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An epitome of Ovid's Metamorphoses, collected by Franciscus Nigrus Bassianas. 42. 8.
Eclogues of the poets Titus Calpurnius Siculus and Aurelius Nemesianus of Carthage. 37. 8.
Some poems of Ioannes Pollius of Westphalia. 8.
A moral interpretation of the wanderings of Homeric Ulysses, by an uncertain author. A commentary by Porphyry on the Cave of the Nymphs in the 13th book of the Odyssey. 42. 8.
Certain apologies for Homer and the art of poetry, translated from Greek into Latin by Conrad Gessner. 42. 8.
Poems of Virgil, Tibullus, and Ovid, for the third class of the Zurich school. 59. 8.
Poems on divine matters by Marcus Antonius. 54. 8.
Susanna, a tragic comedy, by Xystus Betuleius of Augsburg. 38. 8.
A sacred comedy by Rudolf Gwalther of Zurich, entitled Nabal, taken from 1 Samuel 25. 49. 8.
The duel of David and Goliath, and an allegorical exposition of it, described in heroic verse, by the author Rudolf Gwalther. 8.
Arguments for all the chapters of both the Old and New Testament, written in elegiac verse, by the author Rudolf Gwalther of Zurich. 54. 8.
The poem of Hesiod of Ascra inscribed Ἔργα καὶ ἡμέραι Works and Days, that is, Works and Days. Added to this are brief scholia by Jacob Ceporinus. Also, very clear narrations together with a preface by Philipp Melanchthon. Also added is a recent Latin translation by Johannes Fries, by which word is rendered as closely as possible to word. 62. 8.