Augustus and the Greek World
By G. W. Bowersock, Harvard University. Depicting the consolidation
Ii
the Graeco-Roman world wlder Emperor Augustus, the author examinea
iI
detail the relations between Rome and the Greek-speaking peoples at
thII
pivotal point in Roman history. Setting aside the familiar stories of
miJi.
tary exploits and imperialist plans of the early Roman Empire, Prof..
Bowersock concentrates on the mutual interest between men of East ...
West as the solid foundation of Rome's Eastern Empire.
BibliograpA,.
The Complete Letters of
Lady Mary Wortley Montagu
Volume I: 1708-1720
$4"
Edited by Robert Halsband, ColumMa University. Lady Mary Wortley
Montagu was one of the great 18th-century letter-writers. In this, the
f11'lt
new edition for over a century, her letters are edited in a complete
tat
based on her manuscripts, accurately transcribed and fully annotated.
TIlt
volume contains three main groups: letters to Edward Wortley
Mon~
during their long courtship and early married life; the entirely new sen.
to Philippa Mundy; and the brilliant virtuoso letters written when
lady
Mary accompanied her husband on his Embassy to Constantinople,
1716-1&
Two further volumes will complete the edition.
$12.80
The Politic.al Journal of George Bubb Dodington
Edited by
J.
Carswell and' L. A. Dralle, University of Wichita. Dodington'.
diary covers the crucial 18th-century decade preceding the accession
of
George III. Never before published in full, it gives an intimate day-by-day
picture of the politics and high life of the time. Dodington, a member of
the Pelham government and political advisor to the Opposition, had
an
enormous circle of friends, ranging from major politicians like Newcastle
and Fox to obscure agents, officials, and journalists, and including
George
III, Fielding, Johnson, and Voltaire.
$11.211
The Journal of the
Rev. William Bagshaw Stevens
Edited by Georgina Galbraith. William Bagshaw Stevens-poet, scholar
and Chaplain-recorded this Journal from his 37th birthday to his prema–
ture death at 44. In this account appear prominent figures like Sir Francis
Burdett, Charles Fox, Lord Lansdowne, Erasmus Darwin, and Thomas
Coutts; but the Journal is pre-eminently a poignant human document, the
frank account of Stevens' love affair with Fanny Coutts. 5
plates.
$10.10
Oxford
University Press
/
New
York