
oyster, 31
3,
sheep,
Orange
River
Colony,
50
2.
37
ovum,
egg, 51
paulum, a
Paulus,
2,
12
um, peaceful, peacegiving [pacific], 56 paco, I, I pacify, subdue, 10 paene, adv., almost, 47 paeninsula, i, peninsula (paene, almost ; insula, island) , 24 paratus, a, um, prepared, ready,
pacificas, a,
29 parens (parent-),
3,
15
pax
(pac-),
I,
3,
peace, 12
peeco,
sjOT,
27
pedes
(pedit-), 3, foot-soldier, 45
pedester, tris, tre, 3, infantry (used as an adj.), pedestrian, 2 pello, 3, pepuli, pulsus, a, um, /
drive, ex-pel, 35
parent, 21
5
;
paro,
I,
7 prepare,
prepare
for,
41
little,
25
passus, 4, ^ocfi, yrtr;?, 23 pater (patr-), 3, father, 3 patria, i, country, fatherland, 8 patrocinium, 2, protection, 35
protectorate,
penates (Gen. penatium), 3, plur., household gods home, 8 penetro, i, I penetrate, 2 per (with Ace), through, 11 during, i aioMg, 44 per-curro, 3, -cucurri o;- -eurri, I overrun, 36
; ;
patruissimus, a,
um
17
;
Oow, 31 patruus, 2, uncle, i pauci, ae, a, a /eta, 5 few, 30 paulatim, adv., gradually, 15
;
per-do, 3, -dldi, -ditus, a, um, 7 destroy [per-dition] ; aquam perdd, I waste time (lit. water), 32 peregrinus, a, um, foreign, 26 peregrinus, 2, foreigner, 32 periculosus, a, um, perilous, dangerous, 48 penculum, 2, /len'/, danger, 12
ALPHABETICAL VOCABULARY
peritus, a, um, skilled (Gen. in), II per-nocto, / spend the night, 16 perpetuus, a, um, perpetual, everlasting, 12 per-tined, -tinui, I stretch, 2, extend, 23 pertinet ad, it concerns, pertains to, 32
;
167
pontifex (pontiflc-), pontiff. 3, pope, 25 populus, 2, a people, 6 porcus, 2, /)jg [pork], 50 porta, I, gate (of a city) portentum, 2, portent, marvel, 8 porto, I, / carry, 18 poTtus, 4, port, harbour, 23 ;
(compare
-pertinent,'
means
hence
perturbs,
'
'
word
42
wMch
am
pot-
able, 3
unbecoming
')
i,
46
per-venio, 4, -veni, I arrive (lit. come through), 42 pes (ped-J, 3, m., foot, 22 pedibus, on foot, 45 Petrel us eol&s, Pieters Hill, North of the Tugela and to the
;
pharus,
55 light-house, 23 PictI, 2, plur., Picts, 19 tabula painted pictus, a, um, picta, picture, i piget (3rd pers. sing., 2nd Conj. Perf. piguit), it vexes me piget, it vexes me, I am sorry, me non piget, / donH 23 ; 2,
f..
;
;
South-Eastof Ladysmith,
a,'
(
um, /
provide, afford,
etc.,
23
prae-hibeo,
from
praecipito,
cipitate],
praecipitans,
knocking down,
34 praecipuus,
39
mind,
22
;
um,
chief, special,
cricket ball,
particular,
30
piUS, a,
plenus,
Geh. 56, with Ahl. filled, 50 plerumque, mostly, generally, i plurimus, a, um, very much, 38 (Superlative of multus) plus (plur-), more [hence Plural'],
'
32
I,
poeta,
poet,
of Aulus Plautius, 27 weight, pondus (ponder-), 3, 9 pono, 3, posul, positus, a, um, / place [position], 40 pons (pont-), 3, m., bridge ; Pons Aelius, Newcastle, 20
praeclarus, a, splendid, 12 praeda, i, prey, booty, 9 praefectus, 2, officer [prefect] president, 31 governor of a colony, 36 prae-mitto, 3, -misi, -missus, a, um, / send forward, 45 prae-nomen (-nomin-), 3, forename, Christian name prae-sto, -stare, -stiti, / exhibit, render, 49 show, 6 prae-suni, -esse, -fui (with Dat.), I ark in command {of), am at
;
the
head
(of),
i68
prandium,
pretium,
2,
2,
ALPHABETICAL VOCABULARY
lunch,
price,
promunturium,
(grand!
