The SatiresJuvenal, writing between AD 110 and 130, was one of the greatest satirists of Imperial Rome. His powerful and witty attacks on the vices, abuses, and follies of the big city have been admired and used by many English writers, including Ben Jonson, Dryden, and most notably, Dr Johnson, who described his writing as `a mixture of gaiety and statelines, of pointed sentences and declamatory grandeur'. Juvenal has been seen as a stern moralist and, more recently, as an extravagant wit, and is acclaimed for his vivid description of the scenes which aroused his anger. He coined the famous phrase designating people `eager and anxious for two things; bread and races' (panem et circenses'). Niall Rudd's translation reproduces the original style and metrical effect of Juvenal's hexameters. William Barr's Introduction and Notes provide literary and historical background to the sixteen satires. ABOUT THE SERIES: For over 100 years Oxford World's Classics has made available the widest range of literature from around the globe. Each affordable volume reflects Oxford's commitment to scholarship, providing the most accurate text plus a wealth of other valuable features, including expert introductions by leading authorities, helpful notes to clarify the text, up-to-date bibliographies for further study, and much more. |
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Page xv
... Cicero declares that medicine , architecture , and teaching are well enough for those whose rank does not rule out ... Cicero's own words ) ; but , respectable or not , those who chose to live by . them could stand on their own feet ...
... Cicero declares that medicine , architecture , and teaching are well enough for those whose rank does not rule out ... Cicero's own words ) ; but , respectable or not , those who chose to live by . them could stand on their own feet ...
Page xxiii
... Cicero , no scion of a noble family but a mere provincial knight . Rome owed much to its men of lowly origin . The satire is remarkable as being the first to offer positive advice , albeit advice based on examples to be avoided rather ...
... Cicero , no scion of a noble family but a mere provincial knight . Rome owed much to its men of lowly origin . The satire is remarkable as being the first to offer positive advice , albeit advice based on examples to be avoided rather ...
Page xxiv
... Cicero and Demosthenes are cited as examples of men whose cloquence in public life proved their destruction in the end . Military glory and its ultimate futility are exemplified in three foreign generals , Hannibal , Alexander , and ...
... Cicero and Demosthenes are cited as examples of men whose cloquence in public life proved their destruction in the end . Military glory and its ultimate futility are exemplified in three foreign generals , Hannibal , Alexander , and ...
Page 65
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Page 68
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