Penny Dreadfuls, 1912 · page 113 of 118
The Medea — page 113: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
This is an advertisement page listing works by the same author. The page displays a catalog of scholarly and literary publications, including a history of ancient Greek literature, two plays (*Andromache* and *Carlyon Sahib*), an essay on the exploitation of inferior races, critical editions of Euripidis fabulae, and English verse translations of three Euripides works (*Hippolytus*, *Bacchae*, *Frogs*, *The Trojan Women*, and *Electra*). The text suggests this author was a classical scholar rather than a sensation fiction writer, making the Victorian penny dreadful attribution potentially incorrect.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
BY THE SAME AUTHOR HISTORY OF ANCIENT GREEK LITERATURE. ANDROMACHE : A Pray. CARLYON SAHIB: A Ptiay. THE EXPLOITATION OF INFERIOR RACES IN ANCIENT AND MODERN TIMES: An Essay In * LIBERALISM AND THE EMPIRE.’ EURIPIDIS FABULAE: Brevir ApnotTaTioneE CRITICA InstrucTag, Vots. I. and IT. EURIPIDES: Huirrotyrus; BaccHaz; ARisTOPHANES’ ‘Frocs.’ Translated into English verse. EURIPIDES: Tue Trojan Women. Translated into English verse. EURIPIDES; Execrra. Translated into English verse. (E(@) iIDoo ¢s) (E(0)