1. Catonis Disticha de moribus. 2. Dicta insignia septem sapientum Græciæ. 3. Mimi Publiani, sive, Senecæ proverbia, anglo latina. Cato item Grammatice interpretatus Latinis & vernaeulis vocibus pari ordine, sed diversis lineis alternatis. Quò se aetatulâ Pueriles Praecepta vitae communis ita legant ut intelligant. A Carolo Hoolo, A M. Privatae Scholae Grammaticae Institutore in Aurificum viculo apud Londinates. = 1. Cato's Distichs, concerning manners. 2. Excellent sayings of the seven wise men of Greece. 3. Publius's Stage verses, or Seneca's proverbs, in Latin and English. Likewise Cato Construed Grammatically, with one Row Latin, and another English. Whereby little Children may Understandingly learn the Rules of Common Behaviour. By Charles Hoole, Master of Arts, and Teacher of a private Grammar School in Goldsmith-Alley, London.
- Date:
- MDCCXXII. [1722]
- Books
- Online
Online resources
About this work
Also known as
Disticha de moribus. English and Latin.
Publication/Creation
London : printed by W. Hunter, for the Company of Stationers, MDCCXXII. [1722]
Physical description
[24],70,[2]p. ; 80.
References note
ESTC T125336
Reproduction note
Electronic reproduction. Farmington Hills, Mich. : Thomson Gale, 2003. (Eighteenth century collections online). Available via the World Wide Web. Access limited by licensing agreements.