D. Iuni Iuvenalis Saturarum libri V |
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Page vi
... poetry is known by a Greek title ; satire alone has a name distinctly Roman , and is based on no corresponding Greek type . For this reason the claim to originality set up by Horace and Quintilian must , with some modification , be ...
... poetry is known by a Greek title ; satire alone has a name distinctly Roman , and is based on no corresponding Greek type . For this reason the claim to originality set up by Horace and Quintilian must , with some modification , be ...
Page x
... poet . 2 3 8. Martial . A third source of information is Martial , the only writer of the first three centuries who mentions the name of Juvenal . That the two poets were on terms of friendship , and even of intimacy , seems a safe ...
... poet . 2 3 8. Martial . A third source of information is Martial , the only writer of the first three centuries who mentions the name of Juvenal . That the two poets were on terms of friendship , and even of intimacy , seems a safe ...
Page xi
... poet is not necessarily his own biographer . Many a picture which he presents may be purely literary , due to the influence of department or of other writers , and may have no existence in fact . Even what seems to have a direct ...
... poet is not necessarily his own biographer . Many a picture which he presents may be purely literary , due to the influence of department or of other writers , and may have no existence in fact . Even what seems to have a direct ...
Page xiii
... poet , Decimus Iunius Iuvenalis , is derived from the subscriptions found at the end of different books of the satires in several of the Mss . In one of the ancient vitae 1 · 4 , 153 . 2 The extreme view in this direction was that of H ...
... poet , Decimus Iunius Iuvenalis , is derived from the subscriptions found at the end of different books of the satires in several of the Mss . In one of the ancient vitae 1 · 4 , 153 . 2 The extreme view in this direction was that of H ...
Page xiv
... poet Aquinas , but this is probably no more than an inference from the passage just cited . • See § 6 . But this statement is rejected by F. I. Merchant , Am . Jour . Phil . , XXII , 1901 , pp . 57 f . , on the ground that Juvenal's ...
... poet Aquinas , but this is probably no more than an inference from the passage just cited . • See § 6 . But this statement is rejected by F. I. Merchant , Am . Jour . Phil . , XXII , 1901 , pp . 57 f . , on the ground that Juvenal's ...
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Page 15 - ... omnibus hic idem, si foeda et scissa lacerna, si toga sordidula est et rupta calceus alter pelle patet, vel si consuto volnere crassum 150 atque recens linum ostendit non una cicatrix? nil habet infelix paupertas durius in se quam quod ridiculos homines facit. "exeat...
Page 12 - Dum nova canities, dum prima et recta senectus, Dum superest Lachesi, quod torqueat, et pedibus me Porto meis, nullo dextram subeunte bacillo.
Page 81 - Herculis aerumnas credat saevosque labores et venere et cenis et pluma Sardanapalli. monstro quod ipse tibi possis dare, semita certe tranquillae per virtutem patet unica vitae.
Page 102 - Tradidit arcano quodcunque volumine Moses, Non monstrare vias,- eadem nisi sacra colenti, Quaesitum ad fontem solos deducere verpos.
Page 21 - ... appropriate on an ancient tomb, is out of place in a modern churchyard, through which no road passes. SATIRE III. HOW THE POOR LIVE AT ROME. Some remarks on this Satire, in some respects Juvenal's masterpiece. will be found in the Introduction p. xxxix. Of many translations or imitations the most famous is Samuel Johnson's ' London, a Poem in Imitation of the Third Satire of Juvenal,' published in May 1738, which at once brought fame, but little profit, to its author.