; Bodius, and now translated into English, 8vo. Lond. 1548. St. Augustin his Twelve Steppes of Abuses. Translated by Nicholas Lesse, 8vo. Lond. J. Daye, 1550. A Woorke of the Holy Bishop St. Augustine, concerning Adulterous Marriages, 8vo. Lond. 1550. Twelve Sermons by St. Augustin, translated by Thomas Paynell. Dedicated to Queen Mary, "the moost vertuous Lady and moost gratious Quene." 8vo. Lond. 1555. A Treatise of St. Augustine that famouse Doctour-Of Faith and Workes, newly translated into English. With a Treatise of Justification founde emong the Writinges of Cardinal Pole, 4to. Lovanii, apud Joannem Foulerum, 1569. Certain Select Prayers, gathered out of St. Augustine's Meditations, which he calleth His Selfe Talke with God. 8vo. Lond. 1574. An Introduction to the Love of God, accounted among the workes of St. Augustine. Translated by Edw. (or Edm. Freke, or) Freake, Bishop of Rochester, 8vo. Lond. 1574. Saint Austen's Manuell, or little Booke of the Contemplation of Christe, 8vo. Lond. 1574. Reprinted 8vo. Lond. 1586. The same, containing special and piked Meditations and godlie Prayers. Collected, trans D lated, and adorned, by Thos. Rogers, 24mo. Lond. 1581. Reprinted ibid 1591. A pretious Booke of heavenly Meditations, called a private Talke of the Soule with God. Translated, purified, and with most ample and necessarie Sentences of holie Scripture adorned, by Thos. Rogers, 24mo. Lond. 1581. A right Christian Treatise, entituled St. Augustine's Praiers. Whereunto is annexed St. Augustine's Psalter, by Thos. Rogers, 24mo. Lond. 1581. An Introduction to the Love of God, by Edmund, Bishop of Norwich;-and newly turned into Englishe Meter, by Rob. Fletcher, 8vo. Lond. 1581. St. Augustin's Ladder to Paradice, translated by T. W. 8vo. Lond. 1581. A Glasse of vaine Glory, translated out of Augustine, entitled Speculum Peccatoris, by W. Prid, Doct. of the Lawes, 24mo. Lond. 1593. St. Augustine of the Citie of God, with the Commentary of Ludovicus Vives, fol. Lond. 1610.-Second and best edit. 1620. St. Austin's Confessions, translated into English by Tobie Matthew, 8vo. Lond. About 1624. The same, by Wm. Watts, 8vo. Lond. 1631. St. Augustin's Book, De Cura pro Mortuis Gerenda, with four other Treatises. The golden ८ Treatise of Vincentius Lirinensis, &c. 8vo. Lond. 1651. St. Augustin's Life, written by himself, 8vo. Lond. 1660. St. Augustin's Judgement concerning Penal Laws against Conventicles, and for Unity in Religion, delivered in his 48th Epistle to Vincentius, 4to. Lond. 1670. St. Augustine's Confessions: with the Continuations of his Life to the End thereof, extracted out of Possidius, by Abm. Woodheat, 8vo. Lond. 1679. St. Augustin's Meditations, and his Treatise of the Love of God-translated by Geo. Stanhope, 8vo. Lond. 1701-08-14-20-28-45. Saint Augustin's Religion, collected from his own Writings, by John Brierly, 8vo. Lond. 1620. Brierly was a popish priest and wrote his booke to prove that St. Augustin held the popish doctrine. This was answered in two other books with the same title, the first per Anonymum, 4to. Lond. 1624, the second by Wm.Crompton, 4to. Lond. 1625, and again by the same in a work entitled St. Augustin's Sums, 4to. Lond. 1625. A Selection of Hymns and Meditations for every Day in the Week, from the reformed Devotions of St. Augustin, 8vo. Lond. 1793. A work which has very little to recommend it. AVIANUS Flavius, flourished under Theodosius the Elder. The Fables of Avian, translated into Englyshe, by Wm. Caxton, at Westmynster-printed with the Fables of Æsop, fol. 1484. The Fables of Avian, added to the Fables of Esope in Englyshe, 8vc. Lond. No date. See Æsor. AULUS Gellius, A. C. 165. The Attic Nights of Aulus Gellius, translated into English by the Rev. W. Beloe, F. S. A. 8vo. Lond. 1795, 3 vols. An excellent translation, though the first, of a very difficult and instruetive author. : Sextus AURELIUS Victor, A. C. 360. The Lives of the illustrious Romans, written in Latin, by Sextus Aurelius Vietor, and translated by several young Gentlemen educated by M. Maidwell, 8vo. Lond. 1693. Decimus Magnus AUSONIUS, flourished A. C. 379. Epigrams from Ausonius, translated by Timothie Kendell. See his "Flowres of Epigrams," 16mo. Lond. 1577. The Sixteenth Idyll of Ausonius, translated into English by Sir J. Beaumont in his Poems, 8vo. Lond. 1629 Cupid crucified, by Ausonius, translated into English by Thomas Stanley, Esq. in his Translation of Anacreon, &c. 8vo. Lond. 1651. The fourteenth Idyll, by Richard Fanshaw, printed with his Translation of select Parts of Horace, 8vo. 1652. Translations from Ausonius by Jabez Hughes, in his Miscellanies. -Lond. 1737. Ausonii Ludus Septem Sapientium, translated into English Verse by Thomas Stanley, Esq. in his History of Philosophy, 4to. Lond. 1743, p. 52. B. St. BARNABAS, Contemporary with Christ. The Epistle of St. Barnabas, among the genuine Epistles of the Primitive Fathers, translated by Wm. Wake, D. D. 8vo. Lond. 1693. Second and best edition, 8vo. Lond. 1710. The Epistle of Barnabas is in this edition rendered much more correct and valuable. Reprinted 8vo. 1719-1737, and often since. Though this work is attributed to Barnabas the Apostle, yet there is no proper evidence that it was written by him. BASIL the Great, born A. С. 329. St. Basil the Great, his Letter to Gregory Nazaanzen, shewing that many hundred Years ago, certaine godly Men began and used the Life commonly called monasticall. Translated by Richard Sherrie, 8vo. Lond. John Day.. No date. . |