A selection of Housman's writings, both scholarly and general, which decisively confirms his reputation as a prose stylist.A selection of Housmans writings, including the Introductory Lecture of 1892 and The Name and Nature of Poetry, 1933, both scholarly and general, gathered from periodicals and other out-of-the-way sources. The collection decisively confirms his reputation as a prose stylist.A selection of Housmans writings, including the Introductory Lecture of 1892 and The Name and Nature of Poetry, 1933, both scholarly and general, gathered from periodicals and other out-of-the-way sources. The collection decisively confirms his reputation as a prose stylist.Lovers of Housman's poetry and admirers of his scholarship have long been aware, from the Introductory Lecture of 1892 and The Name and Nature of Poetry, 1933, that he was also master of a highly individual prose style; and others besides classical students have relished the pungency of the famous preface to his edition of Manilius. Here, in addition to these, is a selection of Housman's writings, both scholarly and general, gathered from periodicals and other out-of-the-way sources, which decisively confirms his reputation as a prose stylist. The prefaces, the adversaria and the reviews, in particular, give the layman an idea of the precision and the penetration of exact scholarship. Housman's comments and judgements on other men illuminate his own nature: withdrawn, austere, even crusty, yet gentle with the unassuming; ruthless in exposure of arrogance and pretension.Preface; Part I: Introductory Lecture (1892); Part II. From the Prefaces: 1. Manilius I (1903); 2. Manilius V (1930); 3. Juvenal (1905); Part III. Reviews, Adversaria and Letters to the Press: 1. Tucker's Supplices of Aeschylus (1890); 2. The Manuscripts of Propertius (1892, 1894); 3. Schulze's edition of Baehrens' Catullus (1894); 4. The Manuscripts of Propertius (1895); 5. Palmer's Heroides of Ovid (1899); 6. Tremeheere's Cynthia of Propl“Ö