;
50
nearly,
49
with Ace,
42
i
'
propero,
i,
/ hasten,
ac/
rapidly,
princeps(priiicip-), 3, emperor, 2 ; prince, chieftain, 15 headship, soveprineipatus, 4, reignty, 35; principate, reign
(of
meaning act
thought)
53
'
princeps
plur.,
3,
principia,
2,
prior (prior-),
0/,
propulso,
repel,
/ drive
12
off,
keep
off,
of,
for,
prospers,
ously,
successfully,
prosper-
56
;
procella,
i, storm Mons Procellarum, Stormberg, in the north of Cape Colony, 46 Promunturium Procellarum, Cape of Storms, the old name of the Gape of Good Hope, 48 procul, far, 22 afar, 26
;
success,
prosperity,
10
next,
pro-curro, 3, -cucurri or -curri, 7 run forward, I charge, 38 proelium, 2, battle, 5 pro-festus, a, um, not holy, not
proximus,
a,
um,
nearest,
a dies profestns, working-day, 30 pro-fundo, 3, -fudi, -tusus, a, um, / pour out, shed [profuse], 54 pro-hibed, 2, -hibul, -hlbitiis, a, um (from habeo lit. T hold I prohibit, at a distance), / forbid, with Infin., 26 prevent, with Infin., 36 with Abl. (from), 52;
festal
; ;
;
preceding, 39 pruina, i, frost, 54 puer, 2, boy, 17 pugna, I, fight, battle, 12 pugnans (pugnant-), 3, adj., fightII
;
last,
ing,
I,
pugno,
of dust,
51
punctum,
2,
52
punctum
46
I,
26
um,
puteus,
puto,
Q
quadragesimus,
a,
um,
fortieth,
it 3
22
ALPHABETICAL
qaadrittus, a, um, square, fourcornered, 23 agmine quadrate, in quarter column, 46
;
VOCABULARY
169
quadringentesimus, hundredth, 24
a,
um, fow
25
quingenti, ae,
quadringenti, ae, a, four hundred, 22 quaesd, 3, / pray, or please (tell me), 32 qnaestid (-ion-), 3, question, enquiry, 19 quam, how, 30 as : than, 14
;
d,, /iwe hundred, 44 quinquagesimus, a, um, fiftieth quinquaginta (indecl.), fi,fty, 2c quinque, ;?, 30
quamquam,
quando,
although, 2
jwAsm, 18
quantopere, how much, 18 quantus, a, um, how great, 56 tantus quantas, so great ... as, 48
. . .
quartus, a, um, fourth, % 3 quartus decimus, fourteenth, 3 quattuor, four, 2 quattuordecim, fourteen qiu, quae, quod, za/^ic^ ? or w/ta^ 19 qin, quae, quod, zu^o, which, 20
quia, because,
i
quintus, a, um, /J/tt, 7 quintus decimus, fifteenth, 3 quis (m., f.), quid (n.), who?, what?, 14, 15, 19 awyoMe, anything; num qiud, lahether anything?, 31 nS quid, lest anything, 52 quis-que, quae-que, quid-que or quod-que, each, each one, 56 quo, whither, to which, 42 quod, that, 23 quondam, once on a time, formerly, 22
;
.'',
quoque, too, also, 3 turn quoque, then too, even then quota hora est ? what o'clock is
it?,
18
at
quota hora,
what o'clock
/",
1 8
R
re-belll6 (-ion-), 3, renewal of war [rebellion!, 8 re-bello, i, / renew war [rebel], 7
district,
II
i,
um,
;
regius, a,
/ betake (me, myself), 43 I withdraw, 44 / recover, 7 receive, 56 rescue, 47 reeito, i, / read aloud [recite], i recreo, i I refresh (me, myself), 22 recte, rightly, 16 right !, 28 red-ambulo, i, I walk' bach, 29
; ;
regno,
regnum,
um,
7 reign,
-pi.,
reliquiae, i, reliquus, a,
relics,
remains,
% 5
um,
the rest,
the re-
maining
remotus, a, um, remote, 4 re-moved, 2, -movi, -motus, a, um, I remove [remote], 27
re-portatus,
a,
5
red-do,
3,
-didi, -ditus,
(lit.
a,
um, /
;
deliver
J give back
;
red-
um,
carried
off
off,
~re-),
38 (note)
I render,
won,
re-porto, win,
res,
5,
i,
54
/ carry
2
(or back),
um,
thing,
affair,
30
res
publica (respublica),
common-
lyo
wealth,
ALPHABETICAL VOCABULARY
31
re
re-voco,
vera
in reality, respublica,
call off,
28 28
49
3,
rex
-scrips!, -scrlptus, a,
(reg-),
2,
3,
king,
re-scilbo,
um, /
re-servo,
i,
write bach, 43
reserve,
Rhenus,
24
manner
3,
[rite],
56
robur (robor-),
robustus,
a,
-stitui,
um, / 49
restore
-stitutus, a, [restitution],
33
I,
rogo,
/ ask,
52
re-surgo, 3, surrex!, / rise again [resurrection], 56 re-tardo, i / retard, delay, impede (from tardus, a, um, slow,
,
Roma, I, Rome, 5 Romanus, a, um, Roman, 2 rutus, a, um, reddish [hence WUliam Rufus '], 33
'
ruinae,
i,
pi.,
i,
ruins,
pi.,
18
tardy),
Rutupiae,
2
(or,
32)
Richborough,
to
revera,
really,
4,
as
two
a,
18
Rutupinus,
a, um, belonging Richborough, 18
words, re vera,
le-vincio,
-vinxi,
-vinctus,
um, / bind
fast,
56
sacer, sacra,
sacrum, sacred,
century,
27
saeculum,
2,
16
sanctus, a, um, holy, 27 Sanctus, 2, Saint, 23 sanguis (sanguin-), 3, m., blood [sanguin-ary, con-sanguin-ity]
;
34
I,
satio, satis,
pretty well, 17
salus (saliit-),
3,
health,
welfare
37
scientia,
1,
science,
knowledge,
9
scio, 4, sciv!, / know, 41 ; vincere scio, I know how to conquer,
51 Scotus, 2, Scot, 19 scribo, 3, scripii, seriptus, a, um, / write [script a thing written ; scribe a writer, lawyer], 32 scriptor (scriptor-), 3, writer, 3
bless
you
I,
SI
ALPHABETICAL VOCABULARY
himself, herself, itself, themselves, 11 inter among themselves secundus, a, um, second, 2 sed, 6m<, 2 sedeo, 2, sedi, I sit, 22
s5,
;
171
9
se,
%g;
sicut, as
(lit.
