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Cato with the commentaries of D. Erasmus of Rotterdam. Apophthegms of the wise. The Publian Mimes. The Institute of a Christian Man. Isocrates' Exhortation. 59. 8.
The same with a German interpretation added, so that boys may easily learn both the Latin and German language by one and the same effort. 61. 8.
Fables of Aesop the Phrygian and others, with the Hecatomythium collection of one hundred fables of Abstemius, and select witticisms of Poggio. 8.
Collectanea of sentences or commonplaces of Ioannes Stobaeus, from countless and most ancient Greek authors (along with certain other small works), in Greek and Latin, translated by Conrad Gessner. All much more corrected and richer than before. 59. F.
Three books of Duties by M. T. Cicero. Also, on Friendship, on Old Age, Paradoxes, and Scipio's Dream, with annotations by most learned men, and some new ones. 53. 8.
Aristotle's first book of Politics, in Greek and Latin, which is the Economics, with a very useful commentary. 8.
Three volumes of sentences or chapters, primarily theological, from sacred and profane books, by the monks Antonius and Maximus. Four centuries of Abba Maximus, on perfect charity and other Christian virtues. Theophilus, sixth Bishop of Antioch, on God and faith. Three books of Christian Institutions against the Gentiles. The oration of Tatian the Assyrian against the Greeks. All in Greek. 46. F.
All the same in Latin, translated by Conrad Gessner, Ioannes Ribittus, and Conrad Clauser, with annotations on Tatian. 46. F.