A09258
|
A briefe introduction to geography containing a description of the grounds, and generall part thereof, very necessary for young students in that science. VVritten by that learned man, Mr William Pemble, Master of Arts, of Magdalen Hall in Oxford.
|
Pemble, William, 1592?-1623.
|
1630
(1630)
|
STC 19571; ESTC S114325
|
20,167
|
42
|
View Text
|
A08657
|
Ouids Metamorphosis translated grammatically, and also according to the propriety of our English tongue, so farre as grammar and the verse will well beare. Written chiefly for the good of schooles, to be vsed according to the directions in the preface to the painefull schoole-master, and more fully in the booke called Ludus Literarius, or the Grammar-schoole, Chap. 8; Metamorphoses. Book 1. English
|
Ovid, 43 B.C.-17 or 18 A.D.; Brinsley, John, fl. 1633.
|
1618
(1618)
|
STC 18963; ESTC S120970
|
103,077
|
106
|
View Text
|
A13665
|
The new found vvorlde, or Antarctike wherin is contained wo[n]derful and strange things, as well of humaine creatures, as beastes, fishes, foules, and serpents, trées, plants, mines of golde and siluer: garnished with many learned aucthorities, trauailed and written in the French tong, by that excellent learned man, master Andrevve Theuet. And now newly translated into Englishe, wherein is reformed the errours of the auncient cosmographers.; Singularitez de la France antarctique, autrement nommée Amérique. English
|
Thevet, André, 1502-1590.; Hacket, Thomas, fl. 1560-1590.
|
1568
(1568)
|
STC 23950; ESTC S111418
|
200,763
|
298
|
View Text
|