meaning i, /
signify,
mean,
13;
24
flag,
Segedunum,
of the
2,
Wa'i M(f
Wall),
'
End
Roman
20
semi-hora, i, half an hour (semisemicircle,' half, as in ' semicolon,' etc.), 49 semi-somnus, a, um, half-asleep (semi-, half somnus, sleep),
;
30
South
49
-i,
24
-e,
5 7,
27
senex (sen-em,
-is,
etc.),
tra,
trum,
left
[sinister],
44
um,
septentrionalis, e, 3, northern, 10 septentriones, 3, plur., m., the North (properly, the seven stars of Charles' Wain), 39 Septimus, a, um, seventh, 6 Septimus decimus, seventeenth, 51 septingenti, ae, a, seven hundred,
46
septuaginta, seventy,
9
sepulchre,
sepulchrum, S6
serenus, a,
2,
<oj6,
densior, denser than usual) solum, 2, soil, 23 solum, only n3n solum sed
; .
.
clear [serene], 18 sermo (sermon-), 3, speech, conversation, talk [sermon], 26 sero, late, too late, 41 servitus (servitut-), slavery, 3, servitude, 2 servo, I, I preserve, keep, watch,
um,
etiam, not only but also, 16 solus, a, um, (Gen. Sing, solius, Dat. Sing, soli), alone, 56 somnium, 2, dream, 35
. .
somnus,
2, sleep, 43 spectaculum, 2, spectacle, show, sigAi, 29 6 specto, I, / look, watch, gaze at, see, 6 spero, I, / hope, 12 spes, 5, hope, 41 promise, 47
; ;
spiritus,
4,
^n'i,
ajVs
[spirit],
35
stabilitas (-tat-), 3, stability, stead fastness, 45
um,
s2;i;^A,
11
if.
172
ALPHABETICAL
,
VOCABULARY
Suetonius Tranquillus, 2, a Roman writer of the second century
statim, adv., immediately at once, i8 statio (-ion-), 3, station, sentryduty, 51 Statio Bechuanarum, Mafeking, in Bechuana;
sum,
/ am,
summus,
lancl,
43
10
/ stand,
um,
highest,
lam
eager (Dat.
56
studium,
suit,
2, eagerness, study,
;
pur-
46
plur. studia, 15 studies, I stultitia, I, folly, 37 sub (with Abl.), under, 11 ; down
in
(with Ace),
to,
down
into,
down
down
sur-
/ sur-
along,
23
mount,
towards, 38 subiectus, a, um, subject, 3 subito, suddenly, 39 subministro, i, / supply, 4 subterraneus, a, um, subterranean,
44
3,
superstitio (-ion-),
superstition,
27
underground,
23
17
sus-tineo, 2, -tinul, -tentus, a, um, I sustain, endure, (from suband teneo), 54 suus, a, um, his (or his own), her (or her own), its (or its own), their (or their own), 2 sui, his (or their) men, 9, 13
;
tabula,
I,
tablet,
plate
tabula
1
te,
thee,
you
tecum,
voith
thee,
picta, picture,
with you
Tacitus, 2, a
Roman
historian,
tam, so, 43 tamen, nevertheless, however, i Tamesa, i, m., Thames, 2 Caesar calls the river Tamesis (3rd Decl.), but Tacitus
; ' '
right time, in time, 22 ; in ipso tempore, in the nick of time, 39 tenebrae, I, plur., darkness, 39 ; Rex Tenebrarum, the Devil,
calls it
'
Tamesa
'
(ist Decl.)
;
28
2,
teneo,
ter,
tenui,
tentus,
a,
um,
/ hold,
terra,
23
8,
24
3
um,
i,
Tasciovanus,
2,
Tasmania,
terribilis,
terrible,
3,
terror (terror-),
38 terror, panic,
39
ALPHABETICAL VOCABULARY
tertius, a,
'^75
um,
third, 2
um,
tesselated,
made
(from
of mosaic
tessella,
work,
15
a small cube)
testimonium,
a,
triglnta (indecl.), thirty, 22 trigon, 3, m. (a Greek word), ball, tennis ball, 30 trigonalis, e, of (or connected with) the tennis ball, i Trinobantes, 3, plur., a tribe in
Essex,
triplex
36 Trisantona,
7
3,
(triplic-),
adj.,
triple,
Togodumnus,
belinus,
tolero,
I,
i,
see
tolerate,
46
tormentum,
gun,
2,
hurling machine,
38 tot (indeclin. adj.), so many, 49 totus, a, (Gen. Sing, totius, Dat. Sing, tot!), whole, 4 tra-do, 3, -didi, -ditus, a, um, / hand down, lit. jwa across
Britannia Romana. Trisantona is uncertain, depending on the reading of a passage in Tac. Ann., xii. 31 tristis, e, 3, sad, 30 bitter, 56
of
map
The form
'
triumphalis,
e, 3,
triumphal,
um
55
triumphs,
i,
I triumph,
exult,
trucidatio (-ion-), 3, slaughter, 13 trucido, I, I slaughter, murder, 7 tu, thou, you (Sing.), 17 Tugela, I, m., the Tugela, a river
in Natal,
47
that time or there-
engine]
traicio
a,
(
um, / throw
4, 2,
44
turbulentus,
tremo,
3,
tremui, I tremble,
f.),
38
;
turbulent, unFliimen Turbulentum, the Modder River (in the Orange River Colony Modder =-mud), 44
settled,
um,
;
10
'
'
tres (m.,
tria (n.).
