The school-masters auxiliaries, to remove the barbarians siege from Athens; advanced under two guides. : The first, leading by rule and reason to read and write English dexterously. The second, asserting the Latine tongue in prose and verse, to its just inlargement, splendor, and elegancy.
"The Latine grammar. Or, a guide teaching a compendious way to attain an exact skill in that tongue" has separate dated title page, pagination and register. "Auspice Christo, Deo" has caption title, separate register, and is unpaginated. "De Prosodia" has caption title, continuous register and separate pagination.
With a final errata leaf.
Text is continuous despite pagination.
Annotation on Thomason copy: "Feb:"; the '9' in imprint dateis crossed out and replaced with an "8".
Reproduction of the original in the British Library.
Wing (2nd ed.) L2672.
Thomason E.1830[1].
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Mich. : UMI, 1999- (Early English books online) Digital version of: (Thomason Tracts ; 228:E1830[1])