New York: Macmillan, 1905. — 288 p.
Part I includes the thirty-two lessons, which will afford sufficient preparation for the reading of the Greek, the first letter of John, the Beatitudes and the Lord's Prayer from Matthew, the chapter on the Prodigal Son from Luke, and the thirteenth of First Corinthians. These selections are given in Wescott and Hort's reading and are followed by notes and vocabulary. Of the epistle there is given a translation of three chapters, two literal and one quoted from the Revised Version. This translation may serve for retranslation in case the reading is taken up inductively apart from the lessons. In Part II are found the essentials of the grammar, embracing, in the first part, the alphabet, table of consonants, vowel and euphonic changes, in the second part, the declension of nouns, pronouns, adjectives, participles, the conjugation of verbs, the optatives of the New Testament, a table of about eighty irregular verbs, and the special study in the classes of verbs and the most common irregular verbs.
In all verbal forms the aim has been to confine the forms given, to New Testamertt usage. In the third part of the grammar the main features of the syntax are illustrated with quotations from the New Testament Greek. The prepositions also are discussed somewhat and accompanied with sentences illustrating New Testament peculiarities.