Gen. trium
13,
3,
tower, turret, 22
tribute,
tiitus,
a,
tuus, a,
U
ubi, where,
i
umquam,
adv., ever, at
waa.
any
time,
uUus,
a,
14
Dat. Sing, ulli) ultimus, a, um, last [ultimate], i litterae ultimae, a final de-
together ; with, 6
cum,
together
spatchan ultimatum,
37
174
undecim
undecimus,
a,
ALPHABETICAL VOCABULARY
(inderl.), eleven,
13
urbs (urb-),
3, city
um,
a,
[urban], 5
eleventh
undetrlcesimus,
ninth, 33
um,
twenty-
undevlginti findecl.), nineteen, 52 undique, adv., on all sides, 39 universus, a, um, all together [universal] unus, a, um (Gen. Sing, unius, Dat. Sing, uni), one, 5
right on to, \ \\ tisus, 4, use, 23 (USUI) ut, how, 22, 31 ; as, 3 ; ut pojsum, as best I can, 38,
46 that,
;
usque ad,
that,
utilis, e,
3,
50
useful, 15 3, wife,
uxor (uxor-),
vacca,
I,
vadum,
ford,
2,
'
shoal,
41
Vahalis,
32
2,
valeo,
am
in
strong ; valere iubeo, I bid farewell (lit. to vale (plur. fare well), 23 valete), farewell, 30 ; ut vales ? how do you do f, iTiultnm valet, avails 31 ;
good health,
am
VergHius Maro), a Roman poet of the age of Augustus, 4 verius, compar. adv., more truly, 56 vero, but ; but in truth, 42
versus, 4, verse, 38 verto, 3, verti, versus, a, turn ; bene vertat,
um,
1
it
may
much,
validus, a,
34
strong,
Verulamium,
49
Hertford
verus, a,
>
2,
St.
56 Albans,
in
um,
lire,
twenty miles
vallum,
2,
20
I,
10
vera,
vasto,
the truth
true things),
11;
vastus, a,
Vectis,
3,
um,
Abl. Wight,
(Ace.
vehiculum,
vel, or,
I
2,
15 vehicle,
vero, in truth, 42 vesper, 2, evening, 30 [vespers] vester, vestra, vestrum, your (of several persons), 12 vestibulum, 2, vestibule, entrance
hall
cart,
9,
carriage, 18
vestimentum,
it
2,
gaj-merei
[vest-
were [vel
ment], veteranus,
50 2, veteran,
old soldier,
even
34
vexillum, 2, standard, flag, 38 vexo, I, / anwoy, wsa;, 2 via, I road, way, i de via, from the road in viam me do, / give myself to the road, I start, 18 inter viam, on the journey, 19
,
ALPHABETICAL
vlesiiuus, a, um, twentieth, victito, 1, / live, 50
VOCABULARY
vis,
3,
175
54
;
39
Ace. vim,
Abl.
:
vi,
victor (victor-),
victoria,
3, victor, 14 i, victory, 2
Plur. 50, violence, force vir-es, -ium, -ibus, strength visits, I, I visit, i
vita,
I, life,
Victorian Victorianus, a, um, crux Victoriana, the Victoria Cross, instituted by Queen for conspicuous Victoria
by Tacitus
vito, i, / avoid, 13 vivo, 3, vixl, / live vix, scarcely, hardly,
bravery,
'
56
adj.,
fem.,
vobis,
vide5, z, vidi, Wsos, a, um, I see, to it 22 ; video ne, I see not, 52, 56 that viginti (indeclinable), twenty, ^ 22
. . .
43 vobiscum, with you to you vocans (voeant-), 3, calling, 42 voco, I, / call, 4 / summon,
;
8
I,
void,
I fly. ^
2,
9
volunteer [volun-
villa,
I,
country-house, villa, 15
voluntarius,
tary],
um, /
vox
49
3,
pluck, courage
54
Zelanda,
i,
'
Zealand
'
Zeelanda
was
the
Nova name
to
New
II.
ENGLISH-LATIN
the words contained in the Exercises have occurred in previous passages of the text of Pro Pairia and ought therefore to be The object of this Vocabulary is simply to put familiar to the pupil. him on the track of the word, if he has forgotten it and, accordingly, the minimum of information is given here. In the case of a few words, however, introduced from Ora Maritima or not appearing in either book, the declension or conjugation is indicated.
Nearly
all
possum able 1 am posse to be (Prep.), di : about (Adv.) chciter accordingly, itaque accuse, accusdye across, trans
;
better,
melior,
melius
between, inter
bid, iubeo big, magnus bird, avis (fem.)
