2. The Doctrinal of Princes made by the Noble oratour Isocrates, and translated out of Greke in to Englishe by syr Thomas Eliot knight. [Title border dated 1534] 8o BL
Reprinted: [There is another London edition but no date is given.]
3. The Godly aduertisement or good counsell of the famous orator Isocrates, intitled Parænesis to Demonicus: whereto is annexed Cato in olde Englysh meter. Anno Do. M.D.LVII. Mense Decemb. 8o BL [Translated by John Bury]
4. Esocrates to Demonicus. [Licensed to Owen Rogers, 30 May, 1560.]
5. The extract of Epistles, out of Isocrates. [In Abraham Fleming's A Panoplie of Epistles. 1576. 8o]
6. A perfite looking Glasse for all Estates: Most excellently and eloquently set forth by the famous and learned Oratour Isocrates, as contained in three Orations of Morall instructions, written by the Authour himselfe at the first in the Greeke tongue, of late yeeres. Translated into Lataine by that learned Clearke [pg 077] Hieronimus Wolfius. And now Englished to the behalfe of the Reader, with sundrie examples and pithy sentences both of Princes and Philosophers gathered and collected out of diuers writers, coted in the margent approbating the Authours intent, no less delectable then profitable. 1580. 8o BL [Epistle dedicatorie signed Thomas Forrest, translator]
7. Oration intitled Evagoras by Jer. Wolfe. 1581. 8o
8. The good admonition of the Sage Isocrates, to young Demonicus; translated from the Greek by Richard Nuttall. 1585. 8o
9. Archidamus, or, the Councell of Warre. Being 2000 yeares old, and written by Isocrates the couragious Orator, translated by Tho: Barnes. 1624. 4o
10. Advice to a young Gentleman. Writ in Greek by Isocrates, the famous Athenian Oratour; and lately made English for the use of schools. 1696. 8o