[456] By Leonard Culman.

[457] Less widely used were the Dialogues of John Posselius, a German philosopher. They treat of the school and the study of the classical tongues. They were printed in London in Latin and English in 1625, as Dialogues conteyning all the most familiar and usefull words of the Latin Tongue.

[458] Which took the form of translating: "For all your constructions in Grammar Scholes be nothing els but translations," Ascham, The Scholemaster (1570), ed. Arber, 1869, p. 92.

[459] C. Hoole, An advertisement touching ... school books, 1659.

[460] Institution of a young nobleman, 1607, p. 78.

[461] Quoted by F. Watson, Grammar Schools, p. 246.

[462] The Boke named the Governour, ed. Crofts, 1883, i. p. 33.

[463] The Scholemaster (1570), ed. Arber, London, 1869, p. 28.

[464] Elyot, op. cit. i. p. 54.

[465] Ascham, op. cit. p. 92.