or adventdre, advenlre (after 41) as, ut, or sicut ascend, ascendere at once, statim at the present day,
attack, impetus attack, to, oppugndre attendant, minister time attention, opera
omnes
ball, pila already, iamalso, etiam : but also, balloon, ndvis deria barbarians, barbarl sed etiam barbarous, harbarus although, quamquam baths, balneae always, semper among, in numero battalion, cohors (with gen.), or inter battle, proelium amphitheatre, amphi- beautiful, pulcher because, quia thedtrum ancient, anttquus before, ante begin, incipcre an,9;el, angelus beginning, initium angle, angulus Angles, Angll behoves, it, oportet Belgian, Beli;a Annals, A nndles annoy, vexdre Belgium, Belgium alia, bell, tintinnSbulum another, alius, aliud, or alter, a, urn beloved, cdrissimns besiege, obsidere answer, respondere best, optimus any longer, iam
near, ad
Caledonian
(adj.),Ca;/-
donius; Caledonians, the, Caledones call, to, vocare calm, tranquillus camp, castra can, I, possum
cannon,
cape,
se
tormentum promunturium
arms, arma
betake
"
oneself,
ITO
capital, caput
army, exercitus
recipere
captive, captnus
ALPHABETICAL VOCABULARY
capture, captare carry off, deportdre cause, cattsa cavalry, equester (adj.) Celts, Celtae century, saeculum channel, fretum chapter, caput charge, to, procurrere
chariot, essedum cheerful, hilarus
chief,
177
cottage, casa
country
house, villa courage, auddcia course, cursus coward, igndvus cowardly, igndvus
create, credre
cross, to, trdicere cruel, crUdelis
Dutch, Batdvus
dwell, habitdre earth, terra east, oriens eastern, orientdlis easy, facilis egg, ovum eight, octo eight hundredth, octin-
summus
children, liberi cube, tessella, i Christ, Christus Christian, Christianus danger, periculum gentesimus dangerous, perlculosus eighth, octdvus church, basilica Cicero, Cicero (-on-) daughter, filia eighty, ociogintd citizen, civis eleventh, undecimus day, dies citizenship, civitds dear, cdrus else, alius, alia, aliud embroidered, pictus, a, city, urbs death, mors civil war, bellum do- December, December mesticum declare, decldrdre or emperor, princeps
um
civilized,
declare empire, imperium hUmdnus affirmdre war, bellum indicere end, finis climb up, ascenders superare or endure, tolerdre cloak, chlamys (chla- defeat,
;
myd-), 3 vincere (after 38) cloud of dust, pulvis defend, defenders defender, defensor coast, litus cohort, cohors delight, delectdmentum
coin,
enemy,
nummus
Camulo-
Colchester,
dunum
collect, colligo
colonel, praitfectus
delight, to, delectdre desire, to, cupere desirous, cupidus destroy, delere devastate, vastdre
die, exspirdre difficult, difjicilis
even, etiam
Dat.) dining
chief,
i
commander, imperdtor
room, nium, 2
commander
in
imperdtor summus commerce, mercdiHra, compel, cogere conquer, vincere conquered, debelldtus conqueror, victor conversation, sermo
to far, procul farewell, vale insignis farm, agellus fashion, modus or cldrus fate, foriuna ditch, dyke, fossa father, pater divide, dividere fatherland, patria do, facere
distinguished,
178
fear, to,
ievf,
ALPHABETICAL VOCABULARY
Gaul, Gallia
general,
formldare a few, pauci fifth, quintus fifty, quinquagintS quintus fifty-fifth, quinquagest m iis
hurry, festlndre
et
dux German, Germdnus if, si Germanic, Germdnicus image, simulacrum immense, ingens Germany, Germdnia
give, dare glass vessels, vitr^ea, glorious, cldrus glory, gloria
implore, implordre2 in, in, with Abl. in order that, ut in the house of, apud infantry, pedester (adj.) inhabit, incolere inhabitant, incola
fight, to,
fine,
fire,
first,
pugnure
pulcher
ignis,
m. primus
five, flag,
fleet,
quinque
vexillum
classis
folly, stultitia
food, cifcMs
^es, w. {ootball, follis,
Icibt,
m.
for,
BafM or ewim
great, magnus inhuman, inhiim-dnus greater, mdior, mdius inj ury, iniuria greatly, magnopere into, in, with Acr. Irish, Hibernicus grief, dolor guard, custodlre island, insula gun, tormentum Isle of Thanet, Insula
hand, manus forename, praenome-n happy, felix (fellc-), harbour, partus form, forma foitieth, quadrdgesimus hasten, properdre have, habere fortify, munjre hear, audire forty, quadrdgintd help, auxilium, 2 fornm, forum high, flsrt. found, condere foundation, fundamen- hill, collis, m.
for the sake, causa forbid, prohibere forces, copiae foreigner, peregnnus
Tanatis
hair, capilll, pi. hall, atrium
3
Isle of
Wight, Insula
Vectis
January,
just,
Idnudrius
jolly, bellus
iustus
Jutland,
paeninsula Cimbrica
himself (Accps.), se ium history, historia four, quattuor f ourteenth.^Mfflj'fes deci- hold, tenere or habere
Kent, Cantium
kill,
interficere
(after
43)
,
mus
fourth, quartus fowl, galllna
(sermonem)
holidays, feriae
Kimberley
polis
A damanto-
free, liher
wards, domum hope, spes hope, to, sperdre free, to, Hberdre horse-flesh, caro equina freedom, Uhertds French, the, Franco- hour, hora
France,
Francogallia
friend,
kingdom, regnum
kitchen, culina,
i
know,
scire
knowledge, notitia
amicus
e
{ex)
how, quam or Mi how many, quot how much, quantopere however, autem, iamen hundred, centum for 200 see two.'
;
known,
notus, a,
um
Ma-
La.iy3ra.ith,Castra
ridna
land, terra lands, agri land, to, applicdre
;
'
hurrah, optime
large,
magnus
'
ALPHABETICAL VOCABULARY
laugh, ridere lazy, piger,pigr-a, lead, ducere left, laevus
legion, legio
less,
179
miserable, miser
nothing, nihil
-um
now, njinc missionary, nuntius nowadays, hodie verbi dlvlnl nowhere, nusquam mistaken, to be, errare number, numerus
missile, missile
minus
mistress,
domina
Modder
River,
FlUmen
oblivion, obltvio
Turbulentum letter, epistola or lit- month, mensis terae (of the alpha- moon, luna morning, in the, mdne bet), littera most bravely, fortisliberty, Ubertas
;
sime mostly, plerumque mother, mater light, lux like to libenter, with mountain, mons, m.
