Macrobii Theodosii Illustrissimi Saturnaliorum libri VII.—A beautiful illuminated manuscript of the fifteenth century at the World Digital Library.
En tibi lector candidissime. Macrobius: qui antea mancus mutilus: ac lacer circumferebatur: nunc primum integer: nitidus & suo nitori restitutus in quo graecae maiestatis dignitas quo ad eius fieri potuit superstes reperitur. (“Hey! Worthy reader, look what we have for you! It’s Macrobius, who was previously published maimed, mutilated, and mangled, now for the first time whole, hale, and restored to his splendor, in which the surviving dignity of the majesty of the Greek is as much as possible revealed.”) Ioannes rivius recensuit. Venezia Lucantonio Giunta 1. Venetiis, 1513. —The title page is gorgeous, and all in red. The printing is beautiful. The scan is decent, but not as high-resolution as we might like.
Macrobii Ambrosii Aurelii Theodosii, viri consvlaris & illustris, In Somnium Scipionis lib. II. Saturnaliorum lib. VII. Ex varijs ac vetustissimis codicibus recogniti & aucti. Lugduni apud Seb. Gryphium, 1542. —A very high-resolution scan of a beautifully printed italic edition.
1550 edition from the same printer.
Aur .Theodosii Macrobii V. Cl. & inlustris Opera. Ioh. Isacius Pontanus secundò recensuit: adiectis ad libros singulos notis. Quibus accedunt Ion. Meursi breviores notae. Lugduni Batavorum, Ex officina Joannis Maire, 1628.
Macrobe (oeuvres complètes), Varron (De la langue latine), Pomponius Méla (oeuvres complètes) ; avec la traduction en français [et] publiées sous la direction de M. Nisard. Paris: Firmin Didot Frères, Fils et Cie, 1863.
1850 edition from Garnier Frères, which appears to be identical except for a different cut on the title page, and the scan is much better.
Macrobius. Franciscus Eyssenhardt iterum recognovit. Lipsiae: In Aedibus B. G. Teubneri, 1893.
Manetho. With an English translation by W. G. Waddell. Cambridge (Mass.): Harvard University Press; London: William Heinemann Ltd. 1954. (With the Tetrabiblos of Ptolemy in the same scan.)
The Sphere of Marcus Manilius Made an English Poem: with annotations and an astronomical appendix. By Edward Sherburne, Esquire. 1675.
Marcus Aurelius has his own page.
The Index Expurgatorius of Martial, literally translated: comprising all the epigrams hitherto omitted by English translators. To which is added an original metrical version and copious explanatory notes. Printed for private circulation. London: 1868.
The Epigrams of Martial. Translated into English prose. Each accompanied by one or more verse translations, from the works of English poets, and various other sources. Bohn, 1871.
Martial: Epigrams. With an English translation by Walter C. A. Ker. Loeb edition. London: William Heineman.
Vol. I (1919).
Vol. II (1920).
The Dissertations of Maximus Tyrius. Translated from the Greek by Thomas Taylor. London: Printed for the translator, 1804. —Two volumes, both included in this scan.
Ancient India as Described in Megasthenes and Arrian; being a translation of the fragments of the Indika of Megasthenes collected by Dr. Schwanbeck, and of the first part of the Indika of Arrian, by J. W. McCrindle. Calcutta, Bombay, and London, 1877.
The Works of Anacreon, Sappho, Bion, Moschus, and Musaeus. Translated from the original Greek. By Francis Fawkes, M.A. Second edition, 1789.
Select Poetical Translations of the Classics of Antiquity. London: Printed for W. Plant Piercy by J. M‘Creery, 1810. —Includes seven “Idylliums from Moschus.”
The Works of Anacreon, Sappho, Bion, Moschus, and Musaeus. Translated from the original Greek. By Francis Fawkes, M.A. Second edition, 1789.