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Phaedri Augusti Liberti Fabulae Aesopiae
(Teubner, 1876)
This is one of the many printings under Number 620 in Carnes' Phaedrus bibliography. Here is Carnes' description: One of the most successful editions of Phaedrus, a school edition, by Müller (1836-1898), with a short ...
Aesop's Fables as Romanized by Phaedrus, with a Literal Interlinear Translation, Accompanied by Illustrative Notes on the Plan Recommended by Mr. Locke; bound with Phèdre, Hachette, 1846
(Printed for Taylor and Walton, 1845)
Carnes 894. The introduction (iii-xx) to this literal translation of Phaedrus explains the usefulness of such a translation, provides an introduction to Phaedrus and defends the choice of fables presented. The choice of ...
Phaedri Augusti Liberti Fabulae Aesopiae
(Teubner, 1881)
This book seems to reproduce the one which I have listed under 1876, right down to the page count. I will repeat my comments from there. This is one of the many printings under Number 620 in Carnes' Phaedrus bibliography. ...
Phaedri Augusti Liberti Fabulae Aesopiae ad Lusitanae Iuventutis Commodum et Institutionem de Integro Recensitae et Illustratae
(Ex Typographia Nationali, 1835)
Editio priori castigatior et emendatior. The Latin place name of Lisbon, I learned here, is Olisipo, and it occurs here in a nice locative ablative. I am not sure in what the illustratae consists, since there are no ...
Römische Fabeldichter: 2. Bändchen: Aesopische Fabeln des Phädrus
(J.B. Metzlersche Buchhandlung, 1886)
This pamphlet comprises Books 3-5 of Phaedrus. It thus picks up where the translations in Pamphlet 24 B left off. And its pagination picks up at 113, at the very point at which that edition left off. However, this book ...
Phädrus Aesopische Fabeln. Bändchen 1, Abthlg. B, Buch 1, 2
(Metzlersche Buchhandlung, 1880)
This poor little (about 4 x 5¼) pamphlet has suffered. Perhaps some pages are missing, since it starts abruptly in the midst of a sentence of the introduction on 81. However, it finishes on 112 with a translation of the ...
Aesop's Fables as Romanized by Phaedrus, with a Literal Interlinear Translation, Accompanied by Illustrative Notes on the Plan Recommended by Mr. Locke
(And Hatchard and Son Piccadilly,Printed for John Taylor, 1828)
See my later printing of this book--the eleventh edition--from 1845. The publisher will change then to Taylor and Walton. For comments see Carnes. The introduction to this literal translation of Phaedrus explains the ...
Fables and Satires, With a Preface on the Esopean Fable
(Archibald Constable and Co., 1809)
There are three sections here, before four satires and notes (211) on both volumes. Beware: Volume the Second is placed by mistake in the midst of notes on the first volume (233). New to me in the first section, a ...
Fables and Satires, With a Preface on the Esopean Fable
(Archibald Constable and Co.Constable Hunter, Park, and Hunter,, 1809)
My first volumes by a baronet! Leather binding and cover-edges. Marbled covers and page edges. Excellent condition. The preface begins with a bold self-advertisement of this attempt to present [Esopean fable] in a less ...