lie,
life,
iacere vita
move, moved much, multum multitude, muUitUdo little, parvus live ( dwell), habitare murder, truciddre live on ( eat), victitare, with Abl. naked, nudus London, Londinium name, nomen name, to, nomindre long (adj.), longus
listen,
Verb
ocean, oceanus October, October officer, praejectus often, saepe on, in, with Abl. on account of, propter once, quondam one, unus, una, unum only, tantum or solum onto, in, with Ace.
drea, 1 order, imperdre origin, orlgo other, alius, alia, aliud ought see behoves our, noster, nostr-a,-um
: '
auscultate
open space,
love, a>aye
lunch,
prandium
Statio
Mafeking,
next, proximus pay attention, operam night, nox by night, dare peacQ, pax manufacture, fabricare noctu populus many, multi, ae. a nine hundred, nongentl people, a, persons, hnnnnes march, iter facere ninth, nanus meanwhile, intered no ( not any), nullus perhaps, fortasse
;
page, pagina, i panic, terror Be- new, novus part, pars news, nuntius newspapers, actadiurna pavement, pavimentum
;
Natal, Terra Ndtdlis near, prope or ad necessary, necesse net, inddgo never, numquam nevertheless, tamen
out of, ex or e Outlander, peregrlnus over, super, with Ace. overrun, percurrere
oyster, ostrea
human
homo
mention, commemordre merciful, clemens merry, hilarus message, nuntius midland, mediterraneus mUe, mille passus miles, milia passuum mind, animus
;
Nones, Nonae
Picts, Pictl
picture, tabula, i north, septentriones northern, septentriond- pit, puteus pity, misericordia lis not only, place, locus not, non
;
non solum not any place, to, collocdre longer, non iam pl".n, consilium
; ;
minister, minister
pluck, virtHs not yet, nondum note book, commentdril poet, poeta
i8o
ALPHABETICAL
VOCABULARY
;
prepare, pardre prevent, prohibere provide, praebere province, provincia purpose, consilium put to death, mortl dare
dare slaughtered, truclddtus quimus, inquiunt slave, servus school, mdus litterdrius slavery, servitus schoolmaster, magister sleep, somnus schoolmistress, magis-- smaller, minor, minus
tra
so,
soil,
tarn
so great, tantus
solum
mare
;
soldier, miles
queen, reglna
rank, ordo
read,
lectitdre
venumdare
nonnumquam
son, filius
or
lego
September,
serve
(after
34)
"
mus
-um seventy-eighth, duodeoctogesimus shape, forma, i shell, concha, i shilling, dendrius ship, ndvis show, monstrdre
praestdre
side, latus (later-),
spear, hasta,
special, praecipuus
regnum
square
Rhine, Rhenus
ride,
equitdre
right, dexter
siege, obsidio signal, signum signify, significdre Silchester, Calleva silence, silentium sing, cantdre
sit
surname, cognomen
surrender, dedere seder situated, situs ; to be surround, circumdare ^, iacere swim, natdre said (he, she), inquit six, sex said (they), inquiunt sail, ndvigdre six hundred, sescentl sixteenth, sextus deci- take, capere Saint, Sanctus
down,
sake (for
the),
causa
mus
sixth, sextus sixtieth, sexdgesimus slaughter, truclddtio slaughter, to, trucl-
ALPHABETICAL VOCABULARY
tell,
l8l
narrdre, or dicere
tumble, cadere
tunic, tunica,
1
what
(after 32)
temple, templum
ten,
turbulent, turbulenius
decern twelfth, duodecimus qtiod tennis, liidus trigonalis twelve, duodecim what o'clock, quota twentieth, vlcesimus tenth, decimus hora twenty, viginti tesselated, tesselldtus when (in a question), two, duo, duae, duo than, quam quando (not in a question), cum that, quod (but generuncle, patruus whence, ally Ace. with Inf.) unde under, sub where, ubi then, turn unhappy, which, miser there, ibi qui, quae, quod unite, concilidre while, dum thing, res unless, nisi white, cogitdre think, albus, a,
;
um
third, tertius
thirtieth, tncesirmis thirty, 'tngintd this, Kic, haec, hoc thousand (a), mille thousands, milia
who
1
urn, urna,
use, iisus
;
quis
thousandth, milUsimus three, tris, m., f tria, n. through, per throw, iacere thunder, tonitrus
.
;
wife,
win
uxor a victory
over, reportdre
ndvigium
vexes
ad
Wales, Cambria to-morrow, eras walk, ambuldre also, wall, miXrus too, nimis quoque want, inopia tower, turris war, bellum town, oppidum warlike, ferox (feroc-), transport, transportdre water, aqua
;
woman, femina
worship, adordre wound, vuhierare
3
write
tremble, tremere trench, fossa tribe, ndtio or gens true, virus try, operam dare
wave, unda
well, puieus
yesterday, heri
l82
SUMMARY OF RULES
Summary
Agreement.
1.
of
Grammatical Rules
its
i.
Number
animo
alacri lectito.
ii.
}
i.
21. 2.
10.
An
:
its
noun
in Gender,
Number and
in
Case
reges
reginae
2.
Britannicae
Britannia
This rule applies not only to examples like the above, in which the adjective is called an Attribute of the noun, but also to examples like the following, in which the adjective is said to be predicated of the noun vita Agricolae difficilis est et obscura. i. 10. Horatius incolas Britanniae feros nominat. 4. 6.
:
3. it
noun standing
:
in apposition to another
in Case
librum de vita Agricolae, duds Celebris, mihi dedit. ad flumen Tamesam penetraverat. 2. 5. ex insula Mona properavit. 9. 4.
