A16220
|
A briefe description of vniuersal mappes and cardes, and of their vse and also the vse of Ptholemey his tables. Necessarie for those that delight in reading of histories: and also for traueilers by land or sea. Newly set foorth by Thomas Blundeville, of Newton Flotman in the countie of Norffolke. Gent.
|
Blundeville, Thomas, fl. 1561.
|
1589
(1589)
|
STC 3145; ESTC S104621
|
24,638
|
45
|
View Text
|
A72513
|
Peter Ramus, his logick in two bookes. Not onely truely translated into English, but also digested into question and answere, for the more easie understanding of all men. By R.F. Gent; Dialectica. English
|
Ramus, Petrus, 1515-1572.; Fage, Robert.
|
1636
(1636)
|
STC 15249.7; ESTC S125061
|
47,136
|
128
|
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
|
B09731
|
The beau's academy, or, The modern and genteel way of wooing and complementing after the most courtly manner in which is drawn to the life, the deportment of most accomplished lovers, the mode of their courtly entertainments, the charms of their persuasive language in their addresses or more secret dispatches, to which are added poems, songs, letters of love and others : proverbs, riddles, jests, posies, devices, with variety of pastimes and diversions as cross-purposes, the lovers alphabet &c. also a dictionary for making rhimes, four hundred and fifty delightful questions with their several answers together with a new invented art of logick : so plain and easie that the meanest capacity may in a short time attain to a perfection of arguing and disputing.
|
Phillips, Edward, 1630-1696?
|
1699
(1699)
|
Wing P2064; ESTC R181771
|
227,423
|
431
|
View Text
|
A54745
|
The mysteries of love & eloquence, or, The arts of wooing and complementing as they are manag'd in the Spring Garden, Hide Park, the New Exchange, and other eminent places : a work in which is drawn to the life the deportments of the most accomplisht persons, the mode of their courtly entertainments, treatments of their ladies at balls, their accustom'd sports, drolls and fancies, the witchcrafts of their perswasive language in their approaches, or other more secret dispatches ...
|
Phillips, Edward, 1630-1696?
|
1685
(1685)
|
Wing P2067; ESTC R25584
|
236,029
|
441
|
View Text
|