ILE engaged in compiling my own anthology of AngloLatin poetry, which I hope to publish before long, I was impressed by the lack of any previous complete or comprehensive collection of this sort. The existing collections are usually restricted in the scope either of their chronology or of their general interest, and in only a few of them is material of high poetic value included. It seemed to me that a descriptive list of these volumes might be of value to those interested in Anglo-Latin writings. The titles which I now present must not be thought to constitute a complete survey of the subject. Many smaller collections have undoubtedly escaped my notice, particularly in the eighteenth century, and in some cases I have pointed out that I make no attempt to list everything. It should also be noted that I am dealing only with original Latin verse; translations are not included. To any who will send me additions or corrections I shall be very grateful. The anthologies here considered may be grouped conveniently into three classes: general collections, university collections, and school collections. In the second class I have included not only prize poems, etc., but also works containing only poems by men of a single university, such as the Musarum Anglicanarum Analecta and the Anthologia Oxoniensis. The most striking feature of the general anthologies is their failure to be general in any satisfactory way. Hardly any of them include Milton's poems, or Vincent Bourne's, or Gray's, or Landor's, to mention four of the best Anglo-Latin poets.' None since the Delitiae Poetarum Scotorum of 1637 is in any way representative of the best that had gone before it-unless the Musa Latina Abredonensis of 1892-1910, which covers a very restricted field, should be mentioned. In any case the Scots seem to have the best of it. In the special field of the epigram, however, Stein's Anthologia Epigrammatum Latinorum recentioris aevi of 1816 is to be commended for its excellent selections from English writers up to the time of its issue. 1 Landor's poems do not appear in any collections. Four of Gray's and one prologue of Bourne's are in Selecta Poemata Anglorum Latina. Four of Milton's are in the Examen Poeticum Duplex and one in Arundines Sturi.