4.
relative pronoun qui, quae, quod stands in the Case in would stand if the subordinate clause were a separate sentence, and it agrees in Gender and Number with the noun or pronoun to which it refers
The
it
which
necesse
fuit
magnum
tantur.
qui princeps Romanorum fuit, vallum, aedificare, cuius reliquiae hodie spec-
Hadriano,
20. 7.
Note the following uses of the Accusative without a preposition (l) As the Object of a verb or infinitive
:
vita Agricolae me delectat. nos non pieebit hie sedere. Angelos eos vocari oportet.
i.
9.
20. 8.
SUMMARY OF RULES
(2) as
1 83
the Subject of an infinitive Tacitus eum victoriam reportavisse affirmat. se in loco iniquo esse viderunt. 39. 19.
: '
2.
10.
(3)
denoting
time
how
long
'
apud magistrum
septem dies sum. abhinc annos duos ('two years ago,' 25. 5).
meum iam
31. 2.
(4)
denoting, ' how far ' in space : ducenta milia passuum distat.
42. 8.
(5)
me
'
delectat.
i. 7.
(6)
denoting
'
place whither
in
names
of
Towns
5.
'
to
')
26.
18. 3.
denoting separation
:
adjectives
55.
denoting instrument, means or manner ( 'with or by ') Britannos velut indagine circumdederant. 13. 16. longo die fatigati eramus. 29. 6.
animo
^3)
alacri lectito.
11.
(
'
'
by
'
')
(4)
denoting time when at or in or on ( eo tempore rex Britannorum erat. 3. 15. anno tertio et quadragesimo regnabat. 5- Shaec nonis Novembribus scripsi. 39. 22.
'
'
')
(5)
denoting price
'
at
')
50.
')
:
19.
"^
denoting quality ( of or with Britanni viri animo forti erant. 2. 14. pueros facie pulchra, oculis caeruleis vidit. In this last use alone (No. 6) the Ablative in all other uses it is adverbial.
-
28.
5.
is
adjectival
184
The
Latin) denotes
filio
SUMMARY OF RULES
Dative (-which is always used without a preposition in to or for ' :
' ' '
toti
5.
13.
ii. 7.
11.
quid utUius erat toti orbi terrarum ? 15. 6. Batavis licet esse civibus Britannicis. 56. 61. unus homo nobis cunctando festituit rem. 49.
novis rebus student.
'
' ' ' :
10.
35. 17.
may
be translated
Britannia non erat curae. 2. 20. or useful,' 23. 17.) ? (' of use tormenta navalia nostris auxilio fuerunt. 39. 11,
cui erat usui
' '
praeerant. 3. 19. reipublicae nostrae prosit. 48. 18. tributum Britannis imperaverat. 2.
Romano
8.
The
Genitive
(which
' '
is
9).
5).
Annales Taciti
3.
i.
15).
rex
Britannorum
( 3.
nomen
But
regis ('the name of the king,' Britanni huius faciei sunt. 28. 11.
11).
without
in the following of
'
uses the
Genitive
may
be translated
'
num
quid novi vidisti ? (' anything new,' 31. 7.) ne quid detrimenti capiat (' any harm,' 52. 9). nomen Germanorum ('the name Germans,' 34. 19).
The
Loeative (which
'
is
Dubris
( 27.
5).
domi
( 29. 6).
In Singulars of the ist and 2nd declensions the Locative in Singulars of is the same in form as the Genitive the 3rd declension and all plurals it is the same in form as the Ablative.
;
SUMMARY OF RULES
Gender of Nouns.
1.
; ; _
185
are masculine if they denote they denote female persons. This rule
the same for all declensions : e.g. amita, Boadicea, fern. ; nauta, agrieola, Caligula, masc. mater, uxor, fem. ; pater, frater, victor, masc.
prineeps, rex, custos, miles, Cicero,
masc.
2. The gender of nouns not denoting persons found by the following rules
:
may be mostly
(a)
ip)
(c)
Those of the ist declension are all feminine, e.g. vita. Those of the 2nd declension in us or r are nearly all masculine, e.g. campus, liber (except names of trees, which are feminine, e.g. ulmus) those of the 2nd declension in um are all neuter, e.g. caelum. Those of the 3rd declension which form the nominative singular by adding an s are mostly feminine, e.g. hiem-s, pax (= pac-s), aeta-s (= aetat-s), virtii-s (= virtut-s);
;
navi-s, clade-s
except masc.
Those of the 3rd declension which form the nominative singular without adding an s are mostly feminine if the nom. sing, ends in io, do or go,
e.g. regio, grando (except ordo, m.), origo, indago, especially those in -Ho, -tudo, e.g. mutatio, natio ; multitudo, testudo neuter if the nom. sing, ends in men, us,* ur, or e,
:
mare
e.g.
agger,
aer,
imber
sol
sermo
(d)
those of
(e)
tiie
us are nearly all mascu(except domus, Idus, manus, fem.) ; 4th declension in u are all neuter, e.g. cornu.
Those of the 5th declension are aJl feminine, e.g. fades (except dies, which is generally masculine, though sometimes feminine in the sense 'time': singular number)
final s in these cases is not an addition to the stem, but part the stem ends in s, but this i is turned into r in the genitive and other cases. Note -its neuter, -Us feminine (e.g. virtOs).
The
:
of it
l86
The Gerund
-ing (formed
'
SUMMARY OF RULES
is a noun, corresponding to an English noun from a verb)
:
and
it is
it
unus homo nobis cunctando restituit rem. 49. 10 ; takes the same case (or no case) as the verb from which
:
formed
regent spectandi cupidi erant. 6. 4. toti orhi terrarum imperitandi cupidi estis.
