Xenophon's Ephesian History or The Love-Adventures of Abrocomas and Anthia in 5 Bks - Tr from the Greek by Mr Rooke (1727).pdf

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ETBESIA
AT
HISTORY;
OR
THE
XENO.PHONsx
.LOVE-ADVENTURES
O
F
Abrocomas
and
A
n
t
h
i
a.
In
FIVE
BOOKS;
Tranflated
By
Mr.
from
the
Greek.
RO
0
K
E,
Vltantur
Ventiy
Phvim. -vitantur
&
«/£/?#*,
-
■■
JSIon
vitntur Amor.
Sannazarii
Ecloea
Secnnda.
Printed for
J.
Lane,
and the
next Bookfeller to
the
Horie-
Mi
it
am
LO
ND
0 N:_
in
SkgJ
at
Zwfo'sHead
Guards.
m.dcc.xxvii.
Trice
fiitcVd
is.
«d.
Bound
is.
6
d-
$8%
xc
.
Testimonies
of
Authors
SUIDAS.
concerning
Xenophon
the
Ephesian.
wrote his
*
Ten
Books.
They contain
the
Ep.hesiacs
in
Love-Adventures
of
Abrocomas
and
Anthia.
He
&c,
also wrote
of
the
City
of
Ephesus,
the
VEnophon,
Ephesian
Historian,
ANGELUS POLITIANUS,
Miscel. Chap.
51.
not
the
'.->
"
\
So*
Xenophon
writes,
another
no less
Eloquent,
I
mean the
Athenian,
Ephesian.
bvt
E\
BERNARD
MONTFAUCON,
in
his Diarium Italicum.
('says
--..
'v
l0
thirteenth
Century,
in
a silken Cover,
wrote
with
a
small Cha-
racier,
contains
XenophonV Ephesiacs
in
five
A
little
Volume
he)
of
the
Books,
rus'j
Æthiopics.
*
It
may
as
They
are
q
this
Xenophon Suidas
takes notice.
like
Heliodo-
Love-Adventures
The
Work
is
not
publijlied.
Of
only
Five.
Mr.
Cocchi
imagines
a
Mistake in tha
Impression
of
Suidas,
and
thinks it ought to
be an
E
in
stead
of
an
I,
which
is not
improbable.
Allow
me
to add
another
Conjecture,
which is, that the Copies
of
this
Work,
in Saidas's Days might
be
differently
divided,
.vi\'
some
into
Ten
Books,
and
others into
Five,
of
which
last
this
Florentine
Manuscript
is cne.
But
as
the
Story,
excepting
some
few Chasms,
is
still entire,
and the
Number
of
Sections
of
small
Importance,
I
shall
pass
it
over
'
l/
S
without
further Notice.
con
seem
strange
to
some
Readers, vrhySuidtt should
mention
this
Work,
as
containing
Ten
Books,
and
Mcntfau?
A
2.
BOOKS
printed
for
and
sold ly
J.
Mil
lan
near
the
Horse-Guards, and
at
Locke'j-
Head
in
Shug
Lane,
.^""^'s
I.
f?'ect
Translations in three
parts.
2.
The
Eclogues
of
Hu
Sanna^arius's Sea-Eclogues.
go
Grotius,
Baptista
Amaltheus,
Daniel
He'msius,
and
George
Buchanan.
3.
M.
Hieronymus
Vida's Silk-Worms :
To
which
is
prefixed
the
Lives
of
the
Authors. Price
d. Stich'd
3
s.
II.
Winter,
a
Poem,
By
James
Thomson.
The third
E-
dition. Price
is.
III.
The
Fatal Extravagance:
A
Tragedy.
The
fourth
Edition,
improv'd into
Five
Acts.
By
Mr.
Mitchell.
3
*'M
^"
Bound
s. 6
Price
is.
Second
Edition
of
The Genuine
Love-Letters
of
Mary
Suem
,j
Scots
to
James
Earl of
Bothwell.
With
Re
marks
on each
Letter,
and an
Abstract
of
her
Life.
Price
Mitchell's two
poetical
Petitions.
Price
6
d.
V.
An Ode
to
Sir R.
Walpde:
and
Duke
of
Richmond
on
their
Instalment.
By
Mr.
Beckingham.
Price
6
d.
IV.
Mr.
VJ-
The
is.
King
of
Scotland,
&c.
r
iXVThe
'bcond
Edition
of
'Rebellions
on the
various
Ef-
jetts
0}
Love
:
Intermix'd
with
the latest
Amours
and
In
Mackbeth,
moirs
of
the
Court
of
Scotland,
with
the secret
History
of
VII.
High
German Doctor.
2
Vols. Price
VIII.
Hippolitus,
Earl
of
Douglass;
containing
5
s.
some
Me
trigues
of
Persons of
the
first
Rank
of
both
Sexes.
Pr
1
s
X. The
second
Part
of
RtfeElkns m
the
varhus
EfoQs
cj Love,
&c.
witn
a
Key
to
the
Whole.
Price
1
s. 6
d.
XI.
By Alex.
Gordon,
A. M.i
XIII.
The
present
State
of
Poetry.
Price
6
d.
XIV.
The History
of
John
of
Bourbon,
Prince
of
Ca-
rency,
containing
a
Variety
of
entertaining
Novels,
the le-
cond
Edition. Price
4
s.
XV.
Great Importance
of
a
religious
Life. Price
1
s.
XVI.
Dr.
Lake
on the Sacrament.
Price
one
Price
1
s.
Heiresses.
Itinsrarium
Septentrionale
:
Or
a
Journey
thro'
most
of
the
Counties
of
Scotlond, and those
in the
North
of
England.
with
sixty
six
Copper Plates,
and
Illustrated
The unjcrtunate
The
second
Edition
of
the Mercenary
Lover:
Or,
XII.
Map.
XVII.
selves.
Sturss
fine
Cuts, bound in
the
Bible, or by
them
J
is.'
Also
all
forts
of
Bibles,
Testaments, and
Common-Pray
ers,
with Cuts,
or without,
New
and
Old,
PREFACE.
O
presume
to apologize
for
ic
this
small
Piece
would
be
impertinent,
of
the
greatest
Wits,
and the Sancti
on
of
the
ablest
Judges,
Suidas,
in
having
already re
ceived
the
Approbation
his
Lexicon, mentions
several
Xeno-
phons, who
were
all
famous in the
most
learned
Age
and
Nation
of
the
World,
viz.
Xenophon
the
Athenian,
Author
of
the Cyropœdia;
Xenophon
the
Cyprian,
History; Xenophon
the Antiochian,
who wrote
the
Cyprian
the5a^j/^m«History;andXENOPHON
the
Ephcsian,
the
Ephefian
History.
All
ries
of Time,
or
the Ravages
of
bar
barous
Nations;
and
no
wonder,
since
so
many hundreds
of
antient
Authors
famous
these, except
the
first and last,
have been
torn from
us
by the
Inju
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