6.
14.
The Gerundive is an adjective (formed from a verb), which, agreeing with a noun or pronoun, gives the same sense as the Gerund with the Accusative
:
proelii spectandi ( proelium spectandi) causa. 9. 16. coloniae defendendae ( coloniam defendendi) causa. 36. 7. de ea intranda cogitavit. 2. 22.
Moods.
fact
Kalendae sunt hodie Septembres. 1. i. multa de bello audimus. 40. 2. The Imperative mood expresses command or prayer
audite, pueri
!
40. 7.
!
foedus omnis esto nominis Britannici 49. ij. (or Injunctive) mood expresses desire, and may generally be translated by may or shaU (or by might or ' should in the past imperfect tense)
unum
The Subjunctive
'
'
'
'
'
'
Deo
sit
gratia
Deus salvam
49. 29.
:
ne desperemus 49. 7. The Subjunctive mood often stands in subordinate clauses that (a) introduced by ut, operam dant ut oppidum expugnent. 50. 4. ita facta est ut ad terram applicetur. 50. 25. tantus imber cadit ut sol obscuretur (' is darkened
' ' :
').
50.
II.
'
(6)
(c)
operam dabat ut castra obsidione liberaret. 54. 3. introduced by ne, that not or lest videat ne quid detrimenti respublica capiat 52. 9. hostem circumdedit ne evadere posset. 53. 8. introduced by qui, quae, quod Caledones emittit qui impetum in Batavos dent. 51.5. diem constituunt quo impetum dent. 50. 5. fossas foderat in quibus sui tuti essent. 53. 7.
' . . . ' '
:
SUMMARY OF RULES
Order of Words within the sentence or clause.
187
Rule
position)
An5rthing that goes with a Noun (excepting a pregenerally put after that Noun Latin Kalendae Sepiembres animo patruus meusBritannia nostra antiqua veterani UK Romani vita Agrii.
is
in
alacvi
colae.
(This
is
Except Demonstrative, Interrogative and Numeral Adjectives (including those Adjectives of Quantity which mean all,' some,'
'
many,'
id
'
few,'
'
great,'
'
small
')
bellum hie vir ilia femina aliud tempus tantus imber quanta mutatio quo tempore duae horae primus mensis omnes homines nonnulli homines mulii homines pauci anni magna multitudo -parva manus. Rule 2. Anything that goes with a Verb or an Adjective or an Adverb is generally put before that Verb, Adjective or Adverb in Latin mane lectito in mari natamus me delectat non possum
nonnullis in locis difficilis ^victoria a Britannis reportata multo ante ( 41. i) non revera non saepe. The Dative generally stands before the Accusative : ludo trigonali operam, damns. libris duas horas cotidie do. As a general rule finish ofi one clause before beginning another.
Passive Voice.
For the formation of the Passive Voice from the Active in the Present, Past Imperfect and Future tenses, see page 72 ; for the formation of the Perfect tenses, see page 81. The person by whom something is done is expressed by a or ab with the Ablative ab aliis imperatoribus oppida expugriabantur. 16. 9. Note the passive construction with a vague subject pugnabitur ' it will be fought a fight will be fought,'
:
'
'
41- i6-
Prepositions.
Most prepositions take the Accusative in classical prose, bu\. the following six (and a few others not used in this book) always take the Ablative cum Caractaco, mecwax a Caledonibus, ab hostibus sine mora pro patria de Britannis, de ira e Britannia, ex Annalibus
:
[turn over.
l88
SUMMARY OF RULES
:
and the following two take either the Ablative or the Accusative, according to the meaning in when it means in or on takes the Abl. when it means into or onto takes the Accus. sub when it means under or down in takes the Abl. when it means towards or down into takes the Accus. e.g. in mari natare in mare pellere sub signis Romanis mUitare sub vesperum.
' '
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
'
Pronouns and Adjectives connected with them. Suus, SUA, suuM (' his own,' ' their own ') is an Adjective, and generally refers to the most important person or thing mentioned in the same sentence or clause (printed in black type) Claudius filio suo nomen Britannico dedit. 5. 13. Eius ('his ') and eorum, earum ('their') are Genitive cases of the Pronoun is, ea, id, and generally refer to some person or thing mentioned in a previous sentence Claudius expeditionem contra Britannos paravit : consilium eius erat Britanniam debellare. 5. 1-4. Se, sui, sibi, se ('himself,' 'themselves ') is a Pronoun, and generally refers to the most important person or thing mentioned in the same sentence or clause Caledones trans Clotam et Bodotriam se congregant. 11.16. templum, ubi veteran! se occultaverant, cremant. 9. 3. Ipse, ipsa, ipsum is generally an Adjective like the English
: : :
-self in
myself,' himself,' themselves cupidi erant regem ipsum spectandi. 6. tormenta in ipso tempore apportaverant.
' ' ' :
4.
39. 10.
Questions.
Questions which can be answered by yes or no are intronum or -ne num vos viri minus fortes eritis ? 8. 21. tune, Alexander, Pictus es ? 21. i. nonne melius erit in casteUo cenare ? 18. 14. Nonne is simply the negative non with the -ne attached to it the -ne turns the negative statement into a negative question. Questions which cannot be answered by yes or no are introduced by interrogative pronouns, adjectives or adverbs (without any num or -ne) quis hoc castellum delevit ? 24. i. quo tempore in Caledoniam migraverunt ? 19. ISeur non Rutupias hodie ambulamus ? 18. 2. quando in viam nos dabimus ? 18. 20.
' '
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